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Thursday, January 08, 2009
Ross Mackenzie :: Townhall.com Columnist
Bush in Sum: The Most Consequential President Since Reagan
by Ross Mackenzie
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The left and the media and the ever-expanding blogosphere, and of course the Democrats, never permitted George Bush to recover from the circumstances of his 2000 election.

They deemed him unacceptable, accidental, illegitimate, likely a conniver in the national outcome -- and so took to lobbing their hateful commentaries one after another without end.

On issue after issue, they rejected his appeals for bipartisanship, especially in his second term. In his 2004 victory speech, Bush said:

"Today, I want to speak to every person who voted for my opponent. To make this nation stronger and better, I will need your support, and I will work to earn it....We have one country, one Constitution, and one future that binds us. And when we come together and work together, there is no limit to the greatness of America."

Yet from Social Security and judges to the surge and terror and continuation of the tax cuts, malign leftists dug in and sought to foil him on every front -- to deny him any victory, any success, anywhere.

"Malign" is too harsh? Consider:

Television, blogospheric, and newspaper commentaries slammed President Bush 24/7. Nicholson Baker wrote "Checkpoint," whose protagonists weigh whether to assassinate him. Twelve thousand San Franciscans signed a petition to rename an Oceanside sewage plant for him.

Hollywood went apoplectic, with Oliver Stone -- director of the detestable October-released flick "W" -- declaring: "We are a poorer and less secure nation for having elected (Bush) as our president. . . . America finds itself fighting unnecessary and costly wars and engaging in dangerous and counterproductive efforts to fight extremism. Even more significant and troubling, I believe, is his legacy of immorality."

Despite this vicious stream, George Bush persevered and prevailed. 9/11 changed him. Mistakes abounded, but no subsequent domestic jihadist strike ensued. As he noted at the Army War College last month, this staggering security success was "not a matter of luck." Against islamofascism pre-emption (described by the all-knowing as naive, idealistic and wrong) was -- as it remains -- the right policy for spreading liberty and democracy, particularly in a Middle East that boasts so little of either.

The enterprise in Iraq, following the surge, now approaches victory -- the great Osama himself having declared Iraq "the central front" in his war against the United States. Barack Obama repeatedly pronounced Iraq a distraction and -- from beginning to end -- a mistake. Yet a resolute Bush was true to his values, to his nation, and to mankind's ultimate cause. Last month he told The Wall Street Journal's Kimberly Strassel that liberty can be extended beyond Iraq as long as America continues to believe "in the universality of freedom."

His early tax cuts helped the country out of the recession Bill Clinton left him. The budget exploded, as did deficits -- largely a result of expanded defense spending for the war on terror. (Said Bush in the Strassel interview: "I refused to compromise on the military" -- for which thank heaven, given that the first obligation of every administration is the people's protection.)

Bush was correct about Social Security, despite a spineless, risk-averse Congress unwilling to get its game together. While vastly more nominations would have been better, he managed against obstructionist Senate Democrats to gain approval of 61 federal appellate judges (compare Clinton's 65), now constituting majorities on 10 of the 13 appellate courts. And he gave us the estimable Supreme Court Justices Roberts and Alito.

Yes, spending blew out of control -- albeit with congressional concurrence. Problems plagued the war's conduct in Iraq. Post-Katrina New Orleans was mishandled. Still, Bush can boast hefty tax cuts, major assistance for HIV-infected areas of Africa, significant gains in health care and in education accountability, a multi-ethnic Cabinet (including the first two African-American secretaries of state), and massive improvements from surveillance to strategic policy.

We invest our presidents with greatly too many expectations. It happened with George Bush and his predecessors, as it is happening with Barack Obama -- the latest secular savior. Few mortals can deliver on more than a small percentage of their promises and hopes.

Yet Bush carried two added burdens: (1) difficulty in articulating his goals and (2) relentless hammering by leftists hostile to his values and his success. Then, perceiving him harmful to the Republican brand, many conservatives abandoned him as well. Still and all, his favorable ratings never descended to the ratings for Congress -- particularly the Congress led by Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid.

George Bush a perfect president? Hardly. The worst president of the past half-century, as too many with ideological axes to grind would have us believe? Compare, oh, Carter and Clinton. A more prudent categorization: The most consequential president since Reagan.

To those cognoscenti who argue such an appraisal is preposterous, remind them of this: The most recent conventional wisdom -- the consensus of the best minds and analysts -- was (remember?) that because the fundamentals were so sound the stock market could not crash, the economy could not possibly collapse.

Former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson -- a man of laconic, perceptive humor -- noted that "those who travel the high road of humility in Washington are not bothered by heavy traffic." George Bush concludes his presidency with abundant accomplishments, not least a safer nation -- and still, despite a tsunami of hateful coverage, commendably humble. When the tumult and the shouting die, an appreciative people would escort him down to robust and lingering applause.

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About The Author

Ross Mackenzie lives with his wife and Labrador retriever in the woods west of Richmond, Virginia. They have two grown sons, both Naval officers.

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Re: Pres. Bush & Katrina

LC (Md) at 5:52 pm writes: "Those who post here that think that Bush is responsible for every ill that this country has endured, to INCLUDE Katrina..."

Fact is, it was Pres. Bush himself who took responsibility for the slow, deadly federal non-response after Katrina struck in 2005.

Refer to CNN website story dated Sept. 13, 2005 which bore the headline, quoting Pres. Bush:

"BUSH: 'I TAKE RESPONSIBILITY' FOR FEDERAL FAILURES AFTER KATRINA."

