Board Thread:Fun and Games/@comment-28758801-20181209005049/@comment-30724590-20181215231814

I wouldn't agree on President Trump to be the greatest president, because it depends on what you classify as "greatest president" and what you consider that he did "great".

In comparison to other presidents, his current actions are polarized because half of the people consider him to not be great and the other considers him great, and nobody is willing to compromise.

You can technically compare his presidential term to those of his predecessors in the past few decades. You can see that, by my definition of president, he has lacked really intuition to go above and beyond what he promised during his campaign. You can look at the Obama administration and see that roughly 7/10 things he promised were completed, while Trump's current overall promises are either being changed on a consistant basis or replaced automatically.

You can also compare George W. Bush's administration to Trump, and see that, although not many people seem like W. Bush's due to his possible participation in the allowance of another nationwide recession, his goals were to "increasing the size of the United States Armed Forces, cutting taxes, improving education, and aiding minorities". Looking retrospectively, the No Child Left Behind initiative was almost a complete failure due to it's unrealistic nature for all students to obtain an "above average" test score, and it remains contradictory due to how minorities were treated during the exams even though one of his primary goals was "aiding minorities".

What this all leads to is whether or not competance can really be important in deciding a President, whether former or present, to be considered great. Sure, some would consider that President Obama was great for raising the unemployment rate, while others would consider President W. Bush for responding in close timing with the War on Terror.

So, in all actuality, this debate over "nonsense" is nonsense because the question itself is already too vague for anybody to be right. To be fair, I think the general and average human knows how and what to respond with, however, for the question to even mean anything legitimate and to start a proper "Nonsense Debate", then more specification and detail is needed.

PS I do not find President Trump to be considered "great" in my opinion. I feel his constant swinging of moods, his overuse of social media as a platform just to disguise what he is actually doing (which is smart but deceptive), and his policies towards foreign nations/organizations like Mexico, the European Union, and China, are too globalistically nationalist for any of those plans to properly work and for strong lines of communication to occur or even be present to begin with.

But oh well, as said before, it doesn't matter :D