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Gallup Alerts
GALLUP POLL NEWS SERVICE >> GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
George W. Bush's most recent quarter in office proved to be his worst to date, as far as his average approval rating is concerned. During his 25th quarter in office, Bush averaged 35% approval, one point below his previous low from last year. Bush has averaged below 40% approval in each of the last five quarters and below 50% for the last eight.

 
"See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda." —George W. Bush, Greece, N.Y., May 24, 2005 
(Listen to audio)
With deficits and debt swelling to epic levels, an economy showing massive cracks, and support for America crumbling abroad, the Bush administration finds itself  increasingly isolated.  With mid-term elections looming in November, the President is now widely seen as a political liability.  Republicans are actively distancing themselves from Bush.
"I speak plainly sometimes, but you've got to be mindful of the consequences of the words. So put that down.  I don't know if you'd call that a confession, a regret, something."  —George W. Bush, speaking to reporters, Washington, D.C.,  Jan. 14, 2005

"I can only speak to myself." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., April 28, 2005

"It's in our country's interests to find those who would do harm to us and get them out of harm's way." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., April 28, 2005

"I think tide turning see, as I remember
I was raised in the desert, but tides kind of it's easy to see a tide turn did I say those words?"
 —George W. Bush, asked if the tide was turning in Iraq, Washington, D.C., June 14, 2006
Still glad you voted Republican??  WE DESERVE BETTER….
George Mason University polled 415 presidential historians and found 80 per cent considered Bush's first term a failure. More than half considered it the worst presidency since the Great Depression.  More than a third called it the worst in 100 years For now, the pessimists outnumber the believers. And with every one of Bush's former allies that turns away from his leadership, the margin grows and the odds get longer.
                                Why Bush's Stupidity Is a Threat    
By Matthew Yglesias, The American Prospect. Posted August 2, 2006.
The president's ignorance, on display for the world to see, would be hilarious if it weren't so dangerous.

"We discussed a lot of issues. The Prime Minister has laid out a comprehensive plan. That's what leaders do. They see problems, they address problems, and they lay out a plan to solve the problems. The Prime Minister understands he's got challenges and he's identified priorities."  -- President George W. Bush, joint press availability with Nouri al-Maliki, Prime Minister of Iraq, July 25, 2006

The truly shocking thing about that bizarre statement is that it wasn't even in response to a question. Those were Bush's opening remarks. He did, one assumes, actually meet with Maliki. And they must have talked about something. But Bush doesn't seem to have been listening. Instead, he sounds like a college kid bullshitting in section because he didn't do the assigned reading. "We talked about security in Baghdad," Bush observed, delving into specifics. "No question the terrorists and extremists are brutal."

No question.  This sort of display would be embarrassing were it not so frightening.

Two days later, with Tony Blair standing at the adjacent podium, things went from bad to worse. One is used to hearing Bush say things that aren't true. He appears, however, from the look on his face and from the baffling nature of the untruths he uttered, to have lapsed from dishonesty into confusion. (Sheer boredom may have sent him tumbling to new depths of ignorance.) "There's a lot of suffering in the Palestinian territory," Bush mused, "because militant Hamas is trying to stop the advance of democracy."

It is? Has Bush forgotten that Hamas came to power as a result of elections that he insisted the Palestinian Authority hold? I happen to think the White House made the right call on the question of Palestinian elections -- even in retrospect, even knowing that Hamas won -- though many observers think his policy has merely backfired. Rather than defend the policy, however, Bush seems to have forgotten all about it. He returned to the theme later in the press conference: "One reason why the Palestinians still suffer is because there are militants who refuse to accept a Palestinian state based upon democratic principles."

That's absurd. The president appears to be totally unfamiliar with what is perhaps the single most-discussed topic in international politics. Nothing gets people disagreeing quite like the subject of how to apportion blame for the Palestinian peoples' considerable suffering. But absolutely nobody blames Arab militants opposed to democratic principles. Terrorists opposed to Israel's very existence? Sure. Israeli intransigence? Why not. But only someone paying no attention whatsoever would subscribe to Bush's theory.

.....There's something of a cliché going around about Bush talking loudly while failing to brandish a stick, but in truth he's mumbling indistinctly while Israeli bombs pummel Lebanon.

If Syria is the real problem here, then, not to put too fine a point on it, someone needs to take some action of some kind related to Syria. After all, why would Syria tell Hezbollah to stop doing this shit? What combination of threats and inducements is Syria supposed to offer Hezbollah to get it to stop? And why would Syria offer them anyway? What's Kofi Annan supposed to do about this? If Bush wants to make Syria do something, he needs to do something to make it happen. Either offer Syria something, or threaten Syria somehow, or some combination of the two. The same goes for Iran. In case Bush hasn't noticed, the regimes in Damascus and Tehran aren't run by kind people looking to help the world out of the goodness of their hearts. Nor has the administration's habit of vaguely suggesting we'd like to overthrow their governments rendered either nation more likely to help us or our Israeli friends out of a jam.

There's a temptation to call this combination of inflammatory tough-guy rhetoric and feckless inaction "the worst of both worlds," but in truth the war policy being advocated by the right's more fevered voices would actually be worse than Bush's embarrassing, illogical paralysis. The real problem is that the risk of a wider regional war involving the United States remains. And if that risk becomes a reality, our country will be led into it by a president who doesn't seem to grasp what's happening.

This article is available on The American Prospect. Copyright 2006, The American Prospect.

Matthew Yglesias is a staff writer at The American Prospect.

"We expect the states to show us whether or not we're achieving simple objectives — like literacy, literacy in math, the ability to read and write." —George W. Bush, on federal education requirements, Washington, D.C., April 28, 2005

George W. Bush’s presidency appears headed for colossal historical disgrace. Barring a cataclysmic event on the order of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, after which the public might rally around the White House once again, there seems to be little the administration can do to avoid being ranked on the lowest tier of U.S. presidents. And that may be the best-case scenario. Many historians are now wondering whether Bush, in fact, will be remembered as the very worst president in all of American history.

Isn’t it about time we faced facts? George W. Bush couldn’t lead a troop of Cub Scouts out of a wet paper sack. The only reason he is currently even in office is that he stole Florida’s electoral votes and with it the 2000 election. He then employed his wealthy, well-connected friends to “Swift Boat” John Kerry in 2004.  I don’t believe that history will be kind to Our Glorious Leader- nor should it be- if for no other reason than he deserves nothing less than ridicule. George W. Bush is and will be viewed as the most inept, mean-spirited, and clueless chief executive in our nation’s history…   After all, this is a man who shouldn’t be elected McClellan County Dog Catcher, and yet he’s spent the past five-plus years in the Oval Office.

http://www.opednews.com

It hardly seems necessary to tell the blogsphere that the occupation of Iraq is an unmitigated disaster. For most of us who consider ourselves progressives or independent thinkers, it’s become painfully obvious that whatever it was that America set out to do in Iraq, we have failed. Every day brings fresh evidence that Iraq is descending into chaos: insurgent attacks are at a record high, and there are continuing reports of death squads and US atrocities. The war in Iraq is over.

That the United States, once touted as the "world's greatest democracy," is now ruled by a presidential dictatorship is a fact beyond any serious dispute. 

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