- 8,194
- 2,530
So in retrospect, what do you think best describes him?
Isn't that redundant?How about: "Very smooth, otherwise typical politician"?
phatmonky said:but would LOVE to put him into an ambassador position.
Clinton didn't just lie to save his own hide, he would lie just to lie. At no time did he ever string ten sentences together before I began to wonder if he hadn't thrown in a whopper.
We can win the war quickly, and the Iraqis will welcome us. We can establish democracy in Iraq. Mission accomplished.JohnDubYa said:I just don't see George W. making up wild stories for no apparent reason.
We can win the war quickly...
, and the Iraqis will welcome us.
We can establish democracy in Iraq.
Mission accomplished.
Wasn't George W. the one warning us that the war could take a long time, maybe even years?
I don't recall him ever saying this in such a fashion.[Bush's statement that the Iraqis will welcome American troops].
Who says we can't? [establish democracy in Iraq]
Context? (What mission is he talking about?)[referring to the mission accomplished banner displayed on the US carrier Bush landed on during his flightsuit debacle]
Yes.Gza said:nope.
Were you by chance just posing another statement without backing?were you by chance, hiding under a rock last year?
Never wanted us there in the first place? In the middle of the height of the insurgency, before the interim government took place, people were split 50/50 on whether they wanted us there. So your statement is invalid. Secondly, the same poll says Iraqis are looking forward to their future and positive about it. They also voted that they want a democracy.how do you start a democracy in a country that never wanted us there in the first place? I shouldn't even localize it to country, that entire damn region hates our presence there (as evidenced by the numerous insurgent kidnappings of civilians.)
what mission do you think he could possibly be talking about? If you want context, how's this: we're in the midst of a WAR. The president has just claimed MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. And unless he was talking about completing his mission of fitting into that rediculous flight suit, I'm pretty sure the mission is the war.
Look who is talking. Did you bother to look at the date on your citation? Try again, and see if you can't come up with a better citation, one that was made before the war. No one is denying that Bush changed his tune after it was too late, once the mission had already been accomplished in his mind.phatmonky said:Yes.
http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/07/01/sprj.nitop.bush/
Were you by chance just posing another statement without backing?
You own statement refutes your claim.Never wanted us there in the first place? In the middle of the height of the insurgency, before the interim government took place, people were split 50/50 on whether they wanted us there. So your statement is invalid.
This would be a wonderful argument if it did not completely avoid the entire point under discussion, and instead present a completely irrelevant statement about nothing."Rediculous" flight suit?? Are you not aware that said flight suit is a safety feature when riding in a military jet, and you'd be a moron for turning it down?
phatmonky said:I did loook at the date, and it's irrelevant. Your statement was that Bush DID NOT say it would be a long term effort..
Please provide a citation that supports your claim that I stated that Bush did not say this. I think that you are quite confused.phatmonky said:speaking of changing tunes, good job on changing your original generalized statement.
I did loook at the date, and it's irrelevant. Your statement was that Bush DID NOT say it would be a long term effort.
Please provide a citation that supports your claim that I made this absolute statement. I think that you are quite confused.No, it doesn't. I never made the statement that they WANTED us there. You made the absolute statement that they didn't, and it was wrong.
It's not an argument, just pointing out the ignorance in your own irrelevant statements.
I think that you are confused. You certainly seem to be confused about anything that I have posted. If you are equally confused about everything else you have ever said, then I and others who read your postings should take them all with a grain of salt. Perhaps you confuse me with someone else here. You are showing your ignorance, by making absurd accusations against me when I never made the statements that you are challenging. Does that make you ignorant and irrelevant in your mind?phatmonky said:Once again prometheus, you have ignored your original statements with no backing. Try to bring some links next time.
Why do you people keep doing this?? Post a link!Gokul43201 said:clearly, before the war, Bush was suggesting that it will be quick.
Accepted. It could happen to any of us.phatmonky said:Prometheus. I looked at the damn page 10 times, and thought you were the one who I originally replied to, it was Gza DOH!
My humble apologies![]()
phatmonky said:Why do you people keep doing this?? Post a link!
Perhaps, George W Bush himself never directly stated that the war will be quick (I'm not sure...this was over a year ago...and Bush himself said very little), but surely that was the impression given to the public by all the White House folks - from Cheney, to Rummy to Fleischer. And surely the President is ultimately responsible for what the people hear from the White House.
And the common public opinion was that the war would be quick, with minimal loss of life.
JohnDubYa said:So who stated that the war in Iraq would be easy? And this time, how about some (get this) actual quotes?