That's the same Pres. Bush who promised on Aug. 28, 2005 (the day before Katrina hit):

"WE WILL DO EVERYTHING IN OUR POWER TO HELP THE PEOPLE IN THE COMMUNITIES AFFECTED BY THIS STORM."










Amen!
Amen Mr. Mackenzie.You said it very well!

Those who post here that think that Bush is responsible for every ill that this country has endured, to INCLUDE Katrina, have not paid much attention to the vile antics of the Dems. these last eight years.

Barry got his prize. If you thought that the past eight years were bad....you ain't seen nothin yet! Fasten your seatbelts. It's going to be a bumpy ride!

Pres, Bush's Legacy, in His Own Words

Pres. Bush's legacy, I believe, is locked into his own words, such as:

"I HAVE POLITICAL CAPITAL AND I INTEND TO SPEND IT." -- a defiant message Pres. Bush conveyed to the nation after gaining a second term. Rather than pursue a bipartisan course and pull the nation together, Mr. Bush callously chose to keep it divided.

"AFTER 9/11 WE MUST TAKE THREATS SERIOUSLY" -- Quoted from a speech Pres. Bush delivered on Aug. 16, 2004, in Traverse City, Mich., implying that Mr. Bush and his team PRIOR to 9/11 failed to take seriously the threats of imminent terrorist attack.

"WE WILL DO EVERYTHING IN OUR POWER TO HELP THE PEOPLE IN THE COMMUNITIES AFFECTED BY THIS STORM." -- Statement by Pres. Bush recorded in White House press release dated Aug. 28, 2005, the day before Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, and several days before federal aid finally arrived.

'I WANT JUSTICE ... AND THERE'S AN OLD POSTER OUT WEST, I RECALL THAT SAID, 'WANTED, DEAD OR ALIVE." Pres. Bush, rquoted by CNN on Sept. 17, 2001. The CNN report also stated, "Osama bin Laden is the 'prime suspect' in last Tuesday's terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, and the United States wants to capture him."

"I AM TRULY NOT THAT CONCERNED ABOUT HIM (BIN LADEN)." ... Pres. Bush, White House Press Conference, March 13, 2002.

"WE WILL PLAN CAREFULLY, WE WILL ACT WITH THE FULL POWER OF THE UNITED STATES MILITARY." Key promises made by Pres. Bush in his Oct. 7, 2002 speech selling war in Iraq to the American people. The fact Pres. Bush, Commander-in-Chief of the world's most prolific military, after four years of deadly warfare, had to resort to a "surge" to stave off "consequences of failure," underscores to what degree Mr. Bush failed to deliver on either of his 10/7/02 pledges.

MacKenzie about Bush...
In the photograph of all the presidents alive now, Bush is standing up front and that's where history will have him too!! Watch!! Isn't "free press" just amazing and the people who read and trust it as well. If only most could realize that not much is what they think it to be. Oh, distortions by the "free press" live on...Obama, Obama when, if ever, will it be your turn?

Burial
When Dubya dies, we are going to bury him face down. That way all you bozos that dislike him so intensely can stop by and pucker up on his posterior.

Me? I'm better off because he was there instead of the alternatives. Don't like that opinion? Use your dislikes in lieu of Preparation H.

When it came to being Commander-in-Chief, he earned and kept the confidence of the Legions.
Few have done as well. Obama has some big shoes to fill. Hope he manages to grow into them.




david
you say this

The previous administration inherited a recovering economy, saw it halt until the Congress became Republican in 1994 and rode the wave until the tech bubble burst in 2000. That isn't a Republican narrative, it is fact, a concept that you don't normally find on your usual posts, as best I can tell.

your posts are nothing but republican narrative myths.

following your logic then, bush must be blamed for the worst recession since the great depression right?


bush's most enduring legacy
will be the destruction of our nation by allowing unchecked illegal immigration for 8 years. as chief executive, all he had to do was order all the enforcement agencies to fine any and all employers of illegals to the maximum allowed, and illegal immigration would have ended. no need for the phony fence. but he refused, because the short term enrichment of his friends, who were employing illegals, was more important to him than protecting the nation from foreign invasion. thank you, jorge bush, for destroying our nation. even in his second term, when he no longer had to run for anything, he continued to betray the nation by encouraging illegal immigration. i too would be happy to escort him to prison for betraying our nation by refusing to do his duty.

Bush...
"George Bush concludes his presidency with abundant accomplishments, not least a safer nation...When the tumult and the shouting die, an appreciative people would escort him down to robust and lingering applause."

Man, you're nuts. Bush is a disgrace. His "accomplishments" were at our expense. He's left this country weaker through irresponsible spending and provoked militarism in various places, particularly Russia. He's an authoritarian lout and a moron. 9-11 happened while he was president, and the country, and the world, is by no means safer. With a weaker world economy, it is entirely possible there will be another world war. All it will take is more government intervention, as we've gotten from Bush, to lead us there. Obama fits the bill. I'd like to escort Bush to prison, where he belongs.

David
I see the logic! Our President inherited so many things, why not say he inherited a recession too? In reality, you can't hold a president accountable for the state of the economy, but I'll be damned if Republicans don't to do just that try when the economy is doing well and they've got one of their own in office. Clinton inherited a recession too, and when he left we had a budget surplus Bush could probably use right about now. But Bush squandered it on tax cuts, and, OBVIOUSLY, that was not a long-term solution.

If we're talking lasting legacy, I think that most Americans will look back and say that Bush spent a lot of time and energy on projects that did nothing to improve the quality of life for Americans, while problems at home were looming.

Max
never once visited huff or Kos. Not my style. Daily Beast, yes!
I've read your posts and would not include you in with Anne or Eric.

