Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Setting the Stage: Bush Gets Licked

How often is the shit press going to make these SHOWS look like they are real?

Sick of being fed BULLSHIT!

And even sicker of the main shoveler!


"Low in Polls, Bush Makes More Time for Friendly Crowds" by SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

ROGERS, Ark., Oct. 15 — Out there in the rest of America, polls show that about twice as many people disapprove of President Bush as approve of him. But here in a cavernous convention center hall, Mr. Bush found nothing but admirers Monday when he answered questions during a town-hall-style meeting.

One man began by commending Mr. Bush “on your steadfastness and your faith.” Another concluded by saying, “Thank you for being my president for the last seven years,” with an emphasis on the word “my.” A third expressed dismay that Mr. Bush could not run for president again.

[A committable condition, readers.

They may get their wish, too.

Once martial law is declared by this guy, he ain't never leaving!]


“It’s time for new blood,” Mr. Bush replied. “Plus,” he added wryly, “I’d be single.”

The friendly audience in northwest Arkansas — not a single questioner criticized Mr. Bush — is typical of such let-Bush-be-Bush events, which the White House is staging with increasing frequency. Mr. Bush’s aides like them because the president is much better in an informal setting, especially one where he can get his message across, conversation-style, without pesky reporters asking the questions.

[Yeah, your are nothing but "pesky" reporters.

I'll bet you all give him good head, though.]


Mr. Bush’s message Monday was the economy — “The worst thing we could do is run up taxes,” he said — and his looming fight with Congress over the budget. “You’re fixing to see what we call a fiscal showdown in Washington,” he said, renewing his threat to veto spending bills he does not like.

[Like Kids Health, right, asshole?

How about vetoing a war bill, shitfuck?]


About 300 people attended the session, for which the local chamber of commerce and the Arkansas Republican Party distributed tickets. The chamber’s president, Raymond Burns, said he had hoped to draw an audience that represented “a diversity of businesses,” not a diversity of political points of view, and that had “people who are respectful.”

[I do not see why we have to respect a mass-murdering war criminal]


They were. Outside the hall, after lunch at a barbecue restaurant, Mr. Bush and his motorcade passed a few onlookers carrying “impeachment now” signs and antiwar signs. Inside the hall, the war in Iraq came up only when Mr. Bush talked about it himself.

Instead, he fielded questions on such matters as the possibility of government grants for private preschools (“Probably not,” he replied) and a bill to raise the retirement age for pilots (he confessed he had not heard of it).

The kicker came from a girl who asked when he thought there would be “a girl president” — from the Republican Party.

“You took my line,” the president replied, apparently thinking for a moment that he was being asked about Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Democrat of New York. “I think there will — a lady will be president, you know, and she’ll be a Republican.”

[While you are giving back-door advice to your fellow Globalist, right, Bushie?

You are such a fucking liar!

And Hillary might as well be a Republican, anyway.

Certainly walks and talks like one!]