Title: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: pintofguinness14 on January 26, 2006, 11:19:40 am Since we're already talking about abortion, let's move on to another politically charged topic.
http://www.slate.com/id/2134845/?nav=ais I voted for Bush in 2000 because the thought of Al Gore in the White House made me want to hurl. By 2004, the Bush team had me blowing chunks. I'd like to know what other Republicans (like me) think about the administration's decision to railroad the Congress, trample civil liberties and ignore states' rights. Is the War on Terror worth all of this? Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 11:30:35 am I voted for Bush both times, and I think I'm done supporting him.
pint, what reason is there for any conservative to support him? He's jacked up federal spending faster than any Democrat, and not just on the military. He promoted and won huge farm subsidies and a bill to make healthy young people pay for old sick people's prescription drugs. He's drastically expanded federal power by broadly interpreting his authority to conduct surveillance on American citizens. He didn't oppose affirmative action in the two Michigan cases a few years ago. He's stuck it in the face of states by increasing the exclusive jurisdiction of federal courts over class-action suits and allowing the DOJ to fight Oregon's assisted-suicide law. Maybe, maybe, the one justification during the elections could have been that as bad as Bush has been on conservative principles, the alternative would have been worse. But even if that were true, and I'm not sure it was, it's irrelevant now. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 11:39:03 am This thread makes me happy. Not because I hate Bush (which I do), but because it shows me that Republicans aren't all just blindly following the leader. I think that the Republican party has changed. This isn't the old Republican party, based on small government. This is some new party, based on Christian morality.
I always have voted Democrat, but I've been against some of their (unsuccessful) wars - like censoring video games and music, and their push for affirmative action. ...it's good to see that old school Republicans aren't necessarily porting over.  I (and many Dems I know) like certain Republicans -- especially McCain, and it'd be nice to see someone with more free views on personal freedoms. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Philly Fin Fan on January 26, 2006, 11:42:22 am  I (and many Dems I know) like certain Republicans -- especially McCain, and it'd be nice to see someone with more free views on personal freedoms. I am so hoping he will be the Republican candidate in the next election. He is a personal hero of mine. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: pintofguinness14 on January 26, 2006, 11:47:15 am He promoted and won huge farm subsidies and a bill to make healthy young people pay for old sick people's prescription drugs. Let's not forget about the highway bill. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 12:03:10 pm This is some new party, based on Christian morality. I don't think this is a fair criticism. What exactly has Bush done to promote Christianity or Christian morality? I think the specter of Christianity is just raised as kind of a catch-all bogeyman to suggest to other liberals that Bush is unenlightened or stupid or backward. I don't think it's based in any actual fact. None of the complaints I listed in my post above had anything to do with Christianity. Nor do any of the more common complaints: the war in Iraq is wrong, Bush is in bed with oil interests, Bush picks extremist judges, etc. The one thing might be stem-cell research. But that's small potatoes. You can't really say the theme of the Bush Administration has been Christian morality. I think saying it shows kind of a malicious desire to somehow try to link Christianity with things that are just plain bad in some general sense. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: TonyB0D on January 26, 2006, 12:17:34 pm I am so hoping he will be the Republican candidate in the next election. He is a personal hero of mine. hell yes!! him or buchannon please.... Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 12:19:11 pm I think that the party's progression with censorship, the selection of judges with abortion in mind, school vouchers, the stance on Terri Schiavo, and the stance on homosexual marriages -- all of these are based in Christian morality.
Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Phishfan on January 26, 2006, 12:42:55 pm I don't think this is a fair criticism. What exactly has Bush done to promote Christianity or Christian morality? I think the specter of Christianity is just raised as kind of a catch-all bogeyman to suggest to other liberals that Bush is unenlightened or stupid or backward. I don't think it's based in any actual fact. None of the complaints I listed in my post above had anything to do with Christianity. Nor do any of the more common complaints: the war in Iraq is wrong, Bush is in bed with oil interests, Bush picks extremist judges, etc. The one thing might be stem-cell research. But that's small potatoes. You can't really say the theme of the Bush Administration has been Christian morality. I think saying it shows kind of a malicious desire to somehow try to link Christianity with things that are just plain bad in some general sense. He didn't say Bush, he said the Republican Party. Although Bush is the head, by virtue of being the President, there are other people at play within the GOP. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Fau Teixeira on January 26, 2006, 01:21:52 pm school vouchers are hardly a christian issue
they're plainly a case of the parents knowing what's best for their kids, vs. over bloated government beurocracy deciding where to put funds based on a detatched view of statistics just because some parents would opt to place their children in schools affiliated with churches, doesn't mean school vouchers is a religious issue Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: bsfins on January 26, 2006, 01:54:33 pm Not Mine,I found it when looking for details for Frimps' time magazine..
(I thought a good thread to post it...) (http://xs65.xs.to/pics/06044/toneddown.jpg) (I did clean it up,adding*@ ) Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 02:38:59 pm school vouchers are hardly a christian issue they're plainly a case of the parents knowing what's best for their kids, vs. over bloated government beurocracy deciding where to put funds based on a detatched view of statistics just because some parents would opt to place their children in schools affiliated with churches, doesn't mean school vouchers is a religious issue This can be argued both ways.....I'm not really trying to argue the merit of school vouchers with this thread...but I'm trying to make the point that it's one of the stances on the Christian Right agenda. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Brian Fein on January 26, 2006, 03:21:28 pm Question for the republican population.
