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Who was the worst president?

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liberty student:

Nitroadict:
The whole citizen / soldier distinction; if more citizens at least witnessed war in person (not necessarily as soldiers), or at least not sheltered from the horrors of it from the State, I'd imagine a lot more people would change their tune about the value of a human life.

The State needs it sheep to be blind until they hit the battlefield, however.  Whoever survives the shock of it all is a Darwinian Hero.

I don't think people care.  Our movies are meant to increase our resistance to gore and death.  Our video games glorify killing and conquest.

People care about war, when it hits them in the pocket book.  When it threatens directly, their own children.

But sadly, most Americans are now sheep.  Or they are completely vile, believing in the glory, nay reveling in the empire's looting and destruction.

Sorry to get all anti-American, but I feel the same way about Sheeple everywhere regardless of nation.  It's just that Americans seem to provoke and supply weapons to almost every single conflict, whether their blood is spilled or not.

I disagree, partially, with charging culture to blame, as there always has been a degree of expository and/or entertainment involving violence & death in cultures throughout history (perhaps out of a need for individuals to cope with the ultimate unknown that is death).   Then again, Statism has been around for a while as well. 

However, it would be in the State's interest to encourage a culture of coercion & a conflict view of society, both of which I think infiltrates culture of various nations (especially the USA) at every level possible. 

For example, one can take the movie Resevior Dogs has largely glorying coercive violence or one can take the eventual outcome of the movie as an expository on the almost futile & destructive nature of said coercive violence. 

Recently, there was an excellent article at LRC regarding the conflict view of society in the U.S. that sort of relates to what I'm talking about:  http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/barriers-broken.html

As for the pocketbook remark, this is sadly & easily obfuscated with the myth / half-truth of WWII revving up the economy & ending the previous poverty of the Great Depression (half-truth, since we already had a war-based economy, but yea).

As for being anti-American: poppycock, I say.  Many Founding Fathers would be called "anti" American nowadays, by the leering idiots who cheer for their political teams like a hot day in the football stadium, then line up at the polls like they're winning a lottery ticket. 

Recently, with a dreadful conversation with relatives over Election-Day, I was called "anti-american" for essentially "not picking a side", & criticizing everything else everyone had to say. 

Truly one of the most disgusted moments (personally) this country has brought me so far.

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Natalie replied on Sat, Nov 8 2008 2:11 PM

liberty student:
Sorry to get all anti-American, but I feel the same way about Sheeple everywhere regardless of nation.  It's just that Americans seem to provoke and supply weapons to almost every single conflict, whether their blood is spilled or not.

 

AKs are more popular than any American weapons :)

If I hear not allowed much oftener; said Sam, I'm going to get angry.

J.R.R.Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings

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Natalie replied on Sat, Nov 8 2008 2:12 PM

Nitroadict:
Many Founding Fathers would be called "anti" American nowadays, by the leering idiots who cheer for their political teams like a hot day in the football stadium, then line up at the polls like they're winning a lottery ticket. 

Yes, rich racist white men.

If I hear not allowed much oftener; said Sam, I'm going to get angry.

J.R.R.Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings

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Natalie:

Nitroadict:
Many Founding Fathers would be called "anti" American nowadays, by the leering idiots who cheer for their political teams like a hot day in the football stadium, then line up at the polls like they're winning a lottery ticket. 

Yes, rich racist white men.

I did not glorify the Founding Fathers to exempt them from such valid criticism. 

I meant that their Constitutional beliefs would cause their nationalism to be called into question by the current "entitlement" generation, looked over by the Statist Welfare/Warfare machine.

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Mark B.:

I will repost what I posted in our local newspaper forum on this topic a few days ago.  Needless to say, it got quite a different reaction there. :)

The disastrous Presidents:

1.  Abraham Lincoln - The slaughter of 600,000 Americans in an unlawful war of conquest.  The forcible overthrow and subjugation of the Confederate States.  To many abuses of power to even list.  Lincoln's tyranny set the pattern for the tyranny of the Federal Government and the subsequent Presidents, all the way to the current one.  George Bush is merely raising the bar that was first established by Lincoln and his four thousand doesn't hold a candle to Lincoln's 600,000.  To further add to his crimes is that he brought to fruition the centralization of economic power in Washington, D.C., that had long been pushed by the Federalists and later the Whigs, and long resisted by the Jeffersonian Republicans and Jacksonian Democrats.

