Whom do you respect more as President - Bill Clinton or George W. Bush?

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SUMMARY

The forum discussion centers on the comparative respect for Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. Participants overwhelmingly express a lack of respect for Bush due to his controversial decisions, including the Iraq War and domestic surveillance programs, while some acknowledge Clinton's shortcomings but view him more favorably. Key points include criticisms of Bush's adherence to unpopular beliefs and the perception that he has caused significant damage to the country. The conversation highlights the complexities of presidential legacies and the differing opinions on leadership styles.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of U.S. presidential history and political context.
  • Familiarity with the implications of the Iraq War and its aftermath.
  • Knowledge of domestic surveillance policies, particularly the Patriot Act.
  • Awareness of political ideologies, including neo-conservatism.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the impact of the Iraq War on U.S. foreign policy.
  • Examine the implications of the Patriot Act on civil liberties.
  • Study the historical context of presidential decision-making in crises.
  • Explore the evolution of public perception of presidential legacies over time.
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for political analysts, historians, students of political science, and anyone interested in understanding the complexities of presidential leadership and public perception in American politics.

Whom do you respect more as President - Bill Clinton or George W. Bush?

  • Bill Clinton

    Votes: 53 71.6%
  • George W. Bush

    Votes: 7 9.5%
  • I respect neither

    Votes: 10 13.5%
  • I respect both equally

    Votes: 4 5.4%

  • Total voters
    74
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Whom do you respect more as President - Bill Clinton or George W. Bush?
 
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Bill Clinton by a few trillion light years. The worse he did was lie about having sex with an intern. Bush lied about evidence to start a war, ignored the will of the people, continues to push for war with Iran, refuses to admit to the crimes he has committed with his warrant less wire tapping program, refuses to close Guantanamo Bay, ignores the law, has uses signing statements to essentially make him untouchable, and is just down-right incompetent.
 
Clinton was a disappointment. Bush is not only terrifying on many levels, but the damage he has done is immeasurable. No contest; I think Bush likely belongs in prison for treason.
 
:rolleyes: I didn't know george bush was a member of Physics Forums
 
heh, I meant to put neither...I think both arent the greatest but I guess only time will tell. a lot of presidents weren't popular by any means but history generally paints a much different picture.
 
I respect Bush more, by which I mean I respect him very little.
 
Bill Clinton easilly, he's quite popular over here, he's also an alma marta of Oxford, so he at least has visited our country for more than 5 minutes. As a president I supose he was OK, Camp David failed because Israel refused to accept the pre 1967 borders, and this is probably what I'll remember from his political office, that and handing the reupublicans a budget positive rather than a defecit, how anyone can run up 1 trillion in such a short space of time is beyond me :smile:

I have no respect at all for Bush or his cronies. Neo-con idealogy is redundant.

I know it's gramatically correct but who uses whom in conversation? If I say who's your favourite president, or who do you respect more Bill Clinton or Bush, will the world come to an end, it's an unnecessary conjugation IMO, everyone knows what you mean anyway, very much a fan of lazyness in language, that's why I don't use punctuation after brackets, it's also redundant.
 
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I respect both equally. Clinton is a nice, progressive guy who just made some understandable mistakes. Bush is a nice, religious guy who just gets his priorities confused sometimes. :smile:
 
russ_watters said:
I respect Bush more, by which I mean I respect him very little.

Really, Bush more than Clinton? Why do you say that?
 
  • #10
Rach3 said:
Bush is a nice, religious guy who just gets his priorities confused sometimes. :smile:

:eek: Why do you want a religious fanatic running your country? From what I've seen he's not very nice either.
 
  • #12
trajan22 said:
heh, I meant to put neither...I think both arent the greatest but I guess only time will tell. a lot of presidents weren't popular by any means but history generally paints a much different picture.

It's becoming more and more apparent that history will not compare Bush to other Presidents; he will be compared to other despots instead, Hitler obviously being the despot of choice for such comparisons.

Some of the similarities that are already public knowledge do seem to be very striking. I'm speaking generalities here, like the fear-mongering for war, etc., that is unless anyone here at this board is actually convinced that Saddam was just about ready to conquer the world, without any access to any first tier weapons systems.
 
