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A Day With George W. Bush

Today,
after
serving
as
the
43
rd
President
of
the
United
States,
George
W.
Bush
some
how
loves
to
live
a
quiet
and
a
simple
life
in
Dallas,
Texas.
What
a
change,
right?
He
even
seems
to
have
lost
the
interest
in
a
lot
of
other
things.
For
instance,
his
house.
The
man,
once
a
resident
of
The
White
House,
lives
in
a
house
with
two
oak
trees
that
shades
the
front
yard.
The
Secret
Service
occupies
a
house
next
door.
And
his
neighbours
are
a
barrier
of
orange
cones,
two
police
cruisers
and
four
Secret
Service
agents
who
scan
the
perimeter
with
binoculars
restricts
entrance
into
the
cul-de-sac.
The
Bushes
plan
to
install
a
permanent
gate
outside
the
cul-de-sac
later
this
year.
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| | About once each week, Bush travels to give a speech or raise money for his 300 million dollar presidential centre, but he always moves inside an insulated bubble. |
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So far as his daily routine is concern. It, too, goes simple, with not a lot of things to be done. Bush almost always arrives at his Dallas office by 7:30 a.m., a few minutes before many of his employees, making him first to arrive. He works on his book with the help of a speechwriter, leaves for a late afternoon bike ride and spends his evenings reading or watching televised golf or baseball. Most of his weekdays are spent 95 miles north, in Preston Hollow, an upper-class section of Dallas where he lived for seven years before becoming governor of Texas in 1995. He has declined to give interviews, except to discuss baseball or his book, and neighbours remain silent so as not to violate his privacy. So, now the man cares about violation of his privacy, huh? His weekends, however, are spent more with the family. He spends most of his weekends with his wife, Lauraat, in their isolated ranch in Crawford, Texas, where he likes to wake up early, roam the 1,600 acres with a chainsaw and cut new bike trails.
About once each week, Bush travels to give a speech or raise money for his 300 million dollar presidential center, but he always moves inside an insulated bubble. But, with all these, Bush, most known for his temper and freaky nature, at times, manages to show his strange behaviour. For instance, on a trip to Calgary, one of the cities in Canada, last month, he flew into town on a private jet and ate in a private room at a restaurant with three friends and the Secret Service. Eighty police officers provided extra security.
Bush works with a dozen aides from his administration, socializes with friends he has known for decades and lives in a conservative neighbourhood that voted for him – both times – by a ratio greater than 2 to 1. No wonder. He dismisses analysis of his presidency as premature, regrets little and refrains from engaging in the snippety back-and-forth between the Obama administration and Bush loyalists such as Karl Rove and Dick Cheney.
Bush feels content with his presidency, friends said. Now he will try to explain his two terms by writing a book and building a presidential center at Dallas's Southern Methodist University, so that history will have the means to judge him fairly.
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