Comment of the Day: “The Worst President Ever? Part 6: The Final Field”

Steve-O-in NJ contributed a well-reasoned and researched resolution of the Ethics Alarms series “The Worst President Ever?” after the penultimate installment, which I posted last month. At the time, I still wasn’t certain how the Wilson-Biden contest would come out, and since (spoiler!) his analysis came down to the same final two, I resolved to hold this obvious Comment of the Day until I had finished my final installment, which went up (finally!) last night. Steve’ alternate analysis is excellent, as all of Steve-O’s historical epics are.

Here is Steve-O-in NJ’s Comment of the Day on “The Worst President Ever? Part 6: The Final Field.”

An interesting list, certainly. I believe that if you asked 100 people who the worst presidents were and why, you’d probably get 100 answers that would all differ at least slightly, although some common threads would run through them, and you’d get one group from conservative folks and another from liberal folks. I’m not sure I 100% agree with this list, but it’s the list you’ve given us to work with, so here are my thoughts:

Franklin Pierce – Had a life-long problem with alcohol, to the point where other military officers (yes, believe it or not he is one of the ten presidents who was a general) called him the “hero of many a well-fought bottle.” Tragic family history, and let grief and drink paralyze his single term in office.

James Buchanan – Took almost no steps to stop the Civil War from happening. Started to dislike the office to the point where he told Lincoln that if Lincoln was as happy upon assuming the presidency as he was upon leaving it, he was a happy man indeed.

Andrew Johnson – Never meant to be president, put on the ticket because he was a Democrat and a southerner. Couldn’t control the radical Republicans. Was impeached (probably unfairly) and came the closest any president ever came to removal from office. Also had the hardest act of all to follow.

Woodrow Wilson – Biggest racist ever to sit in the White House. Also probably one of the 3 or 4 most arrogant presidents. Led us into WW1 when we might not have needed to go, then alienated the world with his attempt to impose his own morality. Also alienated most of his political allies back home and was a willing participant in hiding that he had had a debilitating stroke from the country.

Richard Nixon – Popular president who didn’t trust his own popularity to take him past the finish line and overreached, then tried to cover it up.

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The Worst President Ever? Part 7: The Worst of the Worst Revealed

If you want to review how we got here, these were the previous posts in “The Worst President Ever?”: Part I, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and a month ago, Part 6. Right now, the final field stands at eight, which is more than I wanted and a number that surprised me, especially since I disqualified one of the conventional wisdom favorites for Bad President infamy, Warren G. Harding. But poor Harding only was President for 2 and a half years, dying of a heart attack in August of 1923. He still had some good moments, and what he has always been marked down for is scandals in his cabinet that didn’t come to light until after he died. Like the other Presidents who didn’t serve a full term (W.H. Harrison, Taylor, Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Andrew Johnson and Gerald Ford), Harding never had a fair chance to distinguish himself (although Chester A. Arthur managed to do well in fewer than four years), so I felt it wasn’t ethical to include Warren in the Presidential Hall of Shame.

With that calculation, I realize that the field of eight must in fairness be reduced to seven. As I just mentioned, Andrew Johnson is one of the Presidents who didn’t get the opportunity to serve a full term. Yes, he only missed 41 days, but as the ghost of any President will tell you, a lot can happen in 41 days, good and bad. I think I may have been biased by the fact that when I first began studying the U.S. Presidency, literally everyone was taught that of course Johnson was the worst President: after all, he was the only President who was impeached! John Fitzgerald Kennedy while Senator helped the public understand that the impeachment was not as damning as widely believed by making Edmund Ross, the Republican Senator from Kansas who saved Johnson from conviction, one of his “Profiles in Courage”; still the stain of impeachment by the House hung like a black cloud over the first President Johnson. That cloud began dispersing a bit when Richard Nixon had to resign, a bit more after Bill Clinton was impeached (on stronger grounds than Johnson) and beat the rap as well as managing to remain a rock star in his party until that sexual predator thingy belatedly caught up with him. Then Nancy Pelosi’s Democrats managed to eliminate impeachment as a brand of disgrace by abusing the process with two purely partisan impeachments during Donald Trump’s first term. Johnson’s impeachment doesn’t look so damning now, and he didn’t get a full term in office. I am revoking his selection as a candidate for The Worst President.

