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Louis VI the Fat
04-06-2007, 04:04
This thread is a spin-off from the election of the greatest Portuguese thread. Pindar inspired me to open a .org version of other countries. So let's have our own elections of Greatest this or that.

One thread in which all countries get lumped together will kill all debate, it will become cluttered. I think a good format would be to choose our Greatest American and Greatest Briton seperately. These two make sense demorgraphically. It's not sensible to have seperate threads for greatest Fin, Canadian, Argentine or Frenchman, so I'll lump us all together in a single third thread, where everybody can post their lists, or shred apart those of others, from any nationality. I'll do the biggest one now, to see if this generates some interest, and if so I'll do the other two later.


My top ten:

1 Benjamin Franklin
A leading political thinker AND a scientist

2 Thomas Jefferson
America's great idealist

3 Bruce Springsteen
America's greatest poet and artist. Everything I know about America Springsteen has taught me.

4 James W. Monteith
You don't know him. He died at the age of 26, on June 6, 1944.

5 James Madison
The most influential force behind the constitution.

6 George Lucas
Star Wars!

7 Franklin D. Roosevelt
Maybe America's greatest president

8 Charles Lindberg
Anybody willing to risk life and limbs just to get from America to Paris as quickly as possible deserves a nomination.

9 Bill and Hillary Clinton
Future generations will call them America's two greatest post-war presidents

10 Ronald McDonald
Anybody who invented le Big Mac should be on this list.


Hmm, three founding fathers, no authors, one woman, one scientist, no business tycoons, whites only. These lists don't turn out the way you expect them to be. It's tough, many more deserve a mention.

Gawain of Orkeny
04-06-2007, 04:10
1 Benjamin Franklin
A leading political thinker AND a scientist

2 Thomas Jefferson
America's great idealist

Well those two are good.


Bruce Springsteen
America's greatest poet and artist. Everything I know about America Springsteen has taught me.


That explains alot. I cant stand him.


5 James Madison
The most influential force behind the constitution.



OK Ill give you that one


7 Franklin D. Roosevelt
Maybe America's greatest president



You mean worst


9 Bill and Hillary Clinton
Future generations will call them America's two greatest post-war presidents


Samething as FDR......the worst Though FDR was far better but did a lot more damage.

Proletariat
04-06-2007, 04:17
1) Jefferson

2) Washington

3) Franklin

3) Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Du Motier

4) Truman

5) Steinbeck

Lemur
04-06-2007, 04:32
Wow, my tiny little brain is going to explode at the thought of trying to boil down the great Americans into a top ten. Do we emphasize the political? Then Jefferson, Washington, Franklin, obviously. Do we go for invention? Science? Industry? Does Edison go on the list? Henry Ford? What about our artists and writers? Melville, Twain, Steinbeck, Whitman, all of them deserve something. Do we count the artists? Does Jackson Pollack get a place, of was he really "Jack the Dribbler"?

What about music, seeing as Gospel, Blues and Rock & Roll originated on our shores? Chuck Berry? Miles Davis? The entire world of Motown? George Gershwin? Sondheim?

Where do we put Oppenheimer and Einstein? Alexander Bell? Joseph Henry?

And what about the people who expanded our freedoms? Harriet Tubman kicked a lot of booty, and you'd be hard-pressed to say there was someone "greater" than her. Martin Luther King, whatever you think of him, did valuable work, and nobody in their right mind wants to undo what he did.

How about our warriors? Jackson, Grant, Lee, Patton, etcetera, etcetera.

No, I don't have the necessary brainpower to boil this down. America has been blessed with an astonishing number of great people in its history. There isn't a top ten list made that I can live with.

Sasaki Kojiro
04-06-2007, 04:58
hmm. Lincoln, Washington, Jefferson, Madison, MLK, Edison, gosh this is hard. I don't really know enough history to say. Who invented the bikini?

Lemur
04-06-2007, 05:13
Gah! The bikini was invented by the French! Gah!

