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Your current Gulch score:
Theodore Roosevelt 1,081
William H. Taft 724
Woodrow Wilson 1,803
Warren Harding 522
Calvin Coolidge 1,203
Herbert Hoover 968
Franklin Roosevelt 3,721
Harry S. Truman 907
Dwight Eisenhower 484
John F. Kennedy 214
Lyndon B. Johnson 325
Richard Nixon 346
Gerald R. Ford 169
Jimmy Carter 320
Ronald Reagan 381
George Bush 166
Bill Clinton 364
George W. Bush 291
Barack Obama 227
Source:
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/data/o...
In my opinion, every one of them violated the constitution repeatedly and deserved prosecution.
It would be nice for people running now to promise to set a precedent of less executive power. That's kind of tough sell-- if elected I not only will do less, but I will make the office the president less powerful.
Whoever is president next (unless it's Rand Paul) will use these powers as precedent. What they do with them will be different. But they'll think they're the good guys and they have to use every tool at their disposal for their causes and constituents.
I completely agree with this article.
It seems a little unfair to focus on President Obama since this trend has been going for a long time, but he sort-of asked for it by promising to bring change and transparency to gov't.
There only a line or two about presumption of secrecy,
"Every new power seized by government is an individual freedom lost. As such, this pattern of executive abuse and overreach cannot continue."
This is so true, but I don't see it stopping. The executive branch has taken over the power to declare war, and the legislative branch is mostly okay with that b/c it lets them dodge blame for military actions that turn out unpopular.