Unless you can believe something like this from Anne in Pa

"There is NO DOUBT that Drs. Rossiter
and Bradley are absolutely right when they say that the liberal mind is one that failed to develop beyond childhood."

Do you believe that?



Maximilian
How am I NOT open minded? You are right. I am not open minded toward stupidity like Anne--when she says Obama is going to have the US Army take her away (if only they would), yes I am not too open minded on that idea. When she says American citizens should be stripped of their citizenship because they are Muslims, I am not open minded on that idea.

Not a liberal and you have just as many nuts on Kos and Huff and DU as you do here...maybe more.

A conservative leaning post there would probably get plenty of nasty replies and you'd be banned and your post erased. Here liberal and balanced posts get the same venom, but TH is more open minded and those posters aren't banned.

David
"Saddam violated the UN resolutions that ended the Gulf War."

Great, so now your Conservative thought has made us the 'errand boy' for the UN.

subpilot
"I look to those who do not take credit but instead accept responsibility. This is an honest man and at least can be trusted."

Are you joking?

It's Republican thought that has brought on this financial meltdown. Spending more than you have will surely lead to disaster.

It was Republicans who spend more than the Democrats. They increased pork barrel spending from 3,000 to 14,000 projects a year, NOT PAID FOR.

They have engaged in a five and half year social engineering project in the Middle East that costs $120 billion a year and may well last another 100 years, NOT PAID FOR.

They have added another layer of entitlement spending that costs $50 billion a year called Medicare Prescription, NOT PAID FOR.

Mandated $4 billion a year in ethanol subsidies, as well as drastically increased cotton, sugar, soybean, corn, wheat handouts, NOT PAID FOR.

Doubled the size of the Department of Education, NOT PAID FOR.

How would you pay for all this spending? It took 210 years for the first $5 trillion and debt and only 7 years of Republican control to double it. It's nigh time for some fiscal Republicanism.

WRH Bill
I would tend to disagree with you on your assessment of the administration, though I agree that he was a decent and honorable president (more so than the previous one, but that's another topic).

His failures came about when he sought compromise with those who meant him ill, vis-a-vis, No Child Left Behind and campaign finance reform. The invasion of Iraq proved to be a necessary step that should have been completed in 1992, or continued when Saddam violated the UN resolutions that ended the Gulf War. The victory may only be considered "Pyrrhic" if his successor pulls out too soon. As for the civil liberties that may have been eroded, methinks you overstep when you consider the records of FDR, Lincoln and others and their treatment of those liberties in times of crisis. Mr. Bush faced greater dangers than the previous two administrations, and dealt with them as honorably as he could. I would predict that historians will likely place him alongside Wilson and Truman at worst, and far above Clinton in any case.

twomany
The current president inherited an economy that was in recession and brought about a nearly six-year recovery that only ended in the final quarter of this year when the home loan policies and oversight by the current Democrat Congress.

The previous administration inherited a recovering economy, saw it halt until the Congress became Republican in 1994 and rode the wave until the tech bubble burst in 2000. That isn't a Republican narrative, it is fact, a concept that you don't normally find on your usual posts, as best I can tell.

He meant well, but.....
It's no doubt true that G. W. Bush's failures have been exaggerated and that he was never going to get a fair shake from liberals and leftists, especially after the disputed 2000 election. Nonetheless, as one who voted for GWB but now regrets it, I think the best even symathetic historians will be able to say about him is "He meant well, but...." Bush defenders like to say how fundamentally decent he is. I think they are probably right; I don't believe Bush is an evil monster who enjoys seeing soldiers blown up, as some liberals believe. But decency is not enough to be a good President. You also need good judgment, competence, and the right set of political principles. Mr. Bush didn't have enough of any of these, in my present opinion. He did some good things but also caused a lot of damage... by his ill-advised invasion of Iraq which will at best produce only a very Pyrrhic "victory" for America; by his erosion of Constitutional civil liberties and limits on Presidential power in the name of the "war on terror"; and by his big-government "compassionate conservatism" which achieved the worst of both worlds; it had many of the same disastrous results as big-government liberalism, while enabling real liberals to blame all our problems on "free-market, small-government conservatism".

Purple fingers and not much else...
We all know the fairy tale... In Republican fantasy, victory in Iraq was to create a pro-west democratic state which would in turn serve as an example and transform the entire region. The fall of Hussein was to be the end of powerful Hamas sympathizers, and support for Israel would swell in the region.

In reality, the Islamic Da'wa Party of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki does not even support Israel... Last week they called for all Muslim countries to cut diplomatic relations with them! So much for our shining example.

As for the Reagan comparison, I am reminded of another Republican narrative, that Reagan rescued the economy that Carter destroyed. Would that mean that Bush destroyed the economy that Clinton rescued?

wrightsrong52
You and Akagi "open minded"? Now that's funny. You are much more talented at humor than your daily show and SNL comrades. Why don't you teach them how to be original for once.

Seriously, I've got a wager for you. If you think we Conservatives are so thick-skulled, then prove it. Pick an article on the Huffington post or the Daily Kos. I'll respond to it courteously but with a strong Conservative assertion. We'll see which side is more obtuse in dealing with opponents.

What say you?

Christianlib
How do you account for all those purple fingers on the women of Iraq?

Also, the US had some unstable times in it's history too (the Wild West, Gold Rush etc..). So, Huntington's writings are inconclusive.

Seadog
In your opinion, he's fine. In mine, not so much. I guess he has the respect of some of the troops. There are a few thousand who won't get to weigh in on that, tho!

Akagi
I can agree with you since you're quite open minded. But when you deal with cognitively challenged cons like Eric and Anne you need to keep it simple. NO IT'S NOT!!! YES IT IS!!
UN UH! AH HUH!

