From the NR interview with Bush:
At the end of the interview, the president mentioned that he’s just about to host his first of 25 Christmas parties at the White House. He shared that he’s currently reading A Confederacy of Dunces...
Best. President. Ever!
So the truth finally emerges: the Iraq War was just one big Crusade for Moorish Dignity. Dang, if only he'd put it that way to begin with, we'd have avoided all this misunderstanding. Now, about that secret sodomite political party that will bring about world peace...

Add to Newsvine
Add to StumbleUpon
Re: from the NR article: "...everyone came away impressed with how confident and fluid Bush was."
Bush was always confident and fluid running various enterprises and initiatives into the ground throughout his "career". Because it was always somebody else's money.
Only this time, it's not just money, it's national treasure. Must be nice to be able to squander a billion dollars, 4,000 lives, be the first chief executive proponent for torture, conspire with Congress for 6 years to spend money like drunken sailors and still remain "joyous".
Yep, must be nice indeed...
Wouldn't it be easier for the National Review to just let Dana Perino write the columns and let the rest of the gang just live off their trust funds and familial legacies. Shameless.
Wouldn't it be easier for the National Review to just let Dana Perino write the columns and let the rest of the gang just live off their trust funds and familial legacies. Shameless.
Posted by: Daniel | November 29, 2007 9:11 AM
That's a pretty unfair comment about the National Review staff, Daniel. Many of the writers there have been plenty critical of the Bush administration. Their opinions run the gamut; in fact, they hardly walk in lockstep on anything. Jonah Goldberg and Mark Steyn are two of the hardest working columnists around - not just incredibly prolific, but interesting, provocative, and often hilarious. Not too many people resting on their trust funds over there....
Wouldn't it be easier for the National Review to just let Dana Perino write the columns and let the rest of the gang just live off their trust funds and familial legacies. Shameless.
Posted by: Daniel | November 29, 2007 9:11 AM
That's a pretty unfair comment about the National Review staff, Daniel. Many of the writers there have been plenty critical of the Bush administration. Their opinions run the gamut; in fact, they hardly walk in lockstep on anything. Jonah Goldberg and Mark Steyn are two of the hardest working columnists around - not just incredibly prolific, but always interesting, provocative, and entertaining. Not too many people resting on their trust funds over there....
Oh! My VALVE!
Post a Comment
By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.