Crazed Rabbit
04-06-2007, 05:58
Hmmm,

George Washington
Thomas Jefferson
Benjamin Franklin
Abraham Lincoln
Ronald Reagan
James Madison
Teddy Roosevelt
Thomas Edison
Robert E Lee
General Patton



No, I don't have the necessary brainpower to boil this down. America has been blessed with an astonishing number of great people in its history. There isn't a top ten list made that I can live with.

Ditto. My list above is a futile attempt.

Louis - Springsteen as #3?! Argh. And the Clintons? And FDR? Triple-argh.

CR

BigTex
04-06-2007, 06:19
Abraham Lincoln, someone who isnt on your list. Great man who lead the way through one of the worst times in USA history.

Albert Einstien, whether you'd classify him as a refugee or just a german, I call him a great American. Brilliant man who created much of the physics we know today. Also a great passifist, up there with Ghandi IMO.

KafirChobee
04-06-2007, 07:08
Well those two are good.

That explains alot. I cant stand him.
OK Ill give you that one
FDR
You mean worst
Clinton
Samething as FDR......the worst Though FDR was far better but did a lot more damage.
I had no idea you were so sinicle. No doubt, now that Reagan is in heaven he has supplanted God as the supreme being.

Duke of Gloucester
04-06-2007, 08:19
Albert Einstien, whether you'd classify him as a refugee or just a german, I call him a great American. Brilliant man who created much of the physics we know today. Also a great passifist, up there with Ghandi IMO.

Not only is this man a GERMAN (so he does not qualify as an American), I hold him primarily responsible for the division of physics in to those who carry out the experiments and those who think up the ideas. This was a bad development. He was also hostile to quantum mechanics which undermines the claim that he created much of the physics we know. This does not mean that he was not a genius and would certainly be in a list of top ten scientists. However even if he were American, he would not be in the top 10.

My list:

Benjamin Franklin
Abraham Lincoln
Martin Luther King
George Washington
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Richard Feynman
Joshua Chamberlain
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Elizabeth Blackwell
Carrie Chapman Catt

Petrus
04-06-2007, 10:08
Robert Johnson, the only man that makes you float through happiness with a few minutes of his music.

Miles Davis, James Brown and a few other American artists also come close from this category.

Kralizec
04-06-2007, 10:36
Einstein was born German, but he renounced his citizenship around the time the Nazis grabbed power IIRC. He was an American citizen when he died.
Edison...not enthusiastic about this one, keeping in mind how he screwed Tesla.

I don't really understand the anti-FDR sentiments. In retrospect, he did lots of things that damaged the American economy, but you can't really blame him- they didn't have the same understanding of economic principles that we do today, and he did it with the best intentions. And for better or worse, without him the office of the POTUS would't be the centre of power as it is today. I don't think he's the best, but he's certainly above the norm when it comes to American presidents. Dislike of him always seems to boil down to political convictions rather then his performance.
Reagan...also above the norm. "Reaganomics", wether you like it or not, did have the intended impact of reducing inflation and recession. However his record with managing his presedential duties in general is rather mediocre, the lowest point being the Iran-Contra scandal when he declared he had absolutely no knowledge about his staff's activity, wich doesn't speak well of him.
OTOH, I'm relieved nobody's mentioned JFK. Now there is a genuinely overrated president.

James Madison gets my vote. His support of divided government and institutionalized pluralism had decisive impact on the constitution, the greatest American statesman in the early years IMO.

InsaneApache
04-06-2007, 10:55
Benedict Arnold. :whip: :knight:

Adrian II
04-06-2007, 11:06
James Madison gets my vote. His support of divided government and institutionalized pluralism had decisive impact on the constitution, the greatest American statesman in the early years IMO.Seconded. James Madison improved on Montesquieu's trias politica in a decisive way by acknowledging the need for a fully independent judiciary to complement and balance the other two powers. For that reason he beats Daffy Duck, albeit by a small margin.

Kralizec
04-06-2007, 11:22
MacArthur - Whatever. I don't want to hear it. This guy won the war in the pacific, only to get shot down by a government without the balls to do what had to be done to win, when it came to Korea. Thus began the limited war, which has been plagueing us ever since, yet somehow remains an acceptable strategy.