2.  Franklin Delano Roosevelt - He never did solve the depression, by the way.  He took the bad situation he received from Hoover and totally f***ed it up beyond repair.  He did demonstrate once and for all that Keynesian Economics does not work.  Sadly, most modern citizens have never absorbed this lesson.  His greatest crime was the ending of the gold standard and confiscation of gold from Americans.  His brutal intimidation and overthrow of the once independent Judiciary Branch of government also stands to his disgrace.  Maneuvering the United States into conflict with Japan again stands to his disgrace.  FDR continues to screw this country from his grave, with the many millstones he tied around America's neck.

3.  Woodrow Wilson -  His greatest crime, for which America may never recover, was the establishment of the Federal Reserve.  In one stroke of the pen, he forever sold America out to the tyranny of inflation.  He also set in motion the events leading up to the Great Depression.  His needless involvement of this country in World War I and his incompetent foreign policy would end up dooming the world to experience World War II.

The failures:

1.  Theodore Roosevelt - Advocacy and advancement of central banking and his ultra progressive policies.

2.  Herbert Hoover - Turning an ordinary "panic" into a true disastrous with his interventionist policies.  In fact, Hoover's policies would very much foreshadow FDR's later policies.  In both cases they failed, badly.

3.  Lyndon Baines Johnson - The disastrous Great Society and Vietnam.

4.  Tie.  William McKinley - advocacy of central banking and centralization of economic planning.  Also, imperialist foreign policy.

4.  Tie.  George W. Bush - No real need to explain this. :)

4.  Tie.  Harry Truman -  Use of an atomic weapon on a civilian city.

5.  Tie.  Richard Nixon - Bad economic policy, particularly the ending of the gold exchange standard.  He does get a reprieve for his foreign policy, which is why he is not tied for 4th with the others.

5.  Tie.  Jimmy Carter - Just general ineptness for the Presidency.

It should be noted that government expanded both absolutely AND as a percentage of the GDP during the administrations of the eleven Presidents listed.  It should be noted that the partisan breakdown is six Republicans and five Democrats, lest it be thought that I considered either party worth a damn.

At least the Democrats WERE a damn good party, up until 1896, that is.

<below this line was originally posted as a separate post>

Good Presidents <defined as those Presidents who abided by Article II of the Constitution and did not fundamentally abuse their offices, disregarding minor scandals>

1.  Grover Cleveland

2.  Martin van Buren

3.  Calvin Coolidge

4.  Warren G. Harding <this President is noted for his excellent handling of the panic of 1921, caused by WWI inflation under Wilson, if Herbert Hoover had only taken heed of this man's excellent example.>

Adequate Presidents <generally as above, but had serious incidents during their presidency>

1.  Thomas Jefferson - Failed to abolish the Bank of the United States established under the Federalists and failed to undo Federalist tariffs.  Also foreign policy blunders.

2.  James Madison -  Same as Jefferson, plus War of 1812.

3.  Andrew Jackson -  Overall an excellent President, however his brutal treatment of Indians gives him a major black eye.

4.  Dwight Eisenhower - Foreign policy problems.

5.  George Washington -  Washington suffers mainly from being under the influence of Alexander Hamilton.  The Bank of the United States is his major failure, followed by suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion.  To his credit, however, he kept the Presidency in deferment to the Congress.

Honorable mentions that I have not quite placed yet.

James Monroe and John Tyler.

The remaining pre-1896 Democratic Presidents, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan deserve some positive mention for at least trying, although both were ineffective.  Andrew Johnson merits a thumbs up for standing up to the radical Republicans.

As for the rest of them, they go into the mediocre category.  In chronological order the mediocres would be:

John Adams

John Quincy Adams

William Henry Harrison

James Polk

Zachary Taylor

Milliard Fillmore

U.S. Grant <borderline for the failure range>

Rutherford Hayes

James Garfield

Chester Arthur

Benjamin Harrison

William Taft

John Kennedy

Gerald Ford

Ronald Reagan

George H.W. Bush

Bill Clinton

 

Where is George Washingston on this, or any, list? He was a president, wasn't he?

