George W. Bush, Winner
By Lisa Fabrizio on 1.14.09 @ 6:07AM
Friends, Americans, conservatives; lend me your ears. I come to praise George W. Bush, not to bury him; I'll leave that to our famously unbiased media. Now that the eight years of his presidency have come to an end, there will surely be endless shovels of dirt dumped on the legacy of our 43rd president, some even heaved by our brethren on the right; but not here. I come instead not to speak specifically of his accomplishments or his errors, but of the man himself.
One can be reasonably sure that his exit, like his controversial entrance, will be marked by a graciousness usually absent in political circles. We can also be pretty certain that his departure will not feature the ransacking of the Oval Office and Air Force One, or the sophomoric removal of the "O's" from White House keyboards. If, as has been the case for his entire presidency, he is true to his word, he will be as magnanimous to his successor as he was to his predecessor; notwithstanding the disrespect he received at the hands of both.
In his last press conference on Monday he said that when he leaves Washington he'll be "getting off the stage," because there should only be "one person in the klieg lights at a time." Would that all former presidents had made and kept this same pledge; especially those of the Democratic stripe. Love him or hate him, you can't help but think that despite a rambunctious youth, this man was raised right.
Although some of his actions upset conservatives, as he departs the Beltway for his beloved Texas ranch, we can and should admire the aspects of his character that not only saw the nation through the dark days after 9/11, but restored a measure of dignity to what had been an Office marred Impeachment and irresponsibility.
The foremost of his virtues and the one that evokes the most hatred from those on the left is that he remains true to the courage of his convictions; not an easy task in these days of moral relativism. When he stated that there is good and evil in the world, and that Americans have always given their lives in defense of the good, he reopened a page of Americanism not seen since the days of Ronald Reagan.
Of course, some saw this dogged determination as hubris and decried his unwillingness to "admit mistakes." But this only pointed to his gift of good judgment. George W. Bush is one of the few powerful men in the world to recognize that homicidal brutes like those in Al Qaeda must be met not only with force of arms, but a steadfast resolve equal to or greater than their own. All the spinning in the world by his enemies cannot change the fact that this is what has kept our country safe from attack these last seven years.
And yes, he truly is a compassionate conservative. Unlike politicians who can turn on the tears on cue, George W. Bush could truly get misty at a T-Ball game on the White House lawn or at a press conference with "Snowflake" babies; those born from embryos that would otherwise have been destroyed or used for research. And who can forget one of the most emotional of all the scenes immediately following the carnage of 9/11, when President Bush returned to his seat after delivering his beautiful remarks in the National Cathedral, and embraced his visibly-shaken father.
This is a man who endured countless savage attacks on himself and those of his administration, and spoke not one bitter word in return. A man who, in stark contrast to his predecessor, cared not a whit about public opinion when it came to our national defense, trusting instead that future historians will do what their current counterparts refuse; to treat him fairly.
So this is the message to our liberal friends in the media: you didn't beat this president, he beat you. You and your allies in Washington failed time and again to take this good man down. Indeed, he was elected and re-elected despite your historic efforts to the contrary.
And this is his legacy: that this man did precisely what the President of the United States is sworn to do. He and the troops who fought so bravely under him for eight long years have defended this still-great country of ours against one of the most pernicious enemies mankind has ever seen, and equally important, he kept alive the idea that America is and can still be, a force for good in the world.
Mark Davis
1881 Cerruti Blue
Vivienne Westwood
I think a lot of what happened during his term was not his fault nor anything he could have done about it. I believe he tried to stay true to himself and made decisions based on his beliefs and on what information he was given. I may not have agreed on everything but I feel he tried. That earns my respect.
1Mine too, Schalanne.
2Nice article.
Which I thought was a classy thing to do. So BO should be pretty smooth sailing in that respect.
3I heard that after he first moved into the White House and all the "W" keys had been torn off the keyboards and the WH was basically trashed he set up a committee to make sure there was a smooth transition for whoever the next president was. So nothing got ruined just because the interns and staff didn't like the next president elect.
