Why Jimmy Carter Will Always Be Remembered as the Worst President in Modern History Causing Much of Today's Woes
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Wednesday, September 10,
2008 4:20 PM
Jimmy Carter became our 39th president at the young age of 52. He was a one-term governor
from Plains, GA, where he managed the family peanut farm and taught Sunday
school. He was also a graduate of the Naval Academy and served seven
years in the Navy, leaving as a lieutenant.
He came to power
in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and the resignation of President
Nixon. The public wanted change and someone new,
and Carter was an ambitious, hands-on politician who promised better
days. As good as his intentions were, however, the things he tried
were not successful. In fact, he created far more serious problems than he
ever solved.
The centerpiece of Carter's foreign policy was
human rights, and he did achieve one noble success-a peace treaty between
Egypt's Anwar Sadat and Israel 's Menachem
Begin.
Unfortunately, that later led to Sadat's
assassination at the hands of Muslim radicals.
Many people felt Carter was a good man who worked hard and meant
well. But he was naive and incompetent in handling the
enormous burdens and complex challenges of being president. He wrongly
believed Americans had an 'inordinate fear of communism,'
so he lifted
travel bans to Cuba , North Vietnam and Cambodia and pardoned draft
evaders. He also stopped B-1 bomber production and gave away our
strategically located Panama Canal .
His most damaging miscalculation was the withdrawal
of U.S. support for the Shah of Iran, a strong and longtime military
ally. Carter objected to the Shah's alleged mistreatment of
imprisoned Soviet spies who were working to overthrow Iran 's
government. He thought the exiled Ayatollah Khomeini, being a
religious man, would make a fairer leader. Having lost U.S. support, the
Shah was overthrown, the
Ayatollah returned, Iran was declared an
Islamic nation and Palestinian hit men were hired to eliminate opposition.
The Ayatollah then introduced the idea of suicide bombers to the Palestine
Liberation Organization, paying $35,000 to PLO families whose young
people
were brainwashed to kill as many Israelis as possible by blowing
themselves up in crowded shopping areas.
Next, the Ayatollah
used Iran 's oil wealth to create, train and finance a new terrorist
organization, Hezbollah, which later would attack Israel in 2006. In
November 1979, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other Iranians stormed the U.S.
embassy in Tehran and took 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. Not until
six months into the ordeal did Carter attempt a rescue. But the
mission, using just six Navy helicopters, was poorly
executed.
Three of the copters were disabled or lost in
sandstorms. (Pilots weren't allowed to meet with weather forecasters
because someone in authority worried about security.) Five airmen
and three Marines lost their lives.
So, due to overconfidence, inexperience and poor judgment, Carter undermined
and lost a strong ally, Iran , that today aggressively threatens the U.S.,
Israel and the rest of the world with nuclear weapons.
But
that's not all. After Carter met for the first time with
Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, the USSR promptly invaded Afghanistan.
Carter, ever the naive appeaser, was shocked. 'I can't believe the
Russians lied to me,' he said. The invasion attracted a 23-year-old Saudi
named Osama bin Laden to Afghanistan to recruit Muslim
fighters and raise money
for an anti-Soviet jihad.
Part of that group eventually became al-Qaida, a terrorist
organization that would declare war on America several times between 1996
and 1998 before attacking us on 9/11, killing more Americans than the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor .
On Carter's watch, the Soviet Union went on an unrestrained rampage
in which it took over not only Afghanistan, but also Ethiopia, South
Yemen, Angola, Cambodia, Mozambique, Grenada and Nicaragua. In spite of
this, Carter's last defense budget proposed spending 45% below pre-Vietnam
levels for fighter aircraft, 75% for ships, 83% for attack submarines and
90% for helicopters.
Years later, as a civilian, Carter negotiated
a peace agreement with North Korea to keep that communist country from
developing nuclear weapons. He also convinced President Clinton and
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to go along with it. But the
signed piece of paper proved worthless. The North Koreans deceived
Carter and instead used our money, incentives and technical equipment to
build nuclear weapons and pose the threat we face today.
Thus did Carter unwittingly become our Neville Chamberlain,
creating with his well-intended but inept, unrealistic and gullible
actions the very conditions that led to the three most dangerous security threats we face
today: Iran, al-Qaida and North Korea .
On the domestic side, Carter gave us inflation of 15%,
the highest in 34 years; interest rates of 21%, the
highest in 115 years; and a severe energy crisis with
lines around the block at gas stations nationwide.
In 1977, Carter, along with a Democrat Congress, created a worthy
project with noble intentions - the Community
Reinvestment Act. Over strong industry objections, it mandated that
all banks meet the credit needs of their entire
communities.
In 1995, President Clinton
imposed even stronger regulations and performance tests that
coerced banks to substantially increase loans to
low-income, poverty-area borrowers or face fines or possible restrictions
on expansion. These revisions allowed for securitization of CRA
loans containing sub prime
mortgages.
By 1997, good loans were bundled
with poor ones and sold as prime packages to institutions here and
abroad. That shifted risk from the loan originators, freeing banks
to begin pyramiding and make more of these profitable sub prime
products.
Under two young, well-intended presidents, therefore, big-government
plans and mandates played a significant
role in the current sub prime mortgage mess and
its catastrophic consequences for the U.S. and international
economies.
Hardest-hit by the mortgage foreclosures have been
the citizens that Democrats always claim to help most-inner-city residents
who fell victim to low or no down payment schemes, unexpected adjustable
rates, deceptive loan applications and commission-hungry
salespeople.
Now we're having to bail out at huge cost Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, the very agencies that were supposed to stabilize the
system. In time, this should improve the situation. But the party of
Carter and Clinton that midwifed our mortgage mess now wants to be trusted
to take over and have the government run our entire system of health
care!
And everyone is blaming Bush for our current
problems.
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