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Luis Buenaventura:

Where is George Washingston on this, or any, list? He was a president, wasn't he?

He was on the adequate list, #5.  Seems like you skimmed right over him when you were reading.

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Tex2002ans:

Luis Buenaventura:

Where is George Washingston on this, or any, list? He was a president, wasn't he?

He was on the adequate list, #5.  Seems like you skimmed right over him when you were reading.

 

Seems like I need new glasses, again.

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Justin D replied on Tue, Mar 24 2009 6:31 PM

Bumping this to see if Barack Obama has entered a ranking in his short time

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nameless replied on Tue, Mar 24 2009 6:35 PM

He's trying his hardest to make it to number one on the worst.  YES WE CAN

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DBratton replied on Tue, Mar 24 2009 7:30 PM

Aristotle100:
 Let's not forget Andrew Jackson people. Remember he voted against the nation bank

He did kill off the national bank. But then he put the government's money in private banks belonging to his own political supporters - the so called. "pet banks".

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I'm officially placing Obama in as the worst president in the history of the United States.

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The Rev replied on Tue, Mar 24 2009 8:27 PM

Worst?  I think FDR or Lincoln for sheer destruction, but for general buffoonery, who can top our loveable W?

I would like to give Andrew Jackson some honorable mention, though.  Sure, he was a total psycho, even by the standards of his own time, but he IS the only president in US history to take down a central bank.

The Rev

Lifes a piece of shit, when you look at it

Life's a laugh and death's a joke, it's true

Just remember it's all a show, keep em laughing as you go

Just remember that the last laugh is on you

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Mark B. replied on Tue, Mar 24 2009 11:42 PM

I will start Mr. Obama off at position #12 from worst, after Jimmy Carter, within the "fail" range.

Obviously you can't judge a man who has been in office only 60 days on his achievements or lack thereof, so I am going by his words, intentions and actions.  Currently, his words, intentions and actions are those of a man on his way to disaster.

My feeling is that he will end closer to worst, but for that we must wait and see.

For comparison, I currently have George W. Bush tied at 7th from worst, with McKinley and Truman.

If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home and leave us in peace. We seek not your council, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.
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Dondoolee replied on Wed, Mar 25 2009 12:04 AM

I think it is far to early to rank obama as one of the worst ten yet.  If he has implemented some bone headed policies thier full effects have yet to be felt, plus he hasn't drafted yet nor killed as many people as his past 3 predecessors yet.  I still don't think he has reached the heights of TR, FDR, Truman, LBJ or Wilson yet by a long shot.

For the Rrecord, if I had to pick the worst it would be TR as he seems to be the alpha for all things bad.  His precedents were poison that have never left the system.  Lincoln and McKinley may have been before him, but I don't think they had as much of an impact in philosophy the way that TR had, they were more proto types.

 Let us look then and see, how they manage their concerns- they for whose cause we are to labor, devote ourselves, and grow enthusiastic

 -Max Stirner, The Ego and His Own

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Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

Other than Lincoln, I can't think of a single president that managed to wreck so much havoc after he went into the ground. Wilson probably comes close.

 

 

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Justin D replied on Wed, Mar 25 2009 8:55 AM

I still say Wilson is the worst.

Once Obama matches Bush in international blunders contributing to more death, he will enter the top 10. He intends to pass Bush economically before his 100 days is over. Maybe that will stop him at a single term.

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Spideynw replied on Wed, Mar 25 2009 9:01 AM

A quick note on Lincoln and the Civil War, the South did fire first...

[edit] Nevermind.  The South told the North to give up their forts, and the North refused.

At most, 5% of the population would need to stop complying to bring down the government.

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Justin D replied on Wed, Mar 25 2009 9:11 AM

Spideynw:

A quick note on Lincoln and the Civil War, the South did fire first...

After Lincoln sent 75,000 troops to invade the South to end secession.

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aludanyi:
Bush Jr. is also in the club, but I don't think he is comparable with those three.  

Excellant resource by the way, thanks!

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Coolidge presided over the 20's, when the Federal Reserve pumped massive amounts of credit into the system. I don't think he can be called a good president.

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