Author Topic: yes, yet another topic on politics  (Read 253 times)

Offline -ammo-

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yes, yet another topic on politics
« on: May 14, 2001, 05:19:00 AM »
Well nothing deregetory, but this artical that I pasted in here just shows the differences in the White house between the last administration and the current. I say it is a blessing knowing that the white house is being run in this manner now. I thank God that we have a real president now

From: News and Views | Beyond the City |
Sunday, May 13, 2001
Bush Stamps His Brand
On White House
By THOMAS M. DeFRANK
Daily News Washington Bureau Chief
 n
        the first week of his presidency, George W. Bush decided to throw an impromptu dinner
        party for a small group of Texas pals. A White House steward suggested the Map Room might
        be a perfect venue.
But Bush demurred. Too much trouble for the waiters, he replied. The food and table
        settings would have to be carted down from the family quarters to the main floor of the
        White House.
"It's no problem for us at all, Mr. President," the staffer assured. "We
        served Mr. [Hugh] Rodman dinner down there every night."
Former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's freeloading brother, who spent the last
        several weeks of the Clinton era in residence at the White House, is long gone from the
        Map Room. So are the infamous fund-raising coffees staged there by the Clintons.
And Bush and wife Laura entertained their old friends in the family dining room
        upstairs.
From Tex-Mex enchiladas on the First Family's down-home dining list to meetings that
        begin on time, the White House is a far different place these days — and Secret
        Service agents, grounds crew, telephone operators and others on the permanent staff say the Bushies treat the hired help better than their predecessors.
Not long ago, for example, an acquaintance asked one of the "little people"
        who are every organization's lifeblood how things were going under the new crowd.
"One of them actually held the door open for me," the astounded veteran
        remarked.
As might be expected of a Republican incumbent, what Presidents love to call the
        people's house is more of a corporate enclave under Bush than the frat-house, pizza-party,
        blue-jean style of the Clintonistas.
No male can enter the Oval Office without a jacket and tie. Shuttle vans to Capitol
        Hill have been cut back because they often ran half-empty. Sixteen separate cellular phone
        contracts for staffers have been pared to a handful.
Clinton staffers were even allowed to give friends tours of the supersecret Situation
        Room, where first word of foreign crises reaches the White House. No longer. "Unless
        you have official business there, the Situation Room is off-limits now," a senior
        Bush aide says.
In the next few weeks, the Bushies expect to become even more button-down by hiring a
        chief financial officer and a chief technology officer — two White House firsts.
"The only words I never want to hear are, 'Well, we've never done it this
        way,'" says Joe Hagin, the amiable deputy chief of staff for operations. "The
        permanent staff here is extremely professional, but just because this is the White House
        doesn't mean it can't be streamlined and made to run more efficiently."
Some Clinton aides privately called their boss "the late President Clinton"
        because he was notorious for almost never being on time. Bush, by contrast, is a stickler
        for punctuality. He's so intent on keeping a schedule, in fact, that last week he left the
        White House five minutes early for an event, leaving his official photographer behind and
        Hagin sprinting to make the motorcade.
Even Bush's Saturday radio address to the nation is routinely released to reporters on
        Friday afternoons.
"Everything runs like a Swiss train," says a senior member of the permanent
        cadre. "It shows respect for the people who work for him and with him."
Rules have been tightened for White House dining. More than 500 staffers had dining
        privileges in the Clinton era, swamping the Navy stewards who run it. "They turned it
        into a fast-food restaurant," a senior Bush aide shuddered.
These days, all White House staffers retain carry-out privileges. But only about 150
        senior staffers and military personnel are entitled to table service in the wood-paneled
        dining room — the norm before Clinton arrived.
In honor of the President's favorite comestible, the mess menu also sports a new entree
        — peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, in grape, strawberry or raspberry.
There's even a little touch of New York in this Texas-tinged White House: The entrance
        to the dining facilities features a freshly hung color print of the battleship Texas
        docked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1930.
Commanding Officer, 56 Fighter Group
Retired USAF - 1988 - 2011

Offline jihad

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yes, yet another topic on politics
« Reply #1 on: May 14, 2001, 05:54:00 AM »
Cool.  

In the next few weeks, the Bushies expect to become even more button-down by hiring a
chief financial officer and a chief technology officer — two White House firsts.


I thought the Ratpooplicans were going to downsize the government?

<pokes -ammo- with pointy stick>  


[This message has been edited by jihad (edited 05-14-2001).]

Offline Thud

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yes, yet another topic on politics
« Reply #2 on: May 14, 2001, 07:38:00 AM »
Phew, what a relief, he can't even come up with a proper foreign policy but at least he respects Navy stewards..... And I was thinking you elected a moron, silly me!