Good Riddance, Mr. Obama

One figure looms large over all his successors as the worst US president ever.

Guest post by Robert Gore at Straight Line Logic

Barack Obama was not the worst president in US history. That honor goes to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was dead before most of us were born. Any education in history threatens to shed light on present conditions, so it’s been eliminated from curricula, replaced with pandering propaganda. Proper instruction would teach that FDR effected the sea change that transformed the US from a melting pot of mostly self-confident, self-reliant, marvelously competent individuals into a bankrupt welfare and warfare state, the majority of whose citizens are jumpy at their own shadows, afraid of their fellow citizens, and terrified of their politicians. Mr. Obama has merely been mop-up relief for the welfare-warfare team’s starter, FDR.


Roosevelt had his forerunners—Lincoln and Wilson—but he presided over the largest agglomeration of power by the US government ever. His tactic was breathtakingly simple: use the government’s failures to expand the government. To address what should have been a garden-variety stock market correction and recession, exacerbated by Hoover’s ineffective nostrums, Roosevelt took economic power away from millions of diffuse individuals and businesses, acting in their own interests, and consolidated it in Washington. It didn’t work. The economic statistics were worse in 1938 than they were when FDR took office in 1933, but failed programs were expanded and new ones added to “solve” the problems created by the earlier programs.

FICTION THAT TELLS THE TRUTH

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Power, not effectiveness, was FDR’s lodestone. By 1938 the US government was the most powerful institution on the planet, feeding off of its continuing failure to remedy the Great Depression. Subsistence itself became the government’s responsibility. The coercive extraction of money from some for the benefit of others—formerly known as theft—became the prevailing ideology of Roosevelt’s Democrats. By the time Obama trotted in from the bullpen, both parties and most of the American public unquestioningly believed that a good chunk of GDP should detour to Washington every year, some lining political and bureaucratic pockets, the rest distributed to favored beneficiaries.

An ever-increasing mountain of laws and regulations, reaching into every nook and cranny of American life, has also become an occasionally deplored but never reversed feature of government since the New Deal. When Franklin and Barack’s team wins, everyone not favored by the government loses. The New Deal was really the same Old Deal stretching back centuries: a government expanding its powers to the detriment of the people it rules.

While the New Deal alone would earn Roosevelt a place of honor in the statist hall of fame, the US’s involvement in history’s bloodiest war garners him his very own wing. He had promised during the 1940 campaign to keep the country out of a war he was working assiduously behind the scenes to enter. It’s fair to ask why the US didn’t just stand aside after Germany invaded the USSR and let the two odious dictatorships knock each other out. It’s also fair to ask, as an increasing number of historians have, if Roosevelt maneuvered Japan into the Pearl Harbor attack, knew it was coming, and let it happen to rouse the American public into a war it wanted to avoid. There is plenty of evidence that he did, although Roosevelt partisans still argue that it’s not conclusive.

Randolph Bourne noted that war is the health of the state, and although Roosevelt did not outlive it, World War II left the US government feeling chipper indeed. It had consolidated its control over the economy and business, eroded civil liberties, developed a doomsday bomb, ran up the national debt, and emerged as the leader of a global confederation, a de facto empire. Unfortunately power corrupts and empires crumble; when you’re on top of the world the only direction is down. Seventy-two years later, Roosevelt’s warfare-welfare state is bankrupt, the once vaunted US military has lost a string of wars against ostensibly outmatched opponents, and Russia and China are leading a consortium of nations exiting the US orbit.

Obama, like most of his predecessors since Roosevelt, has made his contribution to the list of soon-to-be insolvent “entitlements. However, Obamacare is only the cherry on the redistributionist sundae concocted by FDR. Also like most of his predecessors, Obama has found trouble spots around the globe into which the government has stuck its nose, but Libya, Syria, Ukraine, other regime change missions, and random drone strikes don’t qualify as skirmishes compared to World War II. The only arena in which Obama, in conjunction with George W. Bush, outshines Roosevelt is restricting civil liberties. Undoubtedly Roosevelt would have availed himself of the surveillance state’s bag of technological tricks had they been available at the time.

All of Roosevelt’s successors have been merely disciples, spreading his gospel of an ever more taxing, indebted, intrusive, arrogant, and powerful government. Those who claim Obama is the worst US president reveal their ignorance of history. Those who rank Roosevelt as the greatest, or one of the greatest, US presidents reveal they’re nothing more than power-worshipping, government-loving nonentities. The greatness of America has never rested with its government, but with its people and what they have done with their freedom. That freedom has dwindled still more during Obama’s reign.

