Think Progress

Bush: I regret standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner.

President Bush was in Canada yesterday to speak at a luncheon of the Montreal Board of Trade. Approximately 300 protesters gathered outside the venue, blowing plastic horns, throwing shoes, and burning the former president in effigy. The Vancouver Sun reports on what happened during Bush’s speech:

Inside the regal Fairmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel, a relaxed-appearing Bush spoke with very few regrets about some of the most controversial moves of his presidency.

“I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul,” Bush told an audience of about 1,000 men and women at the $400-a-seat steak luncheon.

Bush also said that he regretted appearing in front of a “Mission Impossible” sign in 2003 during an address about the Iraq war. Of course, the sign actually said “Mission Accomplished.” Maybe “Mission Impossible” would have been more appropriate. (HT: Raw Story)



99 Responses to “Bush: I regret standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner.”

  1. LibertyLover says:

    Didn’t sell his soul, but he sold the American people a white elephant (Iraq war) and he sold a heck of a lot of coffins.


  2. 666cicadas says:

    Freudian slips for the win.


  3. tombaker says:

    Forget about the banner –

    what about the lying, mr. bush?????????


  4. missmolly says:

    PLEASE tell me that Dubya didn’t spend his time in office convinced he was Jim Phelps…


  5. Dave N says:

    Bush also said that he regretted appearing in front of a “Mission Impossible” sign in 2003 during an address about the Iraq war. Of course, the sign actually said “Mission Accomplished.” Maybe “Mission Impossible” would have been more appropriate.

    Oh, the irony…


  6. lokidog says:

    Then we’re getting somewhat closer to even, Chimpy.

    We regret you were ever president.

    Immensely.


  7. barfly says:

    Bush:
    “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul,” Bush told an audience of about 1,000 men and women at the $400-a-seat steak luncheon.”

    Satan, teed up on Bush’s head, on the infernal golfcourse: “That’s nice — Now, watch this drive!”


  8. Dave N says:

    Oops. That’s what I get for not reading the story before I post.

    My bad.


  9. Dr. Hussein Matt says:

    America and the world regrets herr dubyah was ever born.


  10. COProgressive says:

    “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul,” – George W. Bush – Failed American president

    Three things I see wrong with that statement.

    First, Bush has no principles.

    Second, as best he could, should read as he was told to do.

    Third, he doesn’t have a soul, at least anymore.


  11. vinylspear says:

    Will we ever be free from Bushism’s?


  12. Virtual Pebble says:

    WTF? Oh. He thinks he’s in a movie. A really bad movie. One where he’s applied the Sidam Touch to history, causing it’s repeat as tragic farce. And now no one wants to buy an option on the screenplay. Sheeyit.


  13. Dr. Hussein Matt says:

    “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul,” Bush told an audience

    Herr dubyah (R-Nazi) was too busy murdering souls to worry about his own.


  14. katy says:

    subliminal strikes again…

    it’s your conscience speaking, george…


  15. stewarjt says:

    It was not a mistake mind you, just a regret. No word on the 100,000 other miscues of his presidency?


  16. Fred says:

    I did not sell my soul

    Wonder why he felt obligated to say that? See, it always comes out in the end, doesn’t it?


  17. SP Biloxi says:

    “Bush: I regret standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner.”

    Yeah, and tell that to the deceased soldiers that put in harms way for a lie and oil profits, to the families of the deceased soldiers, and to the American people that you lied to for the last 8 years. Too little too late. Can’t turn back time, George.


  18. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 4. missmolly says: PLEASE tell me that Dubya didn’t spend his time in office convinced he was Jim Phelps… October 23rd, 2009 at 12:43 pm

    Nope, he thought he was that other Arnett fella, that Marshall Dildo, er, Dillweed, ahh damnit, FESTER YOU BEEN MESSIN’ WITH THE SCRIPT AGAIN…

    (and the Shrub slunk quietly out of Dodge… er, Quebec? ah Toronto? oh, Mount Royal… whew…)


  19. noseeum says:

    Dufous:
    “…and I did not sell my soul….”

