J. TODD FOSTER: Bush Worked Hard To Earn Title Of Worst President

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Two days from now, America will breathe a collective sigh of relief. The worst presidency in modern history – possibly U.S. history – mercifully will be over.

Who among us can honestly say they are better off today than eight years ago? Only the descendants of Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan and Andrew Johnson – frequently recognized before now as the four worst presidents ever. Those families waited and prayed for generations for a guy like George W. Bush to come along.

And no, it’s not too early to render such a judgment despite Bush’s 2003 statement to journalist Bob Woodward: “History. We won’t know. We’ll all be dead.”

What an orator.

Many professional historians already have concluded that W stands for Worst. Of 109 interviewed in early 2008 by the History News Network, two historians rated his presidency a success; 107 rated it a failure. Sixty-one percent rated it the worst ever. Another 35 percent rated Bush’s presidency as among the worst.

And that was before the economy collapsed.

“At a time of national crisis, Pierce and Buchanan, who served in the eight years preceding the Civil War, and Johnson, who followed it, were simply not up to the job,”  Columbia University history professor Eric Foner wrote two years ago. “Stubborn, narrow-minded, unwilling to listen to criticism or to consider alternatives to disastrous mistakes, they surrounded themselves with sycophants and shaped their policies to appeal to retrogressive political forces (in that era, pro-slavery and racist ideologues). Even after being repudiated in the midterm elections of 1854, 1858 and 1866, respectively, they ignored major currents of public opinion and clung to flawed policies. Bush’s presidency certainly brings theirs to mind.”

I used to think Bush was a decent fellow who was in over his head. He reminded me of a Saint Bernard left alone in a house. The dog’s master returns home and finds broken dishes, a chewed couch and other rampant destruction, but the dog is cheerfully wagging his tail and wanting to go for a walk.

Bush is oblivious like the Saint Bernard. But he possesses numerous dangerous qualities, which taken alone are bad enough.

Together, they forge a toxic cocktail.

Lazy. Stubborn. Arrogant. Apathetic. A lack of intellect and curiosity about how the world works and thinks. A man who sees the world in black and white, instead of nuanced in shades of gray. A man who believes God truly only blesses America and that the U.S. has a monopoly on good, while anyone who disagrees with us is evil.

“No individual president can compare to the second Bush,” one historian wrote in that History News Network survey. “Glib, contemptuous, ignorant, incurious, a dupe of anyone who humors his deluded belief in his heroic self, he has bankrupted the country with his disastrous war and his tax breaks for the rich, trampled on the Bill of Rights, appointed foxes in every henhouse, compounded the terrorist threat, turned a blind eye to torture and corruption and a looming ecological disaster, and squandered the rest of the world’s goodwill. In short, no other president’s faults have had so deleterious an effect on not only the country but the world at large.”

America’s standards for its presidents are not impossibly high. We want someone who is among the smartest in the room, who works hard, who reads his briefing papers, who listens to reason and, when he fails, is willing to admit it and change course.

W can’t bring himself to admit a single mistake – only “disappointments,” including the inexplicable “disappointment” of not finding weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

Disappointment is when Baskin-Robbins is out of your favorite flavor. When it rains out your softball game. When you lose at B-I-N-G-O.

Disaster is when you wrongly invade a country, kill tens of thousands of civilians and send several thousand of your own soldiers and Marines to their deaths. Incompetence and cronyism, not disappointment, result when you preside over the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression. Only political stupidity and lack of empathy would allow an American city to drown while you vacation and play the guitar in California – a modern-day Nero fiddling while Rome burned.

Speaking of vacations, Bush had nearly twice as many of them as press conferences. He chopped more wood, rode more bikes and played more video games than any president in history.

Even the people he surrounded himself with – notably Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales – will go down as among the worst in history.

“With his unprovoked and disastrous war of aggression in Iraq and his monstrous deficits, Bush has set this country on a course that will take decades to correct,” said another historian. “When future historians look back to identify the moment at which the United States began to lose its position of world leadership, they will point – rightly – to the Bush presidency. Thanks to his policies, it is now easy to see America losing out to its competitors in any number of areas: China is rapidly becoming the manufacturing powerhouse of the next century, India the high tech and services leader, and Europe the region with the best quality of life.”

None of us knows what kind of president Barack Obama will be. But we do know this: Obama is whip smart, pragmatic and eloquent. He reads real books and writes them, too. He can string together words in a manner that inspires Americans, not makes us international laughingstocks. And – the ridiculous label of socialist aside – Obama already has shown himself to be a common-sense centrist.

In 2000, this nation had the opportunity – and actually did by popular vote – to elect the smartest candidate.

The Electoral College, aided by the Supreme Court, threw the presidency to the guy most of us preferred to share a beer with.

We know what a smart president can do. Bill Clinton was an intellectual giant – above the waist anyway – and tireless. He balanced budgets and generated surpluses.

W has put your grandchildren in hock. That’s what happens when you elect a president who’s the smartest person in the room only when he’s alone.

By now, some of you are accusing me of being overly harsh. You probably don’t have relatives who are so afraid of traveling overseas as Americans that they put Canadian maple leaf stickers on their luggage.