Those who control the government will suffer the fate that has befallen governments and those who control them throughout history: collapse and ruin. Obama has done nothing to forestall it. He is a small man with a small man’s flaws: mendacity, hypocrisy, vanity, vituperative, petty, unprincipled, an outsize ego, preoccupied with image over substance, and an inability to accept responsibility or admit error. Roosevelt had the same flaws, but you get treated better by the historians when you preside over the birth rather than the death throes of an empire. Death is an inevitable consequence of empire, because of a phenomenon as simple as a Newtonian law. As an empire grows linearly larger and more successful, the energy and effort necessary to sustain it grows exponentially. Political and geographic entropy eventually engulf even the best administered regimes.

Obama will enjoy the same historical prominence as Anthemius, Olybrius, Glycerius, Julius Nepos, and Romulus Augustulus, the last five emperors of the Western Roman Empire. Even Roosevelt’s reign will eventually be seen as just another governmental usurpation of power and abridgment of liberty. Nothing special, just what governments do and have done throughout history. Revolting against their arrogant overseers and rejecting Obama’s so-called legacy, the American electorate bestowed an improbable electoral victory on Donald Trump. It remains to be seen what he will do with it, but January 20 cannot come soon enough. Good riddance, Mr. Obama.

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24 Comments
Jack Lovett
Jack Lovett
January 4, 2017 4:08 pm

FDR was a communist jew. A POS. baaaarock the bomber is just a muslem NIGGER. BTW I know some very good black people.

WIP
WIP
  Jack Lovett
January 4, 2017 4:28 pm

No you don’t.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 4, 2017 4:32 pm

Let’s wait to say “good riddance” till he’s actually gone.

fear & loathing
fear & loathing
January 4, 2017 4:41 pm

from wilson to the present the aims of the left never change. look forward to reading hoovers notes post presidentacy by schales. the local library is trying to locate. read the brothers dulles if despair is your interest. currently reading 1916, thousands starved though out the world, parallels wherever you look. i agree in total with your views.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  fear & loathing
January 5, 2017 9:07 am

@f&l: Amity Shlaes, a former senior fellow at the CFR, did a well known biography of Coolidge, but Hoover appears in The Forgotten Man, I think. Have the book but haven’t read it yet. Oddly enough I’m reading the The Brothers by Stephen Kinzer (long-time NYT guy) right now; it has a decidedly leftist slant, but the Dulles brothers were in fact hand-in-glove collaborators of the Rockefeller interests and elitists to the core.

I wish I could believe that Prez-elect Mr. T will drain that particular swamp, but whatever his intentions, I believe it’s a task at which Hercules might have balked, given its near-impossibility at this stage of the game. Think of the line from the old Cadillacs song “Peek-a-Boo”: “Look in the dark/You see my face/Don’t try to hide/I’m everyplace.” And they are.

Rainman
Rainman
January 4, 2017 6:22 pm

As a certified right wing nut, I disagree with the author. Sure, his govt was too big. But his leadership in WW2 has made him, to me, one of the 3 greatest presidents. WW2 was the greatest triumph over evil in the history of the planet earth. No, it wasn’t perfect. We needed Reagan to finish off the Ruskies. But on 12-7-41, America was still in the depths of the great depression. We had the 17 largest army on earth. Romania’s was larger than ours. Most of our pacific navel fleet was knocked out on that day along with our planes and army in Manilla. While Pearl Harbor was bad, it was nothing compared to what Hitler’s sub wolfpack did to us in the Atlantic.
But in less than 4 years, we had won. By the end of the war our war machine was producing ridiculous amounts of planes, ships, tanks and boots per day.
What have we done since. We still haven’t defeated a few thousand goat herders with AK’s in Afghanistan. Vietnam and Korea were total debacles. The people who got us into Iraq, Libya and Syria should be hung for genocidal war crimes. Obama and John McCain have literally sided with Al-Qaeda in Syria and Libya.
Yes, outside of ww2, Roosevelt was middling at best. But he did do a great job of fixing the agricultural practices that were the cause of the Dust Bowl. And he won world war 2.
Rainman…..

Vic
Vic
  Rainman
January 5, 2017 1:12 am

First, Roosevelt engineered the Pearl Harbor attack. Then he didn’t inform the commanding officer in advance of the attack after they were able to decode Japanese messages and found out when the attack was to happen. And they made the commanding officer the scapegoat afterwards. Why would the Roosevelt administration do such a thing? War presidents usually get re-elected.

