Bush thinks it's funny that the U.S. can't find WMD in Iraq

Does this guy also think it’s funny that hundreds of Americans have died in a war over these missing WMD? Does he find it funny the number of innocent Iraqis who were killed in this war as well? Does he find it funny how its costing the American tax payers billions of dollars for the war aimed at taking out these missing WMD? What exactly is so funny?

Bush Makes Jokes About Lack Of WMDs In Iraq

POSTED: 9:11 a.m. EST March 25, 2004

WASHINGTON – President George W. Bush poked fun at his staff, his Democratic challenger and himself Wednesday night at a black-tie dinner where he hobnobbed with the news media.

Bush put on a slide show, calling it the “White House Election-Year Album” at the Radio and Television Correspondents’ Association 60th annual dinner, showing himself and his staff in some decidedly unflattering poses.

There was Bush looking under furniture in a fruitless, frustrating search. “Those weapons of mass destruction have got to be somewhere,” he said.

his own kids aint dying in that useless war, he cud care less i guess.

Why was I surprised? :mudhosh:

Pleeeeeeaaze. Has everyone lost their sense of humor in this world. If David Letterman or Jay Leno or the cast of Saturday Night Live had made these same jokes, people would be rolling in the aisles. The one about trying to learn foreign leaders' names by looking at a deck of cards was hilarious.

The poll in the link above shows 67% think it was inappropriate.

For the president to be making such a comment, was indeed, in bad taste. I say this having spoken to the father of a slain US soldier in Iraq.

Actually, him making such a remark gives the likes of Jon Stewart a chance to entertain us good.

But it wasn't Jay Leno or David Letterman who conned their country into going to war on a basis of lies. Therefore, they are permitted to tell these jokes.

The easiest way to hide the Truth is to brush it off as a joke and start looking under table hoping for a Monica Lewinsky to be under there!

If Bush wants a sense of humour and a good giggle, all he has to do is look in the mirror and speak!(or try to)

oh give it up mv.. puhleeeze.. how far would u go to defend that moron? It was inappropriate for a President to trivialize such a major issue.. people’s lives have been lost.. US and Iraqi.. there are families without their sons and daughters.. thousands will have to live without a limb or two and the a$$hole and his rich a$$wipes think it’s funny? :mad2:

How did Bush end his time on stage?

He said the greatest honor for a president is seving with the fine people in the military. Pelosi laughed, everbody laughed. The press later created a political issue out of it. He mostly was pointing out his own foibles, perhaps this was not the best subject about which to do that, but to extrapolate that he trivializes the consequences of this war is stupid.

down with Bush :nook:

Bush criticized for gags about weapons search

Democratic critics and some family members of soldiers serving in Iraq took President Bush to task Thursday for his jokes at a black-tie dinner about the fruitless search for weapons of mass destruction.

The jokes came at Wednesday night’s annual Radio and Television Correspondents Association dinner. In a 10-minute, mostly puckish, self-deprecating speech, the president presented a slide show he called “an election year, White House photo album.”

In several photos, he appeared to be searching the Oval Office. A photo of Bush looking under a piece of furniture was flashed on the large projection screens in the ballroom.

“Those weapons of mass destruction got to be here somewhere,” Bush said in his narration, drawing laughter from the audience of journalists, politicians, government workers and other guests.

Another photo showed him looking through a window. “Nope, no weapons over there,” the president said.

“I’m appalled,” said Larry Syverson of Richmond, Va., who has a son serving with the Army in Iraq and another who recently returned after serving in the Tikrit area. Syverson read news accounts of the event.

“I think it’s in extremely poor taste,” he said. “I think he owes an apology to those families who have lost loved ones there and those of us that are going through the dread every day having a son or daughter in Iraq.”

Syverson recalled the displeasure many military families felt with Bush after he appeared last year to be daring Iraqi insurgents to attack U.S. troops by saying “Bring it on.”

“Now he pokes fun at the reason that he told us [soldiers] went over there. I think it’s extremely callous.”

White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan defended the president. “There is no question about the seriousness about which the president approaches this issue” of the Iraq war, she said.

At such dinners, mainstays of the Washington social circuit, presidents traditionally poke fun at themselves and that’s all Bush was doing, she said.

She added that the president ended his speech on a serious note with a “very moving tribute to the men and women of the military in which he expressed appreciation for their keeping our nation safe.”

But Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who watched the dinner on television, echoed other critics when he said he wasn’t amused.

**“I didn’t see the humor in it,” Durbin said. “I don’t think there’s anything humorous about the American people being misled about the reasons for going to war.” **

Asked if Bush should apologize, Durbin said he need not go that far. But the joke “was in bad taste,” he said.

Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, the presumptive Democratic nominee, also took Bush to task.

**“If George Bush thinks his deceptive rationale for going to war is a laughing matter, then he’s even more out of touch than we thought,” his campaign said in a statement. **

Questions about the propriety of Bush’s comedy routine were even raised Thursday at a Pentagon (news - web sites) briefing. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was asked whether the president and many of the journalists at the dinner erred by treating the issue of weapons of mass destruction so lightly.

“So my question,” a reporter said, “… both for the president, with respect, and for the news media–is it appropriate to make a joke … about the hunt for weapons of mass destruction, when both [the president and Rumsfeld] were involved in the difficult issue of sending troops to war for that hunt? And did the news media also blow it by sitting there and laughing?”

Rumsfeld replied: “I wasn’t there . . . and I just am not in a position to be judgmental about that.”

I agree, this was very bad of Bush. Poor choice of words.

whoever went to serve in Iraq is probably feeling pretty humiliated