Occupiers attack Barack Obama’s inner Bush

The Occupy mob has come to the conclusion that the shade of George Bush has possessed Barack Obama and made him, on rare occasions, act like a U.S. president even though he continues to talk like a dopey liberal who never left the campaign trail.

From here:

Demonstrators held signs that leveled some of the Occupy protest’s most pointed criticism to date of the president. “Obama is a corporate puppet,” one said. “War crimes must be stopped, no matter who does them,” read another, beside head shots of President George W. Bush and President Obama.

One man, wearing a mask of the president’s face and holding a cigar, carried a sign that read, “I sold out!”

Satan prevented from speaking at Tyndale University, Toronto

Well, the next best thing: George Bush.

The Canadian Evangelical Left has blocked former President George W. Bush from speaking at evangelical Tyndale University in Toronto, deriding him as a virtual war criminal.

An online petition by faculty and students, fueled by reporting by the Toronto Star, evidently ensured the event’s cancellation last month. One Tyndale professor, in his own anti-Bush op-ed, implicitly accused the former president of “blasphemy” and “heresy’ for daring to have employed scriptural language in citations of dreaded American exceptionalism during his administration.

Apparently, Dr. Arthur Paul Boers is heartbroken over the absence of careful deliberation, discernment or debate about the arrogant theological actions and assertions of George W. Bush. If only Bush had attended Tyndale University, he would, no doubt, have emerged with his theology conformed to the received leftist Tyndale dogma, whereupon he would have metamorphosed into Jimmy Carter and given interviews to Playboy to discuss lust instead of invading Iraq.

Perhaps Boers and Bush could come to an agreement: Bush is not a theologian, so he will cease all theological utterances and Boers is not a politician (thank God), so he will keep his nose out of politics, confining himself to mystical mutterings in the comfort of his sacerdotal ivory tower.

Amnesty International wants Canada to arrest George W Bush

From here:

Amnesty International wants the federal government to arrest former U.S. president George W. Bush when he visits British Columbia next week.

Alex Neve, Amnesty Canada’s secretary general then went on to make the understatement of 2011:

Neve conceded that arresting a former president would likely cause tension with the United States

In contrast, when the murdering madman, Muammar Gaddafi wanted to drop in to Canada, Amnesty was completely silent, leaving it to Stephen Harper to officially protest.

Any smattering of integrity that Amnesty International might have once possessed has long since dissipated and, in this latest foolishness, Amnesty has confirmed its compulsive asininity and irrelevance.

 

The Tea Party shows that democracy works

Reader Warning:  “Bush”, “Fox News”, “Hannity” and “Tea Party” about to appear in one sentence; liberals should avert their gaze to prevent the danger of concentrated conservative input triggered brain implosion syndrome.

From here:

The rise of the Tea Party movement shows “democracy works,” former President George W. Bush says in an interview to air Tuesday night on Fox News’ “Hannity.”

“Here’s what I see. I see democracy working. People are expressing a level of frustration or concern and they’re getting involved in the process,” Bush told Sean Hannity in advance of the release Tuesday of his memoir, “Decision Points.”

“And the truth of the matter is, democracy works in America,” Bush said.

If it's not the Crusades, it's the cartoons

I don’t really need any more reasons to like George W. Bush, but here is another one anyway from Mark Steyn:

I was among a small group of columnists in the Oval Office when President Bush, after running through selected highlights from a long list of Islamic discontents, concluded with an exasperated: “If it’s not the Crusades, it’s the cartoons.” That’d make a great bumper sticker: It encapsulates both Islam’s inability to move on millennium-in millennium-out, plus the grievance-mongers’ utter lack of proportion.