    “I was bluffing, heh heh, and I lost the bet…


  20. Chuck Feney says:

    I made calls as best I could

    Your best was never good enough. And, that’s why you are resigned to being a freak exhibit at a motivational mega show for only $19.95 for a group of 4.


  21. whirlaway says:

    “Mission Impossible“?

    This can mean only one thing – George Dumbyass Bush has finally finished reading the “My Pet Goat” book and started seeing movie DVDs…


  22. spearNmagicHelmet says:

    i regret his cowardly ass represented this country for 8 years. i regret his lack of response on 9/11 and basically everthing since then.

    he’s a vile, cowardly, war criminal with no honor, no class, and no dignity.

    a stain on this nation.


  23. RUCerious says:

    As an inanimate puppet of Darth Cheney, he hasn’t a soul to sell.


  24. konchster says:

    “Mission Impossible” that explains why he has no regrets and thinks he made wise structured decisions It’s because he is a complete moron.


  25. EnnuiDivine says:

    Eh, I guess i’m in the minority on this but…

    I don’t think he was the worst President we’ve had. I mean, Buchanan was much more of a ridiculous, complete, and utter failure who brought death, carnage, and corruption on the country.

    Out of 43, I place Bush at 42.


  26. Shayne says:

    I believe his grandfather Prescott sold the souls of his entire family to Hitler.


  27. Shayne says:

    Many historians rate W as the worst president ever and Ronald Reagan as the most overrated. Enter at your own peril trollies.


  28. Mugsy says:

    Attention you creative types:

    Source material

    Have at it. :)


  29. Dr. Hussein Matt says:

    Come on, trolls, not one of you hicks are going to screech to us that the banner was actually referring to the ship’s mission? Pleeeeaaazzzzeeeee!!!!


  30. Leftside Annie says:

    Of course he didn’t sell his soul – but it wasn’t from lack of trying. Nobody wanted his stupid cheapass filthy shrunken soul anyway – not even the Devil.

    He sold everything else that wasn’t nailed down, though.


  31. Cats r Flyfishn says:

    “I made calls as best I could”.

    The truest statement ever made by George W. Bush. When there isn’t much in the brain department, one can’t expect much in the decision making department. Bush just explained why he made bad choices. He wasn’t capable of doing better.


  32. Buckie Boy says:

    “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could and I did not sell my soul,” Bush told an audience

    ..decisions based on principle… corrupt and criminal decisions principles

    I made calls as best I could… as best as a drunken coked up C- student could

    I did not sell my soul… true, you don’t have a soul to sell.

    Why is this WAR CRIMINAL not on trial?


  33. dolgre says:

    Just how many lunchtime martinis did the former President gulp down?


  34. Cats r Flyfishn says:

    Bush tried to sell Social Security to Wall Street. If you think the economy is bad now, just imagine what it would be like if all that Social Security money was invested in derivatives.


  35. zxbe says:

    Oh, I see. So had it not been for that sign, all would have been right with your Iraq strategy George?


  36. Rab says:

    Shrub could’nt sell his soul, it was already bought.


  37. ralph the wonder llama says:

    So… pushing the nation into a war it could ill-afford based on faulty intelligence — not a regret.

    Standing in front of a banner for a hubristic photo-op — THAT he regrets.

    I’d have been disappointed if it were any other way.


  38. MapleStreet says:

    Knowing how the Bush Cabal like the CSI / Jack Bauer scenarios, by any chance did Bush think Mission Impossible was a documentary on his covert ops ?


  39. pags2 says:

    Bush should be apologizing to the US and the military, not the Montreal Board of Trade.


