Politics | President Obama Obama Echoes Bush— But Does It Better Why? 'He is decidedly not' his predecessor By Matt Cantor Posted Jun 4, 2009 1:10 PM CDT Copied Unidentified Bahraini reading newspapers at a Manama, Bahrain, coffee shop as U.S. President Barack Obama delivers a speech aired live Thursday, June 4, 2009, reaching out to the Muslim world from Cairo University in Egypt. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali) President Obama’s speech in Cairo sounded a lot like President Bush’s 2006 speech to Muslims—yet Obama’s manages to carry far more weight, writes Michael Crowley in the New Republic. Both spoke of respect for “the history and traditions of the Muslim world”; both suggested governmental systems can’t be “imposed.” But Bush’s speech was “forgotten,” while Obama’s “seems to offer the potential of making millions of Muslims reconsider their view of America,” Crowley writes. “There is no novel way to restate the obvious reason for this,” Crowley writes: “Obama is not Bush.” Obama doesn’t have Iraq to answer for, he’s got a “reputation for honesty," and he's just plain smarter. “Above all, he is a black man with Muslim heritage,” which he discussed. “To see him unfold his biography,” Crowley observes, “is to appreciate how much America will benefit from presenting this new face to the world.” Read These Next More details coming out about the last party the Reiners attended. First Australia victims lost their lives confronting the shooter. The Reiners murders and arrest have called attention to a 2015 film. See the states Americans are leaving, and where they're moving. Report an error