The Sleeping Giant Awakened: Bush Unloads On Obama With Both Barrels

June 18th, 2009 (42) Posted By Pat Dollard.

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Washington Times:

ERIE, Pa.| Former President George W. Bush fired a salvo at President Obama on Wednesday, asserting his administration’s interrogation policies were within the law, declaring the private sector not government will fix the economy and rejecting the nationalization of health care.

“I know it’s going to be the private sector that leads this country out of the current economic times we’re in,” the former president said to applause from members of a local business group. “You can spend your money better than the government can spend your money.”

Repeatedly in his hourlong speech and question-and-answer session, Mr. Bush said he would not directly criticize the new president, who has moved to take over financial institutions and several large corporations. Several times, however, he took direct aim at Obama policies as he defended his own during eight years in office.

“Government does not create wealth. The major role for the government is to create an environment where people take risks to expand the job rate in the United States,” he said to huge cheers.

Mr. Bush weighed in on some of the most pressing issues of the day: the election in Iran, the closing of the Guantanamo Bay detention center in Cuba, and his administration’s interrogation policies of terrorists held there and elsewhere. The former president has not commented on Mr. Obama’s decision to ban “enhanced interrogation techniques” such as waterboarding, which the current president has called “off course” and “based on fear.”

“The way I decided to address the problem was twofold: One, use every technique and tool within the law to bring terrorists to justice before they strike again,” he said, adding that the country needs to stay on offense, not defense. On Guantanamo, which while in office Mr. Bush said he wanted to close, the former president was diplomatic.

“I told you I’m not going to criticize my successor,” he said. “I’ll just tell you that there are people at Gitmo that will kill American people at a drop of a hat and I don’t believe that persuasion isn’t going to work. Therapy isn’t going to cause terrorists to change their mind.”

The Obama administration has started to clear out some of the more than 200 detainees at the facility.

Repeating a mantra from his presidency, he called the current war against terrorism an “ideological conflict,” asserting that in the long term, the United States needs to press freedom and democracy in corners across the world.

Mr. Bush did not directly address Mr. Obama’s response to the election in Iran, which some critics have called tepid, but he did make clear that the outcome is very much in dispute. For a fifth straight day, as the Obama administration walks a tightrope by issuing little criticism, protesters gathered in Tehran to demand a new election.

“Clearly, there’s a level of frustration on the Iranian streets,” Mr. Bush said. “It looks like it’s not a very fair election.”

Mr. Bush returned again and again to the economy, and sought to defend his own actions after the financial meltdown in the waning days of his second term. Mr. Obama repeatedly has said he inherited that mess.

“I am told, ‘If you do not move strongly, Mr. President, you will be a president overseeing a depression that will ultimately be greater than the Great Depression,’” Mr. Bush said. “I firmly believe it was necessary to put money in our banks to make sure our financial system did not collapse. I did not want there to be bread lines, to be a great depression.”

He said his administration sought to address the “housing bubble” before the system broke down. “We tried to reform” mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, “but couldn’t get it through the vested interests on Capitol Hill.”

Still, Mr. Bush was optimistic, pressing, as he did as president, free trade, open markets and the free enterprise system. “We’ll come out of this better than before,” he said to more applause.

But he was less than convinced about Mr. Obama’s move to overhaul the health care system.

“There are a lot of ways to remedy the situation without nationalizing health care,” Mr. Bush said. “I worry about encouraging the government to replace the private sector when it comes to providing insurance for health care.”

Asked by the evening emcee at the 104th annual Manufacturer and Business Association meeting if he finds the new president’s policies “socialist,” Mr. Bush started then stopped.

“I hear a lot of those words, but it depends on..,”he said, breaking off. He later offered a more diplomatic assessment: “We’ll see.”

