Who was the greatest President of the United States of America, and why was it Franklin Delano Roosevelt?

Who was the greatest President of the United States of America, and why was it Franklin Delano Roosevelt?

Other urls found in this thread:

newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/FDR-s-Policies-Prolonged-Depression-5409
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Fuck FDR, he should be counted as one of the worst

If he was so great why couldn't he walk?

Checkmate

>liberals love him
>they literally ignore he enslaved japs

Doesn't this prove Libtards want to jail anyone who is a """""threat""""?

>implying he didn't fuck up the economy even more

newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/FDR-s-Policies-Prolonged-Depression-5409

Truth

>progressive shitstain & opportunistic nation rapist

FDR was a fucking progressive cunt. Fuck his new deal , fuck his social security.

...

Db8me

damn, FDR BTFO

>Lincoln
>great tier
Kill yourself
Agree with the other ones in great tier though.
Teddy should also be in there
Johnson should be in shit tier too.

Best President is was and always will be Polk. Completed, with bipartisan support, every major foreign and domestic goal of his campaign in one term and rode off into the sunset.

Second is probably Teddy or Eisenhower.

Seriously.
Lincoln was the death of the 10th Amendment.

>Nixon
>not Great tier
Explain yourself, burger.

You misspelled Thomas Jefferson.
Pretty bad too, not sure how you did that.

Teddy his cousin was far better.

He was so liked they even named kids "teddy" bears after him

>Inb4 Jackson fought the kike bankers
They regained control over the now smashed banks, and the economy went for a wild ride.

>INB4 Ike was a kike plant that killed Germans
Sure, but he was a solid President.

>Inb4 FDR saved the economy
Some regulations were necessary, but the entire New Deal was crackpot.

>Inb4 Reagan was great
Reagan did what he needed to do to fight the USSR, including promoting cuckstianity, various proxy wars, and welcoming various third worlders to sway them against Socialism, but invade the world, invite the world, crony banking connections, and (((free))) trade were fucking fail.

>Inb4 muh JFK saint
His RFK and Ted said ending immigration quotas was originally JFK's proposal, he talked out of both sides of his mouth on war depending on his audience, and he liked dem gibs.
>After muh Nixon ended the gold standard
He had to, the US was left in an economic mess from guns and butter and to avoid bankruptcy he cut gold-USD convertibility, then used OPEC to sell oil in USD to back it, then opened up relations with the PRC in the Sino-Soviet split, which displaced US manufacturing, but also allowed slave Chinks to do dirty work while the US went into higher forms of labor, and the PRC kept parking money in US treasuries so we could keep the lights on at home that taxes wouldn't be able to cover.

He wasn't as great as he could have been, because he was paranoid as fuck, ran his administration to the ground, could have done Cambodia differently, and worked to repeal the Hart Celler LBJ passed.

So long as you don't name Kennedy, we'll have no problem.

checked!

McKinley was pretty great

Andrew Jackson

If you really believe that, you are going to find very little common ground with anyone here, but you're probably just trolling for (You)s.

>Inafter Muh South Will Rise Again
Lincoln was a a true Nationalist that worked toward the expansion of the American enterprise from North to South and Coast to Coast.

Southern Secessionists didn't care about States' rights, because if they did,

>1

they wouldn't use their congressional representatives to call for federal slave catching units, using conscripts- many of whom were from non-slave-holding states, to catch feral, violent, niggers, that would be forced to compete with them in agriculture for 0-fucking-dollars, in 'free' states they they ran away to.

So they didn't respect the ability of a state not to honor the the ownership of a slave from another state.

>2
When other, abolitionist, states proposed nullification for enforcement of slavery related laws within their states, the Southern states chimped out. But when it was their time for nullification, Southerners of course supported it

>3
They supposedly supported the right of secession because the Federal Government was a child of contractual relationships between states, and thus entrance revocable at will, and the Federal Government potentially impermanent, but the CSA constitution explicitly says

>each State acting in its sovereign and independent character, in order to form a permanent federal government

>permanent federal government

>permanent

Also Lincoln was more than fair during Reconstruction. Johnson fucked everything up.

...

Redpill me on William McKinley. Were the wars worth it?


Teddy was good in that he expanded US influence to the global stage, some of the regulations he passed were good, and the economy under him at the very least didn't overheat (usually happens when politicians use asymmetric information and regulatory capture to pump capital to friends in business) political but didn't fall to shit either (usually happens with a bust cycle, mismanagement, outside forces trying to cuck you, or overregulation).

He was shit for sending many good men to die, and for passing a lot of overbearing regulations that amounted to regulatory capture for his friends.

...

because only faggots walk

The only right answer, cucks

FDR was a builder. Industry and infrastructure boomed under the guy, thousands of bridges, parks, roads etc. were built under him, therefore millions of jobs were created therefore catapulting the USA out of the Great Depression.

Also, who gives a shit if he put the Japanese into camps, the USA won the war. Desperate times come for desperate measures.

>stumbles into the Oval Office
>economy collapses
>grabs another bottle of whiskey
>blacks out

I agree with infrastructure, but most US presidents before and since have advanced domestic infrastructure. FDR also funneled funds into a bunch of shit.

Also more resources and more spending was mobilized for WWII than for the New Deal.