Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: why does president bush hate information?
FCP Poker Forum > Off Topic Forums > General
mk
Full article at:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9287434/

How Bush Blew It
Bureaucratic timidity. Bad phone lines. And a failure of imagination. Why the government was so slow to respond to catastrophe.

By Evan Thomas
Newsweek

Sept. 19, 2005 issue - It's a standing joke among the president's top aides: who gets to deliver the bad news? Warm and hearty in public, Bush can be cold and snappish in private, and aides sometimes cringe before the displeasure of the president of the United States, or, as he is known in West Wing jargon, POTUS. The bad news on this early morning, Tuesday, Aug. 30, some 24 hours after Hurricane Katrina had ripped through New Orleans, was that the president would have to cut short his five-week vacation by a couple of days and return to Washington. The president's chief of staff, Andrew Card; his deputy chief of staff, Joe Hagin; his counselor, Dan Bartlett, and his spokesman, Scott McClellan, held a conference call to discuss the question of the president's early return and the delicate task of telling him. Hagin, it was decided, as senior aide on the ground, would do the deed.

The president did not growl this time. He had already decided to return to Washington and hold a meeting of his top advisers on the following day, Wednesday. This would give them a day to get back from their vacations and their staffs to work up some ideas about what to do in the aftermath of the storm. President Bush knew the storm and its consequences had been bad; but he didn't quite realize how bad.

The reality, say several aides who did not wish to be quoted because it might displease the president, did not really sink in until Thursday night. Some White House staffers were watching the evening news and thought the president needed to see the horrific reports coming out of New Orleans. Counselor Bartlett made up a DVD of the newscasts so Bush could see them in their entirety as he flew down to the Gulf Coast the next morning on Air Force One.

How this could be—how the president of the United States could have even less "situational awareness," as they say in the military, than the average American about the worst natural disaster in a century—is one of the more perplexing and troubling chapters in a story that, despite moments of heroism and acts of great generosity, ranks as a national disgrace.

President George W. Bush has always trusted his gut. He prides himself in ignoring the distracting chatter, the caterwauling of the media elites, the Washington political buzz machine. He has boasted that he doesn't read the papers. His doggedness is often admirable. It is easy for presidents to overreact to the noise around them.

But it is not clear what President Bush does read or watch, aside from the occasional biography and an hour or two of ESPN here and there. Bush can be petulant about dissent; he equates disagreement with disloyalty. After five years in office, he is surrounded largely by people who agree with him. Bush can ask tough questions, but it's mostly a one-way street. Most presidents keep a devil's advocate around. Lyndon Johnson had George Ball on Vietnam; President Ronald Reagan and Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, grudgingly listened to the arguments of Budget Director Richard Darman, who told them what they didn't wish to hear: that they would have to raise taxes. When Hurricane Katrina struck, it appears there was no one to tell President Bush the plain truth: that the state and local governments had been overwhelmed, that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was not up to the job and that the military, the only institution with the resources to cope, couldn't act without a declaration from the president overriding all other authority...
Don Giovanni
what a fool
SAM_Hard8
QUOTE (mk)
Most presidents keep a devil's advocate around. Lyndon Johnson had George Ball on Vietnam;  


Ya that worked out well.
digitalmonkey
Q: Why does president bush hate information?

A: Because he lacks the intelligence to understand the majority of it.
mk
QUOTE (SAM_Hard8)
QUOTE (mk)
Most presidents keep a devil's advocate around. Lyndon Johnson had George Ball on Vietnam;  


Ya that worked out well.


Don't be results oriented. Ball tried to make a good laydown.
ABS_Alex
The little lie that just got bigger.

A little boy makes what he thinks is a little white lie that won't harm anyone, but gets confronted about his little white lie.

Well because he doesn't want to admit he was lying he makes another white lie to cover for his first white lie. Eventually the small lies become big lies and because so many lies have been told, the little boy goes deeper into his web of deceit only because he know that at this point if he were to tell the truth he'd be in a huge pile of trouble.

Bush is that little boy, and the lies he has told the entire world have put him in such a hole that the whole of America is going to suffer greatly when the truth comes out (If ever). Support him or not, he is a liar, all the way from his national guard days to when he ran Arbusto. He's lied on the blood of good hearted Americans and knows that telling the truth will only ruin the Bush name, A name Prescott Bush worked so hard to build when he was funding the Nazi party and German iron during WW2.

I'm going to post a link but please don't consider it spamming because knowledge is power, and if ya'll want to know the truth then you have to look in yourselves to be bi partisan taking the good with the bad to make a truly informed decision.

HTTP://www.whatreallyhappened.com

Bush saying he's sorry once doesn't make up for 2 stolen elections, and illegal war, or billions of YOUR MONEY wasted on programs meant to strip Americans of their rights and dignaties all to fight an invisible enemy.


AL
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2012 Invision Power Services, Inc.