NP Rank:
Bush Worst Ever?
Rasmussen Reports poll shows that 41% of American believe that George W. Bush will go down in American history as the worst president ever. Pretty high number, but in reality, it is more like 42%, because they didn’t ask me!
Let’s take a look …
Here is the problem with ranking Bush the very lowest. James Buchanan was a complete and utter failure and was so inept he saw the Civil War coming and did absolutely nothing, nor do I think he had any power to stop it. Despite the oncoming clash between slavery states and free states, Buchanan was pro-slavery and helped instigate the War. His leadership was non-existent.
Then there was Harding. The Harding administration was so corrupt and he was too preoccupied with the women that running the nation was more of an annoyance. While Harding was more interested in playing poker; his friends were busy ripping off the US Treasury. Harding was completely inept. Then again, I don’t have much to say about the Bush Administration on corruption either, I think Harding and Bush are even on that ground.
Pierce. Well his policy decisions such as naming Jefferson Davis to his cabinet and his stance on popular soverignty says what kind of person he was.
How about Andrew Johnson. His feelings toward African-Amercians was not hidden. Johnson fought passage of the Fourteenth Amendment and failed to create ways to advance for Southerners of all races, condemning the South to years of poverty. He just inherited the presidency and used it to push his own racism. His fumbling of Reconstruction led to his impeachment, although he survived removal
How about Richard Nixon. All though the tools for the making of a good politician were there, his obsession with power led to complete corruption and tramping all over the United States constitution that eventually led to his resignation. He expanded the Wars in Vietnam and Cambodia.
Jimmy Carter. As a DEM, I won’t even argue this one. His handling of the economy was pretty poor and his inability to deal with Iran was disgraceful.
And then finally, there is the current President. Appointed tio his first term by the US Supreme Court, Bush had high popular numbers after the tragic attacks of 9/11. But since then, he has fumbled 91% approval ratings down to the lowest ever in US History, since approval ratings were take, to at one point below 25%.
Bush lied his way into a War in Iraq to benefit the oil industry and corrupt corporation like Haliburton. But even worse, the failure to plan for the peace in Iraq has caused the US to get bogged down in a quagmire. His War of Lies cost so far nearly 4,000 American lives and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives.
His failed No Child Left Behind education policy is another instrument to prove his failure. First, the reality of all children being proficient was a pipe dream at best. Certain kids can’t. Certain kids don’t grow up in lofty mansion like the Bush family. They grow in destitution, poverty, and gang and drug violence. You think these kids care about a standardized test? Further, the Bush education policy has transformed our education system to teaching kids to take a test, instead of surviving and competing in a global economy. Finally, No Child Left Behind was one of the largest unfunded mandates in history that has led to substantial local property tax increases across America.
The Bush Administration ineptness was no more apparent than the mis-mangement of Hurricane Katrina. A stunned nation sat and watched for days as part of this great nation tuned into a third world country, with a federal government apparently too inept to respond.
The Bush Administration’s tax cuts for the wealthy during a time of war has broke the US economy. Any moron with half a brain can tell you, you don’t lower taxes at a time of War. The war costs billions of dollar per month, yet we are going to lower revenues. Where is the logic? That logic has led to a serious economic recession. Gas prices have doubled, food prices are skyrocketing, the mortgage and credit industries are near collapse, all under the watch of Bush.
America’s reputation around the world has plummeted to an all time high. Many conservatives say, so what, who cares what they think. But that is not part of the American moral fabric. Our forefathers and grand fathers took pride int he building a great reputation as a caring, kind and generous nation. Bush has single handily destroyed that image.
Bush has used a tragic event like 9/11 to trample on consttituional rights by breaking down privacy protections and the US Patriot Act. This Administration has used the Constitution as a doormat, hiding behind it when in need, tossing out as trash when it fits their needs and corruption.
You know, with this Administration, I could go on and on and on, but just don’t have the time. My point is, is Bush the worse? Not sure I would put him there yet, but damn, a strong argument could be made. As for me, here is how I would rank them, 1 to 7 worst being #1.
1. James Buchanan
2. Andrew Johnson
3. George W. Bush
4. Franklin Pierce
5. Warren Harding
6. Richard Nixon
7. Jimmy Carter
August 12, 2008 at 07:55 am by DCPSR, 220 views, 7 comments




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (7)
at 08:16 on August 12th, 2008
DCPSR, I like this story. It's good stuff.
The historical perspective is good! The article is maybe a little too long for my carefully groomed short American attention span, but it's got a lot of nuggets ...
In better days, hopefully to come, Bush wil probably be seen as maybe the last in a long line of snake-oil salesmen - skillfully bamboozling a good-hearted, patriotic citizenry who naturally want to do the right thing, and so follow along behind their leadership in good faith ...
For instance, let's take the Roosevelt, even though he doesn't seem to be in your list - FDR, the man who gave us the greatest Ponzi scheme of all time, Social Security ...
Heady stuff, history ...
at 09:55 on August 12th, 2008
A. It's dishonest for you to publish this trash without labelling it as your opinion.
B. Harry Truman, now considered one of our greatest presidents, had an approval rating according to the Gallop poll as low as 23%. President Bush will similarly be remembered as one of the great presidents and one who saved America and western civilization from the Islamofascist murderers.