Maybe you shouldn't have posted it then? Not withstanding ones record in WWII, someone who in the Korea war thinks it's a good idea to reduce Beijing/Peking to radioactive dust is a fringe lunatic. His attempts to bypass Truman's authority were way out of line, and he got what he deserved.


Seconded. James Madison improved on Montesquieu's trias politica in a decisive way by acknowledging the need for a fully independent judiciary to complement and balance the other two powers. For that reason he beats Daffy Duck, albeit by a small margin.

Personally, I prefer Homer Simpson.

BigTex
04-06-2007, 11:30
Not only is this man a GERMAN (so he does not qualify as an American),

The man was as American as any other on the list. Everyone in this great nation has come here from elsewere. He died an American citizen he was as American as George Washington. He definately makes the top ten, one of the more brilliant scientists of the 20th century.

Vladimir
04-06-2007, 13:13
My top ten:

1 Benjamin Franklin
A leading political thinker AND a scientist


And seducer of many French women :laugh4: :2thumbsup: .

KukriKhan
04-06-2007, 14:13
Kukri's picks:

#1: Jim Thorpe, who not only embodied, but expanded the American Dream to include every american. Up by his bootstraps, top of his field, dashed by technical error, resurrected by his own efforts. Truly a self-made man, a re-invented man, and a doggedly determined man. My hero, since boyhood.

#2: George Washington, who overcame his Englishman-ness to set the bar for what it meant to be American, when that title was still in its defining stages. Stepped up when duty called, stuck with the struggle even in hard times, could have been crowned King of the land, but eshewed that as un-american. The definitive public servant, the equal of whom is rarely seen.

#3: The guy who said "Let's Roll" on Flight 93, on 9-11. Faced with the prospect of imminent pain and death, and the knowledge of his captors intentions, he (and his fellows) chose active resistance. Ordinary guy, in extraordinary circumstances, stepping up and doing an extraordinary thing, regardless of personal consequence.

My top 3. :bow:

doc_bean
04-06-2007, 14:31
I shoudl probably give this more thought, but for now, i'd definitely back my fellow low landers with the Madison nomination.


Kukri's picks:
#3: The guy who said "Let's Roll" on Flight 93, on 9-11. Faced with the prospect of imminent pain and death, and the knowledge of his captors intentions, he (and his fellows) chose active resistance. Ordinary guy, in extraordinary circumstances, stepping up and doing an extraordinary thing, regardless of personal consequence.


Great choice ! I'd like to add that a short 'catch phrase' like 'let's roll' is definitely very American.

Reenk Roink
04-06-2007, 16:00
:stupido:

10) Mike Modano (hockey player):

One of the top 5 greatest American hockey players ever. Only the second American born player to hit 500 goals and is now first in career goals scored by Americans. The scary thing? He's not even a offensive type player. A great two-way player still very underrated defensively, and a consummate leader. Did I mention he's a Michigan boy?

9) Sitting Bull (Sioux leader):

Fought heroically for his people and land but even more importantly, was a family man and a really friendly guy. A role model for us all. Great name and great hair.

8) and 7) are some people I know who are really great. :smiley:

6) Grigori Rasputin (man of many talents):

He was American. Stop listening to Russian propaganda.

5) Chris Chelios (hockey player):

Arguably the greatest American hockey player ever, one of the top 10-20 greatest defensemen ever, his longevity is legendary, and at his peak was one of the best rounded defensemen ever, winning 3 Norris trophies against incredibly stiff competition. Played defense excellently, offensive menace, and a painful physical presence. At 45, he has lost his speed and offensive game, but is still a great defensive player and still polled by others as one of the toughest to play against.

4) Comic book guy (funniest man ever):

Who else knows more about Science fiction and comic books? Have not seen someone more funny.

3) George Berkeley (smart man who killed Calculus for 230 years):

There is no Ireland. He was American (he's got a dorm room in Yale). Idealism, Empiricism, Bishopism, Anti-Calculusim...