  40. EugeneDebs says:

    All the catastrophes this disaster who walks like a man brought America and THAT is what he regrets. MAN. What a putz


  41. okie dokie says:

    One of the demonstration photos on the Vancouver Sun link
    shows a large bin with shoes, covering a tattered American flag.

    What a perfect summary of George W. Bush’s legacy.


  42. Max Anax junius -1 says:

    .

    “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul,” Bush.

    The principle of Lying?
    The principle of Spying?
    The principle of violating the Constitution?
    The principle of outing a covert CIA agent?
    The principle of Murder?
    The principle of TORTURE?
    The principle of Greed?

    .


  43. Mathazar says:

    He sold his soul the day he opened Guantanamo.

    As a motivational speaker, his only advice could be to pick wealthy parents that know the right people.


  44. JayS says:

    @11 – Don’t misunderestimate the chance of that happening.


  45. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 18. Correction. Sorry, Miss Molly, it’s ‘that other Arnett fella’, not Arness. Peter Graves (Jim Phelps) is James (Marshall Dillon, “Gunsmoke”) Arness’s brother.


  46. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 45. next cup of coffee please. s/b Arness not Arnett. Dang Fester been messing with my head again, making the mission impossible….


  47. A Patriot Acting says:

    After eight years of royally fu(king up the Nation THAT’s his one regret?? Not the speech he gave on the deck of the carrier, all full of pomp and bullshit??

    A few lines from his “Mission Accomplished” speech:

    “In the Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”

    “…I have a special word for Secretary (Donald) Rumsfeld, for General (Tommy) Franks…: America is grateful for a job well done.”

    “With new tactics and precision weapons, we can achieve military objectives without directing violence against civilians.”

    ” We have begun the search for hidden chemical and biological weapons, and already know of hundreds of sites that will be investigated.”

    “In the Battle of Afghanistan, we destroyed the Taliban, many terrorists, and the camps where they trained.”

    Really Mr. Bush…REALLY? Standing in front of the banner is the one thing that you regret?


  48. slappy magoo says:

    So, who had to cut Dubya’s steak for him so he didn’t choke on the big pieces? And whoever it was, did they have to pay for the “honor,” or was it a “short straw” kind of deal?


  49. noseeum says:

    “In the Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”

    For the moment.

    “…I have a special word for Secretary (Donald) Rumsfeld, for General (Tommy) Franks…: America is grateful for a job well done.”

    Halliburton, KBR and the arms industry are especially grateful.

    “With new tactics and precision weapons, we can achieve military objectives without directing violence against civilians.”

    Unless unproven tactics and faulty intelligence end up killing more civilians than insurgents.

    ” We have begun the search for hidden chemical and biological weapons, and already know of hundreds of sites that will be investigated.”

    100’s of sites investigated, no WMDs

    “In the Battle of Afghanistan, we destroyed the Taliban, many terrorists, and the camps where they trained.”

    Well, not entirely destroyed, not all the terrorists, and we missed a few caves…


  50. had enough says:

    standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner IS his regret?

    What about the book length lies, treason, torture war crimes, bad jokes making fun of what his evil deeds have don,the psychopathic excitement of bringing shock and awe on KNOWING FULL WELL the mass killing would be over lies…


  51. katy says:

    BULLSHIT ALERT!!!

    from C&L

    An amendment that would prevent the government from working with contractors who denied victims of assault the right to bring their case to court is in danger of being watered down or stripped entirely from a larger defense appropriations bill.

    Multiple sources have told the Huffington Post that Sen. Dan Inouye, a longtime Democrat from Hawaii, is considering removing or altering the provision, which was offered by Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) and passed by the Senate several weeks ago.

    http://crooksandliars.com/node


  52. katy says:

    oh… er… not so newsy after all… heh.


  53. TeleMan says:

    Bush: I regret standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner.

    Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. *wipes tear*

    Ah, you just can’t make this stuff up.


  54. gully foyle says:

    “I did not sell my soul…”

    Junior is bereft of a soul. Can’t sell what you don’t have.