Buffoons
You buffoons don't get it. This is exactly what the democrats wanted.
They wanted the country to fall flat on its face.
The democrats didn't give a damn what it cost this country or you and me as long as they regained the presidency, the US senate and the house.
Wellllll...... they have it all now and lets just see how well they get along amongst themselves.

A top-notch assessment of Bush's legacy
Bush has been an outstanding president overall. Those who couldn't resist the media bandwagon of condemnation include the socialist, terrorist-sympathizer left and the "gas all the Mexicans" right. Both groups have no integrity, intelligence, or courage.

Our great president will be remembered as one who stood fast while the country idled. I'm just glad my city will probably not be a terrorist target. On that fateful day, everyone, including the anti-McCain right, who allowed this empty-headed empty-suit, Obama to take office will realize his worth as he focuses his efforts towards global warming rather than counter terrorism. Enjoy.

I'll always remember Bush as president during my life's greatest years. Let's hope America will persevere over the next four.

David
You want to debate me in history, feel free to start or civics and economics as far as that goes. I am not an expert in all areas of history, but let's venture into areas I do know something about. Where would you like to start-the US Civil War (badly named as it is), East Asia? The Pacific War?

Please tell us vis-a-vis Bush where we are so wrong. Did he or did he not push through the de facto take over of the American educational system? Sign a law he himself declared unconstitutional, for which he should have been impeached? Medicare prescription blackhole? The list is nearly endless.

Subpilot
I agree with your assessment of the presidency, but I am afraid that you won't find much support among some of the less-thoughtful posters.

rum.dog, Akagi, sdf and particularly ex-pat...thank you for proving the abject failure of the public education system in imparting knowledge on such topics as history, economics, and civics. For ex-pat to describe the column as spinning demonstrates the utter lack of intellectual honesty that is typical of the Soros-bought shills and assorted band of bedlamites whose only concern is their own prejudices.

A Realist
A Realist knows that any President rarely gets the credit he deserves and always gets the blame for all things even remotely not his fault. It is the nature of the job that blame rather than credit is placed at the feet of a President. In life this is also the case. Credit rarely goes to those who deserve it, instead it goes to the loudest and swiftest of tongues. Blame on the other hand comes naturally with responsibility.

With those precets in mind I look to those who do not take credit but instead accept responsibility. This is an honest man and at least can be trusted.

Now I have mentioned no names on purpose. I want you to apply what I have said to all people who are in a position of control. See who tries to take credit and see if they are different from those who accept responsibility. I think you will find this an interesting excercise.

Bush consequential?

Indeed.

In fact,I would say, looking at Afghanistan, New Orleans, Veterans Hospital, ruptures to the consitution, Iraq, and the economy that the consequences have been pretty disastrous.

Writ'r-MOM
As others have said, any president would have done the same thing--was FDR a conservative? How many more Pearl Harbors were there (there was another--two Kawanishi flying boats--due to poor visibility the attacks failed)?

And fiscally, Obama can hardly be worse.


Anne
That's okay Anne. The US Army is going to take you off to the re-education camp in two weeks or so anyway. You told us that. So no need to waste my time on a dead girl. There is still time though. Get your passport in order (you have one even?) and a visa and escape while you still have time. You can still post from exile even if you'll have to lie about your location since TH for some reason doesn't have options to pick a non-US location.

And Ladebak:

"I've read most of the oppositions to the president's good legacy and I don't know why many of the bloggers tie up the blog with their twisted reasoning..."

Good legacy? What---5 trillion more in debt? NCLB? McCain-Feingold? The Iraq fiasco. Katrina? Paulson? Rummy? Now calling that a good legacy--now that is twisted logic.


joycey
although i agree with your heartfelt emotion about freedom, you must remember that different cultures see freedom differently than we do.

quick example:

karen hughes was tasked by bush to put on a conference for muslim women in the mid-east to unify them and explain how wonderful democracy can be for women.

she ran into a brick wall.

now these were the most educated and westernized women that could be found.

their response was

1. if iraq is an example of democracy, we don't want it.

2. they told her their religious values were more important than secular values like freedom and democracy.

they actually booed her when she tried to argue about it.

sam hunnington, in a book called "clash of civilizations" put it this way:

Huntington noticed a troubling trend. Sometimes, progress American style—more political participation or faster economic growth—actually created more problems than it solved. If a country had more people who were economically, politically and socially active and yet lacked effective political institutions, such as political parties, civic organizations or credible courts, the result was greater instability. That has been the story of parts of the Third World over the past three decades. Think of Pakistan, whose population has gone from 68 million in 1975 to 165 million today, while its government has proved ill equipped to tackle the basic tasks of education, security and social welfare.

Living through change, people have often stuck with their oldest and most durable source of security: religion. That was the most important message of "The Clash of Civilizations." While others were celebrating the fall of communism and the rise of globalization, he saw that with ideology disappearing as a source of human identity, religion was returning to the fore.



Leftist Invaders
I've read most of the oppositions to the president's good legacy and I don't know why many of the bloggers tie up the blog with their twisted reasoning. The hatred they bear must has become a disease that they cannot shake. I think Obama's presidency will reveal how well we had it under Bush.

There is NO DOUBT that Drs. Rossiter

and Bradley are absolutely right when they say that the liberal mind is one that failed to develop beyond childhood.

Without exception, each of the liberal posters (so far) have taken information out of context, and twisted and convoluted the other rest, or made assumptions that they have no logical or realistic way to make!

How truly childish, not to mention ignorant!

MacKenzie is spot on. The libs were just insane with rage that Pres. Bush won, and have since been on an 8yr. tirade of inanity.