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Cultural Literacy Note: “Drinking the Kool-Aid”

The Daily Mail headline is beyond stupid—-“People are only just realizing the dark origin of ‘drinking the Kool-Aid’ phrase”—-but sharp-eyed commenter Other Bill was quite astute to draw it to my attention (Thanks, OB) with an email this morning.

Apparently several historically and culturally illiterate whipper-snappers on social media expressed surprise at the “dark origin” of the common phrase “he (or she) drank the Kool-Aid” to describe someone who has been gulled into believing something false or dangerous. Yet this gap in the younger generations’ knowledge shouldn’t be surprising. Oh, there was a movie about the horrible incident and it is one of the best examples of the dangers of cults. But the Jonestown mass suicide of the 918 American followers of cult leader Jim Jones in Guyana occurred almost 50 years ago, in 1978. As unusual and shocking as it was, the poisoned powered drink massacre is not the kind of event likely to be covered in history courses: schools barely cover World War I. How would someone under the age of 50 come to know about the event?

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From the Res Ipsa Loquitur Files: Kamala’s Petty Picture

There is one last bit of ethics drama that arose from the Jimmy Carter funeral and its historic array of Presidents past, present, future, and sort-of, failed candidates, VPs and spouses. As USA Today pointed out, Kamala Harris put up a version of the event on Instagram that carefully copped out President-Elect Trump and his wife.

Stay classy, Kamala. USA Today writes, predictably attempting to cloak Harris’s back-handed slap at the man who defeated her (with her own invaluable assistance) by adding that “it was not clear if Trump’s exclusion was intentional.” Was the photo posted intentionally? Yes. Then Trump’s exclusion was intentional. The photo is cropped to make Harris the focus, and that also had the effect of leaving out the most important figure in the scene.

Well, it’s a better reaction than rioting at the Capitol, I guess.

Harris’s boilerplate words under the photo ( “President Jimmy Carter loved our country. He lived his faith, served the people, and left the world better than he found it. President Carter’s many contributions will echo for generations to come.”) has me wondering if a partisan conservative factchecker would label this “disinformation.” Did Carter really “leave the world better than he found it”? As for his “contributions” echoing for generations, that’s carefully deceitful line like fake compliments to untalented friends in bad theatrical performances (“Well, you can’t do better than that!” and “That was amazing!”).

Every man becomes President of the United States loves this country: you can’t get to the White House if you don’t and are unlikely to try. In that picture, the individual who demonstrated that he loved the U.S. in its present state least is Barack Obama. If that was a veiled shot at Trump by Harris, it was a particularly stupid one. A standard talking point from the Trump-Deranged is that “he only cares about himself.” Becoming President requires courage and sacrifice, and nobody runs for the position who isn’t determined to do a good job for all Americans.

Some have been more capable of achieving that goal than others.

Unethical Quote of the Month: President Joe Biden

“It’s just completely contrary to everything America is about. We want to tell the truth. We haven’t always done it as a nation. We want to tell the truth.The idea that, you know, a billionaire can buy something and say, ‘By the way, we’re not gonna fact check anything,’ and you know, you have millions of people reading, going online, reading this stuff. Anyway, I think it’s really shameful.”

—-President Joe Biden, attacking Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg decision’s to end its biased, censorious fact-checking system that relied on partisan propaganda operations like PolitiFact and Snopes.

What’s shameful is a President of the United States advocating speech censorship. Like many of Biden’s brain-addled outbursts lately, however, he has committed the cardinal political sin of saying what he and his puppeteers really believe out loud. So now we know, at least those of us who weren’t paying attention before and couldn’t read the metaphorical neon signs flashing before our eyes, Joe Biden and his entire party advocates the censorship of free speech on social media, including opinion, adverse positions and anything that might expose its rotting proto-totalitarian party for the threat to democracy it has become. Thanks, Joe! But it was pretty obvious already.