And only the President could have instilled such an opinion in the public? What about past experience fighting in the Persian Gulf? You don't think the public remembered that war and how relatively easy it was?
You don't think the Left played up Iraq's weaknesses in order to diminish our successes?
You are pretending to have a short memory. How believable.JohnDubYa said:Okay, so you couldnt' find any Bush lies, so now you turn your attention to his staff. And even that is suspect.
Again, an irrelevant quote made in October 2003. Nobody is disputing that once the war had begun and Bush and friends realized what a mistake they had made in estimation of timing that they changed their estimation. Why do you continue to make this case using evidence from so late in the war?So who stated that the war in Iraq would be easy? And this time, how about some (get this) actual quotes?
Here is an article about Rumsfeld. Point out any point in the story where he says the war would be easy.
Your analogy is flawed, in my opinion. A person believing that he will win the marathon is not a good analogy to a president making large numbers of "optimistic" statements that are mistaken yet meet their purpose of leading us to war.By the way, being overly optimistic is hardly a lie. A person can think he is going to win a marathon, but that doesn't make him a liar if he doesn't.
Bush made numerous claims that led to war. In the most polite view, he "erred". Your personal optimism based on past experience in the Gulf war should not be used as an excuse for his mistaken portrayal of the war, its purpose, and its cost.And only the President could have instilled such an opinion in the public? What about past experience fighting in the Persian Gulf? You don't think the public remembered that war and how relatively easy it was? You don't think the Left played up Iraq's weaknesses in order to diminish our successes?
kat said:I'm the public, I paid very close attention to what was being said before the war...reading direct transcripts etc. I never got the idea that the Iraq war was going to be "quick". I'd like to see any direct statements that would support such an impression. Please share the wealth.
I'm the public, I paid very close attention to what was being said before the war...reading direct transcripts etc. I never got the idea that the Iraq war was going to be "quick". I'd like to see any direct statements that would support such an impression. Please share the wealth.
The war “could last six days, six weeks. I doubt six months.” – Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld [2/7/03]
“We will, in fact, be greeted as liberators. . . . I think it will go relatively quickly... (in) weeks rather than months.” – Vice President Cheney [3/16/03]
Your analogy is flawed, in my opinion. A person believing that he will win the marathon is not a good analogy to a president making large numbers of "optimistic" statements that are mistaken yet meet their purpose of leading us to war.
JohnDubYa said:"the fierce fighting currently underway will demand further courage and further sacrifice." (is that a lie?)
“You can't distinguish between al-Qaida and Saddam."
Taken out of context. He was talking in terms of danger to the world, not that they were actively cooperating.
As for Dick Cheney, he is entitled to his opinion, which he admitted throughout was based on mostly conjecture.
In my opinion, Bush never really has lied - he just says what Rove, Cheney and Rummy want him to tell.
The art of lying has nearly been perfected by this administration. Perhaps no one in the administration ever said this literally, but strangely, half the people believe that Saddam was responsible for 9/11. Wonder where they got that idea from ?
I agree. But the real gem is the statement that follows : "And so it's a comparison that is -- I can't make because I can't distinguish between the two, because they're both equally as bad, and equally as evil, and equally as destructive." <don't be distracted by the grammar>
Damn, didn't know the Veep could go about proffering opinions 'based on mostly conjecture' to the masses.
And he's admitted this ? When ?
So here are the quotes from George W. Bush offered so far:
"A campaign on the harsh terrain of a nation as large as California could be longer and more difficult than some predict." This was hardly a reversal due to misfortune, as he spoke it on the day of the invasion.
"the fierce fighting currently underway will demand further courage and further sacrifice." (is that a lie?)
"military conflict could be difficult. An Iraqi regime faced with its own demise may attempt cruel and desperate measures." (is that a lie?)
So where are the Bush lies? If anything, his statements have proven prophetic.
I find it funny how you select out some fragmented quips where Bush is actually making sense, and draw the broad conclusion that he is not a liar from these few of statements.
Bush lied to everyone to get the war in motion. Who, besides you, cares that on the first day of the war he started backtracking.JohnDubYa said:So here are the quotes from George W. Bush offered so far:
"A campaign on the harsh terrain of a nation as large as California could be longer and more difficult than some predict." This was hardly a reversal due to misfortune, as he spoke it on the day of the invasion.
"the fierce fighting currently underway will demand further courage and further sacrifice." (is that a lie?)
"military conflict could be difficult. An Iraqi regime faced with its own demise may attempt cruel and desperate measures." (is that a lie?)
So where are the Bush lies? If anything, his statements have proven prophetic.
