Now that’s very good news. Gas prices are sure to follow. Mac’s surely right. We have GWB to thank.
UPDATE: The next day the price climbed to $125.49 a barrel. Not bad at all. Then it closed out the week at $123.89. We’ll take it.
Now that’s very good news. Gas prices are sure to follow. Mac’s surely right. We have GWB to thank.
UPDATE: The next day the price climbed to $125.49 a barrel. Not bad at all. Then it closed out the week at $123.89. We’ll take it.
Comments Off on Oil below $125 a barrel
Tagged McCain, oil prices, President Bush
I don’t watch television much. Television, as someone said the other day, is for losers. So I didn’t watch the president’s news conference. So I didn’t get the sound of all the word fumbling that he normally commits–although he’s nowhere near as vacuous as Baby Barry. But in the transcript, which the White House makes available in these glorious Internet days when one is no longer hostage to whatever the newspapers are willing to print of it, or whatever the teevee and radio folks are willing to air of it, Bush reads pretty good–inspiring, even, unless you hate him as some do.
For one thing, he delivers the most succinct summary of the how of the war on terrorism that I’ve read in a long time, and there’s another good one on just how the oil companies are trying to take advantage of $140 a barrel oil by seeking more supply. Then there’s his take, repeated several times to similar questions, about how the American people are smart enough to adjust their own driving and thermostats without the nanny state’s help. Lord, yes. How could they not be? All in all, he sounds pretty confident to me, not at all the shell-shocked lightweight the Seablogger encountered on the tube. Maybe there’s a lesson here. Read the transcript, people. You’ve finally got it available whenever you want it. So read it.
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Posted in Afghanistan, Iraq, Scribbles, The War, Troops
Tagged President Bush, press conference transcript, White House
It isn’t popular and that’s why someone needs to do it. Stand up for President Bush. And VDH is just the guy to do it. Like him, I could wish, however, for a more forceful defense of Dubya’s wartime and other policies by the president himself: April’s 5 percent unemployment was lower than March; more than 95 percent of mortgages are not in foreclosure; 0.6 percent growth is not a recession; the stock market is sky-high; and the Maliki government finally is moving the Iraqi government in the right direction. The arguments are on your side, George.
Comments Off on Give ’em hell, Dubya
Posted in The War
Tagged campaign 2008, Dubya, Give 'em hell, President Bush, VDH
As with so much else, you can blame the irrational War on Drugs for the undercutting of privacy that we’re so often told is the nefarious work of the Bush administration. Executive power, which he also is frequently accused of overusing, likewise predates the war on terror, as explained in this good analysis by Glenn Reynolds.
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Posted in The War
Tagged President Bush, privacy, war on terror
Gasped, I tell you, when President B. failed to address the Pope as "your holiness." Then, to show that he had no shame, whatsoever, he crossed "his legs ‘Texan style.’" I’m still working out that one. Apparently only the South African Press Association has a clue as to what it means.
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Now Peggy Noonan is saying it–or maybe said it before but I missed it–in criticizing President Bush for ad hominem attacks against party detractors of his immigration bill. Maybe Fred’ll close them. I haven’t been a Republican voter long enough to know whether it’s true that when you lose Noonan, you’ve lost the GOP. Mysticchords’ John Salmon thinks she’s a poor analyst, but Instapundit started saying last fall she was leaving Bush behind and taking the conservatives with her.
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Posted in The War
Tagged close the borders, Fred Thompson, GOP, immigration, Peggy Noonan, President Bush

Helping an old man walk. In this case, Robert Byrd, the vitriolic former Klansman and Democrat senator for life from West Virginia. You don’t always get to pick the object of your compassion. AP’s pix posted by Don Surber.
Via Instapundit
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Tagged President Bush, Sen. Byrd, W