President Bush has long assumed, rather idiotically, that his universal unpopularity was just a fluke, and that historians would remember him kindly. The fact is there will almost certainly be revisionists at some future point who will say "he's not so bad" but torture and Katrina and Iraq kind of seal the deal for his future reputation. But, sitting down with, uh, his sister for an oral history interview on the end of his administration, Bush is sanguine and only slightly defensive. How would he like to be remembered? As a guy who "did not sell his soul." The rest of his answer veers off into patently untrue nonsense:

I came to Washington with a set of values, and I'm leaving with the same set of values. And I darn sure wasn't going to sacrifice those values; that I was a President that had to make tough choices and was willing to make them. I surrounded myself with good people. I carefully considered the advice of smart, capable people and made tough decisions.

Right. Sure. You have absolutely no connection to observable reality, do you, Mr. President?

But this is maybe the best quote, nonsense-wise: "THE PRESIDENT: I've been in the Bible every day since I've been the President, and I have been affected by people's prayers a lot."

Great, revealing interview, Doro Bush Koch.

Photo: ANDINA/Carlos Lezama