Wednesday’s speech to hundreds of high-paying association members “premium” tables at the city’s convention center went for $1,500 was just the second post-presidency speech by Mr. Bush on U.S. soil (his two major speeches were both in Canada). He was loose and relaxed, his nose a bright red from nearly a week in Kennebunkport, Maine, where he joined his family in celebration of his father’s 85th birthday. Mr. Bush told some of his new set stories: How just a month after leaving office he was picking up his dog Barney’s poop off a manicured lawn in his Dallas neighborhood; how he’s experienced his first red light in 14 years (he served six years as Texas governor before being elected president).

His Secret Service detail, however, was not relaxed: This was the first event in which audience members did not have to pass through metal detectors. Outside, a tiny group of protesters and supporters about 10 people on each side faced off on opposite curbs. One man held a sign that said, “President Bush, thank you for saving all the babies.” On the other side: “Arrest Bush.”

But the former president got a big cheer when he walked out on stage even bigger than Joe Paterno, the legendary Penn State coach who was also on hand for the event. The former president noted that America has a funny political system: “You’re it, then you’re not it instantly.”

He lamented the politics of personal destruction that he said is rampant in Washington, noting, though, that it has always been thus. Recalling how a treasury secretary and a vice president once fought a duel, he joked: “At least when my vice president shot somebody, it was an accident.”

During a question-and-answer session, Mr. Bush recounted tough decisions he made in office. Still steely, the former president said he left Washington with the same moral resolve. “When I look in the mirror, I say, ‘He did not sell his soul for short-term politics.’”

Asked about the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, when he first learned of the terrorist attacks while in a classroom full of children in Florida, Mr. Bush said he simply found an inner resolve.

“I realized that we were in crisis, and the first thing I do in any crisis is calm. If you’re president, and all of a sudden the whole world is watching you, and you get up and do something precipitously, frighten children, storm out, that kind of movement will cascade through a society,” he said.

In answer to a question about what he learned as president, Mr. Bush smiled broadly. “There’s so much stuff coming at you,” he said to laughter. But turning serious, he said, perhaps to his successor: “You don’t know what’s going to come when you’re president. You just have to be ready for it.”

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  • JayMS

    ‘He did not sell his soul for short-term politics.’”

    Bush is a man with an iron will, balls of steel, and a towering strength of conviction. God Bless you, Mr. President. It was my sincere honor and priviledge to have voted for you in 2004.

  • RTLM

    Its about time indeed. The one thing that did greatly piss me off about President Bush was the LACK of his self-defense of his policies and other Republicans during (and after) his presidency. To let Limbaugh, Cheney, Hannity and others carry his water was not a sign of class. It was shirking his duties as a PROMINENT citizen.

    That said – I am a strong supporter of President Bush. History will show his record to be honorable and right minded.

    :gun:

    • dogwhisperer

      I feelyour pain but couldhe ever have been right with MSM?

      Pisses me off and then some.

  • carlos cuellar

    MR. BUSH, you are still the president,now is the time to reveal what really happen .

    • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran

      Wonder if he really knows? If so I hope he does.

      Kenya show us the birth certificate,barry,Kenya?

  • David

    I concur. But he was weak on closing the borders when he had a majority in congress. He could have done a whole lot more. One of his problems was the WHORES in congress who were and continue to look out for themselves at OUR EXPENSE. All they care about is power and screw the rest of the country. They care about being re-elected, chaseing young girls and boys and spending like crazy. I voted for him twice and would vote for him again. It does not seem like there is anyone on the horizon who cares about our GREAT COUNTRY.

    • unkaglen

      There in lies the problem.He would defend our soldiers on foriegn soil to the death,while allowing two brave and valiant border agents to rot in jail for shooting an illegal alien drug smuggler in the ass.Never trusted the man after that and NEVER will.. :mad:

    • LCpl. Alexander

      He did pardon ramos and compean before he left office though.

    • unkaglen

      1)It was’nt a full pardon
      2)Did that make the act it o.k.?

  • Vehement

    Bush made a lot of mistakes as far as I’m concerned. But Obama is only going to amplify our problems with his socialist bullshit. I believe Bush was a good man, but I don’t believe he was a great president. Obama is horrible person and dictator, not a president.

