George W. Bush

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Related to George W: George Bush, George H W Bush
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Synonyms for George W. Bush

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References in periodicals archive ?
Mr Clinton kept the Republicans out of the White House for eight years, the sores afflicting the Bush family festered and George W just wanted sweet revenge whatever the cost in lives or dollars.
Thus, after claiming a lifetime's ambition had finally been fulfilled by playing at the 'Stute, he targeted stressed-out American postalworkers, the financial crisis, the (non) teaching of evolution, the BNP and George W's Presidential Library - or, as Hall would have it, the world's largest collection of Garfield books.
George W's epitaph will be: "You made us laugh (RIP the world)".
With all the cavalier treatment of other people by George W
IRAN may be on George W's most-wanted list but it's a sell-out destination for adventure holidaymakers this month, reports The Imaginative Traveller.
George W's two elections hardly qualify the Americans to pontificate about democracy.
The fight was only avoided when George W's brother, Jeb, jumped into the fray and announced Dubya had just been accepted by Harvard University.
The streets must be tooling pretty threatened by this time, because the idea of a Republican-engineered election fraud is no longer the property of the kind of people who think George W. designed 9/11 and that John Kerry is a Halliburton-supplied bot containing batteries set to run out on October 15.
George W. didn't introduce the legislation himself of course.
Anti-Bush lyrics feature strongly throughout the album, the most notable line coming from That's It That's All ( "George W's got nothing on we, we got to take the power from he".
This habit also seems indicative of the 'policy setters', firmly installed in the Prime Minister's own office (which has been structured along the lines of his new buddy George W's office set-up), who retain a sound grasp of international law--witness the Tampa and Iraq invasion--but little understanding of the complexities evident in the many cultures of the Pacific.
Happily he had no evil in mind like poison in the pretzels, merely to fill Pages 1-7 on the day George W came to stay.
The oil is there in the ground, and George W's steadfastly anti-environmental policies (In one term I single-handedly destroyed the planet!) will ensure that it gets pumped out at the ground to fill your tank as often as you need.
It's not their lives at risk when their friend George W. Bush decides to go to war.
Rinder attempts what I guess might be called an antiestablishment Biennial, "outside the New York-LA axis," which is, I gather, something like George W's axis of evil: "What are the assumptions that underlie the divisions and boundaries that we have come to take for granted and which stipulate that this, but not that, is suitable for museum display?" Fine, I suppose, but Rinder backpedals rapidly, writing that his Biennial "opens the door only hesitantly to the possible richness of a truly expanded view of artistic practice." Why so timid?