  • #13
Polar I hope you are not seriously toying with the idea that Bush is comparable to Hitler in any way. If so you must just be delirious. I also don't disagree with Sadam being deposed, the man was a tyrant. (whether or not he was working on wmd's)
 
  • #14
cyrusabdollahi said:
Really, Bush more than Clinton? Why do you say that?
Bush has beliefs and he sticks to them regardless of whether or not they are popular. Clinton does not.
 
  • #15
russ_watters said:
Bush has beliefs and he sticks to them regardless of whether or not they are popular.

You mean regardless of whether they work?
 
  • #16
russ_watters said:
Bush has beliefs and he sticks to them regardless of whether or not they are popular. Clinton does not.
What? You respect him more because he GOES AGAINST THE WISHES OF THE PEOPLE HE SERVES? Is this a Democracy or not? He is not King George, for the love of god!

His only job, his only PURPOSE is to listen to the people and do as they tell him! Him sticking to his beliefs which are unpopular is exactly the type of thing that Presidents should be impeached for.
 
  • #17
I also think Bush's beliefs kind of threaten the notion of the separation between church and state.
 
  • #18
trajan22 said:
I also don't disagree with Sadam being deposed, the man was a tyrant. (whether or not he was working on wmd's)

And the difference in Iraq under Bush's rule is what, exactly, oil?

Why not compare Bush's rule in Iraq to Sadam's rule in Iraq?

Yes, tyrants. That's exactly what I was talking about.
 
  • #19
What oil?! I haven't heard of us getting any free oil, if so please post some kind of evidence of this. And there is a marked difference between Sadams Iraq and now, the current violence is not caused by the government but by the lack of an effective governing body. And I am not even sure what you are talking about in your third statement.

In almost every government transition(where the current government is deposed) there has been an insurgency, the only real effective way to keep this from happening is to utterly vanquish your enemy. ie germany and japan after world war 2. Otherwise insurgencies are common.

And in reference to sticks in stones this country is not a democracy
it is a Constitution-based federal republic https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/us.html
and if any country was controlled entirely by the people it would'nt exist for very long.
 
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  • #20
russ_watters said:
Bush has beliefs and he sticks to them regardless of whether or not they are popular.

I think we should reflect on their beliefs before we blindly give people respect for this quality. The same could be said for any number of criminals, dictators, and schizophrenics.

Presidents are elected to serve the people, not themselves.
 
  • #21
i believe before the war is over 5 to 7 permanent military bases will be left in iraq, history is written by the WINNERS.

if you don't have food on your plate and someone else owns a store full is it wrong to take a loaf of bread or do you have to die to prove that you really needed the bread?

i want to be idealistic too but the hard reality of what I've seen won't let me.
 
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  • #22
I have less respect for the political system than any single President.

Both Presidents have done things that are great, good, bad and worse and nothing can change that. It is not like President George W. Bush waged the only war that the United States has taken part in during the later part of the 20th century and early 21th. I do not think that a simple change of President will change the overall goal of the US.
 
  • #23
russ_watters said:
Bush has beliefs and he sticks to them regardless of whether or not they are popular. Clinton does not.

You mean one person is a political animal who can acknowledge that he needs to be flexible in his approach; the other sticks to his guns, despite people telling him he's going to shoot himself in the foot, then when he does he seems surprised. I don't want to tell him I told you so about Iraq, but I did.:rolleyes:

Bush has a singular vision, the problem is no one else but his cronies share it, and it's plainly clear it has failed.
 
  • #24
Rach3 said:
You mean regardless of whether they work?

isn't bush conducting himself the same way in his second term as in his first? i think he is quite unpopular now but for the same reasons he was unpopular before, its just that his supporters have been convinced his actions are not good for the country after all
 
  • #25
cyrusabdollahi said:
Really, Bush more than Clinton? Why do you say that?

Cause he can't bring himself to admit how wrong he was 4yrs ago.
 
  • #26
So, have fun paying off the national debt.
 
  • #27
one ''did'' an intern
the other ''did'' the country
 
  • #28
Rach3 said:
You mean regardless of whether they work?
Sure, that too. But at least he believes they work (or are right, which isn't necessarily the same thing).

