This president did the best any reasonable person not afflicted with the most threatening mental disorder that swept the nation for 7 years BDS would expect under the extraordinary circumstances with which he was presented in 2001 on September 11th. He’s kept the country safe since then, no easy task .
A task that Hussein and his legions of ObaMorons will soon find out can only be done in the manner of which he’s managed to do it, Tea parties and bong a thons with Ahmadinejad and other Arab Sheik scum won’t get it done. Their new hero had better do the same or his political career will be a short and useless and we’ll have his head on a platter, period.
Any changes to Bush’s successful terror policies that result in an attack will rest solely on his shoulders and theirs, and that’s a fact the left better get a grip on and soon.
President Bush was an honorable man who was unpopular because men of character don’t stick their crooked fingers in the air to check the public wind direction and consult pollsters to make their toughest decisions as democrats like Slick Willie and Barack Hussein Osama do..
Bush says he didn't compromise soul to be popular:
WASHINGTON (AP) - President George W. Bush knows he's unpopular. But here's what matters, he says: "I didn't compromise my soul to be a popular guy." In a wide-ranging interview with Fox News Channel, Bush also praised the national security team assembled by President-elect Barack Obama, offered hope to U.S. automakers seeking government assistance and said the people of Illinois will have to sort out allegations that Gov. Rod Blagojevich sought kickbacks in choosing a successor for Obama's Senate seat.Bush said presidents fail when they make decisions based on opinion polls.
"Look, everybody likes to be popular," said Bush.
"What do you expect? We've got a major economic problem and I'm the president during the major economic problem. I mean, do people approve of the economy? No. I don't approve of the economy. ... I've been a wartime president. I've dealt with two economic recessions now. I've had, hell, a lot of serious challenges. What matters to me is I didn't compromise my soul to be a popular guy."
An Associated Press-GFK poll last week showed just 28 percent of the public approving of the job Bush is doing, about where he has been all fall. Among Republicans, 54 percent approve, a low figure from members of a president's own political party.
Bush said he didn't think he would be viewed as the 21st century's Herbert Hoover, who was president during the Great Depression. He said he worked to keep the economy from collapsing.
"I'm a free market guy," Bush said. "But I'm not going to let this economy crater in order to preserve the free market system. So we made a lot of very strong moves and it's been painful for a lot of people, particularly because, you know, this—the excesses of the past have caused a lot of folks to hurt when it comes to, like, their 401(k)'s or, you know, their jobs."
He said his administration is continuing to look at options for helping the Big Three automakers and that it needs to get done "relatively soon." He said a "disorganized bankruptcy" of one or more of the automakers could cause great harm to the economy "beyond that which we're now witnessing."
"That concerns me," he said. "And the other point is that I—I'm not interested in—in really putting good money after bad."
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