America has taken a heaping pile of shit on the living
room carpet and is expecting everyone else to pick it
up. The caliber of the Bush Administration could be
compared to the music career of Vanilla Ice; it was
disturbing, unforgettable, and entirely too long. George
Walker Bush will easily go down in history as one of
the worst Presidents of the United States of America, if
not
the worst. Whether we like it or not we are making
history as a nation and it is not for the better.

Late at night, right before I close my eyes to fall deeply
into a dream that usually contains something with a
libido stronger than a category five hurricane and
Alyssa Milano, I often ponder who exactly was the
worst President of the United States and to always
make things a little more difficult, I attempt to exclude
George W. Bush. I am only left with a handful then,
Herbert Hoover with the Great Depression following the
fall of the stock market, Ulysses S. Grant who was
drunk on Confederate Whiskey most of the time, and of
course you cannot forget Richard Millhouse Nixon, the
only President actually forced to resign; but I always
came back to Bush, his failures are unprecedented. The
fall of our economy, the rise of gas prices, and
Operation: Iraqi Freedom or Operation: Democratic
Iraq, or whatever his pretty little head has decided to
call it today.

The fact is that the only President in recent history that
has had a lower approval rating than Bush is Nixon.
However don’t get too excited Bush Supporters, it’s
only by ten percent. As of right now Bush’s approval
rating is 36%, which went up to 37% after the death of
Iraqi Al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, but since
has gone back down to 36%. Nixon’s Approval rating
during the Watergate Scandal was 27% and he at least
had the decency to resign. It seems ludicrous to think
eight years ago Congress was attempting to impeach
President Bill Clinton for dipping his pen in the company
ink.

Rome wasn’t built in a day, and it took centuries to
crumble. President Clinton spent eight years building
America’s economy to a historical peak, to a point that
it seemed impossible to be able to climb any further.
During the Clinton Administration our economy had an
average of four plus percent growth (four percent
better than the pervious year) each year. During the
Bush Administration we have lost more jobs than we
have created. With the Clinton Administration 20 million
new jobs were created. In the first four years of
Cont.