2) Pat Lafontaine (hockey player):

Lalalalafontaine is the greatest American forward and only has Chris Chelios to compete as the greatest American hockey player ever. Chelios has the longevity but Lafontaine had the best peak of any American. Simply a magnificently talented, intelligent, and gentlemanly player who had to play in the era that was the bane of centers (80's- early 90's) and so is incredibly underrated. Injuries cut a huge swath on his career, but it is still great as is. Did I mention he grew up in Michigan?

...and finally...

1) The Esteemed Representative from New York in the Second Continental Congress:

Greatest political theorist ever who found the only solution to our crap form of government/politics (sadly it is ignored and democracy remains the opium of the masses). Trumps any of our loser presidents/politicians.

Icing on the cake is that he did everything with class and courtesy.

Stig
04-06-2007, 16:39
Great Americans? Are there great Americans?



Well Walt Disney, atleast he did something that was good for the rest of the world (untill you reach the age of 12).
William Hanna and Joseph Barbera for similiar reasons.

Louis VI the Fat
04-06-2007, 17:21
Benjamin Franklin
And seducer of many French women :laugh4: :2thumbsup: .Yes, he was flirtatious backstabbing bastard. Spending his evenings seducing the daughters of the French diplomats he tried to sway to his cause during the day. His years with the Parisian upper circles were one big, scandalous affaire of lust and intrigue. He shamelesly exploited our hospitality to satisfy his own promiscuous lust at every opportunity he had.

I guess that explains his enduring popularity here. What a legend! :2thumbsup: :beam:
____


Louis - Springsteen as #3?! Argh. And the Clintons? And FDR? Triple-argh. CRClinton - as above. Scandalous affaires are a sign of virility and strong personality. We just can't take a man of power seriously if he can't even manage to have himself an exiting love life.
If a president can not even seduce a young, impressionable intern, what good is he when confronted with an experienced president of Russia?
____

Here's a classic Springsteen video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=543T7YUVdz0), his Born the USA. Such a great song and video. He shows that you don't have to be obsessed with the size of America's balls to love it with a passion.
____

Hmm, so far none of the Euros have mentioned George Washington, many Americans have. Funny.

Here's (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greatest_American) the top 25 of the American tv show:

Ronald Reagan - 24% - named "Greatest American"
Abraham Lincoln - 23.5%
Martin Luther King, Jr. - 19.7% - named "Greatest African American"
George Washington - 17.7%
Benjamin Franklin - 14.9%
George W. Bush - named "Greatest Living American"
Bill Clinton
Elvis Presley - named "America's Greatest Entertainer"
Oprah Winfrey - named "Greatest Woman in American history"
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Billy Graham
Thomas Jefferson
Walt Disney
Albert Einstein - named "Greatest American Scientist" and "Greatest Jewish American"
Thomas Alva Edison
John F. Kennedy
Bob Hope
Bill Gates
Eleanor Roosevelt - named "America's Greatest First Lady"
Lance Armstrong - named "America's Greatest Athlete"
Muhammad Ali
Rosa Parks
The Wright Brothers
Henry Ford
Neil Armstrong

Proletariat
04-06-2007, 17:54
Hmm, so far none of the Euros have mentioned George Washington, many Americans have. Funny.


Well, Duke of Gloucester had him at four. Unless your not counting England as Euro, I suppose.

That list is very good, too! LOL@Oprah>TJ

Stig
04-06-2007, 20:16
Lance Armstrong - named "America's Greatest Athlete"
Am I allowed to shout: Dope, Dope!

Sasaki Kojiro
04-06-2007, 20:18
What about:


Norman Ernest Borlaug (born March 25, 1914) is an American agricultural scientist, humanitarian, Nobel laureate, and the father of the Green Revolution. Borlaug received his Ph.D. in plant pathology and genetics from the University of Minnesota in 1942. He took up an agricultural research position in Mexico, where he developed semi-dwarf high-yield, disease-resistant wheat varieties.