However, the interesting thing is, heaven forbid a Conservative or Republican criticize Obama on policies, etc., the libs go crazy calling us all manner of names, "racist" being not the least of it.



Oh and akagi, forget it! Don't even bother responding to me. I'm still done with you and your insufferable arrogant, pompous, pretentious, insolent, boorish, uncultured mentality!!!!

Kept us "safe"
Look,

There was no real possibility of a significant terrorist attack after 9-11. The increased surveillance and security measures enacted in America kept us "safe", and virtually anyone who had become president would have done the same thing. Preventing any further attacks was child's play.

However, on a broader strategic scale, America is much, much less safe as a result of the Bush administration. He abandoned any effort to resolve the middle East crisis, presided over a debilitating financial debacle of historic proportions, launched an ill advised invasion of a secular Islamic nation (which he botched), ignored opportunities to reach rapprochement with Iran, and led millions and millions of our allies to determine that the US was a greater threat to peace than Islamic terrorists.

All that took some doing. Akagi is correct. He HAS been consequential, but the consequences have been terrible.




Safe?
You really cannot say Bush kept the U.S. safe when he allowed the largest terrorist attack ever on U.S. soil to occur even though he was briefed with intelligence reports which were titled, "Bin Laden determined to strike in US" and "Bin Laden threats are real" from the NSA.
Republicans have been awful on national securtiy since Reagan.

Akagi
Not only that, but American taxpayers have been funding Iraqi Sunni insurgents...at least 90,000 of them at $300 per month(those in Anbar who now have turned on Al Qaida).

One can argue it is better to pay them to fight Al Qaida, rather than expose our own troops to peril.

But Maliki is not at all happy.

His Shia government views these Sunnis as potential enemies that will try to topple the government once we leave.

I don't think democracy as we envision it is in the works in Iraq.

Iraq purposely has a very weak central govt, and great autonomy exists within the provinces, most of whom are controlled either by Shias(in the south), or Kurds(in the north).

The Kurds are the most disposed to democracy, but they want their own state, to be independent from Iraq.

The constitution would never have ever been ratified unless most power rested in the provinces.

In fact, the Kurds refuse to acknowledge the Baghdad government within their provinces.


Grateful to our President
I fear that the American people will only come to appreciate Bush's strong stance against terrorism when we have another 9-11-type attack.

Who, in 2001, believed that we would be safe for this long? Seven plus years without another attack!

Amazing that our citizens do not hold Bush in higher regard for this.
I am forever grateful for what he has achieved.

Erwin
"I am sure that there are a lot of things that went on behind the scenes that we were not made aware of for security purposes which Bush had to make tough decisions on."

How tough was it to know that you shouldn't take over the US educational system, how long should it have took to know Rummy was imcompetent? And then accept his resignation AFTER the 2006 midterms when it wouldn't do any good. Why not fire him in May when it would have? How long before you knew Paulson was? To kick the ball to the SCOTUS thinking they'd declare a law--you declared unconstitutional--unconstitutional (and they didn't). Ad on and on. These acts had nothing to so with security. Terrible, terrible president. US Grant and James Buchanan terrible.

Thanks for the nice article..
Thank you Ross for the wonderful column. I give Bush a lot of credit for keeping this country safe. I am sure that there are a lot of things that went on behind the scenes that we were not made aware of for security purposes which Bush had to make tough decisions on. That's why he won't get the appreciation he deserves on this issue.

Joycey
"You underestimate the power of and passion for freedom that beats in the heart of every man."

In many parts of Iraq there is less freedom now that under Saddam. The US has allowed Shia groups which the US call CLCs (concerned local citizens) and have created in many ways created an Iranian-sytle theocracy. Freedoms for women have been greatly reduced since Saddam's ouster in areas where there are Shia majorities. The US has made this Faustian bargain because it has reduced violence, but don't mistake what is going on in Iraq as democracy--elections aren't democracy.

Seadog
"Gore would have apologized to those who bombed the World Trade Center. Kerry would have held an anti-war meeting and figured out how to blame the bombing on the United States."

Sure they would. FDR was a liberal, did he apologize to the Japanese? They would have done exactly what Bush did in Afghanistan. It is one thing to blow up a bomb and kill 6 people (and the organization didn't have a state harboring them either)quite another to kill 3000 and a country letting them use it as a base of operations. They would not have gone into Iraq though--and most Americans see that as the correct path. I can't hardly see how either would have spent as much as Bush did. I am not sure if Kerry or Gore would have been better, but they could hardly have done much worse.

christianlib
You underestimate the power of and passion for freedom that beats in the heart of every man. These Iraqi people are capable of great things. But they have a choice. Wisdom over hatred.

Joycey
Funny you mention socialist since Bush has been the biggest socialist since LBJ.

Liberal: Tax and Spend

Bush: Borrow and Spend


wrightsrong52
Not sure if Gore or Kerry would have been better, but they could have hardly been worse. Too bad the choices in 2000 and 2004 were between terrible and terrible too. Like the choice between slowly being hanged or feed to a wood chipper feet first.

Bush
"The Most Consequential President Since Reagan."

Yes. Doubled the national debt, launched a war without knowing what the standard of victory was, and no exit strategy, too few troops to accomplish the mission, Katrina (need I say more about that?), allowed for the Federal takeover of the US educational system, the banks, the auto companies, violated his oath of office by signing a law HE KNEW was unconstitutional (McCain-Feingold), tried to sign a bad immigration reform law, worked to suspend the Writ of Habeas corpus, was a key figure in destroying the US economy, appointed the worst Secretary of the Treasury in the history of the country, got in bed with authoritarian leaders while scolding those from full-fledged democracies, and allowed more government control, government spending and socialism since the days of LBJ.

