What U.S. President is your favorite and why?

Codger

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First off, I am not starting this thread to start any arguements or allow anyone to DIS someone else's choice. What matters in this thread is your own opinion of your favorite and why. Difficult though it may be, please refrain from hurling insults and disparaging remarks about other folks choices. Add your own choice if it is different, or add your positive reasons if you choose the same but for a different reason.

My favorite is Ronald "Ronnie Ray Gun" Reagan. I think he did the whole world a service when his persistance in persuing SDI led to the dismantling of the Soviet Union, and the freeing of many nations. His political constituants viewed him as *"an airhead who has lived a charmed life. Diplomat Clark Clifford has called him an "amiable dunce," and Nicholas von Hoffman said it was "humiliating to think of this unlettered, self-assured bumpkin being our president." Tip O'Neill flat out said in public, "He knows less than any president I've every known." Anthony Lewis of the New York Times claimed he had only a "seven-minute attention span." Author Gail Sheehy declared he was "half asleep" while he was president.

With great courage and moral clarity, and ignoring the advice of many "experts" even in his own administration, Reagan personally mapped out a four-part plan – not just military, but economic, political and psychological – to crush the Soviet Union once and for all. This will be news to most people, many of whom still think the "amiable dunce," the "cowboy actor" with the "million-dollar smile" just happened to be in the right place at the right time, and reaped undeserved credit for winning the Cold War.

Reagan had kept Congress in the dark about SDI and gone directly to the American people – and Congress never forgave him for that. SDI was immediately derided as "Star Wars" by Teddy Kennedy, and the rest of the establishment elite picked up that label, using it to this day to mock the idea of missile defenses.

And yet, it was SDI that broke the back of the Soviet empire. When Reagan and Gorbachev were on the world stage at the Reyjkavik summit, Gorbachev offered to eliminate all nuclear weapons from the earth within 10 years, if only Reagan would give up SDI. When Reagan said no, the media and the world's know-it-alls gasped at this stupid, warmonger cowboy actor who blew the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to rid the world of nuclear weapons. "Reyjkavik Summit Ends in Failure" blared headlines the world over.

But Reagan, guided by the courage and moral clarity the rest lacked, knew exactly what he was doing.

Three years later, we turned on our TV sets to watch the evening news and saw something unimaginably wonderful. The Berlin Wall – the hated symbol of totalitarian brutality Reagan had visited more than any other president – came tumbling down. Not only the Berlin Wall, but the entire Soviet Union was tumbling down! Nation after nation was set free from the Evil Empire. The "Other Great Superpower" was imploding.

And who did Time magazine honor as its "Man of the Decade" in 1990? Ronald Reagan? No, it was Mikhail Gorbachev, who just a few years before had been dropping little bombs shaped like toys so as to cripple Afghan children in the Soviet Union's war of aggression against that country.

The real man of the decade was Ronald Wilson Reagan. And yet, even now, Reagan is denied the credit for winning World War III – the Cold War."*

*From a World Net Daily review of a new documentery about Reagan, "In the face of evil".
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=42763
 
I wasn't born yet, But John F. Kennedy was my favorite, I read books about him, learned so much about him. He was the youngest President ever that died, which saddness me. He was also a Democrat. ;) He won world respect as the leader of the Free World, such as the war with the Soviet Union. He was also a war hero, for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Demands for equal rights for African Americans became the major domestic issue during the Kennedy administration in 1961. :mrgreen:


My other favorite when I was growing up is Ronald Reagan even through he was a Republican, He was one darn good President. He was shot also, but lived, but he came back to the office and worked on economic growth, curb inflation, increase employment, and strengthen national defense. He was one brave man who wasn't scare going back in the office after he was shot. He wanted war peace too, I love that about him ;)
 
Cheri said:
I wasn't born yet, But John F. Kennedy was my favorite, I read books about him, learned so much about him. He was the youngest President ever that died, which saddness me. He was also a Democrat. ;) He won world respect as the leader of the Free World, such as the war with the Soviet Union. He was also a war hero, for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Demands for equal rights for African Americans became the major domestic issue during the Kennedy administration in 1961. :mrgreen:


My other favorite when I was growing up is Ronald Reagan even through he was a Republican, He was one darn good President. He was shot also, but lived, but he came back to the office and worked on economic growth, curb inflation, increase employment, and strengthen national defense. He was one brave man who wasn't scare going back in the office after he was shot. He wanted war peace too, I love that about him ;)

I am with Cheri except I was born when President Kennedy was president. :D
 
Cheri said:
I wasn't born yet, But John F. Kennedy was my favorite.....

Ohh! I liked Kennedy too! I remember Eisenhower, but I remember Kennedy better. His action in WWII was immortalized in the movie "PT-109", the torpedo boat that he served on. He quickly disproved his image as a rich pretty boy with his treatment of his crew. I remember that the coconut which he had inscribed with his rescue message sat promanently on his desk all through his administration. He also presided over some major reforms, though one of his last stated goals, returning the U.S. to hard backed currency died with him that trajic day in Dallas Texas. A very good choice Cheri!
 
My choice:

Mr. Theodore Roosevelt:

* Youngest president in history, put in office at the age of 42 upon McKinley's assassination. JFK was 43 when elected into office.

* Led the charge to bust monopolies of corporations under Sherman Anti-trust Act. He broke up many powerful companies, such as Standard Oil, who were charging people up the wazoo for Oil to keep their houses warm. Very bad monopolies.

* Started the construction of the Panama Canal to allow ships a quicker route between the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean

* Established the Monroe Doctrine, which prevented European and Asian countries from establishing military bases and taking over countries in Latin America (Central America)

* Created the U.S. Forestry Service -- the agency that oversees all the National Forests (like Yosemite and Yellowstone) and granted many new lands to them in 1905.

