SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 4, 2009 2004 was a referendum on Bush. He had a 51% approval rating, and won 51% of the vote. You could move some demographics around, but ultimately the final election totals probably would have come out the same almost no matter who you put up against Bush. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CubbyBr 0 Report post Posted February 4, 2009 If my memory serves me correct, wasn't Dean the big anti-war canidate during the primaries and the canidate that would bash Bush the most? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 4, 2009 Yes. However, in November of 2004, the war was only a little more than a year old and there was still a majority of voters who were willing to give Bush the benefit of the doubt about it. There was even still a strong pro-war faction within the Democratic Party at that time. Had Bush been running for reelection in 2005 or 2006, Dean would have destroyed Kerry and Edwards in the primaries, and gone on to when the White House easily. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
stormy 0 Report post Posted February 11, 2009 Bush knew he would beat the odds and stay in the white house for the second term. Why? Because look at history we were solidly into his little war in the middle of the east. It takes a heck of a lot to change horses in mid stream as my grandfather use to say...People have a tendency to stay with the president during the war as long as he is eligable to use the second term because they think he knows whats going on... Only exception to that was Gerald Ford..He was the only president to actually be elected. When he pardon Nixon was the downfall of his political carrear for the most part...Then there were those who said he never should have let the Viet Nam draft avaders come home without charges....Ford did it figuring the country needed to heal but the die hards didn't agree and that was when he lost the election to Jimmy Carter...and he wasn't the man either That when Regan came in and for the most part he was one of the popular ones... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 11, 2009 Vietnam had ended by the time the election of 1976 rolled around. A more apt example, that defeats the premise of never changing presidents in wartime, would be the NH primary voters telling Truman it's definitly time to go in 1952. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nightwing 0 Report post Posted February 15, 2009 Vietnam had ended by the time the election of 1976 rolled around. A more apt example, that defeats the premise of never changing presidents in wartime, would be the NH primary voters telling Truman it's definitly time to go in 1952. It didn't help that Truman (rightfully) dismissed Douglas MacArthur, who was ridiculously popular at the time. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 15, 2009 And, somehow, Estes Kefauver found himself wildly popular. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 16, 2009 Maybe hindsight is clouding my judgement (most people didn't realize how incompetent Bush was until after 2005), but given the state of the economy and world affairs in 2000....how the fuck did Al Gore lose? George W. Bush didn't have a single issue or vast surplus of charisma going for him to be able to do as well as he did...even given liberal apathy towards Gore at the time to lose votes to Nader...it still doesn't add up. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Big Ol' Smitty 0 Report post Posted February 16, 2009 He didn't. ba dum cha Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Big Ol' Smitty 0 Report post Posted February 16, 2009 Timed for Presidents Day 2009, C-SPAN today releases the results of its second Historians Survey of Presidential Leadership, in which a cross-section of 65 presidential historians ranked the 42 former occupants of the White House on ten attributes of leadership. Lincoln Washington FD Roosevelt Teddy Roosevelt Truman Kennedy Jefferson Eisenhower Wilson Reagan LB Johnson Polk Jackson Monroe Clinton McKinley John Adams George HW Bush John Quincy Adams Madison Cleveland Ford Grant Taft Carter Coolidge Nixon Garfield Taylor Harrison Van Buren Arthur Hayes Hoover Tyler George W. Bush Fillmore Harding WH Harrison Pierce A. Johnson Buchanan Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 16, 2009 My opinion: Reagan, Kennedy, Grant, and LBJ are too high, while Andrew Jackson is too low. The top four are right, except I might switch FDR with Washington. No comment on Nixon and Harding. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Your Paragon of Virtue 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 Stumbled onto this, pretty funny. Palin supporters in Ohio: http://www.prosebeforehos.com/word-of-the-...-rally-in-ohio/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 One of the most racist and genuinely dangerous presidents in our history gets ranked the ninth best. The man who returned the country to a progressive civil rights trajectory and did more for U.S. veterans than maybe any president ever (including beating up a guy for fucking with the vet benefit coffers) gets tossed into the bottom five. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 How could poor William Henry Harrison possibly be a worse leader than George W. Bush. Even if you only give Junior the blame for one thing, that's still one more than old one-month. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 *sigh* Here we go again... Woodrow Wilson turned the United States into a world power. While he did segregate the civil service, his visionary ideas outweigh his reactionary (even for his time) views on race. Was Wilson more racist that, say, most of the first 15 presidents? I'm not crazy about Wilson either, but I understand why he was put where he was. Warren Harding died before he could accomplish more than pass a budget reform act, though it was badly needed. The isolationist policies he championed were the opposite of what the world needed at the time. Though not his fault, his election signaled a moving away from the progressive ideals of Teddy Roosevelt and Wilson, ushering in perhaps the greatest era of greed and corruption of the 20th century. His quickly back-tracked from the anti-lynching law he proposed. The guy on that list I see who put the U.S. on a progressive civil rights trajectory sits at #5, by the way. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 Truman came after Harding. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PUT THAT DICK IN MY MOUTH! 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 how the fuck did Al Gore lose? The media decided they hated him and committed blatant character assassination. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