Second, I hate to inform you, but the Russians actually won World War II. The U.S. came in at the end, mopped up and took credit. (I’m know I’m going to get a lot of hate and thumbs down for that one, but, I’m sorry, it’s the truth.)

Third, Roosevelt prolonged the depression with his asinine government action. A lot of people think World War II ended the Great Depression, but it didn’t. The economy sucked during the Great Depression and during the war. You would think if war helped the economy, people would have seen better conditions as the war progressed, but that didn’t happen. What ended the Great Depression was, after World War II, the government was cut in half and taxes were drastically reduced. After that, the economy started rapidly improving.

Fourth, the U.S. created, trained, armed and financed al Qaeda and ISIS, and continues to do so. These are basically mercenary armies being used in proxy wars against other countries. That’s why we can’t defeat them. That’s not the plan. The U.S. government has no intention of defeating “their terrorists.” And it’s not just the Obama administration. The Mujahadeen were created by Jimmy Carter’s administration to be used in Afghanistan to fight the Russians. The Mujahadeen morphed into al Qaeda and ISIS over the years. And every administration since Carter has used them. (Ask John McCain, pictured with the so-called “moderate rebels,” which just happened to have Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, now the leader of ISIS, behind him in the photo.) And remember, Osama bin Laden was part of the Mujahadeen when it started. So what does that indicate to you?

I suggest using not only this website for information on what’s really going on, but also LewRockwell.com to read many articles and to get book references that would help you in this area.

Rojam
Rojam
January 4, 2017 6:26 pm

Mr Gore makes a good case for FDR to take the top prize as worst President ever, but I’m not sure if I agree. ( I am pretty sure that he couldn’t care less whether I agree with him or not). The way FDR has been portrayed by history books and progressives certainly makes him one of the most over rated, but even that is debatable because of the way Lincoln has been portrayed.

I’m not even sure if I know who the worst President in U.S. history was. Good question, actually. There’s been so many fine and stellar candidates! Maybe it would be easier to just narrow things down to one’s own lifetime. Since I was only 7 years old when Kennedy was murdered, the timeline will be from Johnson to Obama. Wow…..that’s almost 53 years of some astonishingly terrible Presidents!! Maybe worst in my lifetime isn’t so easy after all. However, as hard as Johnson and Boy Bush try to get to the top, I would have to say that IMHO Barack Hussein Obama wins the prize as the worst President in my lifetime. Boy Bush comes in a close second with Johnson a few steps behind in 3rd place. (Carter earns a few honorable mention points for being totally inept, but certainly not in the class of Johnson, Boy Bush and Obama). The amazing thing is; if Boy Bush and Obama are taken out of the picture, we would have to go all the way back to Woodrow Wilson for Johnson to, once again, be the 3rd worst. Behind Wilson and FDR. That’s how bad George W Obama was. Just the musings of one guy. Take it with a grain of salt.

Miles Long
Miles Long
January 4, 2017 6:27 pm

But… but… but… that’s not what I learned in school. FDR saved us all from the depression, & Nazis, & those sneaky Jap bastards. Next thing you’ll be telling me that maybe Hitler was only looking out for the good of the German people & our buddy “Uncle Joe” Stalin was a bad actor.

Sarc/off now… or is it?

After finishing school I had no time to question any of the useless shit we were fed because of the state of the world at the time. I was busy at work, sometimes 2 jobs, or doing sidejobs on weekends to pay much attention to anything else. I remember “Dont change Dicks in the middle of a screw, vote for Nixon in ’72”, but couldn’t vote yet as I wasn’t 21. My draft card is in the box of bullshit I’ve saved over the years. The old man was a WW2 vet & the war years were probably the best time in his life, like so many others. How tough would it have been for him to admit his “greatest” generation was duped? Anyway… the point is that there was little reason to question & even less time/motivation to do so for the average schmuck & that hasn’t changed much until recently. The average voter is still almost as uninformed as they were 30 years ago except for what (((the media))) wants them to know/believe but enough people were pissed to make a difference on Nov.8. If it’s for better or worse we’ll see in time. Wondering what will happen in the future with UN control of the internet.

Miles Long
Miles Long
  Robert Gore
January 4, 2017 9:42 pm

It’s a dirty job but somebody’s gotta do it. Carry on, sir.

