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  • 28: He's rude and apparently up to no good

    George W Bush was in my dream last night. He was riding around on a motorcycle wearing a disguise depositing large sacks of I don't know what, while I was urgently trying to escape from a sprawling amalgam of office complex and amusement park. It's disconcertingly invasive to see his face appear unbidden in my mind, the jerk.

    → 10:36 AM, Jul 13
  • 29: Bush is bad for the planet

    On Bush's watch, America's environment deteriorated in many critical areas — including the quality of air in cities and the quality of water that people drink — and gained in very few.

    Bush also has ordered dozens of sweeping changes to existing environmental policies, usually to benefit business interests. He reversed the government's course on global warming, power plant emissions, roadless areas of national forests, environmental law enforcement and agricultural run-off.

    Environment Worsened Under Bush in Many Key Areas, Data Show

    → 8:47 AM, Oct 14
  • 30: "He only likes Americans"

    I don't like George Bush because he only likes Americans.

    The Village Voice: NY Mirror: Shelter: God Bless América by Toni Schlesinger

    → 8:45 AM, Oct 13
  • 31: Bush terribly misled the public

    The only physical evidence the administration offered for an Iraqi nuclear program were the 60,000 aluminum tubes that Baghdad set out to buy in early 2001; some of them were seized in Jordan. Even though Iraq had a history of using the same tubes to make small rockets, the president and his closest advisers told the American people that the overwhelming consensus of government experts was that these new tubes were to be used to make nuclear bomb fuel. Now we know there was no such consensus. Mr. Bush's closest advisers say they didn't know that until after they had made the case for war. But in fact, they had plenty of evidence that the claim was baseless; it was a long-discounted theory that had to be resurrected from the intelligence community's wastebasket when the administration needed justification for invading Iraq.

    The New York Times: The Nuclear Bomb That Wasn't

    → 9:26 AM, Oct 5
  • 32: the DHS promotes terror for political gain

    There are two basic ways to terrorize people. The first is to do something spectacularly horrible, like flying airplanes into skyscrapers and killing thousands of people. The second is to keep people living in fear. Decades ago, that was one of the IRA's major aims. Inadvertently, the Department of Homeland Security is achieving the same thing.

    European countries that have been dealing with terrorism for decades, like the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Italy, and Spain, don't have cute color-coded terror alert systems. Even Israel, which has seen more terrorism -- and more suicide bombers -- than anyone else, doesn't issue vague warnings about every possible terrorist threat.

    These countries understand that security doesn't come from a scared populace, and that true counter-terrorism occurs behind the scenes and away from public eye. For earthquakes, the long term security solutions include things like building codes. For terrorism, they include intelligence, investigation, and emergency response preparedness.

    The DHS's incessant warnings against any and every possible method of terrorist attack has nothing to do with security, and everything to do with politics. In 2002, Republican strategist Karl Rove instructed Republican legislators to make terrorism the mainstay of their campaign. Study after study has shown that Americans worried about terrorism are more likely to vote Republican. Strength in the face of the terrorist threat is the basis of Bush's reelection campaign.

    Bruce Schneier: How Long Can the Country Stay Scared?

    → 12:20 PM, Oct 3
  • 33: we are less safe

    There is a widespread belief that President Bush is making us safe. The opposite is true. President Bush failed to finish off bin Laden when he was cornered in Afghanistan because he was gearing up to attack Iraq. And the invasion of Iraq bred more people willing to risk their lives against Americans than we are able to kill - generating the vicious circle I am talking about.

    President Bush likes to insist that the terrorists hate us for what we are - a freedom loving people - not what we do. Well, he is wrong on that. He also claims that the torture scenes at Abu Graib prison were the work of a few bad apples. He is wrong on that too. They were part of a system of dealing with detainees put in place by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and our troops in Iraq are paying the price.

    How could President Bush convince people that he is good for our security, better than John Kerry? By building on the fears generated by the collapse of the twin towers and fostering a sense of danger. At a time of peril, people rally around the flag and President Bush has exploited this. His campaign is based on the assumption that people do not really care about the truth and they will believe practically anything if it is repeated often enough, particularly by a President at a time of war.

    George Soros: Why We Must Not Re-elect President Bush

    → 10:06 PM, Oct 2
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