During the mid-20th century, Borlaug led the introduction of his grain and modern agricultural production techniques to Mexico, Pakistan, and India. As a result, Mexico became a net exporter of wheat by 1963. Between 1965 and 1970, wheat yields nearly doubled in Pakistan and India, greatly improving the food security in those nations. These collective increases in yield have been labeled the Green Revolution, and Borlaug is often credited with saving over a billion people from starvation.1 He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 in recognition of his contributions to world peace through increasing food supply.

Vladimir
04-06-2007, 20:25
Sounds like he's a contributor to the illegal immigration problem and helped supply the war between Pakistan and India. My vote is :no:

Of course none of you have provided the obvious answer:

https://img404.imageshack.us/img404/1587/imageszj4.jpg

Crazed Rabbit
04-06-2007, 20:29
Louis, with your criteria, how can you list Clinton but not JFK - who did his romancing much more artfully, and wasn't a person of corruption and deceit.

Argh - Oprah's on that list? Greatest American Woman?!?! Who voted - a bunch of stupid housewives?!


Am I allowed to shout: Dope, Dope!
No. He probably got tested more than anyone else and was never found to have been doping.

Good list Kukri.

Crazed Rabbit

Pindar
04-06-2007, 20:30
I'm going to vote for only one as I think that is the point of the question.

I'll qualify greatest along the following simple lines: originality, impact and profundity.

My vote is Lincoln.

A simple why: Lincoln is The American Civil War. The Civil War is the touchstone where the colonial root meets the nation that followed. It was at that point the sacrifice was made that created the secular faith of the nation. Lincoln not only preserved the Union, but turned the conflict from a base national preservation, to a moral campaign where the land was forced to reckon with the bigotry instilled in the founding legal document of the country: the Constitution. He thereby combined national interest with moral clarity. The moral dimension, as noted by Tocqueville among others, is what fed into and feeds the psyche of the American Experiment.


Louis, maybe after you get what you think is a good selection you could turn it into a poll. You may want to set it up to see what American Orgahs see as their greatest and what everybody else sees for comparison.

Gregoshi
04-06-2007, 20:34
Over half the list from the TV show are Americans that lived in the past 40+ years...I don't think so. And how blessed are we today that 3 of the last 4 presidents are in the top 7? :inquisitive: We tend to favour those we know over those we've just read/heard about.

My top American list - the first two are easy:

1) Benjamin Franklin - his influence was so broad: politics/diplomat, writer/printer, inventor, musician, athelete, science, environmentalist, business, social (founding first American library, fire company, etc), and boy could he coin a catchy phrase.

2) Abraham Lincoln

After this, ranking becomes difficult for me, so here's the rest:

Mark Twain

Lewis, Clark & Sacagawea as a group

Frederick Douglas

The Wright Brothers

Bill Gates: regardless of ones opinion of him, his influence on the US and the world is huge.

Elvis Presley

Thomas Jefferson

Robert E. Lee & Ulysses S. Grant: the right generals in the right place at the right time to end the Civil War in the right way without fracturing the country even more.

Jim Thorpe

Martin Luther King

Chief Joseph


This is a hard list to compose. I'm sure there are many others I've omitted but others have covered.

Stig
04-06-2007, 20:35
No. He probably got tested more than anyone else and was never found to have been doping.
Au contraire, they found doping, but it was too old so it might (5%) not have been doping afterall so they couldn't take the 2000 Tour (was it that one) from him.

Next to that he only did the Tour every year. He never won anything else. Sometimes a stage in the Dauphine Libere. He became 2nd in the Amstel Gold Race once, but got beaten in the sprint by Erik Dekker (and have you ever seen Erik Dekker sprinting).


There are loads of American Sportsmen that were better then Armstrong who only did 1 race a year.

Jubilation T Cornpone
04-06-2007, 21:26
James K Polk takes all ten places!

Duke of Gloucester
04-06-2007, 22:05
The man was as American as any other on the list. Everyone in this great nation has come here from elsewere. He died an American citizen he was as American as George Washington. He definately makes the top ten, one of the more brilliant scientists of the 20th century.

I might accept this if he moved to America and then did his most significant work. Of course what actually happened was that he made his major contributions to science decades before he moved to America. Let the Germans have him and pick someone else.

