• (Breitbart Exclusive) Nothing is sacred to partisan GOP Trumplican snip

    From tye syding@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 22 17:24:16 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, alt.home.repair
    XPost: alt.politics.trump

    Trump is a walking disaster. The worst president of all time. Nothing
    but a fat crybaby and a whininer who breaks laws. Every time tRUMP
    opens his mouth he makes a laughing stock out of himself.

    His brainwashed cult is too dim to realize it.

    He could shit in their mouths and receive their praise.

    Trump ranked as worst US president in history, with Biden 14th greatest

    Survey of 154 scholars places 45th president behind even �historically calamitous chief executives� linked to civil war

    Donald Trump finished 45th and rock bottom of a list ranking US
    presidents by greatness, trailing even �historically calamitous chief executives� who failed to stop the civil war or botched its aftermath.
    Trump�s trial calendar becomes clearer � as do his delay tactics
    Read more

    Worse for the likely Republican nominee this year, his probable opponent,
    Joe Biden, debuted at No 14.

    �Biden�s most important achievements may be that he rescued the
    presidency from Trump, resumed a more traditional style of presidential leadership and is gearing up to keep the office out of his predecessor�s
    hands this fall,� Justin Vaughn and Brandon Rottinghaus, the political scientists behind the survey, wrote in the Los Angeles Times.

    Rottinghaus, of the University of Houston, and Vaughn, from Coastal
    Carolina University, considered responses from 154 scholars, most
    connected to the American Political Science Association.

    The aim, the authors said, �was to create a ranking of presidential
    greatness that covered all presidents from George Washington to Joe
    Biden�, in succession to such lists compiled in 2015 and 2018.

    �To do this, we asked respondents to rate each president on a scale of 0-
    100 for their overall greatness, with 0=failure, 50=average, and 100
    =great. We then averaged the ratings for each president and ranked them
    from highest average to lowest.�

    At the top of the chart, there was little change from previous surveys �
    the latter of which also saw Trump, then in office, placed last.

    Abraham Lincoln, who won the civil war and ended slavery, was ranked
    first, ahead of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who saw the US through the
    Great Depression and the second world war. Next came George Washington,
    the first president, who won independence from Britain, then Teddy
    Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson and Harry Truman.

    Barack Obama, the first Black president, to whom Biden was vice-president between 2009 and 2017, was seventh, up nine places.

    Considering drops for Andrew Jackson (ninth in 2015 to 21st now) and
    Woodrow Wilson (10th to 15th), Rottinghaus and Vaughn noted the impact of campaigns for racial justice.

    �Their reputations have consistently suffered in recent years as modern politics lead scholars to assess their early 19th and 20th century
    presidencies ever more harshly, especially their unacceptable treatment
    of marginalised people,� the authors wrote.

    Jackson owned enslaved people and presided over the genocidal
    displacement of Native Americans. Wilson oversaw victory in the first
    world war and helped set up the League of Nations, but was an avowed
    racist who segregated the federal workforce.

    Other major movers included Ulysses S Grant (17th, up from 26th in 2015),
    whose administration generated significant corruption but whose attempts
    to enforce post-civil war Reconstruction in southern states, including
    fighting the Ku Klux Klan, have helped fuel reconsideration.

    Grant succeeded Andrew Johnson, Lincoln�s successor and the first
    president to be impeached. Like Johnson, Lincoln�s predecessor, James
    Buchanan, who failed to stop the slide to civil war, also sits higher
    than Trump on Rottinghaus and Vaughn�s list.

    Trump is a uniquely divisive figure, his legislative record slim, his
    refusal to accept defeat by Biden leading to a deadly attack on Congress,
    and his post-presidential career dogged by 91 criminal charges arising
    from actions in office or on the campaign trail.
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    In the presidential survey, Trump is also ranked behind �such lowlights
    as Franklin Pierce, Warren Harding and William Henry Harrison, who died a
    mere 31 days after taking office,� Rottinghaus and Vaughn wrote.

    �Trump�s impact goes well beyond his own ranking and Biden�s. Every contemporary Democratic president has moved up in the ranks � Barack
    Obama (No 7), Bill Clinton (No 12) and even Jimmy Carter (No 22).

    �Yes, these presidents had great accomplishments such as expanding
    healthcare access and working to end conflict in the Middle East, and
    they have two Nobel prizes among them. But given their shortcomings and failures, their rise seems to be less about reassessments of their administrations than it is a bonus for being neither Trump nor a member
    of his party.

    �Indeed, every modern Republican president has dropped � including the transformational Ronald Reagan (No 16) and George HW Bush (No 19), who
    led the nation�s last decisive military victory�, the Gulf war of 1991.

    Accounting for Democratic climbs and Republican drops, the authors
    acknowledged that academics tend to lean left but also said, with a nod
    to Trump: �What these results suggest is not just an added emphasis on a president�s political affiliation, but also the emergence of a
    president�s fealty to political and institutional norms as a criterion
    for what makes a president �great�.
    a man in sunglasses looks at a crowd of people
    Voters may at last be coming round to Biden�s sunny view of the economy
    Read more

    �� As for the Americans casting a ballot for the next president [in
    November], they are in the historically rare position of knowing how both candidates have performed in the job.�

    Trump has not yet secured the Republican nomination but Biden trails in
    most polls, prey to public concern that at 81 he is too old for a second
    term, even though Trump is 77 and equally vulnerable to public gaffes �
    never mind his insurrectionist past.

    Rottinghaus and Vaughn said: �Whether [voters] will consider each
    president�s commitment to the norms of presidential leadership, and come
    to rate them as differently as our experts, remains to be seen.�

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/feb/20/presidents-ranking-trump- biden-list

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