Is this a joke? I watched his speech, and he doesn't even seem to have a clue what he did wrong. Either incredible ego, or incredible stupidity.
Good riddence.
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4"Thank God, for my naturally clingy nature" - Olive
"getting off the stage," because there should only be "one person in the klieg lights at a time." If only Carter would do this.
He will eventually write about all of this and we will learn a few things, due to security, that we were not allowed to. I never envied his position. Starting off as the leader of this country and it being attacked so viciously changes everything you planned to do or could do.
5***************
"Enjoy life, it's ungrateful not to." - Ronald Reagan
Thanks for posting this G-pa. It's nice to read some positive press about President Bush.
6I thought the whole thing about the W keys turned out to be a myth?
I've been surprised by how many people I've heard saying nice things about him lately. It seems like there has been a softening. I don't know if it's because he's leaving or if some are afraid that Obama will be soon making his own mistakes soon. Even my uber-lefty cousin who has called him the devil, worst president ever, etc, etc, has backpedaled a bit and said he's not actually a bad person, just that she thinks he made some mistakes.
7"The final, official report from the Government Accounting Office was released on June 11, 2002. The 220 page document says there was damage, although not as much as some of the early reports had suggested. The GAO says the damage included 62 missing computer keyboards, 26 cell phones, two cameras, ten antique doorknobs and several presidential medallions and office signs. The damage estimate was about $20,000. Clinton critics say the report proves that the departing Clinton staff members acted recklessly and disrespectfully. Clinton supporters say the report shows that the allegations of vandalism were exaggerated and that there were similar incidents when Clinton took over the White House from the staff of George Bush."
http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/t/trashingthewhitehouse.htm
8And if you want an even Democrat-friendlier source:
"The General Accounting Office, an investigative arm of Congress, said today that ''damage, theft, vandalism and pranks did occur in the White House complex'' in the presidential transition from Bill Clinton to George W. Bush. The agency put the cost at $13,000 to $14,000, including $4,850 to replace computer keyboards, many with damaged or missing W keys.
Some of the damage, it said, was clearly intentional. Glue was smeared on desk drawers. Messages disparaging President Bush were left on signs and in telephone voice mail. A few of the messages used profane or obscene language."
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFDE163CF931A25755C0A...
9Would you mind giving a link to the source for this article? I'd like to email it to a few friends.
10And the furniture thefts:
"In January 2000," writes Olson, "the Clintons began shipping furniture to their $1.7 million Chappaqua home, despite concerns raised by White House chief usher Gary Walters about whether they were entitled to remove the items. Walters rightly believed they were government property, donated as part of a $396,000 White House redecoration project in 1993."
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_22_53/ai_79665374
11Links are provided above with the quotations.
12Oh, I'm sorry Laine...that question was intended for Grampa.
13Sorry for the confusion. I looked it up for ya:
14http://spectator.org/archives/2009/01/14/george-w-bush-winner
RCLdesigngirl, Google Lisa Fabrizio, I always try to attribute articles I post to the author.
15Thanks!
16I have to say, in response to Redegg's comment, that Bush's legacy is that he will never get credit for being a great president because he's the guy who made sure things DIDN'T happen. White House pranks, terrorist attacks, etc.
However, I would love to see them leave "NO SMOKING" signs everywhere in the WH - even in the private residence.
17RCL, "never get credit for being a great president because he's the guy who made sure things DIDN'T happen". You are right in the abstract, but if historians in the future, when all papers are declassified, shows affirmative steps being taken by the Administration, showing direct tangible results in breaking up terrorist plot, then he will get credit, if not, not. I unfortunately doubt I will the final reckoning of historians in my day. Not only will you need declassified documents, but also objective historians without an agenda.
18Yes, definitely. It's tragic that anyone writing the history textbooks will have Bush Derangement Syndrome.
19"NO SMOKING" signs scattered throughout the WH would be a fantastic prank, and as long as they weren't affixed to anything, just hung up with tape, or on trifolds on the tables, that would be the best.
20Good to know, Laine! I forget where I had heard it didn't actually happen.
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