Okay, I need something besides Spain stories on my 'blag', or I'm gonna lose all my referrals. (Thanks to those that continue to come around and read those - wait until you read my next entry, about what happened last night at the Dixieland concert. )
So I bring you new Bushisms, for enjoyment of all. Well, for the enjoyment of me.
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"In all due respect, I'm not so sure it's credible to quote leading news organizations about - well, never mind."
--Third presidential debate, Tempe, Arizona, 2004
"I suspect that had my dad not been president, he'd be asking the same questions: How'd your meeting go with so-and-so? . . . How did you feel when you stood up in front of the people for the State of the Union Address - state of the budget address, whatever you call it."
--Washington Post, March 9, 2001
"In this job you've got a lot on your plate on a regular basis; you don't have much time to sit around and wander, lonely, in the Oval Office, kind of asking different portraits, 'How do you think my standing will be?'"
--Washington, D.C., March 2005
"After the bombing, most Iraqis saw what the perpetrators of this attack were trying to do."
--Washington, D.C., March 2006
"They didn't think we were a nation that could conceivably sacrifice for something greater than our self; that we were soft, that we were so self-absorbed and so materialistic that we wouldn't defend anything we believed in. My, were they wrong. They just were reading the wrong magazine or watching the wrong Springer show."
--Washington, D.C., March 12, 2002
"There's nothing more deep than recognizing Israel's right to exist. That's the most deep thought of all. [...] I can't think of anything more deep than that right."
--Washington, D.C., March 13, 2002
"And so I'm for medical liability at the federal level."
--Washington, D.C., March 10, 2006
"The march to war hurt the economy. Laura reminded me a while ago that remember what was on the TV screens - she calls me, 'George W.' - 'George W.' I call her, 'First Lady.' No, anyway - she said, we said, march to war on our TV screen."
--Bay Shore, New York, March 11, 2004
Only 312 days left, kiddos.