Originally posted by NUKE
Give me a source.
And guess what, you are fanatical if you have no problem withg Iran having nukes, but say the US should'nt have them. The fact is that you are lucky we developed them 1st and still have them.
http://pewforum.org/news/display.php?NewsID=1994Bush's personal faith has turned highly public, arguably more so than any modern president. What's important is not that Bush is talking about God but that he's talking about him differently. We are witnessing a shift in Bush's theology – from talking mostly about a Wesleyan theology of "personal transformation" to describing a Calvinist "divine plan" laid out by a sovereign God for the country and himself.
On Thursday (Feb.6) at the National Prayer Breakfast, for instance, Bush said, "we can be confident in the ways of Providence. ... Behind all of life and all of history, there's a dedication and purpose, set by the hand of a just and faithful God."
Bush has made several statements indicating he believes God is involved in world events and that he and America have a divinely guided mission:
In that speech, Bush said, "Freedom and fear, justice and cruelty, have always been at war, and we know that God is not neutral between them." The implication: God will intervene on the world stage, mediating between good and evil.
At the prayer breakfast, during which he talked about God's impact on history, he also said, he felt "the presence of the Almighty".
"Privately, Bush even talked of being chosen by the grace of God to lead at that moment."
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Yes. Bush thinks he acts on behalf of god. Which god, who knows. Neverthless, that makes him a dangerous religious fanatic, who is leading a whole nation using the guidance of his imagined friend - and makes him no better than the other religious fundamentalists. He aksi has nuked, biological and chemical weapons.