標(biāo)題: Titlebook: Bad Presidents; Failure in the White Philip Abbott Book 2013 Philip Abbott 2013 bush.classification.hand.idea.interpret.success.William Jam [打印本頁(yè)] 作者: 嚴(yán)峻 時(shí)間: 2025-3-21 18:30
書(shū)目名稱Bad Presidents影響因子(影響力)
作者: surmount 時(shí)間: 2025-3-21 20:38 作者: 施加 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 03:12
Weathering the Storm: Herbert Hoover,went under the hammer of auctioneers. Perhaps as many as a million men and boys left their homes, wandering the country looking for work. By January 1931, New York City operated 82 bread lines feeding 85,000 people a day. Farm income plummeted as corn prices fell to pre–Civil War levels. Many schools closed for lack of public funds.作者: Aphorism 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 07:20
Armin T?pfer,Christian Seeringerl” president? Without precedents to guide him, and as a president effectively without the support of either party, did Tyler act boldly and imaginatively? Did Tyler sacrifice his presidency so that other accidental presidents could govern better than he could?作者: phytochemicals 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 09:32
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-33300-3alogy of the Depression as a storm sweeping across American shores from Europe to attack the Hoover administration’s competence: “There are glimpses through the clouds, of troubled officers pacing the deck wondering what to do.” .作者: 擔(dān)憂 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 13:10 作者: Initial 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 19:59
The First Bad President?: John Tyler,l” president? Without precedents to guide him, and as a president effectively without the support of either party, did Tyler act boldly and imaginatively? Did Tyler sacrifice his presidency so that other accidental presidents could govern better than he could?作者: 迷住 時(shí)間: 2025-3-22 23:52
The Booster: Warren G. Harding,alogy of the Depression as a storm sweeping across American shores from Europe to attack the Hoover administration’s competence: “There are glimpses through the clouds, of troubled officers pacing the deck wondering what to do.” .作者: SIT 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 04:08
The Latest Bad President?: George W. Bush,atures with some or all of these very bad presidents (as many respondents have suggested) or is his badness different? Or are other interpretations possible that link Bush more closely with other presidents, even “good” or “great” ones?作者: 燈絲 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 05:52 作者: 貞潔 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 12:48
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-33300-3ident’s one-line statement in 1927, “I do not choose to run for president in 1928” and Dorothy Parker’s response to Coolidge’s death, “How can they tell?” If the “Coolidge prosperity” was indeed a mirage as Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) alleged, the man who was president from 1923 to 1929 seems to be himself an illusion.作者: 騷擾 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 14:11
Julia Wustmann,Michaela Pfadenhauerwent under the hammer of auctioneers. Perhaps as many as a million men and boys left their homes, wandering the country looking for work. By January 1931, New York City operated 82 bread lines feeding 85,000 people a day. Farm income plummeted as corn prices fell to pre–Civil War levels. Many schools closed for lack of public funds.作者: 是他笨 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 20:51 作者: –LOUS 時(shí)間: 2025-3-23 23:38
Landschaft und Offene Gesellschaftetimes they were willful decisions in which the consequences were already clear such as with Andrew Johnson’s vetoes. The tipping point of some presidents was actions deliberately undertaken by stealth such as Buchanan’s endorsement of the as yet unannounced Dred Scott decision and Nixon’s actions after the Watergate decision (see table 13.1).作者: 涂掉 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 03:22 作者: Disk199 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 08:43 作者: GEN 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 11:50
2945-6150 author brings a unique, and often amusing perspective on the idea of the presidency, and begins a new conversation about the definition of presidential success and failure.978-1-349-45513-3978-1-137-30659-3Series ISSN 2945-6150 Series E-ISSN 2945-6169 作者: GOAD 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 16:28
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-04138-0 president, from his stated willingness in his inaugural address to “cheerfully submit” to the Supreme Court’s impending decision to his very last acts, do suggest the possibility of a plan to nationalize slavery or accept Southern secession.作者: 燒瓶 時(shí)間: 2025-3-24 23:04
Building the House?: James Buchanan, president, from his stated willingness in his inaugural address to “cheerfully submit” to the Supreme Court’s impending decision to his very last acts, do suggest the possibility of a plan to nationalize slavery or accept Southern secession.作者: MUT 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 00:02 作者: Corroborate 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 06:46 作者: 特別容易碎 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 11:01
The Compromise: Millard Fillmore,ng with Buchanan—Fillmore, Pierce, Nixon, Grant, and Harding. Certainly, there is substantial agreement about the extreme badness of these presidents. All but Fillmore are unanimously selected in major polls as “failures.” There is, however, a singularity about Fillmore, Pierce, and Buchanan. In the作者: Accessible 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 14:15 作者: 植物群 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 19:29
Lincoln in Reverse: Andrew Johnson, opportunities for genuine reconstruction have been directly traced to his policies. It is the subsequent judgment that impeachment itself was a great error that seems to lessen this assessment and sometimes creates a tipping point away from badness. In 1922, Claude G. Bowers, a popular historian ad作者: hyperuricemia 時(shí)間: 2025-3-25 21:23
,The First Bad “Hidden-Hand” President: Ulysses S. Grant,om in performance. Worse perhaps, Grant has a single negative signifier attached to his presidency—corruption. Yet Grant was reelected with 56 percent of the popular vote. When he left office, Grant went on a world tour lasting two years in which he was greeted warmly by international royalty. He re作者: sperse 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 03:52