John86
04-07-2007, 04:51
Ted Roosevelt, Walt Whitman, Mr.T. (Look! I Included a black guy, Liberals rejoice!)

Lemur
04-07-2007, 05:36
I can't believe I forgot the greatest American of all time -- Melvil Dewey (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melvil_Dewey), inventor of the Dewey Decimal System. He was Google before there was Google. All hail Dewey! All hail Dewey!

lancelot
04-07-2007, 17:27
My vote is Lincoln.

A simple why: Lincoln is The American Civil War. The Civil War is the touchstone where the colonial root meets the nation that followed. It was at that point the sacrifice was made that created the secular faith of the nation. Lincoln not only preserved the Union, but turned the conflict from a base national preservation, to a moral campaign where the land was forced to reckon with the bigotry instilled in the founding legal document of the country: the Constitution. He thereby combined national interest with moral clarity. The moral dimension, as noted by Tocqueville among others, is what fed into and feeds the psyche of the American Experiment.


I dont want to derail the thread but that is a very sugar-coated history of Lincoln.

Divinus Arma
04-07-2007, 21:26
George Washington rightly deserves his cult-hero status. After the war, "His Excellency" could have easily used his newly forming standing army and asserted his authority with the support of the people. There was quite a bit of speculation that Hamilton was inclined towards this end and sought a campaign of conquest in Mexico.

The fact that Washington stepped down after his military leadership is what made him worthy to become our first elected national leader. That example is hardly seen in modern politicians who yearn for presidential power. Powell may be the only modern equivalent in many ways.

Strike For The South
04-08-2007, 01:59
1. Thomas Jefferson
2. George Washington
3. Ben Franklin
4. MLK Jr.
5. LBJ
6. T.R.
7. Henry Clay
8. Henry Ford
9. Sam Houston
10. Davy Crockett and Chesty Pullman

Gawain of Orkeny
04-08-2007, 14:26
1 http://www.friendsofmicronesia.com/archives/osama_cartman.gif

2 http://re3.mm-a6.yimg.com/image/3458193091

3 http://re3.mm-a5.yimg.com/image/3129225165

Anybody notice theres something missing here? Not related to my picks but eveyone elses? Well I guess Im just as bad but see if you can guess.

Husar
04-08-2007, 18:11
1. Bill Gates

2. Henry Ford

3. Steve Jobs

4. Bill Clinton

5. John F. Kennedy

6. Patton

7. Devastatin Dave

8. Paris Hilton

9. John Carmack

10. Tony Blair

:surrender:

Duke Malcolm
04-08-2007, 18:13
Benedict Arnold. :whip: :knight:

Seconded.

(in no particular order)
1. Benedict Arnold
2. William Allen
3. Joseph Brant Thayendenegea
4. William Franklin (son of Benjamin)
5. Beverly Robinson
6. William Stark
7. Alexander Graham Bell
8. Benjamin Thompson
9. Samuel Seabury
10. Herman Melville

Gawain of Orkeny
04-08-2007, 19:04
Again does anybody notice somethings missing here?

KukriKhan
04-08-2007, 19:22
I read you the first time, Gawain ol' buddy. A clue?

Marshal Murat
04-08-2007, 19:25
Benedict Arnold should not be on here.

A traitor to the country.

Kralizec
04-08-2007, 19:26
A poll?

And Simpsons > South Park

Sasaki Kojiro
04-08-2007, 19:38
Benedict Arnold should not be on here.

A traitor to the country.

To be fair he did get a very raw deal. I don't have a poor opinion of him.

I think they are just putting him in the top ten to be contrary though. We have lots of generals.

Marshal Murat
04-08-2007, 19:40
I would admire him, but he almost sold out West Point. He got to caught up in the politics of the generals, and forgot why he joined the revolution.

Traitor.

Gawain of Orkeny
04-09-2007, 00:01
I read you the first time, Gawain ol' buddy. A clue?


What does everyone on this list have in common? If that dont tell you nothing will.

Strike For The South
04-09-2007, 00:20
What does everyone on this list have in common? If that dont tell you nothing will.