And then there’s my latest 401(k) statement. I’ll have to work until I’m 90 to afford retirement. And you think I’m ornery now.

J. Todd Foster is managing editor of the Bristol Herald Courier and can be reached at or (276) 645-2513.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by farmer on January 18, 2009 at 10:44 am

Well said Teacher!!!  No president, or government, can be all things to all people. America is supposed to be a country of hard work. It seems too many don’t get that.

Do for yourself, regardless of who the president is!!!!!!!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by Teacher on January 18, 2009 at 10:38 am

True, there is much unemployment now, but there have always been people with their hands out for freebies.

Observe people you know, you will find this is a generational thing. Being in some professions, you see it more than in others. You have closer contact with families and have known some of them for generations. They’ve had their hands out with no intent to make an effort to do anything on their own.

I am a firm believer that most people could have done better than some of them have done.

I’ve observed working people in grocery stores who are more conservative in their grocery shopping. MANY people with a “card” have a buggy filled with junk foods, soft drinks, etc. If they’d shop sensibly, they could feed their families more nourishing meals. But, then again, they have to sit and watch television and don’t have time to prepare meals. Not all, but many. Too, these same people go to all the places to eat when food is available to them.

I grew up thinking people should make an effort to be self sufficient.


Americans, stand up and be a proud people.

Flag Comment Posted by farmer on January 18, 2009 at 10:24 am

I trust that folks understand that American society has changed a great deal in recent years. Sadly, we’re now a country of some very irresponsible people. Far too many expect government to do everything for them. Many are unemployed, that’s true, but many of those same folks sleep until noon each day and attempt to get few, or no jobs. In their warped world, that’s the president’s fault. That’s silly, but it’s the way so many have started to think.

Keep this in mind. For the people who think Obama is the answer to all problems, I have some news for you. A lack of motivation and irresponsible behavior with Bush as president is much the same as with Obama as president. For this country to turn around, we, the folks, must step up and make it happen. Standing around waiting for a handout, with our fingers extended blaming everyone else for our own shortcomings, and having little motivation to do anything won’t get us anywhere.

Obama, nor any president, can light a fire under us and make us successful. We have a small part in it. We have to decide it’s time to act, and make things better for ourselves regardless of who the president is.

Wake up!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by seawing on January 18, 2009 at 10:07 am

You and others seem to forget that Chris Dodd and Barney Frank had a hand in helping the economy get to the point it is now. Jimmy Carter had double diget unemployment; inflation and interest rates all at the same time in his era. To say that Obama is centrist; either you haven’t checked his voting record or are ignoring it. Yes; Bush was a bad president in a lot of ways but he had help; both parties are to blame for the shape this country is in now.

Flag Comment Posted by capttrips25 on January 18, 2009 at 9:14 am

There were positive sides to G. Ws presidency, He slapped us awake with his stupidity, He provided Dave Letterman a running supply of material. He managed not to die and have us stuck with Dick Chaney. He helped millions of Americans spend more time with their families instead of being gone all day at a JOB.
I think it is wonderful that he is going to leave Obama no place to go but up.
My family were always Republican. We were taught to vote republican no matter what. Bush broke that cycle with me. I am proud that I helped turn Virginia blue. Now if we can all somehow remember to never let someone like Bush back in the white house.
Good riddance G.W.
Hello change.

Flag Comment Posted by farmer on January 18, 2009 at 9:07 am

Keep this in mind, please. President Bush had to deal with more complex issues than any president in history. Did he make mistakes? Of course!! Please point out one, just one, president who made NO mistakes.

Have we been attacked since 9/11?  Ever heard of Jimmy Carter? How did LBJ’s “Great Society” turn out? President Bush will at least admit making mistakes. So many others won’t.
That’s interesting.

I’m waiting to hear some of the real Bush haters blame this cold weather on Bush.

Flag Comment Posted by Teacher on January 18, 2009 at 8:07 am

Always remember, “Respect is earned!“

Mr. Foster, this is a good article. Keep telling it like it is and I will continue subscribing to newspaper and also read it “on-line.“

Flag Comment Posted by Char1215 on January 18, 2009 at 6:42 am

Jenny, you said, “If you do not have good things to say you should not say anything at all.“  Of course that didn’t stop you from your negative rant.  Sadly, every word in this editorial is true.

Flag Comment Posted by jenny on January 18, 2009 at 4:34 am

And many may wonder why the Newspaper business is going to the dogs. I did not vote for President Bush however I was brought up to respect the leaders of our Country. When I see how mean and how disrespecful many Democrates are,  I am embarressed. What are you going to do Mr.Foster? Where are going to go work when this paper no longer exits because you like to insult most of the people in our community.It is not difficult to see why so many Newspapers are not far from bankrupcy. The Bristol Herald Courier has been around as long as I began reading.It may have been a different name or a different owner but I think it is sad that you Mr.Foster are going to be the one to end this legacy.
Did parents not teach you to respect the leaders of your Country? If you do not have good things to say you should not say anything at all. Maybe it is the more intelligent people that take time to read the news and because you go out of your way to insult the people that buy and advertise in your paper and are losing customers daily. Sad, yes very Sad.

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