Yeah he is the most consequential--but those consequencies have been mostly bad. He will go down as one of the worst (not the worst) presidents ever (why do Texans always make such terrible presidents, is it something in the water?). If there is an anti-Mt. Rushmore made of say slag to honor the worst presidents--Bush is sure to be one of those on it. Only 11 more days to go and no Obama will hardly be worse. Once you hit bottom only place you can go is sideways or up.

Americans need to be honorable.
The Socialist/Communist enemies to our wondrous Constitution do not believe in freedom for anyone. Americans make sure you are on the side of goodness and honor before you vote. Socialism,tolerance of the normalization of sexual immorality and abortion are never honorable.

Thank You, Mr. President
Thanks for the excellent and balanced perspective on our president and his legacy.

I also wrote a letter of appreciation to him awhile back: http://dontdrinkthekingswine.com/2008/11/10/dear-mr-presid ent/

Thanks Mr Bush
He ended the terrible practice of partial-birth abortion, he mitigated the progress of perverted lifestyles, he attacked terrorism without fear, he withstood the hatred and malignity of the viscious left w/o dignifying it with a response. He's treated the president-elect & Pelosi with great respect in spite of their constant vilification. He was a man of class and I thank him for his service.

I think
everyone, sans libs, have covered W's wins and losses well enough, however having voted twice for him my major beef with him is his insistence on 'amnesty' for the illegal invaders, his refusal to protect the American residents along our border and having made two
Border Agents political prisoners who are punished worse than the Gitmo terrorists. They are in solitary for their entire sentences for
"their own protection". Sentenced by a kangaroo court and a sleazy U.S. Attny and his
minions on the word of a drug smuggling RAT. He
has my respect for his WOT policies but he will go a long way in redeeming himself in a lot of
American patriots eyes if he pardons those men.
So far, nothing. The author doesn't mention the
political prisoners but they are a major cause for his loss of approval by me and others...I won't forget his 'vigilante' crack.











the last day of the iraq war part three
If Iraq can defend its own borders, keep the oil flowing and not provide a refuge for international terrorists, that's what now counts as an acceptable outcome. Sometimes the newfound pragmatism verges on the heartless—as when U.S. officials refer to "tolerable" levels of violence. Translation: bombings and assassinations, as long as hostilities don't spiral out of control. Talking privately about "Iraqi good enough," one senior American adviser (he couldn't have spoken so bluntly if identified) gave me this definition: "Another way of saying 'we're out of here'."

Iraqis know "good enough" from the inside out. They have an old saying: "A man who has been through death is happy just to have a fever." Iraqi life is all about workarounds and adjustments and adapting to inevitabilities. Water pressure in the city mains is so weak that people need household pumps to get anything from their taps. One high-end model is nicknamed the Thief because it leaves nothing for the neighbors' smaller devices. There's no end in sight for the rough times. American commanders have encouraged at least one major U.S. company to put that fact to intelligent use. The electrical-equipment giant Cummins Inc. has plans to create a distribution and service center not far from Mahmudiyah, in the town of Iskandariyah. The company intends to train Iraqis to repair the mobile generators that U.S. troops and local neighborhoods rely on in place of the country's decrepit power grid. I recall an Iraqi who told me early in the war that we would have been smarter to come with thousands of generators. After all, he said, we managed to bring all those tanks. But in those days the Coalition's only thought was to get big industrial power plants up and running. The grandiose projects fell way behind schedule and are still plagued with problems.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/177717/page/2

wrightsrong52, Eric
On what do you base your statement?. Gore would have apologized to those who bombed the World Trade Center. Kerry would have held an anti-war meeting and figured out how to blame the bombing on the United States.

I fault President bush for a few things:
Not standing up to the democrats -- he should have went to the hill and smacked a few in the teeth, like Reid who called him a liar. Most Texans would have taken direct and instant action to such a slur and old Harry's teeth would have caused a dental surgeon to mule haul it for a few hours!
He seemed always to side with illegal aliens -- no idea why he did this.
He did not take time to explain his reasonings to the American people -- his tour of duty would have been much better had he done this.
He let congress go hog wild in spending. And it was both democrats and republicans who spent -- congress had to vote on the bills to tet them to Bush.
That said, Bush was a pretty good president who was highly thought of by the troops.

the last day of the iraq war part two
In Mahmudiyah the drawdown began almost a year ago. As hard as the Americans tried to fix the place, it's still nothing to brag about. The economy, although improving, remains crippled. Public services are practically nonexistent. Courts and government offices are open, but schools lack working toilets, and teachers are so bad that parents scrape money together for private tutors. Sewage floods some side streets, and telephone landlines fail as often as not. The big government hospital is chronically short of medical supplies; late last month, a man scoured the town's drugstores for surgical thread because the hospital had none for his wife, who was undergoing a Caesarean delivery. "The military is, in some cases, the only government people see," says Maj. John Baker, who advised Iraqi troops in rural areas near Mahmudiyah until late 2008. By normal standards the town is a mess—but it's less dangerous than it was, and at this point that's about the best anyone can expect.

The situation is summed up in a phrase you hear among American combat troops and trainers: "Iraqi good enough." The term expresses their resignation—realism, they'd call it—about the limits of what America can accomplish in Iraq. They say it when an Iraqi Army unit has no choice but to buy fuel for its Humvees on the private market because Iraq's military-supply system is so corrupt and inefficient. Or when the persistent shortage of capable leaders forces Iraqi battalions to function with only half the number of officers they require. Or when Iraqi soldiers fall apart in a senior officer's absence because that's the way it goes in a top-down society. The concept has spread to American Embassy staffers, who invoke it when speaking of the near-impossible task of reforming the decrepit old welfare-state economy. "Good enough" may not live up to Americans' hopes for Iraq, but at this point it describes the place we're likely to leave behind in 2011

the last day of the iraq war part one
The Last Day of the Iraq War
It's too late to fix Iraq before the pullout date. All U.S. troops can do now is keep trying to slow the killing and get out. They call it 'Iraqi good enough.'