At Home 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 his visionary ideas You mean his completely idealistic bullshit that he spewed out after claiming that this would be the "war to end all wars," and Europe would enjoy "peace without victory?" The same one who championed the Weimar Republic? The one who separated much of Europe into places that are still killing each other today? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Art Sandusky 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 If the US President had as much power then as he has today, you'd be justified in that. At the time, we were a brand new player on the European stage and the French/British combo was furious with Germany and a little scared. Look at the western European nations as the reason the East became such a mess and Germany was turned into a vaccum. Imagine how much more of a mess would come out of Russia being at Versailles as well. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 his visionary ideas You mean his completely idealistic bullshit that he spewed out after claiming that this would be the "war to end all wars," and Europe would enjoy "peace without victory?" The same one who championed the Weimar Republic? The one who separated much of Europe into places that are still killing each other today? No, I meant the 14 Points, the League of Nations, and American leadership in world affairs. And it would have worked too, if it weren't for those meddling kids (i.e. the Republicans in the U.S. Senate). Truman came after Harding. Yeah, and Truman is the one who actually helped civil rights by desegregating the military. And Harding did what? Die in office after appointing a bunch of crooks to his cabinet. That didn't have a lot to do with helping minorities. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nightwing 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 his visionary ideas You mean his completely idealistic bullshit that he spewed out after claiming that this would be the "war to end all wars," and Europe would enjoy "peace without victory?" The same one who championed the Weimar Republic? The one who separated much of Europe into places that are still killing each other today? No, I meant the 14 Points, the League of Nations, and American leadership in world affairs. And it would have worked too, if it weren't for those meddling kids (i.e. the Republicans in the U.S. Senate). Wait a second, those Republicans are all wearing masks! *Dramatic reveal* It was really Britain, France, and (to a lesser extent) Italy that made all that go to waste! Come on, the League of Nations wouldn't have done anything more than reinforce the old habits through new means. I can't see it doing any good with Versailles still intact. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 If that's what the textbook you use says about Harding, then it must be so. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 17, 2009 I forgot nobody knows as much as you about history, snuffbox. Certainly not the dozens of historians who've written books and articles about the failed policies of the 1920s or how well documented it is that Harding was able to implement very little before his death. Heaven forbid anyone could come to a conclusion different than what the one biography of Harding you read told you to think. The fact that he was only president for 2 years doesn't seem to deter your opinion that he was able to miraculously accomplish things that no one has ever actually credited him with. I mean, what the fuck do I know? I only have a B.S. in History with a 3.6 undergrad GPA. I must have pulled it from a high school text book. Jackass. It was really Britain, France, and (to a lesser extent) Italy that made all that go to waste! Come on, the League of Nations wouldn't have done anything more than reinforce the old habits through new means. I can't see it doing any good with Versailles still intact. Well, this is all hypothetical, but many historians have suggested that America's absence from the League (due to the Senate's failure to ratify the Treaty of Versailles and join the League) was a major factor in its failure. I'm no Woodrow Wilson fan, either, but having the world's greatest emerging superpower from the organization might have caused the organization to have more of a backbone in the years leading up to WWII. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Big Ol' Smitty 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 How many times have you guys had this Harding fight? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 You can read better than that, smitty. It does not appear that I am taking Y2Jerk, or his argument, into any serious consideration. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 (edited) Nevermind. Edited February 19, 2009 by SuperJerk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 And, how does Kennedy make the list at number 6? I know he's wildly popular and all, and I don't actively despise him like noted failures such as Wilson, but he really only showed one major stroke of great leadership during his abbreviated term. His handle on Congress was so tenuous that the Civil Rights legislation would have probably never been passed under his watch, the Bay of Pigs was awful but at the very least did better qualify him for the missile crisis, and, while he may have moved in a better direction had he not been murdered, played no small role in the creeping towards a disastrous adventure in Southeat Asia. I'm not convinced that the one shining moment during the missile crisis episode qualifies him as the 6th greatest presidential leader in our history. Very popular man, though. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
At Home 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 Yeah I'm not a big Kennedy fan either. Popular guy, but I blame Vietnam on him. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2009 I don't see how he can be given any more blame than Eisenhower, who had already started the whole 'advisors' deal and first popularized the 'domino theory' (his VP, Nixon, and Secretary of State, JF Dulles, were in favor of American involvement in Vietnam as soon as the French fell). Johnson has to be given the most blame, as the decision to escalate the troop involvement while implementing a confused, dishonest and neutered military strategy were his own. Nixon also deserves some blame as he continued the war for more than a full presidential term before agreeing to the same terms he could have gotten during his first year in office. The decisions to widen the war into other countries was his own. But, even without full blame (he has to be given some) Kennedy still can't be placed in the top dozen without taking his popularity into account. And what popularity has to do with leadership is beyond me. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SuperJerk 0 Report post Posted February 19, 2009 I'm gonna have to pretty much agree with snuffbox on JFK. I think Kennedy gets extra credit with a lot of people for handling the Cuban Missile Crisis and pushing the moon landing. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites