Posted on 02/20/2006 11:01:16 AM PST by RightCanuck
Today is Presidents Day. A holiday originally intended to honor George Washington (and in some states Abraham Lincoln), Presidents Day has degenerated into just another day off for government employees and an excuse for large retailers to hold sales.
More destructive to our national consciousness, it has become a day that purports to celebrate all presidents equally, the dismal failures along with the towering giants. Perhaps this is why hardly any celebration occurs at all. This is a shame, because the truly great men who have led this nation throughout our history deserve the American peoples most heartfelt thanks for a job well done.
There have been several presidents who have earned the appellation great for the leadership and vision they demonstrated during their service in the White House, including Thomas Jefferson, James K. Polk, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, and George W. Bush (still a work in progress). Today, however, we must honor three presidents above all others: George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Ronald Reagan. Each of these men led the United States through a period of deep national crisis, and each time the nation emerged stronger, freer, and more committed to its founding ideals.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
I was already to hurl if I read that Jimah Carter was on this list!! Fortunately one of the greatest loser Presidents was not to be found on the list.
CC undoubtedly understood and respected economic principles better than any president before or since. If the Republican Party had begged him to run again in 1928, the phrases "The Crash of 1929" and "The Great Depression" most likely would never have entered into the world's vocabulary. That could have made all the difference in the 20th Century. Might have been a lot different.
Correct. WITH the consent of Congress. The third time Davis asked for suspension of the habeas corpus, Congress denied his request.
Hi PeadRige - you beat me to it and did stated it more eloquently. Hats off.
PeadRige = PeaRidge.
CC definately one of my favorites.. 'Persistence' is a great source of inspiration to me =)
The worst of the 19th century is Linclon, the worst of the 20th is fdr, carter, clinton... fdr did the most harm to the body politic, carter was the most incompetant and clinton the most evil...
My American Flag is waving in the sun for President Washington and President Lincoln today. And my thoughts are with President Reagan as well.
I remember reading about Chester Arthur during a history course a number of years ago.
There were many allegations of bribery and corruption because of his connection with the Customs House and certain legal fraternities. I am no expert, but I recall that class rather fondly.
I am pretty certain that you would not have aced that history course when it came to President Arthur. My Professor seemed to particularly despise the man.
I have never seen anyone heap praise on the man before. I'll have to read a bit more.
President's Day is not for the likes of Jimma Cotta or LBJ or any other than Washington and Lincoln.
I see this type of argument alot. Fine, ask then... Would this Great Republic have survived leaving well enough alone and allowing the southern states to secede? Would the greatest stain on our history remained, or would the Confederacy eventually have decided that "Wow, these blacks really are people and not property."
OK, Lincoln was a tyrant, blah, blah, blah. and yet the greatest tyranny this country ever saw was for years sactioned by the government on every plantation in the southern states.
A needless war my a**. Slavery would have persisted, and all who argue otherwise are fools.
Ben Bradlee editor for the Washington Post (also from MA) practically lived at the WH during the Kennedy years. Camelot ... na, I don't think so ... it was simply portrayed that way by the fawning liberal media. Bradlee, in fact, was so enamored with Kennedy and that era, later wrote two books about him.
If we cannot honor Lincoln, then we can't honor any of the presidents who came after him--including Reagan. If Lincoln was unjustified in bringing the South, back into the Union, then the United States as it exists today is illegitimate. Reagan cannot be given credit for all he did to defend America because he defended an America which incorporates the South--which according to you should be an independent nation.
Washington's Birthday was first declared a federal holiday by an 1879 act of Congress. The Monday Holiday Law, enacted in 1968, shifted the date of the commemoration of Washington's Birthday from February 22 to the third Monday in February, but neither that law nor any subsequent law changed the name of the holiday from Washington's Birthday to President's Day.
Teddy Roosevelt is my favorite. He was incredible
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