The question wasn't asking whether either one was a good president. I respect my boss much more than either of them, but he'd make a worse President than both combined.
SticksandStones said:
What? You respect him more because he GOES AGAINST THE WISHES OF THE PEOPLE HE SERVES? Is this a Democracy or not? He is not King George, for the love of god!
You soooooooooooo miss the point of our system of government. He was elected, wasn't he? If you actually think he stole both elections, fine, but if you accept that he was elected, that's all there is for the country's input (until the next election). The entire point of a representative system is that you elect someone who will make his/her own decisions.

And that was one big difference between Clinton and Bush - Clinton's every move was motivated by how it would affect the next election, not what he actually thought was best for the country. That is one terrible leader.
Kurdt said:
I also think Bush's beliefs kind of threaten the notion of the separation between church and state.
I agree, but that isn't what the OP asked.
SpaceTiger said:
I think we should reflect on their beliefs before we blindly give people respect for this quality. The same could be said for any number of criminals, dictators, and schizophrenics.

Presidents are elected to serve the people, not themselves.
See two sections above - I think Bush is more interested in what he thinks is best for the country than Clinton is/was (yeah - still is).

And again, I said very little. I respect him a little for his guts and conviction, but his lack of intelligence and religious fanaticism are why I respect him very little.
Schrödinger's Dog said:
You mean one person is a political animal who can acknowledge that he needs to be flexible in his approach...
If that's how you saw Clinton, you're entitled to your opinion, but that isn't how I saw him. Flexible becomes spineless if the only thing that motivates him is his next election. Don't you see that someone like that will purposely make bad decisions if he thinks people will like them? Don't you see that just because a decision is popular, that doesn't automatically make it right?
...the other sticks to his guns, despite people telling him he's going to shoot himself in the foot, then when he does he seems surprised...

Bush has a singular vision, the problem is no one else but his cronies share it, and it's plainly clear it has failed.
Well, that's a failing shared by both men and a very common problem among a great many people - especially politicians. Both, with a few notable exceptions, surrounded themselves with cronies, yes-men, personal favor appointees, etc., which then makes taking the advice of your advisors redundant, doesn't it?

It's been a while since I checked the score, but I'd be surprised if Clinton's admin doesn't still hold the record for resignations due to incompetence. Bush's worst (Brown) was far worse than any of Clinton's based on severity of the problem, but Clinton played the incompetence lottery with much higher-level appointees. For example, SecDef Les Aspen. It is an open question whether Somalia was Clinton's failure or Aspen's, but the point is that it happened at a very high level.
Integral said:
Cause he can't bring himself to admit how wrong he was 4yrs ago.
Me or Bush?

-----------------------------------------------------------
Seriously, guys - all of you - how is it possible to have any respect for someone who you think won't act how he/she thinks is in the best interest of the country if he/she thinks making the wrong decision will be best for his poll ratings? Isn't this the entire problem with Congress? Isn't this the primary flaw in our system of government?

Someone who purposely makes wrong decisions scares me much more than someone who makes wrong decisions but thinks he's making right decisions. At least with someone who is single-minded or dumb, you might be able to change his mind or educate him - how do you fix someone who doesn't even care about which choice is better?
 
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  • #29
russ_watters said:
But at least he believes they work (or are right, which isn't necessarily the same thing).
Yeah, I just quoted myself. I do that...

Do you guys see the difference between doing things that are right and doing things that will work and why sometimes you need to do things that are right even if they don't work?

An easy example is the Americans with Disabilities Act. A simple cost-benefit analysis shows that the ADA is a horrible, horrible waste of money. But we still have it. Why? What is the logical basis for it? There is a legal concept that the Constitution is not a suicide pact, so when you get into it, it actually becomes an extremely difficult question.

Now I think Bush probably believed Iraq would be easy (because he didn't think enough about the aftermath of the initial invasion), but it was much more important to him that it was something that needed to be done. And that's the situation we're in now too - it would certainly be easier and would work best (for us) if we just yanked all our troops out now. But would it be right?

These questions are basically rhetorical (I'm not going to get into an Iraq discussion) - I just want to make sure everyone is thinking about the concept that what works and what is right are not necessarily the same thing.
 
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  • #30
Kurdt said:
I also think Bush's beliefs kind of threaten the notion of the separation between church and state.

The first amendment doesn't separate church and state, that was implemented by a liberal supreme court.
 

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