I’m glad that I have waited to post the resolution of the “Worst President Ever” inquiry until tomorrow, because so much applicable information has been flowing regarding just how awful Joe Biden has been. I think all who have read the series carefully have figured out that the finals are going to come down to Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Woodrow Wilson and Biden, and it doesn’t take a PhD to guess who the last two competitors will be either. Once I thought the ultimate “winner” was clear-cut, but Joe is fighting for the title to the bitter end.

He and his fellow censors circulated lie after lie before and during the Presidential campaign (among them that only Donald Trump lies) yet Biden has the astounding brass to talk about wanting to tell the truth. You know, truth like Biden being sharp as a tack. “Truth” like the border being secure.

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Now THAT’S A Provocative Lawn Sign!

And apparently a real one, the creation of Democrat for an Informed Approach to Gender. Its website is here.

I wonder how that sign would go over in my neighborhood, where the standard woke virtue-signaling signs (“No human being is illegal”…”Love is love,” etc.) sprout like poppies in Flanders Field.

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Pointer: Dr. Emilio Lizardo

“And Now, The Rest of the Story!” MLB Bans Those Two Assholes For Life…

Hey, maybe Major League Baseball reads Ethics Alarms!

In this post in October, EA reported that in the bottom of the first inning in Game 4 of the World Series with the Yankees losing 2-0, NY lead-off hitter Gleyber Torres “hit a high pop-up into right field foul territory. Dodgers right fielder Betts caught the ball with his glove, but” Asshole #1 grabbed Betts’ glove with both hands, opened it, reached inside with his right hand and knocked the ball back onto the field, as Asshole #2 assisted him. It was on national television for all to see, so the umpires, thank goodness, got the call right and ruled fan interference. Torres was called out. I ruled it the most egregious example ever of fans deliberately trying to interfere with a player’s efforts during a baseball game, and called for Austin Capobianco (Asshole #1) and John P. Hansen (Asshole #2) to be banned from attending baseball games for life.

It took three months for some absurd reason, but Major League Baseball finally has banned them from attending games at big league ballparks, probably forever. Good.

The league sent a letter to A1 and A2 this week informing them of the decision.

“On Oct. 29, 2024, during Game 4 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, you interfered with play by intentionally and forcefully grabbing a player. Your conduct posed a serious risk to the health and safety of the player and went far over the line of acceptable fan behavior,” said the letter, released today. “Based on your conduct, Major League Baseball is banning you indefinitely from all MLB stadiums, offices, and other facilities,” the letter continues. “You are also hereby banned indefinitely from attending any events sponsored by or associated with MLB. Please be advised that if you are discovered at any MLB property or event, you will be removed from the premises and subject to arrest for trespass.”

There is justice in the universe. I would have preferred to see the letter end with a promise that if either miscreant is discovered at any MLB property or event or even so much as wearing baseball cap, he will be summarily wrapped in unwashed jock straps and have his eyelids stapled open while he is forced to watch the execrable film, “The Babe Ruth Story” starring William Bendix (which Ted Williams called “the worst movie I ever saw,” though he never saw “The Exorcist II”) on an endless loop until he can’t stop screaming and begs to have his eyes gouged out. But that’s just me.

I can live with this resolution.


The Vatican Insults The World’s Intelligence for Some Cheap Virtue Signaling

I suppose that anyone who remains a devout Catholic after the Church’s child predator scandal will swallow anything…sorry, poor choice of words.

The Vatican approved new guidelines for Italy holding that an applicant for the seminary cannot be rejected simply because he is gay, as long as he remains celibate.

How can this cynical, openly obtuse “liberalizing” of standards for the priesthood be received with anything but mockery? The Church already has gay priests, lots of them, and has since Peter was hearing cocks crow. I can name three in my limited experience with the Church. When I worked at Georgetown, the priest who was then President had a young male companion who followed him around like a puppy.