Let the world take note. I would never have believed it if I hadn't seen it. You are using the "it depends on the meaning of is" excuse. By the way, if he had no way of knowing, he should not have gone for the photo op anyway.“Major combat operations in Iraq have ended.”
In terms of invasions, he was right. It depends on how you define "major." And even if major combat operations didn't end, if he had no way of knowing that fact it hardly constitutes a lie.
Wow. You understand him far better than the rest of us. It seems that only you understood his words in 20/20 hindsight.“You can't distinguish between al-Qaida and Saddam."
Taken out of context. He was talking in terms of danger to the world, not that they were actively cooperating.
Wrong. Cheny has maintained his lies throughout. The press has said that he is wrong, and Bush has said that he is wrong. He refuses to listen to anybody, but to use his position as VP to mislead people. This is far beyond the right that he has to his opinion. You and I have the right to our opinion. He has a responsbility to the nation. Cheny is a major liar.As for Dick Cheney, he is entitled to his opinion, which he admitted throughout was based on mostly conjecture. That doesn't make his statements lies.
Great. We need to iterate your bogus definition of a lie. If a person is in a position of power, and he is an idiot, and he lies to the nation, we do not need to disprove that he thought it was true because he is an idiot in order for it to be a lie. Cheny's optimism. You call it optimism? I think that we should call you an optimist for this take on Cheny.It seems that we need to iterate the definition of a lie. If a person makes a statement that he thinks it is true, it is not a lie. To show that Bush lied, you need to show that he knew better at the time he made the statement. Even Cheney's optimism is hardly a lie. In fact, he pointed out more than once that he was just expressing his own outlook.
Wrong again. Bush provided the world, the entire world, with bogus information. Based on his bogus information, we went to war, and the world changed. You would forgive him because he is an idiot, and he just made an honest mistake in jumping to conclusions without evaluating the information, and never bothering to reconsider his 2 second decisions.When the war began, no one knew for sure what would happen. Each government official gave their own opinions on how long they thought it was going to last. Some were more optimistic than others. That hardly constitutes a lie.
You can take a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. If you don't open your eyes, you can't expect to see.Show me the large numbers of "optimistic" statements that the president made concerning this issue. Once and for all, where are they? Or was this just a "lie"?
Is that a skill that you learned on your own, or did you learn from Bush how to misread other people's words and then react to your misunderstanding?JohnDubYa said:So in other words, Bush' realistic appraisals of the upcoming war were in fact the opinions of Rove and Cheney? So they were all in agreement that the war was going to take a long time to begin with?
Smile when you say "we" pardner. I see that you still have not noticed that several people are not agreeing with you.You mean that since we have now established that Bush did not lie about the war prognosis, we are going to play this silly game with Saddam's involvement in 9/11?
Now I have to wonder if you are even paying attention.This is the ever-shifting target. You offer a hare-brained idea that Bush stated overly optimistic quotes about the war, but when challenged and unable to offer any evidence, you switch to an entirely new subject.
As if it were relevant even if true.And what about the quote? I see nothing there. From what I have seen of Saddam's cruelty, he is every bit as evil as Osama. In my opinion, many times more so.
So now you are backtracking.When reporters ask how long a war is going to take, how can you possibly answer without resorting to conjecture?
Yes. You now finally admit that Cheny is full of it. By your euphemism "conjecture", he lied to the world. I am quite surprised that you find what you call conjecture to be perfectly acceptable.On CBS's "Face the Nation" on March 16, Cheney said the fight would be "weeks rather than months. There's always the possibility of complications that you can't anticipate, but I have great confidence in our troops." Cheney also predicted the fight would "go relatively quickly, but we can't count on that."
"I think things have gotten so bad inside Iraq, from the standpoint of the Iraqi people, my belief is we will, in fact, be greeted as liberators."
"significant elements of the Republican Guard . . . are likely to step aside."
All are examples of conjecture.
Now, this is getting real silly. If you are unable to parse the conjecture in a sentence such as "I think I am getting a Honda for my birthday," then there is no point in continuing this discussion.
Good point. We can't both blame Bush for being too stupid to make a decision on his own and accuse him of lying when others tell him what he thinks.Gokul43201 said:In my opinion, Bush never really has lied - he just says what Rove, Cheney and Rummy want him to tell.
Can't blame him for that !
Translatiion: You didn't read anything, and lo, you found nothing.JohnDubYa said:I pulled the quips from sources offered in this forum by those calling him a liar. I found nothing else in any of the links provided.
Translatiion: You closed your eyes, and lo, you found nothing.Furthermore, despite my repeated requests, no one has offered much of anything else.
