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America's Worst President Ever
The National Interest ^ | May 31, 2015 | Robert W. Merry

Posted on 06/02/2015 8:49:02 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Woodrow Wilson. Here's Why.

If you wanted to identify, with confidence, the very worst president in American history, how would you go about it? One approach would be to consult the various academic polls on presidential rankings that have been conducted from time to time since Harvard’s Arthur M. Schlesinger Sr. pioneered this particular survey scholarship in 1948. Bad idea.

Most of those surveys identify Warren G. Harding of Ohio as the worst ever. This is ridiculous. Harding presided over very robust economic times. Not only that, but he inherited a devastating economic recession when he was elected in 1920 and quickly turned bad times into good times, including a 14 percent GDP growth rate in 1922. Labor and racial unrest declined markedly during his watch. He led the country into no troublesome wars.

There was, of course, the Teapot Dome scandal that implicated major figures in his administration, but there was never any evidence that the president himself participated in any venality. As Theodore Roosevelt’s daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, put it, “Harding wasn’t a bad man. He was just a slob.”

The academic surveys also consistently place near the bottom James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania. Now here’s a man who truly lacked character and watched helplessly as his country descended into the worst crisis of its history. He stepped into the presidency with a blatant lie to the American people. In his inaugural address, he promised he would accept whatever judgment the Supreme Court rendered in the looming Dred Scott case. What he didn’t tell the American people was that he already knew what that judgment was going to be (gleaned through highly inappropriate conversations with justices). This is political cynicism of the rankest sort.

But Buchanan’s failed presidency points to what may be a pertinent distinction in assessing presidential failure. Buchanan was crushed by events that proved too powerful for his own weak leadership. And so the country moved inexorably into one of the worst crises in its history. But Buchanan didn’t create the crisis; he merely was too wispy and vacillating to get control of it and thus lead the nation to some kind of resolution. It took his successor, Abraham Lincoln, to do that.

That illustrates the difference between failure of omission and failure of commission—the difference between presidents who couldn’t handle gathering crises and presidents who actually created the crises.

In the realm of commission failure, three presidents come to mind—Woodrow Wilson, Richard Nixon and George W. Bush. Bear in mind here that nearly all failed presidents have their defenders, who argue, sometimes with elaborate rationales, that the perceived failure wasn’t really failure or that it wasn’t really the fault of this particular president. We see this in stark reality in our own time, with the ongoing debates about the presidency of the second Bush, reflected in the reaction to senator Rand Paul’s recent suggestion that GOP hawks, with their incessant calls for U.S. intrusion into the lands of Islam, contributed to the rise of the violent radicalism of the Islamic State.

The prevailing view of Bush is that his invasion of Iraq, the greatest example in American history of what is known as “preventive war,” proved to be one of the most colossal foreign policy blunders in all of American history, if not actually the greatest. According to this view, Bush destabilized the Middle East, essentially lit it on fire and fostered the resultant rise of the Islamic State and the deepening sectarian war between Sunni and Shia Muslims in the region. Where this all leads, nobody can tell, but clearly it is going to play out, with devastating consequences, for a long time to come.

But of course there are those who deny that Bush created all this chaos. No, they say, Bush actually had Iraq under control and it was his hapless successor, Barack Obama, who let it all fall apart again by not maintaining a U.S. military force in the country. This is the minority view, embraced tenaciously by many people with a need to gloss over their own complicity in the mess.

There is little doubt that history eventually will fix upon the majority view—that Bush unleashed the surge of chaos, bloodshed and misery that now has the region in its grip. As Princeton’s Sean Wilentz wrote in 2006, when Bush still sat in the Oval Office, “Many historians are now wondering whether Bush, in fact, will be remembered as the very worst president in all of American history.” And bear in mind that Bush also presided over the emergence of one of the most devastating financial crises in the country’s history.

Then there’s Nixon, whose Watergate transgressions thrust the nation into one of its most harrowing constitutional crises. There are some who argue that Nixon’s transgressions weren’t actually as egregious as many believe, particularly when viewed carefully in the context of the maneuverings and manipulations of many of his people, some of them conducted behind the president’s back. There may be some truth in this. But in the end it doesn’t matter. He was president and must take responsibility for the culture and atmosphere he created in the West Wing and the Old Executive Office Building. If his people were running around and breaking the law, he must bear responsibility, whatever his knowledge or complicity. And we know definitively that Nixon himself set the tone in his inner circle—a tone so dark, defensive and menacing that wrongdoing was almost the inevitable result. Also, there can be no dispute that the president himself stepped over the line on numerous occasions.

Which brings us to Woodrow Wilson, whose failures of commission probably had the most dire consequences of any U.S. president. His great flaw was his sanctimonious nature, more stark and distilled than that of any other president, even John Quincy Adams (who was no piker in the sanctimony department). He thought he always knew best, because he thought he knew more than anybody else. Combine that with a powerful humanitarian sensibility, and you get a president who wants to change the world for the betterment of mankind. Watch out for such leaders.

