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Who's the worst U.S. president ever?

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  • Ted, you are right of course. But, still, that does not make Lincoln a bad president because he steadfastly conducted the war to a Union victory. I disagree that Lincoln would have negotiated a treaty with the South. McClellan would have, but he was not elected.

    The reason Vietnam was a failure had everything to do with Johnson, though, as he did not prosecute that war with victory as an objective.
    http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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    • Originally posted by Pekka
      I'd say US vs Finland semifinals in hockey World Cup 04 traumatized US more than anything else
      Pekka, was that Finland's finest moment?
      http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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      • Originally posted by Ned
        Ted, you are right of course. But, still, that does not make Lincoln a bad president because he steadfastly conducted the war to a Union victory. I disagree that Lincoln would have negotiated a treaty with the South. McClellan would have, but he was not elected.

        The reason Vietnam was a failure had everything to do with Johnson, though, as he did not prosecute that war with victory as an objective.

        I never mentioned that the event had anything to do with being a bad President.

        In fact, I like Lincoln alot.
        We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln

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        • Originally posted by David Floyd
          So many bad ones to choose from, so few good ones.....

          The three I hate the most are the ones Berzerker already brought up - FDR, Lincoln, and LBJ, probably in that order, for their efforts in shredding the US Constitution. For example, Lincoln's decision to ignore the Supreme Court in Ex parte Merryman strikes me as one of the worst abuses of power in the history of the Presidency - far, far worse than anything Nixon did.

          Franklin Roosevelt violated the Constitution so regularly, the only way his New Deal became Constitution was through his threats to pack the Supreme Court. SCOTUS began to see things his way more often after that Court Packing mess, but the timing of the decisions against FDR vs. those in his favor is sort of telling.
          He was neither the first nor the last President to attempt to use his power to appoint Justices to bend thing his way. For their part the Supreme Court repeatedly over-stepped their bounds just because they didn't like his programs.
          Put another way, without FDR's threat to pack the court (an abuse of power up their with Lincoln's Merryman decision in my book), most of his legislative programs that had not already been found unconstitutional would undoubtedly have been found as such.
          I can think of no instance in which the Suoreme Court backed down from a decision because they were afraid of FDR.

          FDR also was conducting an illegal undeclared war against Germany, and trying to do anything he could to get the US into the biggest bloodbath in history, otherwise known as WW2.
          Even in the 1790s the US reserved the right to protect its merchant vessels by providing armed escort in war zone waters. Thomas Jefferson sent a convoy of grain ships escorted by American (and French) warships to Repuiblican France through a British blockade. The escorts were forced to fight a battle with a British squadron in order to clear the way for the convoy. Was Jefferson conducting an illegal war against Great Britain? OTOH by the time that the US began providing armed escorts for American merchatmen Nazis submarines were already operating on this side of the Atlantic. Therefore it could be said that the Nazis had made all of the seas and oceans between the Old World and the New into a war zone. Would you have confined our merchant fleet to the 3 mile zone?

          Woodrow Wilson is also pretty high up on my list of "worst Presidents" - not only did he get us into WW1, but he also played imperialist games in the Caribbean and Central America, and once we were in the Great War, his administration quelled dissent everywhere they could find it, and created a propaganda of hate against the Germans - in some ways, Wilson stirred up more hatred against the Germany of WW1 in the US than FDR was able to stir up against Nazi Germany, in my opinion. Wilson's administration actively prosecuted ANYONE who disagreed with the war, the draft, or any measures in support of either - people actually went to prison for saying they felt that the war or draft was wrong.
          I think you'd be hard put to find a President who hasn't played imperialist games in the Caribbean and Central America, so why single out Wilson? Also I seem to recall that the US Congress declared war on the Germans, not Wilson. The Zimmerman telegraph pretty much out raged the American public.
          "I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!

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          • Originally posted by Ned
            Let's be honest. The Civil War traumatized the South, permanently we hope. It unified the North and made the United States what it is today. The Civil War transformed the US to a better place.

            Nothing positive can be said about Vietnam.
            You make the South sound so bad. The north hated blacks and didn't want them anywhere near the north. That's why many of the northern states had rules against blacks even coming into the state. While the South might have enslaved, at least they were tolerant. And the north only didn't want expansion of slavery, not abolition, until after the Civil War even started.
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            • Ned, absolutely. Well maybe not the best.. but only second to the inter-baltic berry picking contest where we paricipated and came second!!
              In da butt.
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              • He was neither the first nor the last President to attempt to use his power to appoint Justices to bend thing his way.
                Good point - Lincoln threatened to do it too. Besides, there is nothing wrong with appointing Justices who are likely to rule "your way", but "packing the Court" with extra Justices on the basis of ideology alone is an unconscionable abuse of power.

                For their part the Supreme Court repeatedly over-stepped their bounds just because they didn't like his programs.
                Give me an example. Striking down, say, the AAA or the NRA was fully within the bounds of the Supreme Court, because both of those entities were unconstitutional, or at least were acting unconstitutionally.