The Booster: Warren G. Harding,uchanan are often judged as responsible for the Civil War, Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover together share responsibility for the Great Depression. As Lincoln, a great president, provided the critique of his bad predecessors, so did Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) for his. Franklin D. Roosevelt did not nam作者: 幼兒 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 07:16 作者: Myofibrils 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 09:46 作者: implore 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 16:33
Ex Parte Exercitii: ,to this dangerous prototype appears very strong. Nixon was a master of surprise like Richard III. He could act swiftly but also indirectly. His pursuit of power was relentless. Both leaders ignored constitutional boundaries, large and small. And, of course, like Richard III, Nixon held deep grievanc作者: 知識(shí) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 19:11 作者: 繁榮中國(guó) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-26 21:44 作者: 生存環(huán)境 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 01:29
Armin T?pfer,Steffen Silbermannat ranks presidential performance as a research activity leads not to a rigorous and robust body of knowledge in presidential studies as Glad predicts but rather to a version of the emperor’s encyclopedia described by Jorge Luis Borges in which phenomena are cataloged in a completely ersatz fashion?作者: 傾聽(tīng) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 05:54
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-04136-6nstitutional government in the United States.”. It is certainly true that Johnson’s general reputation rose first as a result of negative reassessments of Reconstruction and then as a result of negative reassessments of the Civil War in the 1930s. He was ranked nineteenth out of twenty-nine presiden作者: Gratuitous 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 13:08
Julia Wustmann,Michaela Pfadenhauerd villainy / With odd old ends stole forth of holy writ / and seem a saint, when most I play the devil”) and Nixon’s (“You won’t have Nixon to kick around anymore”; “Well, I am not a crook”; “Generally you can’t trust the bastards. They turn on us”; and “With regard to the bombing. You’re so goddamn作者: 興奮過(guò)度 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 14:03
Classifications: Kings and Presidents,at ranks presidential performance as a research activity leads not to a rigorous and robust body of knowledge in presidential studies as Glad predicts but rather to a version of the emperor’s encyclopedia described by Jorge Luis Borges in which phenomena are cataloged in a completely ersatz fashion?作者: 填滿 時(shí)間: 2025-3-27 19:58
Lincoln in Reverse: Andrew Johnson,nstitutional government in the United States.”. It is certainly true that Johnson’s general reputation rose first as a result of negative reassessments of Reconstruction and then as a result of negative reassessments of the Civil War in the 1930s. He was ranked nineteenth out of twenty-nine presiden作者: 事情 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 00:55 作者: Maximize 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 04:54 作者: 打折 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 10:00 作者: 寬宏大量 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 12:28
Book 2013Bad Presidents seeks to interpret the meaning of presidential ‘badness‘ by investigating the ways in which eleven presidents were ‘bad.‘ The author brings a unique, and often amusing perspective on the idea of the presidency, and begins a new conversation about the definition of presidential success and failure.作者: defenses 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 16:06 作者: 漸強(qiáng) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-28 21:54 作者: 平 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 00:40 作者: STYX 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 03:25
Armin T?pfer,Christian Seeringerirst eight presidents were placed in the first quartile (Washington, Jefferson, and Jackson), four in the second (John Adams, Madison, Monroe, and John Quincy Adams). Only one, Marin Van Buren, has received assessments in the third quartile. John Tyler, however, who took the oath of office on April 作者: hypnogram 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 09:29
Lutz von Rosenstiel,Peter Neumannng with Buchanan—Fillmore, Pierce, Nixon, Grant, and Harding. Certainly, there is substantial agreement about the extreme badness of these presidents. All but Fillmore are unanimously selected in major polls as “failures.” There is, however, a singularity about Fillmore, Pierce, and Buchanan. In the作者: Guileless 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 14:58 作者: 臭名昭著 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 17:47
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-04136-6 opportunities for genuine reconstruction have been directly traced to his policies. It is the subsequent judgment that impeachment itself was a great error that seems to lessen this assessment and sometimes creates a tipping point away from badness. In 1922, Claude G. Bowers, a popular historian ad作者: Landlocked 時(shí)間: 2025-3-29 21:05 作者: 標(biāo)準(zhǔn) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 01:28 作者: 倔強(qiáng)一點(diǎn) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 07:23 作者: Ganglion-Cyst 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 09:52
Julia Wustmann,Michaela Pfadenhauer (10,000 of them between 1929 and 1934); drought conditions were reported in 300 counties in 30 states; 12 million people were unemployed by May 1932; and farmers lost their land to banks and/or tax collectors. In a single day in April 1932, one-fourth of the entire area of the state of Mississippi 作者: 集聚成團(tuán) 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 15:05
Julia Wustmann,Michaela Pfadenhauerto this dangerous prototype appears very strong. Nixon was a master of surprise like Richard III. He could act swiftly but also indirectly. His pursuit of power was relentless. Both leaders ignored constitutional boundaries, large and small. And, of course, like Richard III, Nixon held deep grievanc作者: Mosaic 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 18:12
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-42136-6tical scientists have moved steadily downward, from nineteenth in a 2005 poll to thirty-sixth in 2009. In another poll in 2008, 61 percent of respondents placed him last; in a 2010 poll he was ranked at thirty-ninth.. Since volatility among lower ranked presidents is relatively low, it is likely tha作者: Duodenitis 時(shí)間: 2025-3-30 21:08 作者: 懶鬼才會(huì)衰弱 時(shí)間: 2025-3-31 04:33 作者: gene-therapy 時(shí)間: 2025-3-31 05:12
The Byronic President: Franklin Pierce,If the tipping point in Fillmore’s badness is his support of the Compromise of 1850 and its enforcement, Pierce’s is his support of the Kansas-Nebraska Act and its implementation.作者: 冰河期 時(shí)間: 2025-3-31 13:08