George W. Bush

George W. Bush and cabinet Bush officials: Where are they now?

The unemployment rate is high around the country -- but not for former Bush officials. A guide to who's cashing in
  • Night of the living neocons

    The shameless fools whose Iraq folly empowered Iran's hard-liners are back, smearing Obama as an appeaser
  • Gibbs responds to Bush: "we won"

    The press secretary hits back at the former president's criticism of the Obama administration
  • Obama's Cairo mission: Don't be Bush

    Five disastrous Middle East policies that the president must show he's rejected.
  • This president does not chop brush

    Unlike all his predecessors since Kennedy, Obama is an engaged city dweller -- just like the majority of Americans.
  • Bush criticizes Obama

    The former president said he wasn't going to speak ill of his successor -- and then did
  • Republicans lose their national security edge

    A new poll finds that Americans no longer favor Republicans on national security issues.
  • "The world has ignored our warnings"

    Nuclear watchdog Mohamed ElBaradei talks about being wiretapped by the Bush administration, whose "arrogance and ignorance" turned the Middle East into "a giant mess."
  • Our unending war of terror

    Bush's embrace of torture was horrific, but it was hardly the first time Americans have acted like terrorists.
  • The 13 people who made torture possible

    The Bush administration's Torture 13. They authorized it, they decided how to implement it, and they crafted the legal fig leaf to justify it.
  • We tortured to justify war

    Dick Cheney keeps saying "enhanced interrogation" was used to stop imminent attacks, but evidence is mounting that the real reason was to invent evidence linking Saddam Hussein to al-Qaida.
  • Soufan: CIA torture actually hindered our intelligence gathering

    An FBI agent testifies that an al-Qaida prisoner provided useful intelligence until the CIA got rough -- and casts doubt on Bush's statements about the effectiveness of harsh interrogations.
  • They're Obama's wars now

    George W. Bush may have started the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it's up to the new president to resolve them.
  • Is the White House pulling out on abstinence?

    The Obama budget cuts two abstinence-only programs, but the administration's not completely ruling out funding for the idea.
  • Dear Wingnut, why are Republicans afraid of science?

    Our undercover conservative answers two different Salon readers who want to know why the GOP seems anti-intellectual and anti-science.
  • It's time for Obama to listen to his mama

    The president has promised to increase religion's influence on policymaking. He should honor the late Ann Dunham by strengthening the wall between church and state instead.
  • The "best and the brightest"? Spare me

    Some are arguing that if we prosecute Bush officials for torture, or reregulate the financial industry, talented people won't enter government or become bankers. No, they're not kidding.
  • The reluctant enablers of torture

    A Senate report shows that during the Bush administration's War on Terror, mental health professionals raised questions about harsh interrogations -- but helped design interrogation programs anyway.
  • Quote of the day

    If you don't love George W. Bush, it's probably because you're an awful person.
  • America's necessary dark night of the soul

    We need to investigate the Bush years, even if it means tearing the country -- and ourselves -- apart.
  • How Obama can succeed in the next 100 days and beyond

    His first 100 days has been a sprint. But the success of his second 100 days -- and his presidency -- hinges on a series of tough decisions.
  • Why can't conservatives admit George Bush broke America?

    From his undisclosed location, our undercover Wingnut explains why the right thinks George Bush has been unfairly criticized and will be vindicated by history.
  • Torture and truthiness

    If Dick Cheney believes he can prove that torture saved us from terrorist attacks, why does he oppose a full investigation?
  • Our misguided fight against Somali pirates

    Those teenage high-seas renegades are not about to team up with terrorists, so why is the U.S. military devoting so much attention to them?
  • The shaming of America

    Judge Jay S. Bybee provided the legal framework for torture to the Bush administration. If he had even a particle of decency, he'd resign.
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