Big Dick
Big Dick
January 4, 2017 6:57 pm

Amen! Flush the black turd to the boneyard of history’s pile of shitheads we were stupid enough to elect!

rhs jr
rhs jr
January 4, 2017 7:47 pm

Hussein caused the nation to puke bloody liberalism out both ends (everywhere except the Communist enclaves). But TPTB (and their Useless Idiots) have not been destroyed and will crash the economy by raising interest rates (they have doubled them since 8Nov). When the Tyrants and Trump finally clash head on, pray that the Trump Republicans prevail over the NWO Elite and Rev 13:16,17 is put off at least a decade. Amen.

MMinLamesa
MMinLamesa
January 4, 2017 9:30 pm

FDR might have been the worst but I wasn’t alive to see it. I did however see 8 years of an American hating POS slam this country every day from sunup to sundown and all the while spending millions of dollars on vacas, bling and lavish fetes.

He, Jarrett and his wife are absolutely despicable. If their intent was to ramp up racial tensions & inflame the world and do everything to destroy the lives of ordinary, hard working Americans and at the same time throw their open hate for our values, traditions and culture squarely in our faces, they succeeded beyond all possible expectations.

Gayle
Gayle
January 5, 2017 12:27 am

I think people who seek positions of power over others (including Trump) must have varying degrees of mental health issues. Emotionally healthy people have little interest in manipulating or controlling anybody, although they may rise to leadership positions because of natural talent or unexpected circumstances. It pays to be wary of those who have big agendas to “improve” the world. All presidential candidates fall into this category by default. If such an individual can be contained – by his/her own self awareness and spiritual health or by some benevolent underlings, we may stay safe or even thrive. If not, there will probably be hell to pay. I agree with Robert’s assessment of FDR, although like all of you I was taught he was a great man for “getting us out of the Great Depression,” just one of the many lies I was fed when I was growing up.

The current crop of great men wanting to change the world scare me to death: George Soros, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and the nameless, faceless scientists who are messing around with the human genome, AI, and CERN, for starters. I can’t leave Obama off the scary list, either, since he promises to hang around Washington to harass the incoming administration, still trying to impose his own twisted visions of hope and change.

Vic
Vic
  Gayle
January 5, 2017 1:33 am

The good thing about Trump is he grew up wealthy and has been powerful through his businesses. Maybe that experience will keep him from becoming a regular greedy, power-hungry politician. The fact that he spent his own money on his campaign is a good sign that maybe he truly wants to help. Let’s just hope he does what is helpful.

Vic
Vic
January 5, 2017 1:41 am

I do have to disagree that Roosevelt was the worst president. Granted, he is number three on my list, after Wilson. But number one has to go to Lincoln, who started the Civil War. Not only did he push and push until the South responded, but he conducted a dirty war, targeting civilians. Of course, that’s only a few things among many. But that war led to the out-of-control federal government we have today, which eventually produced Wilson and Roosevelt. The president of the United States and the federal government in general should have very little affect on the average U.S. citizen. But basically, with the end of states rights, the feds have become all powerful and the state and local governments, which citizens should have the most contact with, especially at the county or city level, lose their own ability to govern according their citizens’ wishes with each passing day.

Rojam
Rojam
  Vic
January 5, 2017 2:51 am

Very hard to disagree with your reasoning about Lincoln, sir. Hard not to name someone “worst President” who was responsible for the lives of 650,000 American citizens. His views on slavery have also been skewed by history. He says so himself in speeches he made.

starfcker
starfcker
January 5, 2017 7:28 am

Interesting take, Robert, but try to imagine US history without Roosevelt. He was consequential. He rose to huge challenges. Matters not whether I agree with his tactics He didn’t shrink. Leadership sometimes revolves around having to make choices when there are no good ones. You still have to do it. Hard to argue he didn’t leave the country in better shape than when he started.

starfcker
starfcker
  starfcker
January 5, 2017 8:27 am

Another interesting way to view Roosevelt. He was elected three times. No other president faced the voters three times and won. He was also succeeded by another dimocrat, Truman. Hardly jimmy carter.

Administrator
Administrator
  starfcker
January 5, 2017 9:02 am

He actually won four times. They changed it to a two term limit because he overstepped his bounds.

Maggie
Maggie
  Administrator
January 5, 2017 10:49 am

Threats of court-packing worked nicely for FDR when Congress appeared willing to call his program UnConstitutional. FDR understood that he could build a court that would approve anything he wanted…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Robert Gore
January 5, 2017 11:31 am

An actual solution solves a problem without creating a new one in its place or just changing the expressed nature of it to make it looked solved.

Not many problems actually get solved any more.