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George W Bush - Site Map
Since his inauguration in January 2001, President George W Bush has consistently proven to be a site for sore eyes. In fact, his current 28% job approval ratings likely make George Bush the most unpopular presidents to hold office in decades. Americans asked to comment on the almost two terms President Bush has served in the White House often reference his generally poor intellect and misuse of the English language than his faulty domestic and foreign policy initiatives. President Bush has brandished such roles George Bush the star of and inspiration for That's My Bush, a short-lived sitcom mocking G W Bush on Comedy Central, and George Bush the brunt of all jokes political on Saturday Night Live. President Bush also deserves credit for providing the material for countless late-night television comedy and news shows.
Thanks to President George W Bush, Americans have also been able to add several new words to their vocabulary - strategery and nucular being two of the most famous among them. There is no denying that President Bush communicates poorly. He is George Bush the Poor Communicator. Criticisms of President Bush at home are magnified by his perceptions abroad, where President George W Bush is better named George Bush the Poor Excuse for an American President. Following the 2004 election, for example, Britain's Daily Mirror ran a cover story about the incumbency of Mr. George Bush with the teaser "How can 59,054,087 People be so Dumb?" It's a question that is echoed across the world, as polls show that the re-election of President Bush makes foreigners "feel worse about Americans" and less at ease about their level of security. Even more damning is the November 2006 poll taken in Britain, Mexico, and Canada that shows people believe George Bush the American is more dangerous than North Korea's Kim Jong-il and Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
People were so dumb as to elect President Bush to another four-year term because he capitalized on his role as George Bush the Manipulator of the Politics of Fear. They trusted President Bush because they thought he could lead them through the turmoil of war and terror. It quickly became apparent, though, that all we really have to fear is President George W Bush himself.
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