Even during his first term, with war raging in Europe, he sought to get the United States involved as a neutral mediator, fostering a peace agreement to break the tragic stalemate that had the nations of Europe in its grip. When that effort was rebuffed, he ran for reelection by hailing himself as the man who kept the United States out of the war.

But, immediately upon entering his second term, he sought to get his country into the war by manipulating neutrality policy. While proclaiming U.S. neutrality, he favored Britain by observing the British blockade of Germany (imposed, said a young Winston Churchill, to starve Germans, including German infants, into submission) and by allowing armed British merchant ships entry to U.S. ports, which in turn fostered a flow of U.S. munitions to the Allied powers. At the same time, Wilson declared that Germany would be held to a “strict accountability” for any American loss of life or property from Germany’s submarine attacks. This policy applied, said Wilson, even if affected Americans traveling or working on British or French ships. He declined to curtail what he considered Americans’ “right” to travel on vessels tied to France or Britain (but not Germany).

Wilson was warned, most notably by his secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, that these lopsided policies inevitably would pull America into the war. When he ignored those warnings, Bryan resigned from the Wilson cabinet on a stand of principle.

As Bryan predicted, America did get pulled into the conflict, and it certainly appears that that was Wilson’s intention all along. Then three things happened.

First, Wilson conducted the war in ways that devastated the home front. Prices shot up into double digits, and then came a potent economic recession that lasted three years. He accepted the suppression of civil liberties by his notorious attorney general, A. Mitchell Palmer. His government nationalized many private industries, including the telegraph, telephone and railroad industries, along with the distribution of coal. Race riots erupted in numerous cities that claimed nearly 150 lives in two years.

Second, America’s entry into the war broke the stalemate, allowing the Allied powers to impose upon Germany devastating armistice terms. Third, when Wilson went to the Versailles peace conference bent on bringing to bear his humanitarian outlook and making the world safe for democracy, he promptly got outmaneuvered by the canny nationalist leaders of Britain and France, whose agenda had nothing to do with Wilson’s dreamy notions about a harmonious world born of his humanitarian vision.

The result was a humiliation of Germany that rendered another war nearly inevitable and created in that country a sump of civic resentment and venom that would poison its politics for a generation. We can’t say with certainty that Adolf Hitler wouldn’t have emerged in Germany if the stalemate of World War I had been settled through negotiations rather than diktat. But we can say that the world spawned by Wilson’s naïve war policies certainly created a political climate in Germany that paved the way for Hitler.

That’s a big load for Wilson to carry through history, though the academic polls consistently rank him quite favorably. That’s probably because most academics are progressives who like Wilson for his own progressive sentiments. But the two Roosevelts also were progressives and left the country better off when they left office. Such a case can’t be made for Wilson, who left the country in shambles. The 1920 Republican victories in the presidential and congressional elections constituted of the greatest political repudiations in U.S. history. Thus, Wilson’s failures of commission render him, arguably, the worst president in American history.


TOPICS: Government; History; Military/Veterans; Politics
KEYWORDS: bushhasser; bushsfault; dnctalkingpoints; eugenevdebs; germany; harding; nationalinterest; nixon; obama; paultardation; paultardnoisemachine; randpaulnoisemachine; randsconcerntrolls; revisionisthistory; robertwmerry; saintobama; wilson; woodrowwilson
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1 posted on 06/02/2015 8:49:02 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well, worst president until the obama.


2 posted on 06/02/2015 8:53:47 PM PDT by Slyfox (If I'm ever accused of being a Christian, I'd like there to be enough evidence to convict me)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

One Big Ass Mistake America


3 posted on 06/02/2015 8:55:20 PM PDT by kik5150
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well, far as I can tell, this turkey glossed over Obungsa’s many failures rather blithely. Could not wait to breathlessly heap all the scorn he could on W to protect the usurper.


4 posted on 06/02/2015 8:58:54 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: kik5150

An academic can write (or say) ANYTHING.

Doesn’t make any one of his words true.

Obola will be recognized when The Decline and Fall of the American Republic is written.


5 posted on 06/02/2015 8:59:42 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but socialists' ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I am very optimistic about -- about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration. You're going to see 90,000 American troops come marching home by the end of the summer. You're going to see a stable government in Iraq that is actually moving toward a representative government.

I spent -- I've been there 17 times now. I go about every two months -- three months. I know every one of the major players in all the segments of that society. It's impressed me. I've been impressed how they have been deciding to use the political process rather than guns to settle their differences.