Hypothetically, if Jeb Bush runs for president in 2008, will you vote for him? Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: TonyB0D on January 26, 2006, 03:55:39 pm ^^^^^^
NOOOOOOO Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 05:43:24 pm I would definitely vote for Jeb. I don't think he'll run or win though, because it smacks of an un-American dynasty. But then again, that's not stopping Hillary.
Dave, Bush didn't do anything in the Schiavo matter, or propose school vouchers, or do anything to fight gay marriage (Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act, remember?). You also don't really know anything about how his judges will treat abortion rights -- no one does. Maybe the party in general is more influenced by Christianity, but it's unfair to paint Bush with that brush without more hard evidence. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 05:53:34 pm I would definitely vote for Jeb. I don't think he'll run or win though, because it smacks of an un-American dynasty. But then again, that's not stopping Hillary. Dave, Bush didn't do anything in the Schiavo matter, or propose school vouchers, or do anything to fight gay marriage (Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act, remember?). You also don't really know anything about how his judges will treat abortion rights -- no one does. Maybe the party in general is more influenced by Christianity, but it's unfair to paint Bush with that brush without more hard evidence. I'm not talking about Bush specifically, I'm talking about "the Republican party". I was careful to use that term each time. Besides, Bush did have stuff to do with the Schiavo matter. Jeb made a big stink of it, Bush spoke on it, and they had emengency court meeting and stuff. While George W. wasn't the front man on the "save Terri" movement, we'd be lying if we said that he wasn't involved. And again, I'm not trying to argue whether or not Alito is qualified or not, but his selection (for both sides) is highly about his opportunity to overturn Roe V. Wade...whether or not he does or not doesn't really matter. He's shown in the past that he is for abortion-regulating law, and the church backs him. ...and regarding Gay Marriage, Bush ran on the platform that marriage should be between a man and a woman, and he even fronted a cause to have it put in the Constitution. Now I'm not even talking about Bush, but even if I were, the argument would still pretty much hold up. I'm talking about the Republican party, and he's their top dog. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: runtheball on January 26, 2006, 06:16:04 pm He supports the things that I believe in, so yes, I'd vote for him again and again.
Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Fau Teixeira on January 26, 2006, 06:59:38 pm kerry ran on the same man + woman = marriage platform .. he just didn't support an ammendment
so lets call a spade a spade and say that both major parties frown upon homosexuality the republicans maybe more from a religio-conservative way and the democrats more from a hypocritical (we aren't really against it but noone would vote for us if we weren't) way lp.org ! drugs and homosexuality for everyone ! (not for me though) (not that there's anything wrong with that...) Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 07:02:27 pm Besides, Bush did have stuff to do with the Schiavo matter. Jeb made a big stink of it, Bush spoke on it, and they had emengency court meeting and stuff. While George W. wasn't the front man on the "save Terri" movement, we'd be lying if we said that he wasn't involved. The Bushes didn't somehow convene the courts. They don't have the power to do that. Maybe Bush spoke about it. That is hardly throwing the weight of his office around. And again, I'm not trying to argue whether or not Alito is qualified or not, but his selection (for both sides) is highly about his opportunity to overturn Roe V. Wade...whether or not he does or not doesn't really matter. He's shown in the past that he is for abortion-regulating law, and the church backs him. Alito is about Roe for both sides? Bush has never said that he is nominating Alito so that he will overturn Roe. It is Alito's opponents who are panicking about Roe. But then they always do that. Check out the "Stop Souter or Women Will Die" picture I had in the other thread. ...and regarding Gay Marriage, Bush ran on the platform that marriage should be between a man and a woman, and he even fronted a cause to have it put in the Constitution. He did run on that platform, but then he didn't actually do anything once elected. So if he's guilty of anything, it's breaking his campaign promises. But again, what does that have to do with Christianity? Nothing. Now I'm not even talking about Bush, but even if I were, the argument would still pretty much hold up. I'm talking about the Republican party, and he's their top dog. In general I don't think it is fair to say that one person must share the characteristics of a group with dozens of millions of members because he is in some sense the head of the group. First of all the President is only the symbolic head of the party. The RNC Chairman is the actual head of the party. The President is the most powerful member of the party. It makes no sense to say that you can be your own man as a governor of a state running for President up until the day before the election, and then the day after the election you suddenly and magically acquire all the characteristics of the broader national party base. Also, look: the head of any organization can have different interests from the group he leads. You seem to be saying that the CEO of GM must be very pro-union, since his workers are. The owner of the Vikings must love sex-boat parties, since his players do and hey, after all, he's the top dog. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 07:23:25 pm Jesus Smitty,
You're like the most close-minded person I've ever spoken to on here. I'm not specifically talking about Bush and his actions. Stop turning this into partisan politics. I'm not saying that the Dems are right about any of this. I'm not even talking about issues. The fact is this: for the most part, the Republican platform of the last several years has been in line with that of the Christian right. They have become more about social issues than they ever have before. The old Repubs were more about fiscal responsibility and small government. The new ones are about social conservatism. Whether or not the current govenment has control to change these things (Roe v. Wade, Shiavo, gay marriage) or not is irrelevant. They are running on a platform of moral values, and they got elected as such. ...my whole point is that this isn't how Republicans used to be. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 07:31:03 pm Hey, I went from being laudably open-minded at the beginning of this thread to the most closed-minded person on here!
