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Default The Great Whiner Makes Pitful Excuses...many reporters die laughing



"Too_Many_Tools" wrote in message
...
And once again George the Villiage Idiot trys to convince people that
he is an important person who has made a positive difference in the
world.

Hmm..remind you of any other pitful conservatives we have around here?

Hey George...don't let the front door of the White House hit you in
the butt on the way out...

Eight years of America's potential, resources, lives were a terrible
thing to waste....remember that the next time you are tempted to vote
Republican.

TMT

Bush defends presidency in final news conference
By JENNIFER LOVEN, AP White House Correspondent Jennifer Loven, Ap
White House Correspondent 18 mins ago
WASHINGTON – By turns wistful, aggressive and joking in the final news
conference of his presidency, President George W. Bush vigorously
defended his record Monday but also offered an extraordinary listing
of his mistakes — including his optimistic Iraq speech before a giant
"Mission Accomplished" banner in 2003.

After starting what he called "the ultimate exit interview" with a
lengthy and personalized thank-you to the reporters in the room who
have covered him over the eight years of his presidency, Bush showed
anger at times when presented with some of the main criticisms of his
time in office.

"I think it's a good, strong record," he said. "You know, presidents
can try to avoid hard decisions and therefore avoid controversy.
That's just not my nature."

He particularly became indignant when asked about America's bruised
image overseas.

"I disagree with this assessment that, you know, that people view
America in a dim light," he said. "It may be damaged amongst some of
the elite. But people still understand America stands for freedom."

Bush said he realizes that some issues such as the prison for
suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have created controversy
at home and around the world. But he defended his actions after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, including approving tough
interrogation methods for suspected terrorists and information-
gathering efforts at home in the name of protecting the country.

With the Iraq war in its sixth year, he most aggressively defended his
decisions on that issue, which will define his presidency like no
other. There have been over 4,000 U.S. deaths since the invasion and
toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

But it was in that area that he also acknowledged mistakes. He said
that "not finding weapons of mass destruction was a significant
disappointment." The accusation that Saddam had and was pursuing
weapons of mass destruction was Bush's main initial justification for
going to war.

He also cited the abuses found to have been committed by members of
the U.S. military at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq as "a huge
disappointment."

"I don't know if you want to call those mistakes or not, but they were
— things didn't go according to plan, let's put it that way," Bush
said.

And he admitted another miscalculation: Eager to report quick progress
after U.S. troops ousted Saddam's government, he declared less than
two months after the war started that "in the battle of Iraq, the
United States and our allies have prevailed," a claim made under a
"Mission Accomplished" banner that turned out to be wildly optimistic.
"Clearly, putting `Mission Accomplished' on an aircraft carrier was a
mistake," he said Monday. "It sent the wrong message."

He also defended his decision in 2007 to send an additional 30,000
American troops to Iraq to knock down violence levels and stabilize
life there.

"The question is, in the long run, will this democracy survive, and
that's going to be a question for future presidents," he said.

On another issue destined to figure prominently in his legacy, Bush
said he has "thought long and hard about Katrina — you know could I
have done something differently, like land Air Force One either in New
Orleans or Baton Rouge." Bush was criticized for flying over the
devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and waiting until
four days after it hit to visit the scene.

But he also said he disagrees with those who say the federal response
to the storm was slow.

"Don't tell me the federal response was slow when there were 30,000
people pulled off roofs right after the storm passed. ... Could things
been done better? Absolutely. But when I hear people say the federal
response was slow, what are they going to say to those chopper drivers
or the 30,000 who got pulled off the roof?" he said.

He also defended his record on Mideast peace.

A bruising offensive by Israel in the Gaza Strip has dashed any slight
hopes for an accord soon that produces a Palestinian state. But Bush,
asked why peace hasn't been achieved, said his administration had made
progress. He said he had laid out the vision for "what peace would
look like" and got all sides to agree on a two-state solution to the
long-running Israeli-Palestinian dispute.

"It's been a long time since they've had peace in the Middle East," he
said. "The challenge, of course, has been to lay out the conditions so
that a peaceful state can emerge. ... Will this ever happen? I think
it will. And I know we've advanced the process."

He called President-elect Barack Obama "a very smart, engaging person"
and said he wishes his successor all the best. He hinted at the
enormous responsibility Obama is about to assume, describing what it
might feel like on Jan. 20 when, after taking the oath of office, he
enters the Oval Office for the first time as president.

"There'll be a moment when the responsibility of the president lands
squarely on his shoulders," Bush said.

He gave his view of the most urgent threat facing the incoming
president: an attack on the United States. He chose that risk over the
dire economic problems now facing the nation.

"I wish that I could report that's not the case, but there's still an
enemy out there that would like to inflict damage on America — on
Americans."

He said he would ask Congress to release the remaining $350 billion in
Wall Street bailout money if Obama so desires. But, he said, Obama
hadn't made that request of him yet.

That soon changed. Shortly after the news conference, the White House
said Obama had asked for the request and Bush had agreed to make it.

That will take at least one burden off Obama's shoulders involving a
program that is extraordinarily unpopular with many lawmakers and much
of the public.

The last news conference of Bush's presidency lasted 46 minutes, and
he took questions from more than a dozen reporters.

The last previous time the president had taken questions in a public
setting was Dec. 14 in Baghdad, a session that hurtled to the top of
the news when Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zeidi threw his shoes at
Bush during a question-and-answer session with Iraqi Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki.

Bush's last previous full-blown news conference was July 15. He
refused to hold another during the final months of last year's
presidential campaign, concerned that the questions would be mostly
related to political events and determined to stay out of GOP nominee
John McCain's spotlight as much as possible. But even though aides had
suggested that would change after the election, Bush still declined to
participate in a wide-ranging question-and-answer session until now,
just eight days before leaving office.

He has been granting a flurry of legacy-focused interviews as he seeks
to shape the view of his presidency on his way out the door.

He gave advice to both his Republican Party and his Democratic
successor.

To the GOP, he said it must be "compassionate and broad-minded" to
come back from the drubbing it received in last year's elections, in
which Republicans lost the White House and sank deeper into the
minority in Congress. He said the immigration debate of two years ago
was harmful, because conservative opposition to broad reform made it
appear that "Republicans don't like immigrants."

"This party will come back. But the party's message has got to be that
different points of view are included in the party," he said.

Bush cautioned Obama not to listen to too much criticism — including
from "your so-called friends" — and to focus on doing what he thinks
is right. He also said to ignore talk of the isolation of the office.

"I have never felt isolated, and I don't think he will," Bush said.
"One reason he won't feel isolated is that he's got a fabulous family
and he cares a lot about his family."

He went on to mock the way some describe the job.

"I believe the phrase 'burdens of the office' is overstated," he said.
"You know, it's kind of like, `Why me? Oh, the burdens, you know. Why
did the financial collapse have to happen on my watch?' It's just
pathetic, isn't it, self-pity? And I don't believe that President-
elect Obama will be full of self-pity."

Bush seemed to struggle to envision himself on Jan. 21, his first day
back at home and without a job.

"I'm a Type A personality. I just can't envision myself, you know, the
big straw hat and a Hawaiian shirt sitting on some beach," he said.
But, he added, it would probably be a pretty low-key day with him and
his wife, Laura, at his ranch in Texas. "I wake up in Crawford on
Tuesday morning — I mean, Wednesday morning, and I suspect I'll make
Laura coffee and, you know, go get it for her."

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