Joe Biden, February 10, 2010 See Link

6 posted on 06/02/2015 9:04:50 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Obama referred repeatedly to the US engagement in Afghanistan, noting that he chose West Point as the venue for unveiling his new Afghanistan strategy six months ago. But he also used his speech to speak about the seven-year war in Iraq in a way that may have been bittersweet for former president George Bush.

“This is what success looks like,” he said, noting that departing US combat troops will leave behind a “democratic” and “sovereign” Iraq that is “no haven” for the kind of violent extremists that attacked the US on Sept. 11, 2001.

President Obama, May 22, 2010 See Link

7 posted on 06/02/2015 9:08:03 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: doorgunner69

My thoughts as well.


8 posted on 06/02/2015 9:08:55 PM PDT by rockinqsranch ((Dems, Libs, Socialists, call 'em what you will. They ALL have fairies livin' in their trees.))
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Obama's studiously avoided declaring victory or the hubris of his predecessor, George Bush, who paraded under a banner proclaiming "Mission Accomplished" just as the worst of the killing in Iraq was about to begin. But the president said that the US has left Iraq better than it found it.

"Iraq's not a perfect place. It has many challenges ahead. But we're leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self reliant Iraq with a representative government that was elected by its people. We're building a new partnership between our nations and we are ending a war not with a final battle but with a final march toward home. This is an extraordinary achievement," he said.

President Obama, Wednesday 14 December 2011 See Link

9 posted on 06/02/2015 9:11:33 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: doorgunner69

I’ll read in full another time but did Mr. Merry Old Soul mention James Earl Carter?


10 posted on 06/02/2015 9:13:03 PM PDT by ConservativeStatement ("World Peace 1.20.09.")
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To: vbmoneyspender

Pure evil. Can it be said better?


11 posted on 06/02/2015 9:13:36 PM PDT by Fungi
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Iraq was stable when the U.S. pulled out. Obama never should have done this. The U.S. was in Japan for over 20 yrs and Germany for.....heck, were still in Germany. Obama is the worst kind of President because he pulled out of Iraq to make GW look as bad as possible. He didn’t give one rats ass about the reputation of the U.S. or the future of the U.S. for that matter. Obama is petty, insecure, immature, small- minded, and in way over his head.

His push for peace with apology- what I call no principles peace-at all cost is called “surrender” by most rational people. Like Nevellie Chamberlain, he seeks a legacy of preventing war, but also like him, Obama’s policies will lead to a much bigger war down the line. Again, peace without principles is surrender and obama surrenders with glee simply because he knows it annoys of liberty. We cheer him today. We will lament his decisions tomorrow.


12 posted on 06/02/2015 9:16:30 PM PDT by Mustangman (The GOP)
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To: Fungi

Sure it can: Valerie Jarrett.


13 posted on 06/02/2015 9:16:55 PM PDT by txhurl
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Agreed. Wilson is by far the worst president in US history. Zero is bad. But ultimately his presidency is a product of Wilson’s along with most of the evils of the last 100 years.


14 posted on 06/02/2015 9:23:56 PM PDT by NRx (An unrepentant champion of the old order and determined foe of damnable Whiggery in all its forms.)
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To: Robert A. Cook, PE

OBAMA can and DOES say ANYTHING no matter how unbelievable or absurd... absolutely no repercussions... no price paid.
AND THEN HE ACTS with exactly the same lack of repercussion or price paid.

When this train derails there will be many scrambling for cover... hope everyone knows where THEY live so we don’t end up shooting each other.

“A rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight” aka the Civil War, will never be fought again/because now we CAN know where they live (and if we don’t “SHAME ON US”)
TT


15 posted on 06/02/2015 9:26:41 PM PDT by TexasTransplant (Idiocracy used to just be a Movie... Live every day as your last...one day you will be right)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I fear that my children or grandchildren may find another so incompetent as the “Won”.


16 posted on 06/02/2015 9:29:05 PM PDT by PROCON (CRUZing into 2016 with Ted.)
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To: Mustangman

SMALL TATERS compared to what “The One” has done to this Once Great Nation.


17 posted on 06/02/2015 9:30:12 PM PDT by TexasTransplant (Idiocracy used to just be a Movie... Live every day as your last...one day you will be right)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

While Islamic terror is still a clear and present danger it seems, increasingly that Muslims are more intent on killing each other than us.

CC


18 posted on 06/02/2015 9:35:47 PM PDT by Celtic Conservative (Sufficient unto the day are the troubles therof)
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To: ConservativeStatement
I’ll read in full another time but did Mr. Merry Old Soul mention James Earl Carter?

Of course not, Carter is a saint to liberals deserate to cover for Obunga.

Carter arrived heal the destruction caused by Nixon, don't you know.

19 posted on 06/02/2015 9:38:06 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: Celtic Conservative

Whatever you say Barack.


20 posted on 06/02/2015 9:46:13 PM PDT by jwalsh07
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