(A cookie for anybody that can tell me where the phrase mission 1 accomplished is associated with and what its significance to President Bush is.)
My letter is not perfect and by no means good as I wrote it fast, I'll provide it as an example anyways:
As I know I will not agree with a president 100 percent of the time I look for specific qualities the president has and how I feel about the main actions hes taken. Do I feel the president is a good example of faith, strength, and honesty? Do I feel that my country is safer because of his administration? Do I feel that we took the chance to help the people of another nation out the best we could? Do I feel like the president stood strong and stuck with what he believed instead of bending to the expectations and qualifications of others? Do I feel the president put his nation first?
I know, without a doubt, that I can answer yes to all of these for President Bush. Was his speech perfect, did I agree with him all the time, and was he free from mistakes? No he was not but thats politics and thats what makes him human. And most importantly, I know that he loves the
We will miss you President Bush and God Bless you and your family.
Dear Elizabeth.
ReplyDeleteThank you for post Mission 1 Accomplished. I can tell you with all certainty that this is not a fake site — because it's mine!
I would also like to claim the cookie by explaining phrase Mission 1 Accomplished: Mission 1 is meant to illustrate how a Commander in Chief has one mission above all: keep us safe. And George Bush accomplished the one mission that matters most: domestic security. Without domestic security, everything a president does is an intellectual argument. The fact that we haven't had another domestic attack since 9/11 is the one thing for which, love him or hate him, EVERYONE ought to be grateful.
Thanks again for your letter. And also check back on the site for some upgrades that we're working on. Among the upgrades, there will be some text windows to explain a lot more details behind the intent of the site and our plans for the collection of letters (which now numbers over 25,000).
—Douglas Miller