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General => The Tailgate => Topic started by: code on February 20, 2012, 12:48:24 PM

Title: Favorite president
Post by: code on February 20, 2012, 12:48:24 PM
Who is your favorite president.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: code on February 20, 2012, 12:48:53 PM
George Washington.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: nastygunz on February 20, 2012, 04:36:53 PM
Ronald Reagan!
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: coyotehunter_1 on February 20, 2012, 05:12:44 PM
Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, our 26th President.

Theodore Roosevelt Quote: "The first requisite of a good citizen in this Republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to pull his weight."
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: blacky on February 20, 2012, 06:05:52 PM
Anyone but Obama.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: weedwalker on February 20, 2012, 06:44:44 PM
Ronald Reagan or Jefferson Davis
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: FinsnFur on February 20, 2012, 06:46:51 PM
I'm gonna have to go with Reagan too.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: Coulter on February 21, 2012, 09:03:21 AM
Thomas Jefferson with Theodore Roosevelt running a really close second.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: Okanagan on February 22, 2012, 09:34:14 AM
I'd go with Washington.   He set a high precedent to follow.  Reagan was one for the ages also, and history looks at Truman better all the time.

Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: yotefever on February 22, 2012, 10:06:59 AM
George Washington. After reading the book 'George Washington's War: The Saga of the American Revolution' by Robert Leckie at our men's library book club I was amazed just what he and the troops went through. And the fact that many wanted him to become king and he refused. (unlike the present resident of the white house that thinks he's a king)
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: Okanagan on February 22, 2012, 03:58:03 PM
That is HUGE.  Washington could have been king, and refused.  That makes him one of the more unusual leaders in history and set the US off on a course unlike any other nation at the time. 

Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: HaMeR on February 22, 2012, 09:10:47 PM
I can't pick just one & I've tried.


Our Founding Fathers. These gentlemen were extremely wise beyond their years. Of course most of that came with their past history with the throne. They are the ones that set this Nation forth on the course it has taken over the years. Without that solid foundation we would have never made it this far. All for one & one for all.

It's the "what have you done for me lately" crowd that is dragging it to it's knees.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: Hawks Feather on February 23, 2012, 06:06:28 PM
Ronald Reagan
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: Yote Buster on February 24, 2012, 05:57:16 PM
I will have to agree, with allot of you on your choices, But, With 'George Washington and Theodore Roosevelt as the front runner, they where also good Respectful Generals and would not expect any work out of there Troops what they would not do there self....
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: nastygunz on February 29, 2012, 03:30:54 PM
YOU GOT THAT RIGHT BABY!!!!!

Reagan ‘Best President,’ Says Harris Poll

President Ronald Reagan confronted challenges as daunting as those the nation faces today, and met them so successfully that he’s now considered the best president in modern times.
In a recently released Harris poll asking respondents who they consider the “best president since World War II,” Ronald Reagan is cited by 25 percent, well ahead of Franklin Roosevelt at 19 percent and John Kennedy at 15 percent.
There is much to learn today from Reagan’s successes. As Wayne Allyn Root, recently in Forbes magazine: “We need a revolutionary new vision. We need a modern-day Reagan with a bold plan.
“Reagan was not afraid to ruffle feathers and put dramatic, even radical plans on the table. That is how he created the Reagan Revolution that revitalized America.”
Reagan faced difficulties on many fronts when he entered the White House in January 1981.
The nation was heavily embroiled in the Cold War. The Soviets had invaded Afghanistan a year earlier. Until the day of Reagan’s inauguration, Iran had held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days.

On the economic front, the nation was in the doldrums after four years of the Jimmy Carter presidency. Inflation stood around 12.5 percent, unemployment was 7.5 percent, and the top tax rate was 70 percent.
Reagan implemented free market policies that came to be known as Reaganomics â€" drastically reducing taxes on income and capital gains, cutting spending on many federal programs, and deregulating the economy.
The result: the largest economic boom in U.S. history.
Reagan’s policies created more than 16 million new jobs, and the GDP grew at an annual rate of 3.85 percent a year. By the time Reagan left office, inflation had plunged to just 4.4 percent, and unemployment had dropped to 5.4 percent.
Reagan also stood up to the Soviet Union, branding it “an evil empire” in a March 1983 speech. He ordered a massive buildup of American armed forces, and introduced the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) â€" later dubbed “Star Wars” â€" to protect the United States from nuclear ballistic missiles launched by the U.S.S.R.
He also boosted aid to anti-communist resistance movements, including the Mujaheddin battling Soviet troops in Afghanistan, and freed the island nation of Grenada from a Marxist government supported by troops from the Soviets’ North American ally, Fidel Castro’s Cuba.
In 1987, Reagan stood at the Berlin Wall and challenged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall!” Two years later, the Wall came down, and the Cold War was declared over.
Reagan’s tough foreign policy approach paid off.
Two years after his Berlin Wall speech, the Soviet Union collapsed, a pivotal moment in history many attribute largely to Reagan’s huge military buildup and threat of building the SDI â€" moves that could not be matched by the floundering Soviet economy.
On the home front, Reagan endeared himself to average Americans with a straightforward, no-nonsense style that earned him the nickname “The Great Communicator.”
But Reagan’s greatest accomplishment, he said at the end of his presidency, was that he made Americans feel proud of their country again.
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: yotefever on February 29, 2012, 05:29:03 PM
I'm not sure about the cold war part, pbs stated on a show that the beatles were the reason the cold war ended?????
I didn't know if I should laugh or cry when I heard that. (I did laugh)
Title: Re: Favorite president
Post by: nastygunz on February 29, 2012, 10:35:55 PM
Im gunna go with  :alscalls: