Thank you, Prof. Loesberg for that thoughtful reply.
While I personally don't have a best/worst list, yours does make a good deal of sense.
Certainly Nixon has to be on any worst list. It amazes me sometimes that our union survived him. I guess it shows how powerful our Lockeian ideal is.
I do feel sorry for Carter who undermined by his own party as well as the opposition. He surely took on big issues (stagflation and energy independence), but without much success. He did bring Begin and Sadat together at least. He is also very bright, having graduated 2nd in his class at the Naval Academy, no mean feat (Ross Perot finished at the bottom of the same class).
I think this is the problem that most folks have. They think that being a "conservative" means being a Reagan-ite. I'm much less impressed with Reagan than others, but am a big fan of Goldwater, who was intellectually honest to the end. This is a kind of Libertarian-lite that exists in Western states.
What I find funny are folks that live in Montana (where my parents live) who decry government spending and intrusion while sucking in the second most federal dollars per citizen, after Alaska.
I think this mirrors my understanding. I am sort of surprised that no credible third party has emerged from the "vital center".
To get back to a point raised by Kevin above, both Forbes and Brown were flat taxers and I think because both believe in an efficient, transparent tax system.
I read an editorial somewhere about how the republican party will become more fringe before it becomes a credible and relevant opposition party.
Personally, I'd love to see a looser union between states and let the flyovers and backwaters do what they will with more limited federal support. Has anyone ever overlaid red states on net federal inflows/outflows of dollars? It is an interesting perspective.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
On the worst Presidents, you have to decide whether you think worst means most ineffectual in office or means having done most damage to the country. If the first, I guess I'd nominate Grant, Harding and, alas, Carter. If the second, I'd nominate Buchanan, Hoover and Nixon. As bad as Bush was, he wasn't inactive in the face of the coming Civil War, he wasn't as bad as Hoover in the face of the Depression and whatever one thinks of his disrespect of elements of the Constitution, he didn't attack it as fully and directly as Nixon did. Which makes him only in the second tier of awful.
While I personally don't have a best/worst list, yours does make a good deal of sense.
Certainly Nixon has to be on any worst list. It amazes me sometimes that our union survived him. I guess it shows how powerful our Lockeian ideal is.
I do feel sorry for Carter who undermined by his own party as well as the opposition. He surely took on big issues (stagflation and energy independence), but without much success. He did bring Begin and Sadat together at least. He is also very bright, having graduated 2nd in his class at the Naval Academy, no mean feat (Ross Perot finished at the bottom of the same class).
On the roots of conservatism, if one considers it as a movement with historical roots and not the thing invented by Goldwater and Reagan,
I think this is the problem that most folks have. They think that being a "conservative" means being a Reagan-ite. I'm much less impressed with Reagan than others, but am a big fan of Goldwater, who was intellectually honest to the end. This is a kind of Libertarian-lite that exists in Western states.
What I find funny are folks that live in Montana (where my parents live) who decry government spending and intrusion while sucking in the second most federal dollars per citizen, after Alaska.
Being say merely pro-business is only conservative to the extent that it has been a policy of Republicans since the 19th century. As a position, the claim is either empirical and thus subject to believe or disbelief according to evidence and not an ideological position, or ethical and thus on its face incoherent.
The strange mix of cultural positions now connected with Republicans are only particularly conservative in the US as a result of a fairly long and unique history of the style of fundamentalism that undergirds such positions.
I think this mirrors my understanding. I am sort of surprised that no credible third party has emerged from the "vital center".
I do think there are some signs that the larger left/right political division that developed at the end of the 18th century may be breaking down and may be largely not descriptive in another 20 years. One of those signs is that some issues, immigration and free trade for instance, cuts across party lines while others--I dearly hope the white backlash vote that has been so important to Republican electoral strength since Nixon--may soon be part of the dustbin of history.
To get back to a point raised by Kevin above, both Forbes and Brown were flat taxers and I think because both believe in an efficient, transparent tax system.
I read an editorial somewhere about how the republican party will become more fringe before it becomes a credible and relevant opposition party.
Personally, I'd love to see a looser union between states and let the flyovers and backwaters do what they will with more limited federal support. Has anyone ever overlaid red states on net federal inflows/outflows of dollars? It is an interesting perspective.