    • Bob USMC

      I agree with everything you posted. And I’ll go further, Bush really did the conservative movement a whole lot of damage by not fighting back enough against a vicious and disingenuous liberal media assault. He let the enemy take the initiative, and in war that’s a very bad thing! He also never seemed to realize that we are in a war with liberalism.

      Just as one example, in the article above Bush says: “We tried to reform” mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, “but couldn’t get it through the vested interests on Capitol Hill.” Bush had a lousy “PR department”, if you will, that didn’t do anywhere near enough to let Americans know what the Bonnie Fwank’s were doing.

      Conservatives must fix this, and start framing debates the way we want them instead of allowing these chump libs to be on the offensive all the time. If we don’t correct this we will lose.

    • German Dragon

      I’ll take it a step further. I spoke with some Congressmen, and they privately told me that the GOP-controlled Congress was AFRAID of the Bush Administration, especially during his first term.

      If Bush had truly wanted to reform Fanny & Freddie, he could have gotten it through.

      As for the conservative movement, Bush was the most liberal Republican we had in the WH since Nixon. He practically ignored us in his zeal to court Democrats as part of his “New Tone” policy.

  • tarantula

    Mr. President, thank you for your time and service to this country. God bless you.

  • Mike Mose

    Bush and Cheney need to make a comparison of the economic policies side by side with Soetoro’s.

    Fall of 2008 unemployment 5% and now Soetoro is stripping jobs from the private sector as fast as he can.

    Bush is a genius compared to Soetoro.

  • http://earthlink nomee 1

    good someone should kick obambis ass, and who better than G W

  • FIU Alum

    I think GW saw that the “economic meltdown” that was promoted last fall was a way to get this bum in the White House.

    Now these “Marxist Social Engineers” are going for broke and really putting the wood to us.

    Remember George W only released I believe 200 Billion in TARP funds to the Wall Street crooks last Oct. He knew it was a sham.

    Then he magnificently set up Soetoro by making him make the call to release the rest of the TARP money to Barry’s Wall Street backers.

  • GRIZZ

    He could have ,and should have, shut down the border with mexico.He would have had no opposition after 9/11.Most of our problems are related to the invasion that is being allowed without an army leading the way.Never in history has a soverign nation allowed itself to be overwrought with millions of people from another sovreign nation without a fight.Bush is like his diddy,a globalist.with all this said,he looks like Soloman compared to ovomit.And I did vote for him twice.

  • http://mailboxawnings.com Marka in the Keys

    Though I admired and still have an affection for the man, I spent most of his presidency with a knot in my stomach, waiting futily for him to fire back at critics rather than take that “high road” and let the bullies run the hallways. If we learned anything from Vietnam, it is that wars are fought in the living rooms of America; yet Bush and Cheney were rarely there while Democrats were on TV 24-7, until even conservative friends of mine began saying it was time for the war to end. The most gut-wrenching time those 7 years. And then! Sometimes you’ve got to chunk free markets to save free markets. Geitner and Bernanke buddy Treasury Sec. Paulson said as he left office that he wanted to work with the ENVIRONMENT, not go into the private sector. (See his interview with Bartelomo). Bush never rid himself of Democrats in his administration and in the end they snookered him on the economy, obviously freaking him out enough to go along with their massive bailout and setting up the stimulus…

    • GRIZZ

      Do you remember the “Sometimes money trumps peace”comment.As far as Iraq,we had to fuck up a mooslum country after 9/11.Our military did a GREAT job,and it would have been over sooner if they could have fought with both hands.GOD BLESS all lost,and all who are still there.Thank you

    • LCpl. Alexander

      Amen brother.

  • http://www alle

    Good! I hope we hear much, much more from both Cheney and Bush! :beer:

  • Tom in CO

    I reminisce about the good old days, like before Jan. 20th, 2009. He’ll be missed.

  • xcrypto

    The safety of American citizens was his top priority; not the portfolios of Wall Street. History will show he was indeed the right man at the right time. Thank you GWB! And again, thanks to the SCOTUS.