  55. gVOR08 says:

    I’ve never questioned Bush’s integrity. He was true to his principles. He just had stupid principles. That and he was a horrible manager.


  56. fletc3her says:

    One cannot sell what one does not possess. It is sad that Bush can only find it in himself to express regret about a blown P.R. stunt. So many failures, so little self reflection.


  57. Keith H. says:

    george, the entire world regrets that your drunken mother didn’t get an abortion after her and your daddy conceived you on the pavement in a dark alley.


  58. An Outhouse says:

    What is it with Canadians and Bush. Everytime you hear that he gave a speech, it was in Canada. Is he really cheap so they’re taking advantage of ‘former leader of the free world as our speaker’ at bargain rates that they’ll never get again?


  59. flight says:

    I think “Mission Impossible” sums it up quite nicely.

    The condition Bush left the country.

    I think “Mission Accomplished” are words Bush dares not to speak. The words don’t belomg together!


  60. delafield says:

    Dear Mr. George W. Bush:

    The Bush family launced two invasions against the nation of Iraq. Both invasions were based on lies. The damage so far? Over one million Iraqi men, women, children, and babies have died as a result of your family’s lies, not to mention over 7,000 dead American troops.

    The mission will be accomplished when you and your father start burning in hell.


  61. brando says:

    um, mission impossible. it’s more like:
    mission unknowable or
    mission never-defined-able
    mission pulled-out-of-a$$
    mission made-up-newly-every-week

    what a stupic prick


  62. had enough says:

    gVOR08 says:

    I’ve never questioned Bush’s integrity. He was true to his principles. He just had stupid principles. That and he was a horrible manager.

    Since when is lying, war crimes, treason, making jokes on issues that created the demise of others, on and on and on….. considered principles?


  63. mary lacewing says:

    Asked whether he would reconsider any of his decisions, Bush brought up his failure to complete immigration and social security reform and his handling of the Hurricane Katrina crisis in 2005.

    How can he even bring up social security ‘reform’ at this point? Doesn’t he see any news?


  64. amish_edison says:

    So while he was in Canada, WHY wasn’t he arrested for War Crimes/ Crimes Against Humanity?

    Do they, now, like the U.S., have no laws against kidnapping, torture, and murder?

    Canada, you disappoint me.


  65. had enough says:

    An Outhouse says:

    What is it with Canadians and Bush. Everytime you hear that he gave a speech, it was in Canada. Is he really cheap so they’re taking advantage of ‘former leader of the free world as our speaker’ at bargain rates that they’ll never get again?

    could he continue to control audience attendance here in the US as HE NEEDS to do?

    Probably less anger in Canada.


  66. Rich H says:

    All the regrets the american people have about your presidency wouldn’t fit on an effin banner.

    That doesn’t even include the rest of the worlds regrets.


  67. The Mighty Sons of Hercules says:

    “I did not sell my soul”

    But everything else was priced to move.


  68. chrislvb says:

    After all the crap President Obama catches for using teleprompters during his speeches, isn’t it funny that puppet boy Bush has a TELEPROMPTER right in front of him. Look at his right hand giving the thumbs up. Even with a teleprompter this idiot couldn’t form a complete sentence.

    I’m sure he does have regrets about standing in front of that banner. And as for not seling his soul, puppets have no soul. He just had Cheney’s hand up his ass for 8 years.


  69. mary lacewing says:

    Also from his speech yesterday:

    (Bush) said that when his administration introduced TARP, “the whole system of capitalism was frozen, it was like a frozen corpse with a faint heartbeat.”

    “So we said, ‘Here is some blood. When you get on your feet, you can find cheaper money and give us back the taxpayer money with a nice return,” Bush said. “But these measures have got to remain temporary for us to recover.”

    Cheaper money?

    “I don’t believe government can lead us out of the mess we are in,” Bush said. “The private sector is the only engine for economic growth.”


  70. evangenital says:

    Who cares about the goddamned banner?