Until now it was impossible to predict with confidence what the end of the war would look like in Iraq. But a clear picture could be emerging here in Mahmudiyah. The outcome is hardly what the occupation's supporters wanted, but it's too late for anyone to do much about that, under the deadlines set by the new U.S.-Iraqi security agreement.



Unfairly Maligned & Stoutly American
With GWB's retirement, will we continue to be safe?

Historically, libs have weakened our defenses in the name of unachievable, albeit lofty, humanist goals. And here we go again, this time with a super lib in charge about whom we know precious little at all and whose core values are, at best, enigmatic.

At every turn, GWB, a bedrock American President, was nastily, needlessly, recklessly and rudely obstructed by self-serving me-first politicians like Pelosi and Reid. Only a man of principle and strength of character could have so generously withstood their ruthless and utterly self-serving onslaughts.

When W tried to reform SS, these poor excuses for leaders obstructed--not out of a sense of duty or what was in the best interest of the country, but out of plain 'ole meanness. They were angrily antagonistic every inch of the way, and Bush somehow stomached it. You can't get more courageous and principled than that.

How could he have accomplished anything in the face of such obstinate contrarians as partners. Their toxicity often bordered on treason. They exhibited no shame, no sense of deceny during this period.

Thus, my primary beef has been with liberal elites and not with GWB. My only beef with W was his willingness to "go along" their assinine and ruinous profligacy. In truth, GWB was more liberal than conservative, but despite that affliction he remained an honorable and trustworthy man who genuinely cared about his countrymen. And I will sorely miss that.

When the historians piece it all together, I'm sure the libs during this period will be fairly disparaged. And GWB will likely be forgiven his liberal accommodations when weighed against his having successfully waged war against our enemies.

That's my quick take on GWB's legacy. GWB 1, Libs 0.

Thomas, et alia
Spoken like true, ignorant ultra-liberals, who know nothing of this country's true history, or current trends toward total socialism.

Nonetheless, keep up your ranting! It only serves to demonstrate the truth of what Ross wrote.

Needed saying
Wonderful, Ross! This has all needed saying for a long time, and should be said, written, etc. many, many times again--notwithstanding the likely diatribes both your article and my comments will receive from the very ultra-liberals of whom you speak.

Bush: A "Conservative" Disaster
(1) Got us mired down in two unnecessary wars.
(2) Spent like a drunken sailor.
(3) Favored the invasion of the U.S. through the relentless push for amnesties.
(4) Could not even manage to pick up a phone and ask some military base to fly in water, rations and portable restroom facilities to the survivors of a hurricane, some of them falling over and dying in a sports stadium, all for days on end in front of live television cameras.

The fact that a non-conservative incompetent president is attacked by the left does not make him a good president, much less a conservative one. Oh, yes, President Bush was “consequential” all right. We will be living with those consequences for decades.

Mmmhhm
"It seems the ones whose reputations suffered the most by it are the liberal and media elites who tried to execute the hit."

We liberals are suffering so badly with the "most liberal Senator in the Senate" as our President Elect and hefty majority control of government. We really fudged that one eh?

Consequential Indeed
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
Then: 4.2% (Bureau of Labor Statistics, January 2001)
Now: 6.7% (Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 2008)
-
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
Then: 115.7 (Conference Board, January 2001)
Now: 38.0, which is an all-time low (Conference Board, December 2008)
-
U.S. BUDGET
Then: +236.2 billion (2000, Congressional Budget Office)
Now: -$1.2 trillion (projected figure for 2009, Congressional Budget Office)

Thank You for Supporting Bush
You're right. He did accomplish a lot. He kept us safe and he kept his sense of humor. It's a disgusting tragedy that the cultural left tried for eight years to destroy his reputation and the media constantly undermined his efforts to keep America safe. It seems the ones whose reputations suffered the most by it are the liberal and media elites who tried to execute the hit.

headline is correct.
Criticizing the policies of the president is not really akin to irrational hatred. Although MacKenzie claims that the democrats could never get over the 2000 election, not surprisingly his examples all come from after Bush's idiotic invasion of Iraq. His claims that the Democrats refused to be bipartisan all come after Bush used that looming invasion as a cudgel to portray democrats (even those who made the mistake of supporting him on the war) as unpatriotic.

The headline is a good one. Bush was consequential. We will be trying to clean up his messes for decades. If Bush was not consequential you would not see the new president with a free hand to pass a trillion dollar stimulus plan.

He just wasn't consequential in a positive direction.

Congratulations!
Congratulations are in order to Mr. MacKenzie as he embarks quite impressively into his new career as a revisionist historian and science fiction author.

FACT CHECK: The Bush Administration will forever been seen as the single worst ever, securing its place on the dung heap of history.

BUSH, OBAMA AND HISTORY
When the history of the new administration is written it will be seen that two Barack Obamas couldn't equal in courage, accomplishments and character one very flawed George W. Bush.

BUSH FAILED TO GET OBL, BUT......
We didn't get bin Ladin during Bush's watch, but we did get a murderer many times more menacing and dangerous: Saddam Hussein. Compared to Hussein who commanded one of the world's largest armies, was turning Iraq into a mass production factory for bloodthirsty terrorist killers and who had proven operational ties with Al Qaida and its affiliates (see the Harmony Documents), bin Ladin was a pipsqueak who got very lucky on 9/11.