                I can think of no instance in which the Suoreme Court backed down from a decision because they were afraid of FDR.
                Perhaps not in any single case, but on the other hand, Justice Owen Roberts suddenly started voting with the liberals on the Court, coincidentally right around the time that FDR was threatening to pack the Court. This created a liberal majority and instead of every major New Deal program being struck down, they were upheld instead. I'm sure you've heard of the "switch in time that saved nine" and this was it.

                Even in the 1790s the US reserved the right to protect its merchant vessels by providing armed escort in war zone waters.
                So what? In the 1790s the US wasn't shipping war material essentially for free to a belligerent in a major war, and using its navy to attack on sight the warships of the other belligerent, which is what was going on in 1940/1941. The USN was at first radioing the position of German U-boats to the British, and eventually simply began attacking them on sight. Those are hostile acts.

                OTOH by the time that the US began providing armed escorts for American merchatmen Nazis submarines were already operating on this side of the Atlantic. Therefore it could be said that the Nazis had made all of the seas and oceans between the Old World and the New into a war zone.
                Duh, Canada was a major belligerent on the side of Great Britain, and a great deal of shipping went between the two nations. We only had a right to keep the U-boats out of our territorial waters, yet by the time we declared war, we had a "security zone" extending over 1200 miles away from the US East Coast. That was both unnecessary for US security, and violated international law, and as far as I'm concerned, that zone was simply in place as a)an intentional provocation to get the Germans to attack, and b)an aid to the British.

                Would you have confined our merchant fleet to the 3 mile zone?
                Not at all, I'm not advocating that. I'm simply saying that the US was behaving in a hostile way towards Germany, while acting as a virtual ally towards Great Britain. You may say that we had a right to do so, and while I disagree with you on the basis of my argument about the war-making powers in the US Constitution (you've heard it before, but I'll repeat it if necessary), that also isn't the point.

                I think you'd be hard put to find a President who hasn't played imperialist games in the Caribbean and Central America, so why single out Wilson?
                I'm singling Wilson out on the basis that he got us into WW1, and then subsequently suppressed individual liberty on a larger scale than Dubya.

                Also I seem to recall that the US Congress declared war on the Germans, not Wilson.
                True, but Congress was manipulated by Wilson - Wilson's mis-information/propaganda network was screaming bloody murder over the Lusitania incident, which we really had no right to be upset over. The Lusitania was carrying arms, and the Germans tried to warn Americans against boarding the Lusitania - but the US government suppressed those warnings.
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                • Originally posted by Apocalypse

                  You make the South sound so bad. The north hated blacks and didn't want them anywhere near the north. That's why many of the northern states had rules against blacks even coming into the state. While the South might have enslaved, at least they were tolerant. And the north only didn't want expansion of slavery, not abolition, until after the Civil War even started.
                  Sortof a blanket statement and sounds like an apologist argument from 1862.
                  We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln

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                  • Now, I dislike Wilson as much as the next guy, but to say he was manipulating Congress into getting into the war is dishonest. He REALLY didn't want to get into the war. In fact, he campaigned on it. He did want to send materials to Britain, but that was the extent of it. It was after the newspapers ratcheted up public sentiment that he was forced to do so.
                    “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
                    - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

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                    • Originally posted by Apocalypse

                      You make the South sound so bad. The north hated blacks and didn't want them anywhere near the north. That's why many of the northern states had rules against blacks even coming into the state. While the South might have enslaved, at least they were tolerant. And the north only didn't want expansion of slavery, not abolition, until after the Civil War even started.
                      Wait, how can one have slavery AND be tolerant? Sorry, thats, well, NUTS. NO the south was NOT tolerant- saying that the north was racist, which it was, is not the same as saying the south was tolerant- in fact, the south was FAR more racists than the north and remained so for well over a century AFTER the civil war.
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                      • Hehe... they were enslaved but tolerant! That could be the dumbest thing I've ever read!
                        “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
                        - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

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                        • Did anyone watch Wolf Blitzer today?

                          I was watching Jimmy Kimmel and he had a clip from Wolf's show where a professor was talking about Lincoln being gay. Wolf asked the professor whether he (the professor) was gay, to which the professor replied that he had "a strong anal fixation", whereupon the interview was terminated.

                          Did this really happen, or was it a joke?

                          edit: Twas a joke, a sharp piece of editing. Pretty funny though.
                          Last edited by Agathon; January 18, 2005, 01:39.
                          Only feebs vote.

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                          • While the South might have enslaved, at least they were tolerant.

                            WFT?!??!
                            Stop Quoting Ben

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                            • Originally posted by Ted Striker
                              Sortof a blanket statement and sounds like an apologist argument from 1862.
                              And also true. Though not the tolerance bit.

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                              • Blanket statements are not true son.
                                We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln

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