    Why didn’t that stupid drunk apologize and express regrets for the Iraq catastrophe and all the lies that he told in order to push it through?

    I am so sick of his stupid smirk.

    Doesn’t he ever have any glimmer of guilt over all the lives destroyed by him and his precious repiggie neo-cons?

    Why isn’t this man facing war crimes charges?


  71. GeorgeandDick says:

    George says – Hehehe, that’s a great picture of the decidering guy, all dictatoring like, hehe. Dick told me that they would make all kinds of statues of me all over Iraq if I invaded them and killed, like a million or so of them, Dick said that they liked dieing for Satan, so I used “willy pete” on em, bombed them, tortured them, robbed them and what do I get, LOTS OF WAR PROFITS, hehe. Now here I am, still free as a bird, yep, no one can touch me, I lied, I invaded, I murdered, I tortured, and yet no one in Obama’s administration is gonna touch me. Why? Because my 20%ers would throw a fit and stamp their feet, that’s why. Hell, just look at congress and the senate, we are the Majority Minority, only that Franken and that other guy have any balls, hehe, and that’s why Dick and I are stinking rich from War Profits and FREE as a bird…what do you think Dick?

    Dick says – I need fresh blood from cute kittens and puppies so I can bath in my bathtub full of blood money.


  72. pete says:

    I’ll even give the Chimperror a little credit. It is entirely possible that he made his decisions based on “principles”. Alas, what this country needed was a President who made decisions based on facts. When a leaders principles displace facts? We get disastrous policies like ol’ Chimpy unleashed upon the World.


  73. rmwarnick says:

    The linked Raw Story article does not quote Bush saying the banner had “Mission: Impossible” on it.


  74. Powkat says:

    I thought he was going to go back to Dallas to exercise and play video games – why is he talking?


  75. Johnny Walker says:

    73, from The Vancouver Sun:

    While Bush’s speech was mostly eloquent and free of the language gaffes he admits he is famous for, he said he regretted appearing in front of a “Mission Impossible” sign during a televised address in 2003. The controversial banner referring to the U.S. mission in Iraq, actually said “Mission Accomplished.”


  76. Uncle Ho says:

    Forget the shoes, it is justifiable homicide to fling hand grenades at a known war criminal.


  77. Uncle Ho says:

    pappy George HW Bush tells Barbara; ” I should have pulled out”


  78. Rascalcat says:

    Really, no really, THAT is what he regrets. That is a bump on a gnat’s ass of what his regrets should be.


  79. lux says:

    my only response is… you know, you just can’t make this stuff up.

    Though the loss of Bush was a great benefit to the country for a wide variety of reasons.. I, as well as the late night talk show hosts, really miss his comedy routine.

    mission impossible.. wow. that’s just phenomenal..


  80. Uncle Ho says:

    EnnuiDivine says:

    Sorry, I have to disagree with you. As bad as Buchanan was, chimpy is absolutely the WORST OF THE WORST.
    the chimperor is SO BAD, that I could EVER miss having Nixon to kick around.

    BTW- I recently read somewhere that chimpy believed to have a successful administration, he needed to have a war. So he lied us into an illegal and unjustified war, killing and maiming untold tens of thousands of people to look good in the history books. What a effing, evil, egotistical, narcissic b*stard.


  81. dasm says:

    Proving Bush still can’t read.


  82. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 73. rmwarnick says: The linked Raw Story article does not quote Bush saying the banner had “Mission: Impossible” on it. October 23rd, 2009 at 4:01 pm

    Haven’t looked at Raw Story’s post yet, but the Vancouver Sun had this posted:

    Asked whether he would reconsider any of his decisions, Bush brought up his failure to complete immigration and social security reform and his handling of the Hurricane Katrina crisis in 2005.

    “I spend a lot of time thinking about Katrina, and whether I could have sent in the federal troups right away, even though it was against the law,” he said.

