Who was or is "the Worst American"?

Jimmy Carter? Care to expand on this?

For all of Bull Connor’s misdeeds as the head of public safety in Birmingham, Alabama, he went on to get a statewide job in Alabama as the Public Service Commissioner and was instrumental in the development of the first 911 emergency phone call system.

Assuming you mean the 39th President, he is ineligible for consideration per the OP - living ex-president.

Jimmy Carter?? Gods. Don’t get me wrong, I haven’t got much good to say about ole peanut boy…but to even seriously consider ranking him in a list of the worst Americans, let alone THE worst??? Well, I guess we are all operating under different definitions of the word ‘Worst American’.

In the spirit of the thread I’ll now nominate Donald Duck to go along with my previous nomination of Mickey Mouse. I find Donald subversive and offensive. I know that speech impediment he has is an affectation and he uses it to pervert American values as well as a means to pick up chicks (damn him!!). He is personally responsible for poverty and chaos both in the US and abroad, and in his role as Scrooge McDuck (I know its SUPPOSED to be another character but I’m not fooled) he is, well, RICH!! And if he’s RICH he MUST be evil (seems to be the consensus on the board here, and I’m trying to accomodate), so there. Definitely should be at the top of any realistic list of really really bad American’s.

:rolleyes:

-XT

All bad, possibly tragic choices. But I don’t see these as worse than what he did. Many people die in all three cases. Only in the scenario Lee chose is he actively fighting for slavery.

Really? In all I’ve read about him, nothing has mentioned the emergency phone system. Do you have an article or somesuch? I don’t doubt you, I’d just like to read about it.

He was not a U.S. Citizen; he was a citizen of the Confederate States of America.

Besides which, George Washington was most definitely a traitor against England, who had never stated provisions under which the colonies could withdraw or form a new allegiance. Why is he not a “bad American”?

Perhaps Joel Grey sang it best:

Emphasis added. Simply in the name of fighting ignorance, it must be noted that Fuchs was never ever an American. Depending on the period, he was either German or British.

How about Strom Thurmond? His 1948 Dixiecrat campaign led the way for the ugly racial “Southern Strategy” which is still in use today. Also, he was a hypocrite of the worst type. His love for segreation and fathering a daughter out of wedlock while playing on American’s fears of intergration was just disgusting.

From the time Virginia joined the CSA (April 1861, two months after its founding) until 1865, maybe.

Uh… that might make him a bad Briton, but it wouldn’t make him a bad American.

So you agree with Benjamin Franklin:

Let’s agree to disagree.

I’m making a much simpler point, and I’m not denying Washington’s actions were treasonous toward Britain. That wouldn’t make Washington a bad American. You might say Lee was a good citizen of the CSA by the same measure.

You might say I’m just taking the topic more literally.

I had to check the dates, but I was correct: Lee assumed command of the Army of Virginia on April 22, 1861, which was after Virginia joined the Confederacy. He specifically would not take a command until that time so as not to be treacherous.

I’d like to see a cite on this. Some context would probably explain this better.

Oh, come on., Sampiro, even you don’t buy that. “Ummm, I’m not a traitor… I, ah, I’m not an American anymore!” If it didn’t work for John Lindh, it doesn’t work for Bobby Lee.

You can’t excuse Lee’s treason by saying the rest of Virginia was treasonous too. Traitors don’t get a bye for being part of a mob any more than the “but the other kids are doing it too” excuse worked with your Mom. Robert E. Lee was a traitor.

Viewed from 21st century eyes the notion of a breakaway Republic is unthinkable, but is it unConstitutional? (As I said, that’s a whole other debate.) Remember though to those of Lee’s time how recent the American Revolution, founded on the premise that when “it becomes Necessary to dissolve the Bonds which heretofore hath binded the Ties that connecteth the Midsection of the mother Country” you do so, was in living memory.

Lee’s own father had been a cavalry officer in the Revolution. Two uncles who had grown up in the house he was born in had signed the Declaration of Independence. George Washington wasn’t just a venerated name in a book to him but his father’s friend, a neighbor, and- oh yeah- Lee’s own grandfather-in-law (by marriage and adoption, but still… Lee’s father-in-law was raised by the man). Secession was not an act of treason, but a souvereign right.

Anyway, anybody who can say that Lee was a worse person than Jefferson Davis or Joe McCarthy isn’t worth arguing with.

Andrew Jackson has been getting a lot of play in this thread because of his maltreatment of the Indians. I think it bears mentioning that his brother was tortured and killed by Indians. It doesn’t excuse what he did, but, considering also the historical context, it gives some insight into his actions. I wonder whether the Indians would have really been any better off in the long run had Jackson never lived - American society was not exactly rewarding kindness to Indians in the early 1800s.

He’s certainly a loathsome person, but what actual damage has he ever done to the Republic?

Robert E. Lee, as I understand it, from reading various histories, did not fight in defense of slavery. It was the cause of the war, but not why he made the decision to fight he did.

He is one of the people about whom it could be truly said, he fought for the states rights. That the United States were states first, and united second. He had a difficult decision, to choose between his country and his home state, and he chose his home state. The difference, from his perspective, between the EU and England.

I consider him a great american, for his decision to do what he thought was right, for his behavior as a moral standard, and for his dignity at all times.

Despite him being on the wrong side of the war, and fighting for an unjust cause. He was a very admirable man. He did nothing ‘Unamerican’ that I can think of. After all, if you disagree with something, you should do your part to change it.