C. Smears like yours will soon be forgotten.
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RobertC (not verified)at 10:44 on August 12th, 2008
It's dishonest for you to not label this as a joke. Unless it's not, and you're really just an idiot.
I'd like to assume the former, but I'm prepared to accept the latter.
To the author: Good stuff, your opinions are on-target and presented without bias. Good journalism! Keep it up.
at 11:40 on August 12th, 2008
And is Christopher Hitchens also an idiot (flaming violates Nowpublic's policy)?
Why do we have such a hard time hearing good news from Baghdad?
By Christopher Hitchens
Aug. 11, 2008 Slate (Excerpt)
"Yes indeed, Iraq should pay for its own reconstruction. But, just before we all join hands on this obvious proposition, may we take a moment to apologize to Paul Wolfowitz? Of all the many slanders hurled at this advocate for Iraq's liberation, probably none was more gleefully bandied about than his congressional testimony that Iraq's recovery from decades of war and fascism could be self-financing. Now the opponents of the intervention are yelling that Iraq ought to be opening its bulging wallet right away.
There will be time enough for that to happen, since Iraq's vast resources are back in the hands of its own people and are no longer "privatized" as the personal property of a psychopathic crime family. Sen. Levin, who with Sen. John Warner, R-Va., requested the original report from the Government Accountability Office on Iraq's finances, was the ranking Democrat on the Senate subcommittee investigating the "oil for food" outrage. He knows perfectly well what used to happen to Iraq's oil wealth, which was prostituted through a U.N. program and diverted to such noble causes as the subsidy of suicide bombers in Gaza and the financing of pro-Saddam and "anti-war" politicians in London, Paris, and Moscow. While this criminal enrichment of Iraqi and overseas elites was taking place, the population of the country was living on garbage and drinking tainted water as a result of the U.N.-mandated international sanctions.
I think we should be glad that the luridly sadistic and aggressive Saddam Hussein regime is no longer in power to be the beneficiary of the rise in oil prices and thus able to share its wealth with the terrorists, crooks, and demagogues on its secret payroll. I think we should also be glad that its private ownership of Iraq's armed forces, and its control over a party monopoly called the Baath, has been irrecoverably smashed. Iraq's resources are no longer at the disposal of an aggressive, parasitic oligarchy. Its retrained and re-equipped army is being deployed, not in wars of invasion against its neighbors and genocide against its inhabitants, but in cleanup campaigns against al-Qaida and the Mahdi Army. An improvement. A distinct improvement.
It is in no spirit of revenge that I remind you that, as little as a year ago, the whole of smart liberal opinion believed that the dissolution of Baathism and militarism had been a mistake, that Iraq itself was a bottomless pit of wasted dollars and pointless casualties, and that the only option was to withdraw as fast as possible and let the inevitable civil war burn itself out. To the left of that liberal consensus, people of the caliber and quality of Michael Moore were describing the nihilist "insurgents" as the moral equivalent of the Minutemen, and to the right of the same consensus, people like Pat Buchanan were hinting that we had been cheated into the whole enterprise by a certain minority whose collective name began with the letter J.
Had any of this sinister nonsense been heeded, it wouldn't even be Saddam's goons who were getting their hands on that fantastic wealth in such a strategic country. It would have been the gruesome militias who answer either to fanatical Wahhabism on one wing or to fanatical Shiism on another, and who are the instruments of tyrannical forces in neighboring countries. Hardly a prospect to be viewed with indifference. I still reel when I remember how many supposedly responsible people advocated surrendering Iraq without a fight.
Before 2003, there was, in a way, a socioeconomic basis for fascism in Iraq, in that the lack of oil on Sunni turf supplied an imperative to the Tikrit-based gangsters for the domination of Kurdish and Shiite areas that did possess the needful oilfields. Now, new discoveries of oil and new laws on regional and provincial decentralization provide at least the socioeconomic basis for federalism. Again, a distinct improvement. This element of the substructure, as we Marxists say, does not in itself guarantee the superstructure, any more than the vast new wealth in Iraqi coffers is automatically a promise of prosperity for all. (After all, in spite of a huge improvement in prison conditions in Iraq in general, one has to admit the crimes and coverups of Abu Ghraib.) But does anyone seriously regret that these questions are being addressed in their only feasible context, namely the post-Saddam era that was the necessary if not the sufficient condition?
So, yes, major combat operations appear to be over, and to that extent one can belatedly say, "Mission accomplished." If there is any Iraqi nostalgia for the old party and the old army, it is remarkably well-concealed. Iraq no longer plays deceptive games with weapons of mass destruction or plays host to international terrorist groups. It is no longer subject to sanctions that punish its people and enrich its rulers. Its religious and ethnic minorities—together a majority—are no longer treated like disposable trash. Its most bitter internal argument is about the timing of the next provincial and national elections. Surely it is those who opposed every step of this emancipation, rather than those who advocated it, who should be asked to explain and justify themselves." Slate
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sammy-brown (not verified)at 10:49 on August 12th, 2008
forgotten not by you forgotten by us soon
at 09:57 on August 12th, 2008
OPINION should be on here, in the title, and the tags!
at 11:47 on August 12th, 2008
You need to label this as 'opinion' as it is clearly your own viewpoints.