All Bush has to do is to before he leaves office is to install a giant mirror in the Oval Office, facing the President's desk. Then Obama will spend the next four years staring at his reflection (while being fed, bathed, and groomed in place by attendants, and occasionally repositioned to avoid pressure sores) and will thus be unable to cause any damage. He won't be able to sign any legislation either because he won't be able to direct his attention to anything but the image of himself behind the President's desk, but that would simply mean that Nancy Pelosi could not get anything done either. Does anyone see any downside here?
In retrospect, the Republicans could have shut down Obama's campaign by installing big mirrors in every hotel at which he stayed, because then he would never have shown up for any of his scheduled campaign events.
Say nothing.
Sign nothing.
Propose nothing.
Worry about...nothing.
This will leave every pile of $h!+, big and small, for Obama to deal with. He'll be so buried in these piles, he'll have no time for anything else on his twisted agenda. At least, for a while.
Hey that an insult to every buffoon. We know there are at least 64 million of them in the USA.
I’m sure the Left applauded his insult. Classless.
Obama, on the other hand, isn't stupid. Do not underestimate someone who believes he is here to "change the world."
“the man who congratulated him on his election”
Why would it make a difference. He is the “ONE”(evil one that is). And he will leave no man or woman standing who would oppose his plan. What President Bush should do now is , like 0 did with any controversy, is to make himself unavailable for questioning by the inquisitor.
I predict that the right will have a hayday with the amount of comic material Obama and Biden will provide. His first press conference was laughable. Take the teleprompter and script away from this guy, wind him up, and watch him display to the world how hollow he actually is.
Even the left will be wishing for a third Bush term after this guy.
Obama’s a smug, condescending liberal elitist with one goal in mind -— undermine the enemy and hold onto power. Even a beloved figure like Mrs. Reagan isn’t off limits to the Messiah.
What goes around, comes around.
This is not the time for nasty rhetoric from conservatives. This is the time to espouse Godly virtues and wisdom. This is not the time to be what the left thinks we are but are not.
Yes, at least the Romans got the whole horse.
By the way, do we think Obama is really president unless he proves it by producing a REAL birth certificate?
I don’t think the courts or politicians will act on this, but there will always be doubts that he is a legitimate POTUS until he confirms it with solid proof.
Wow! He will need to put some ice on that one.
Question:
What offenses will cause a President or VP to be removed from office?
In: United States History
Answer:
An impeachable offense can be as nebulous as “He practices cronyism.” We can call this a misdemeanor. According to the Constitution, Article II, Section 4, “The President, Vice President, and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.” President Gerald Ford was correct when he said in 1970 that, “An impeachable offense is whatever the majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at any given moment in its history.”
Me thinks the horse shows best as how it will end.
His two favorite "words."
Two U.S. presidents have been impeached: Andrew Johnson, the seventeenth chief executive, and William J. Clinton, the forty-second.
Johnson, a Southern Democrat who became president after Lincoln’s assassination, supported a mild policy of Reconstruction after the Civil War. The Radical Republicans in Congress were furious at his leniency toward ex-Confederates and obvious lack of concern for ex-slaves, demonstrated by his veto of civil rights bills and opposition to the Fourteenth Amendment. To protect Radical Republicans in Johnson’s administration and diminish the strength of the president, Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act in 1867, which prohibited the president from dismissing office holders without the Senate’s approval. A defiant Johnson tested the constitutionality of the Act by attempting to oust Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. His violation of the Act became the basis for impeachment in 1868. But the Senate was one vote short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict, and Johnson was acquitted May 26, 1868.
Gotta love it!