Bush was horrible (and Cheney was just evil), but we cannot forget that he did what he was told to do, the same as Obama will do what he is told to do by the same people who told Bush what to do. The same people also told Clinton what to do and Bush Sr before him. They make it appear to be different, but it is the same agenda being pushed from different angles by the same puppet masters.
I wonder how long it will take Bush Jr to join his pop and Clinton on their vacations?
Bush merely plucked the feathers and put the chicken on the chopping block and handed off the hatchet to Obama, who is continuing to bail out the rich and spend our way into oblivion in a new version of the failed New Deal of another tool by the name of Roosevelt. The only thing that bailed us out of economic disaster then was a world war. We're already in two declared wars now and that is only adding to the problem.
I wonder how long the honeymoon is going to last? Just a coincidence that Obama's approval ratings have already fallen by 15% in just a week?
DQ
By David Gardner
Last updated at 8:56 AM on 26th January 2009
Barack Obama might have been in office for less than a week, but the euphoria is beginning to wane.
The new President's approval ratings have fallen from a stratospheric 83 per cent to a more modest - although still impressive - 68 per cent.
Washington analysts said the scale of the drop in the Gallup poll underlines the immense challenges Mr Obama faces in trying to turn round the U.S.'s battered fortunes.
He still remains vastly more popular than his predecessor George Bush - who left office with around 25 per cent approval.
Oh, get a move on: Michelle Obama waits with apparent impatience as her husband attends to business on his first day in the Oval Office
But there were signs yesterday that reality has set in following the wave of optimism surrounding his inauguration last Tuesday.
Mr Obama is facing an ugly battle with Republicans over his plans to bail out the economy with £515billion of taxpayers' cash. Opposition leaders claim the rescue package relies too much on government spending and not enough on tax relief for families and small businesses.