Posted on 01/21/2013 5:48:44 AM PST by Iron Munro
Edited on 01/21/2013 7:51:52 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
The "legacy thing" may be harder than Barack Obama imagines. Beginning his second term, Obama has a focused, though unstated, agenda: to achieve presidential greatness in the eyes of historians and Americans. In this, he will almost certainly fail. He is already a historic president as the first African-American to be elected, but there is a chasm between being historic and being great.
Presidents are ultimately judged not by their total record, or by their ability to enact their agendas, or by their popularity. They are judged by whether they get a few very big decisions right or wrong. Lyndon Johnson is mostly remembered for failure in Vietnam; it overshadows the passage of two landmark civil rights bills and approval of Medicare and Medicaid. Richard Nixon is not celebrated for creating the Environmental Protection Agency, expanding food stamps or opening talks with China; Watergate dwarfs all.
These appraisals are made while a president is in office and, more definitively, after he's left. Does a president's performance stand the test of time based on what happens later? Did his policies advance or retard the nation's well-being? Were they wise or simply expedient? Depending on the answers, much else can be forgiven or forgotten, as Robert Merry shows in his engaging book Where They Stand: The American Presidents in the Eyes of Voters and Historians.
Consider Harry Truman. For his last year in office, he was deeply unpopular. His approval rating hit a low of 22 percent. The Korean War frustrated Americans; the White House was accused of cronyism. Yet, historians rank him in the top 10 presidents. Merry relates Truman's reaction to the Soviets' 1948 overland blockade of Berlin "to starve out the city and bring it under the Soviet yoke." His top advisers concluded that U.S. withdrawal was inevitable.
Excerpt, read more at tampabay.com
“A dog turd will never become a diamond.”
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Actually if it contains enough carbon a dog turd under sufficient heat and pressure might actually become a diamond, I would say there is a far greater likelihood of a dog turd becoming a diamond than of Obama becoming a great president.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1CXSuBnD4c
This president is the risk.
My favorite aunt, now deceased, would have replied that they were "grudge babies." (Someone had it in for him.)
And secret service protection for life!! He is 50, so that means for 30+ years he will cause a huge bill for taxpayers for the rest of his life, while he spends all those decades attacking and ridiculing his opponents. He will be like Jimmy and Billy in retirement (nice thought huh) attacking not going away like the Bushes and Reagan.
The victors of any conflict or struggle write the history books.
Look at the thousands of books about Lincoln.
The great majority are written as if he were a beneficent god, even though he presided over the war deaths of 2% of the entire population, with 600,000 Americans dead and another 500,000 wounded.
That's the way it will be for Obama - the popular and accepted history books will ignore the fraud, lies, racism, arrogance and disregard for the constitution. Nor will they mention the corrupt Obama loving media, who are largely responsible for his successes.
The Obama histories will read like something written by Chris Mathews but without the drool and slobber sticking the page together.
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