    While Bush’s speech was mostly eloquent and free of the language gaffes he admits he is famous for, he said he regretted appearing in front of a “Mission Impossible” sign during a televised address in 2003. The controversial banner referring to the U.S. mission in Iraq, actually said “Mission Accomplished.”


  83. PPDCUS says:

    Memo from the Ministry of Truth to George W. Bush:

    One can’t sell one’s soul when it’s already owned by Dick Cheney.

    What you really meant so say is, I didn’t naked short sell my soul.

    Which of course, is the biggest lie of all.


  84. Zooey says:

    Bush also said that he regretted appearing in front of a “Mission Impossible” sign in 2003 during an address about the Iraq war.

    Dr Freud…calling Dr Freud…


  85. pags2 says:

    The reason why Canada allows Bush to come and go is for the reason that he has to go back. We don’t have that option in the US. Elba would be a good place for GWB.


  86. blue53 says:

    Mr. Bush–go back to bed. Call us if your brain and your conscience develop.


  87. republicanSScareme says:

    Unfortunately, Mr. President, the American people regret you were ever born. Period.


  88. Ape-Man says:

    1 LibertyLover says:

    Ya, Bush sold a million humans that were living their lives.

    Bush’s soul is just an idea he has that he’s going somewhere special when he’s dead. It can’t help a single living soul.

    Bush needs to learn to value life. that’s what Bush needs.


  89. Ape-Man says:

    Yes, Bush sold a million human lives, and their native land for an oil opportunity. But Bush didn’t sell his soul. bush needs that. so he can get to some place better than life…


  90. ctcadguy says:

    Why is this war criminal allowed freedom?

    911 and Anthrax Attacks=Inside Job


  91. SKdeA says:

    “Bush: I regret standing in front of the ‘Mission Impossible’ banner.”

    The classic Republican non-apology apology. See, now he is being quite honest – he regrets standing in front of a banner that didn’t happen, but of course no regrets about the real banner.

    Yawn, let’s put him in the Hague already…


  92. Meremark says:

    -

    Sick wussy.” Wimp41 said so.

    -


  93. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 82, I quoted the Vancouver Sun, which had quoted the Shrub; “Asked whether he would reconsider any of his decisions, Bush brought up his failure to complete immigration and social security reform and his handling of the Hurricane Katrina crisis in 2005.

    I spend a lot of time thinking about Katrina, and whether I could have sent in the federal troups(sic) right away, even though it was against the law,” he said.

    WTF? There, ladies and gentlemen, is a first cut at revising history. It isn’t against the law for a President, in a moment of national or regional emergency, to send in federal troops to help maintain law and order and assist in search, rescue, and recovery efforts. All he has to do is issue an executive order. He can also federalize National Guard units and activate Reserve units; again, all that is required is an executive order. So for the Shrub to say, in effect, that he’s not to blame ’cause it was out of his hands, legally, is just plain unvarnished BS.

    It goes further than that. Guard units are supposed to be prepared for exactly that sort of mission. They’ve been responsible for that sort of thing for some time. In fact, it’s not uncommon for Guard units to already be engaged in support missions at disasters when the federalization order comes in. Governors have been known to activate Guard units before hurricanes strike an area, and when federalization occurs in that sort of instance, there’s just a change in the upper level chain of command and from whence the budget for the operation comes.

    If Shrub believes that he couldn’t do anything or that he had to wait for some signal from ol’ Brownie or the governor of Louisiana or some such shit, he’s just lying to himself. He’s trying to draw a picture of himself as victim of the fates. Whether that’s to ameliorate “history’s” judgment, or as a sop to his own sentimentalism, or both, or something else is irrelevant; he’s a dry drunk and he’s never going to stop.


  94. pags2 says:

    Virtual Pebble says:
    WTF? There, ladies and gentlemen, is a first cut at revising history. It isn’t against the law for a President, in a moment of national or regional emergency, to send in federal troops to help maintain law and order and assist in search, rescue, and recovery efforts.