  • David B in Texas

    I knew it would be but a matter of months before Americans, regardless of their feelings about President Bush, would look back on his administration as “the gool old days”. Bush and Cheney kept us safe and had the balls to confront our enemies while the Obamination is doing his very best to destroy our way of life and our country.
    I find it absolutely unbelievable that while N. Korea is testing nuclear weapons and launching missiles, Obama is cutting defense spending and missile defense systems. How totally irresponsible!! Obama is putting politics above the security of the American people. He has a deep-seeded hate for this country and is bent on its’ destruction. He’s well on his way to doing just that.
    This Kenyan-born, Fascist, fraudulent, usurper MUST be stopped and he must be stopped soon. America will not survive much more of Obama and his pragmatic, social welfare agenda.

  • Sebastian

    Bill Clinton, GW and Phil Gramm (Senator, Texas) all deregulated the financial industry and let them lend until they had created in the region of $200 trillion… that’s 4 times the size of the world economy.

    Now you can’t do that without people worrying about the value of the dollar. So what’s happening today? There’s the little matter of $134 billion in US bonds being smuggled over the Italian border with Switzerland… and NO ONE in the US is reporting it, aside from two small blogs: one on Bloomberg site and the other on LA Times.

    Here’s a link:
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=a62_boqkurbI

    What’s wrong with the US press? Where’s Fox news? Savage? O’Reilly? Limbaugh?
    The world is losing faith in the administration of the US and the value of the dollar, and the US is too busy with it’s infighting to bother with it?

    I know this site’s politics. Well ask yourselves: how much did Reagan and the two Bushs put in the bank? How hard did they work to make the US solvent?

    It’s time to cut out the dogmatic hate mongering and get serious, or the US won’t have a future.

  • German Dragon

    Of all the figures in classical literature I could compare George W. Bush to, it would have to be Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde.

    On the GWoT and the Iraq War, President Bush was Dr. Jekyl. He stood strongly for America, took the war to the enemy, and refused to budge from protecting America regardless of how much hell was spewed his way. And the stories of him comforting the families of our fallen soldiers and Marines. How everything was rescheduled around the time he spent with them. And how Pres. Bush would personally correspond with those families, often writing in his own hand.

    How can you NOT be moved by that? How can you NOT be inspired by the man’s compassion, his humanity?

    And yet, when it came to his DOMESTIC agenda, Bush would inexplicably morph into Mr. Hyde: Spending money like drunken sailors, single biggest expansion of Great Society since LBJ created it, signing the McCain/Feingold Incumbent Protection Act with its frontal assault on the 1st Amendment. Whoring himself to the captains of slave labor by keeping the borders open so his beloved illegals could swarm to devour the Middle Class like a pack of locusts. Prosecuting Border Agents for doing their job.

    When the voters had enough and bitch-slapped Bush by putting the Democrats in charge in 2006, Bush only stiffened his defiance further by pushing the disastrous 2007 McCain/Kennedy Amnesty Act.

    And for his swan song, during the 2008 Presidential race, while McCain was proudly telling the GOP’s conservative Reagan base how he deeply he could suck Democrat cock, Bush interrupts McCain’s performance to remind the electorate of the two things they hated most about Bush: His contempt for the conservative base’s will, and his love of spending money. And the rest is history.

    As I said, Bush was Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde. Sad.

    • GRIZZ

      That was almost poetic.Dead nut GD. :beer:

    • Alison Gray

      moron

    • NMPatriot

      Spot On GD!!