Dave you said: Now I'm not even talking about Bush, but even if I were, the argument would still pretty much hold up. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 07:41:30 pm Yes, I feel that it does. I think that you're nitpicking Bush's involvement in specific cases, and I call bullshit. Bush is backed by the Christian right and got elected because of his views on social issues in-line with Christian morality.
He supports a constitutional ban of gay marriage. He supported Schiavo's right to life argument. He supports school vouchers. He supported limits on stem cell research. He is a pro-lifer. He ran on this platform. Whether or not he has had enough power to change any of these things doesn't matter. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 26, 2006, 07:49:19 pm Fuck, Dave, if only you could decide whether you are saying Bush himself is a Christian moralist president or not, we could have an actual conversation about this. One minute you are blasting me in extra-large text, next post you are conceding the very thing you blasted me for.
I responded to all those points above. Unlike you, I think it is what a politician does, not what he says, that matters. Feel free to disagree. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Sunstroke on January 26, 2006, 08:17:58 pm I am so hoping he will be the Republican candidate in the next election. He is a personal hero of mine. Mine as well...and if he get's the party nod in 2008, I'll vote for a Republican president for the first time ever. it's unfair to paint Bush with that brush without more hard evidence. Is it fair to say we have enough evidence to paint him as a total goober by now? I've got a brush here that says he's the President with the worst command of the English language, possibly of all time (I can only remember back to Nixon...but I'd bet it's true all the way back to ol' wooden-teeth himself). ;) Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 26, 2006, 09:28:00 pm Fuck, Dave, if only you could decide whether you are saying Bush himself is a Christian moralist president or not, we could have an actual conversation about this. One minute you are blasting me in extra-large text, next post you are conceding the very thing you blasted me for. Yes, I do think Bush is a Christian fundamentalist. However, my view on that doesn't pertain to my initial point about the changeover of the Republican party. Quote I responded to all those points above. Unlike you, I think it is what a politician does, not what he says, that matters. Feel free to disagree. I do disagree. I think both what a politician does and says matter. How any of this relates to the topic at hand, I don't know. I've seen you argue politics on this board many times, and I often feel that you overlook the bigger discussion and focus in on the semantics in the choice of words of you're opposition, as if we were on a debate team. ...discrediting the speaker, not the point. ...fitting that you're studying to be a lawyer. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Brian Fein on January 27, 2006, 10:15:48 am (http://members.aol.com/chunkyb/smilies/lurk.gif)
Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Phishfan on January 27, 2006, 10:25:00 am Maybe Bush spoke about it. That is hardly throwing the weight of his office around. I think you should check that a bit. Of course the President doesn't have the power to do some things himself, but his word carries a lot of weight and a lot of things happen behind doors. Don't kid yourself into thinking ole JEB and George W didn't have anything to do with this. Political pressure is very hard to overcome. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: ADeadSmitty on January 27, 2006, 12:15:59 pm I think you should check that a bit. Of course the President doesn't have the power to do some things himself, but his word carries a lot of weight and a lot of things happen behind doors. Don't kid yourself into thinking ole JEB and George W didn't have anything to do with this. Political pressure is very hard to overcome. Well in fact they didn't seem to have too much trouble overcoming it, since they pulled the plug on Schiavo. Look, if you hate the Bush administration, is the speech on the Schiavo situation going to be your #1 problem with it? Not unless you have some kind of weird anti-Christian obsession. Most people are concerned with the war, preservation of civil liberties, gas prices, the deficit, etc., long before they worry about what he simply said about Schiavo. This thread started with two conservative people going over their problems with Bush. Dave, you tried to sneak in a bonus point about Christian morality that I thought wasn't warranted by logic or facts. I called bullshit and you spent half of your next posts defending and the other half denying that you'd even said it. Now you say the fact that I even disputed it at all is "semantics." Fuck that. I call it sloppy reasoning on your part. You say the problems with the Bush Administration are mostly due to Bush's Christian morality and I say they're not. That's a material disagreement, not "semantics." Whatever. Title: Re: Has the Bush administration gone too far? Post by: Dave Gray on January 27, 2006, 12:28:41 pm Smitty,
Again, I'm not talking about Bush. While I do think that he's a Christian fundamentalist, it doesn't relate to my point on the Republican party as whole. I'm done repeating myself on this point, and won't speak on it again. I hope you choose to do the same. To start over: The NEW Republican party, in my opinion, is seeded in Christian values around social politics. While the old was based on conservative spending and small government. I am glad that some republicans that previously followed their platform, simply to not piggyback over to these changes in the party. |