Bush worked to earn the support
of those who did not vote for him, but never gave a flip about those who did vote for him.

Some A+s and some F-s
The compassionate conservative gave the store away finacially -education to Ted Kennedy and destroyed the heart of america and vilated his oath of office by willingly ignoring/changing by default the laws dealing with the sovereignity and border security of the USA.
Give him credit for the WOT which few would dare to fight, and his pro- life stance and a passing grade on fighting Kyoto, but otherwise a week energy policy.

In terms of articulating and communicating (which after watching the fantasy Obama campaign work so well) totally failed the conservative revolution and handed the country over to the left -probably never to return.
The sub prime mess caused primarily by the Dem's vote buying tactics (CRA) he literally fought with marshmallows. His second term could have been a lot better.
He gets a C+ overall and an A+ for his great immitation of Saint Stephen taking those barbs and arrows from the haters.

I disagree
You wrote: Still, Bush can boast hefty tax cuts, major assistance for HIV-infected areas of Africa, significant gains in health care and in education accountability, a multi-ethnic Cabinet (including the first two African-American secretaries of state), and massive improvements from surveillance to strategic policy.
-----------------------
Hefty tax cuts were good and I agree with that but......
A massive waste of billions of dollars sent to Africa in support of abstinence programs and condoms. No Republican should have vote for wasting our tax dollars like this.

Healthcare gains were essentially a closer step to nationalized health care and an unneeded increase and burden on tax payers and more government bloat.

Education Accountability - you must mean the failed no child left behind program that centralizes the school system under the Federal government even more and takes away the rights of states and localities to run school systems. Another step on the socialist trail.

Massive improvements to surveillance - yeah the wire taps on American Citizens and cops trumping up charges on people by using the sad "Terroristic threats" charges in the attack on Liberty that was the deceitful Patriot Act. We had to sacrifice Freedom for safety which is never the right thing to do.

You picked all these things that made him a poor leader. Sad that Republicans have become so much like Democrats and against Freedom and Liberty.

Vote Libertarian and take back this country for the people.

The Bush legacy
The proof of the pudding is in its eating. Bush has left the country in ruins. Fiscally "responsible" Republicans have left us with a trillion dollar deficit. Morally “responsible” Republicans are rightly being lectured on morality by an Oliver Stone. It’s a sad state of affairs. Bush will probably go down in history as the turning point in our country's fortunes. This is not going to be our century unless we put everything Republican aside, roll up our sleeves, and start dealing with the real world, not some faith-based illusion.

OBAMA, BUSH AND HISTORY
When the history of the new adminstration is written it will be seen that two Barack Obama's couldn't equal one very flawed Georeg W. Bush

No Flipflopper He.
Flip!

"The most important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden. It is our number one priority and we will not rest until we find him." - G.W. Bush, 9/13/01.

"I want justice...There's an old poster out West, as I recall, that said, 'Wanted: Dead or Alive,'" - G.W. Bush, 9/17/01, UPI

Six months later…..

Flop!

"I don't know where bin Laden is. I have no idea. It's not that important. It's not our priority." - G.W. Bush, 3/13/02

"I am truly not that concerned about him."- G.W. Bush, responding to a question about bin Laden's whereabouts, 3/13/02 (The New American, 4/8/02).

I guess invading a nation that had nothing to do with 9/11 was the next best thing.

Well, if Mackenzie can have an opinion, all of us can.

I believe Bush will be viewed as a poor president because of the massive debt he bequeathed to our nation.

National debt when Bush was elected in 2000 was roughly 5-6 trillion dollars. Now it is a staggering 11-12 trillion dollars.

It doubled size during his tenure.

I think history will judge him kindly on his grants to alleviate aids in Africa.

And perhaps with NCLB(but there is much about that which I find disturbing).

There is little doubt but that the removal of Saddam and establishment of Shia government in Iraq has benefited Iran.

Despite his spinmasters' frantic efforts, I think he will be remembered as a well intentioned man that got in way over his head.

Bush was a good president.
I think he has earned better treatment then the country he has worked so hard for the last eight years is giving him now as he leaves. The first terrorist attack on this nation under George Bush's successor will galvinize all of us in the reality of how much George Bush' Presidency did for our country. Thank you Mr. and Mrs. Bush. We obviously have not shown you enough respect or appreciation.

Eric
it would have been significantly better with Gore or Kerry.
I'm with realcon!

I didnt agree with everything Bush did..
But I can only imagine how dire the circumstances of the U.S. would have been if Gore or Kerry had won

"W" and the fateful journey ...
I’ll rue his departure from my life to be sure. Along with Laura Bush, G.W. Bush has been a model public servant. His good faith overtures to the opposition came in his first term. As he had done as Texas Governor, G. W. Bush tried to welcome the opposition into his White House to hear them out and include them in. Has everyone chosen to ignore those first months after 9/11, when the leadership of both parties would meet for breakfast in the White House?

G.W. Bush stood for things. He wasn’t a reed in the silted soil. His bedrock honesty and clarity of purpose have made me feel better in frightening times and I thank George Bush for it.

That this President did not find a lyric voice for his epic time in the job has been a great loss to him and us all. Yet, have we not all met persons whose strength was not their ability to speak with aplomb but the ability to plow the field one furrow at a time with perseverance and early rise to task. He has not been Homer. He has been Ulysses.

In the law, something is relevant when it has some tendency to prove or disprove a fact of consequence. George W. Bush is more than a consequential President. He has been the relevant one for our lives, safety and future.
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