    You are surprised that Bush & Co. are revising history? They have been trying since shortly before he left office. And they will continue for the next decade trying to rewrite the worst Presidency of the United States. It was an utter failure of foreign and domestic policy by president who reached the office by accident. But they do not get the last word in history. There will be scholars pouring over material for the next couple decades and writing the truth.


  95. Virtual Pebble says:

    @ 94. pags2…

    Not at all surprised, pags. Every time something went wrong Shrub & Darth Cheney turned on the spin machine.

    I just found it interesting that Shrub himself gets up and says something terribly stupid in self-justification. Sheeyit – legalities never stopped him from doing things that he wanted to do; Iraq and prisoner abuse and torture stand as perfect examples of that.

    But after watching him go through the “compassionate conservatism” contortions, both in the campaigns and at various moments in his tenure, and to have him now say that he was stopped, at least in part, from doing something about Katrina because of nonexistent legal barriers – it’s just one of those WTF moments. It’s just fracking awesome, but not a positive sort of awesome…


  96. Game of Life says:

    Who is going to foreign land and apologizing?

    Isn’t that special.


  97. Game of Life says:

    VP@95

    Well said. Now the repugs want to continue their reign as if nothing went wrong, very wrong. They want to come back worse than ever.


  98. Game of Life says:

    the repugs don’t respect President Obama.
    I have heard the squawking heads refer to him as Boy, that guy, coconut, cat (from chimpy no less) and kid.
    What the ignorant inbreds don’t, that he got a free pass. chimpy showed himself as the fool, as the bully, the king.

    The net is ruining their lies, ignorance and their destruction.


  99. estetik says:

    No matter what your feelings are concerning one of our presidents estetik, to gleefully applaud as he is burned in effigy is absolutely wrong estetik burun ameliyati. If that was Obama on that stick every liberal in this country would rise up and escoriate those responsible gögüs büyütme. This picture just proves that Liberals have absolutely no room to talk about the level of disagreement some have with this administration estetik gögüs ameliyatlari. This type of display should never be allowed, free country or not gögüs küçültme. “I am confident that I made decisions based on principle, that I made calls as best I could, and I did not sell my soul vajina daraltma,” True except that he does not have one principle other than to do what Cheney wanted lazer epilasyon fiyatlari. True they were the best calls he could make, which is what happens when you put a frat boy in charge of government, the level of ability goes way down karin germe ameliyatlari. True, he did not “sell” his soul. He gave it away for no apparent benefit plastik cerrahi. Oh and Satan can’t wait to collect. There now I have thoroughly agreed with a statement made by Bush for the first time in my life. Who cares what this man says karin estetigi, saç nakli. He stole two elections, lied us into attacking a non-threatening, sovereign country, tortured innocent people gögüs büyütme, shredded the constitution, and nearly destroyed our economy. Now he’s trying to convince us it was all GOOD gögüs diklestirme! Nah, he and the neocons sold the soul of the nation, instead. Eight years of foreign policy of, against our nature, imposing government models upon those who would not accept what we were pushing of their own volition gögüs küçültme. Eight years of abstract Straussian philosophy and unreachable pie in the sky goals of empire for security vajina daraltma ameliyati, with the attendant spending that has helped impoverish our nation gögüs estetigi. He sold his soul well before he was ever president, but he and the neocons got America at a vulnerable point after 9/11, and auctioned us off.



Jump to Top

About Think Progress | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy (off-site) | RSS | Donate
© 2005-2009 Center for American Progress Action Fund
View Most Popular

Advertisement

What We're About

Featured

image
Subscribe to the Progress Report



imageTopic Cloud


Visit Our Affiliated Sites

image image
Reports


Got a hot tip?
Have a hot news tip? We'd love to hear from you. Use the form below to send us the latest.

Name:
Email:
Tip:
(required)


imageArchives


imageBlog Roll