Now that the evidence is clear and overwhelming to many of us, this post of yours is about a year late.I am not drawing the conclusion that he is not a liar. I am giving him the benefit of the doubt until evidence suggests otherwise. Are we to assume he is a liar, with the burden placed on his supporters to prove he isn't? That is what you are suggesting.
Where are your eyes? Just open your eyes.WHERE ARE THE LIES? Just show the lies.
Where are your eyes? Just open your eyes.
JohnDubYa said:So in other words, Bush' realistic appraisals of the upcoming war were in fact the opinions of Rove and Cheney? So they were all in agreement that the war was going to take a long time to begin with?
Damn I wish you would sort out your logic before posting.
You offer a hare-brained idea that Bush stated overly optimistic quotes about the war, but when challenged and unable to offer any evidence, you switch to an entirely new subject.
The supposed "lies" that I have seen so far either comprise (1) facts that have yet to be proven or disproven, (2) statements that were proven false but (possibly) thought to be true at the time. ...Now, maybe I have missed some stories that don't fall within the two exceptions. If so, let's hear them.
Grammar? His statement was verbal.
Where are the quotes? Show us the quotes.
I am sorry if I post so much that you have to skip some of my postings. You should go back and read a little. Harping on where are the lies will not excuse you from reading all of the postings of lies.JohnDubYa said:I am. I am opening them right now to this thread, and I don't see any lies posted by your, nor anyone else.
Cut the crap and post the lies. Let's see the quotes.
I am sorry if I post so much that you have to skip some of my postings. You should go back and read a little. Harping on where are the lies will not excuse you from reading all of the postings of lies.
I never said that Bush says what R, C and R say or opine - just what they have him say.
To explain why he has turned a $236 billion budget surplus into a projected $307 billion deficit in 2004, the president claimed that he had said during the campaign that he would allow the federal budget to go into deficit in times of war, recession or national emergency but never imagined he would have a "trifecta." Mr. Bush never made such a campaign statement.
Bush highlighted a new private-sector "blue chip" economic forecast projecting that the economy would grow in the fourth quarter of this year by 3.3 percent compared to the same period last year. Bush emphasized a portion of the report suggesting that such a level of growth depended on swift passage of his proposed tax cuts. By contrast, more than 400 economists, including 10 Nobel laureates, said last week that Bush's tax plan wouldn't help the ailing economy immediately. Instead, they predicted that it would create deeper deficits that could drive up long-term interests rates and jeopardize the economy down the road.
"I don't know what he was citing," said Randell E. Moore, editor of the monthly Blue Chip Economic Forecast, a newsletter that surveys 53 of the nation's top economists each month. "I was a little upset," said Moore, who said he complained to the White House. 'It sounded like the Blue Chip Economic Forecast had endorsed the president's plan. That's simply not the case.'"
"[Castro] welcomes sex tourism," Bush told a room of law enforcement officials in Florida. "Here's how he bragged about the industry," Bush said. "This is his quote: 'Cuba has the cleanest and most educated prostitutes in the world.'"
As it turns out, Bush had lifted that quotation not from an actual Castro speech but rather from a 2001 essay written by then Dartmouth University undergraduate Charles Trumbull. In the essay, Trumbull did appear to quote a Castro speech about prostitution. However, the student doctored the quotation.
On Oct. 11, 2000, then-Texas Gov. Bush said: "I think what we need to do is convince people who live in the lands they live into build the nations. Maybe I'm missing something here. I mean, we're going to have kind of a nation-building corps from America? Absolutely not." But on 02/27/03 White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said : "During the campaign, the president did not express, as you put it, disdain for nation-building."
Now please stop complaining about people not posting quotes, or citing resources, because they're all in front of your face. Like Prometheus said, you really need to open your eyes and read them.
JohnDubYa said:The man has been in power for four years, and all you have are (1) Bush recalling that he made a statement four years previously that he apparently never made, (2) a disagreement between him and economists, (3) an honest mistake that could have happened to any of us, and (4) a statement made not by him, but his Press Secretary. The first one looks promising for you, but the rest are really lame. Four years? And that's what you have? We seemingly got more than that on a daily basis from Clinton.
What a pathetic line. You have asked me this irrelevant question some 20 times. I posted a response. Rather than address my response, you post this pathetic dribble in response, as an aside to your pathetic dribble in repsonse to someone else.JohnDubYa said:As for you Prometheus, I am still waiting to hear your opinions on JFK. C'mon, you must have some opinions on the man, considering he ordered the Agent Orange attacks on the Vietnamese. Let's hear it.