* Won the Nobel Peace Prize for his services in negotiatiating a peace treaty between Russia and Japan in 1906. He was the FIRST U.S. citizen to win the award!

* Established the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act.

* Advocated women's rights. A quote from his college days:

"Viewed purely in the abstract, I think there can be no question that women should have equal rights with men."..."Especially as regards the laws relating to marriage there should be the most absolute equality between the two sexes. I do not think the woman should assume the man's name."

"The Practicability of Equalizing Men and Women before the Law"
Senior thesis at Harvard, 1880


* First President to fly in a plane. There is a video on this site:

http://history1900s.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?site=http://www.theodore-roosevelt.com/tr.html



All in all, TDR was a kick ass President, and one I aspire to be like as I enter into politics.
 
DeafSCUBA98 said:
Abe Lincolin.....

Abraham Lincoln was indeed one of our most important Presidents. The pressure he endured while in office would surely have driven a lesser man mad. He was caracatured in papers as an ape (no offense Levonian), his Secretary of war Stanton was a self proclaimed enemy, he dealt with egotistical Generals, great personal tragedy, and a great war such as never was before, nor will be again.

He is remembered for many things, but the one most people are familiar with is dedicating a battlefield cemetary in a tiny Pennsylvania town.

" Perhaps the most famous battle of the Civil War took place at Gettysburg, PA, July 1 to July 3, 1863. At the end of the battle, the Union's Army of the Potomac had successfully repelled the second invasion of the North by the Confederacy's Army of Northern Virginia. Several months later, President Lincoln went to Gettysburg to speak at the dedication of the cemetery for the Union war dead. Speaking of a "new birth of freedom," he delivered one of the most memorable speeches in U.S. history.

At the end of the Battle of Gettysburg, more than 51,000 Confederate and Union soldiers were wounded, missing, or dead. Many of those who died were laid in makeshift graves along the battlefield. Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin commissioned David Wills, an attorney, to purchase land for a proper burial site for the deceased Union soldiers. Wills acquired 17 acres for the cemetery, which was planned and designed by landscape architect William Saunders.

The cemetery was dedicated on November 19, 1863. The main speaker for the event was Edward Everett, one of the nation’s foremost orators. President Lincoln was also invited to speak “as Chief Executive of the nation, formally [to] set apart these grounds to their sacred use by a few appropriate remarks.” At the ceremony, Everett spoke for more than 2 hours; Lincoln spoke for 2 minutes."

In Mr. Lincoln's speech he said in part:" The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here."


How wrong he was. And how much he said about the American people in those two minutes.
 
Thomas jefferson. He knew what true meaning of freedom and independance is about. Hes crime bill was the best! If you commit a crime like shoplifting not paying your taxes you lose 1/3 of your land. And when youre sentence to death you die the next day theres no probation and No Appeals you die the next day, And if your sentence to prison you serve youre whole sentence no paroles your whole sentence.Thats the laws i like.
 
deaflibrarian said:
Abraham Lincoln. Yes, he was a Republican and he caused the Civil War, but he stopped slavery in the USA and put the USA on the road to where it has become 50 states plus D.C. :thumb:
An interesting viewpoint. I wouldn't say that he, or any one man caused the Civil War though. His election was one of the causes. And General Fremont, Military Commander of the Department of the West was the first to issue an emancipation proclamation in 1861, which Lincoln ordered him to rescend, then removed him from his command. Both that proclamation and the one in 1863 by Lincoln were rather for the confiscation of property of people in rebellion to the States, defacto recognizing the slaves as property subject to confiscation.
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
George W. Bush. :)
Another good choice. Can you give us some reasons, and maybe a few of his major accomplishments to date please?


*****Folks, do not flame this post! Respect her opinion! See the header of the first post!!! Then feel free to post your own favorite!
 
My Choice IS:

Abe Lincolin

---Republican president in 1860 provoked the Southern states of the United States to secede from the Union and led to four tragic years of civil war.

---Abraham Lincoln placed the mark of his greatness upon American history. He guided the nation through the perils of war to peace and reunion. He struck the fatal blow at slavery, and he reaffirmed the dignity of free people in language of simple beauty. Death came to him with dramatic violence before his work was done. But death only hastened his elevation to a place beside George Washington in the memory and gratitude of his country. He left behind a nation reunited and a people set free.
 
deaflibrarian said:
See, I already posted what President I like. Quit following me around. :P
Lol! My apologies deflibrarian! I did not realize that you and Ravensteve had started your own thread! Following you around? Bwaaahahahaha! Nope, more like trying to follow a moving thread and picking a VERY similar title by mistake. I corrected my posts there O.K.?
 
anyone but George W. Bush, the most corupt President in the history of the United States
 
My 1st favorite is FDR. He led this country though the hardest part of the 20th century. I wish we had more good leaders like him.
 
bbnt said:
anyone but George W. Bush, the most corupt President in the history of the United States

What does " corupt " means?....
 
Codger said:
Another good choice. Can you give us some reasons, and maybe a few of his major accomplishments to date please?


*****Folks, do not flame this post! Respect her opinion! See the header of the first post!!! Then feel free to post your own favorite!

1. He hired Colin Powell and Condi Rice in his administrative.
2. I like the freedom giving to Iraq and their votes.
3. I like the 2004 RNC, the most cracked up interesting event.
4. He signed my Gallaudet diploma paper.
:ily:
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
1. He hired Colin Powell and Condi Rice in his administrative.
2. I like the freedom giving to Iraq and their votes.
3. I like the 2004 RNC, the most cracked up interesting event.
4. He signed my Gallaudet diploma paper.
:ily:


:roll: *coughing*....
 
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