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Snow Day Ethics Warm-Up, 1/11/25

It’s another snow day in Northern Virginia, but that isn’t stopping climate change hysterics and progressive public policy incompetence apologists from blaming California’s latest wildfire catastrophe on global warming—not L.A.’s incompetent mayor, not the inadequate fire department budget, not the arsonists who may have started the fires, and not LA’s DEI water head, who left a crucial reservoir disconnected, resulting in fire hydrants not functioning.

Department of Water and Power (LADWP) CEO Janisse Quiñones was hired at a $750,000 salary in May, double that of her predecessor. To be fair, she had a background in California fires: she was previously a top executive at electricity company PG&E, a senior vice president at Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) from 2021 to 2023. That’s the company with the power lines that sparked responsible for the second-largest wildfire in California history, Dixie, in 2021. Before that, the company’s involvement in the 2018 Camp Fire resulted in PG&E paying a $13.5 billion legal settlement, although its liability for causing fires was estimated at $30 billion when the company filed for bankruptcy in 2018. It exited bankruptcy in 2020, just in time to hire Quiñones. Hey, but it’s all climate change!….Meanwhile, the discussion over at the Friday Forum (again, sorry for posting it late) about pet peeves and my late wife’s particular objection to using “that” when “who” is correct reminded me of a brilliant limerick that I had almost forgotten.

My strange friends back in Arlington, Mass. used to play a limerick game in which one of us would come up with a first line, the next would add the second line, the third would complete the third and fourth lines that have to rhyme, and my dear, brilliant, witty friend Jay Sylva would always come up with the final line, because he was so good at it. I specialized in first lines, and this time offered, “The man who had eaten my face…” (it wouldn’t have scanned with “that’). The subsequent additions left us with…

The man who had eaten my face…”
Had the nerve to come back to my place.
I said, “Stay a while!
If you’ll cough up my smile

To which Jay immediately added, to applause and his eternal glory,

I’ll forgive you for not saying grace!”

On to today’s early list…

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Late Friday Forum!

Here’s a pet peeve: when I forget what day it is. Since I work every day of the week and most evenings and no longer have anyone living with me in this huge house, I frequently lose track. Today was an example.

Steven Mintz, “the Ethics Sage,” has a post on his blog listing his “pet peeves.” Boy, he isn’t annoyed by nearly as many things as I am, and all most none of them are particularly momentous. Here’s his list:

10. Leaving the toilet seat up [a shout out to women].

9. Turning without signaling. [what’s the turn signal for?].

8. Walking up a flight of stairs while using one’s cell phones; being oblivious to others [this can cause them to run into us].

7. Talking during movies or using one’s cell phones. [even though there is a message from the theater not to do so].

6. Looking at one’s cell phone while someone is talking [inconsiderate].

5. Cutting people off while driving [stupid; you can cause a serious accident],

4.  Failing to share the arm rest on an airplane [thoughtless]. Taking one’s shoes (and socks!) off in an airplane [yuck].

3. Taking one’s shoe’s (and socks!) off in an airplane.

2. Being interrupted by another person while talking [rude! rude! behavior].

1. Using the catchphrase “with all due respect” [a subtle disrespect].

He writes in part, “I’ve been thinking a lot about them lately because I have experienced that increasingly people are inconsiderate; they don’t seem to be cognizant that even the little things can annoy others. I decided to write a blog on this subject because of my commitment to ethical behavior in our personal as well as professional lives. Being considerate of others is an ethical value because it shows caring and concern for the well-being of others. It moves us away from the constant pursuit of self-interest regardless of how it affects others.”

I can top that list with ease, including his #1: My least favorite catch phrase is a tie between “Everything happens for a reason” and “There are no coincidences.”

Another pet peeve is not getting many contribution to the open forums, but I can hardly complain when I open one 8 hours late.