      NMP

    • unkaglen

      Well put German dragon.This was a man I supported 110% in 2000.By 04 I was begining to have my doubts,but as we all know “horse face” was absolutely out of the question.I waited for a sign of support for our Hadifa Marines(yes,I donated to their defense fund),for Compeon and Ramos,but the silence was defening.Our commander in chief was strangely silent.
      All the while illegal aliens were pouring over or southern borders virtually un-opposed,along with suspected Al-Qeda terrorist.
      But with age comes a certain amount of wisdom,and my inner voice was telling me these 50 percenters were really doing the country as much harm as good.A slow road to hell is still a road to hell.I would never settle for a woman who is faithful 50% of the time.My boss would never setttle for a job completion rate of 50%.My mortgage company would never be o.k. with a payment every other month.And I wondered how in HELL any American soldier could do his job while worrying about being brought up on murder charges for shooting some P.O.S. terrorist in the face,when he was only doing what he was trained to do.
      Leaving these behind and moving on to fiscal resopsibility was even more frightening.The perscription drugs legislation was frankly bizare.I kept asking myself W.T.F. is he doing.What the hell was S.P.P. all about(security and prosperity partnership)North American Union anyone?
      Am I a wacked out lefty consperiacy theorist?Not hardley.I was a typical boy who grew up in rural America.I was taught that a man who didn’t keep his word was less than human,and was never to be trusted
      So from now on I will demand a 100 percent from any candidate.The future of this great nation is much to important to entrust to anything less.I may be searching for “pie in the sky” but as God as my witness I will settle for noyhing less….

  • ji

    At least Bush is speaking out against our enemy and he is no longer in power.

  • http://WorldsBestResumes.com Judith, typical White Ohioan

    What a difference between the two. Man and boy. Glad he is speaking out and I really miss him even tho I cussed him for not defending his policies. God, Obuma is a nothing.

    • GRIZZ

      Even a pile of vomit has substance.Ovomit is just a liquid squirt

  • Nick1970

    I, too, miss Bush. :sad:

    I did see an interesting comparison between his off-teleprompter verbal stumbles and Obama’s, on another blog:

    “Bush had a lot to communicate, and stumbled along trying to get it all out; Obama has nothing to say that’s not pre-scripted, and so bumbles along to fill time.”

    Sounds right to me…

  • unkaglen

    Just another COLLECTIVEST………

  • John H

    Bush is a man of iron will for sure, I’d comapre him to Churchhill, and liek him maybe not very apt at economics….but he was the right man at the right time and I thank God he was president when he was.

    They backstabbed Churchhill once the war was over too. “The People” Are an ungrateful fickle bunch of children when they feel safe again, they only want an adult in charge when they’re scared shitless.

  • LCpl. Alexander

    Mr. Bush, take the dam gloves off!!! You dont have to be nice, put some dam bite in your bark!!! :beer:

  • Alison Gray

    I miss you, President Bush.

  • Matt in GA

    George Bush:

    Socialized Medicine: Bush introduced the first socialized medicine in America with the Medicare Modernization Act: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_Prescription_Drug,_Improvement,_and_Modernization_Act
    It was $534 Billion – more than any other single social program in history.

    Bush was they guy that birthed the Patriot Act – now being used against loyal Americans: http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2009/04/obamas-real-terrorists-targeting-patriots-and-the-right.html

    And Bush passed the first TARP, he was for the auto bailout: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601209&refer=transportation&sid=avQpiEJe.OWQ

    Bush was for illegal amnesty: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,109026,00.html

    Is George Bush better than the current President? Of course. But he should not be celebrated. He was an incremental part of a transition. A transition away from a free country, where it’s leaders are no longer servants of the people, but the people become their servants …

  • Matt in GA

    Fucking moderate me. I’m pretty much done then. Moderate me and you will be getting a phone call.

    • Matt in GA

      I apologize for this drunk and disorderly behaviour. No excuse.

  • http://www.dirtydozensbunker.com Sanders

    What Jorge Arbusto did in Iraq and Afghanistan was outstanding – I just wish he would have slipped the collar off our Dogs of War and let them do what they do best – destroy the enemy. Instead, we got goofball ROE that tied the hands of our Soldiers and Marines.

    What he did, more like did not do, to our borders was criminal malfeasance at its best. The debt and spending he supported just led up to what we have now.

    When it comes down to it, history will record the Bush II administration as setting up the scene for the Obongo usurper and the destruction of America.