There men and all are white besided MLK.

Reenk Roink
04-09-2007, 00:21
1) The Esteemed Representative from New York in the Second Continental Congress:

Greatest political theorist ever who found the only solution to our crap form of government/politics (sadly it is ignored and democracy remains the opium of the masses). Trumps any of our loser presidents/politicians.

Icing on the cake is that he did everything with class and courtesy.

Update: His name is Mr. Lewis Morris. :scholar:

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 00:22
There men and all are white besided MLK.

Umm. Jim Thorpe wasn't exactly white. But yeah on the lack of women.

Gawain of Orkeny
04-09-2007, 00:22
There men and all are white besided MLK

Exactly. Theres not one woman on the list.

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 00:26
Looking back, there are two: Harriet Beecher Stowe (nominated by Duke of G) and Sacagawea (nominated by Gregoshi).

Sasaki Kojiro
04-09-2007, 00:37
For most of our history women and blacks weren't in any position to accomplish things.

I would put susan b anthony on the list.

Husar
04-09-2007, 01:49
Paris Hilton is a woman!:inquisitive:

Gawain of Orkeny
04-09-2007, 02:27
Paris Hilton is a woman!

So is Hillary Clinton :dizzy2:

At least I think :inquisitive:

Gregoshi
04-09-2007, 04:02
As Kukri pointed out, I did have Sacagawea on my list - female & Native American. I also had Chief Joseph & Jim Thorpe in the Native American category and Frederick Douglas (along with Martin Luther King) in the African American category.

However, women are lacking on the list. To rectify this, I'd like to add:

1) Harriet Tubman - African American women who was a big part of the Underground Railroad leading runaway slaves to freedom in the North.

2) Clara Barton - nurse during the Civil War and founder of the American Red Cross.


On the light side, I'd add Cheryl Tiegs who single handedly catapulted the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue into the most important Babe event of the year. :laugh4:

Duke of Gloucester
04-09-2007, 08:52
And as well as Harriet Beecher Stowe, I nominated Elizabeth Blackwell (first US woman to practice medicine with a medical degree) and Carrie Chapman Catt (campaigner for women's suffrage).

Ronin
04-09-2007, 10:04
How can I go about such a monumental task as choosing the greatest american of all time?

It needs to be somebody that represents the finer ideals of that country.....the one that most lived up to them, the one that had the most important and most positive effect on my life as an individual.....

I´m going with Hugh Hefner....:2thumbsup:

Ahhhh Hef....one has simply to take a look at your life´s work :book: :whip:
to tell you are worthy of praise....may the future generations say your name in reverence!

doc_bean
04-09-2007, 10:11
Hugh Hefner


No matter how famous or rich you are, there will always be at least a tiny instant where you wish you were Hugh Hefner. :2thumbsup:

Fisherking
04-09-2007, 10:20
My own list not necessarily in order of greatness:

Ben Franklin Statesman and thinker

Samuel L Clemens Author & Humorist

George Roggers Clark perhaps our greatest military commander

Teddy Roosevelt Politician

Tecumseh Leader and statesman

Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson military commander and teacher

Robert E. Lee for his stand on principal and patriotism

George Washington Carver inventor and chemist

William Johnson Indian Agent because he deserves to be on someones list.

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 16:06
To give Louis a hand, below is the raw list of nominees, as of 1500 GMT, 10 April, listed by time of nomination. A '+' after the name indicates additional votes for the same name:

Ben Franklin + + + + + +
Thomas Jefferson + + + + +
Bruce Springsteen
James W. Monteith
James Madison + + + + +
George Lucas
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Charles Lindberg
Bill Clinton +
Hillary Clinton
George Washington + + + + + + +
Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Du Motier
Harry S Truman
John Steinbeck
Abraham Lincoln + + + + +
Theodore Roosevelt + + + +
Ronald Reagan +
George Patton + +
Douglas MacArthur
Andrew Jackson
Crazy Horse
Martin Luther King + + +
Thomas Edison +
Robert E. Lee + +
Albert Einstein +
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Richard Feynman
Joshua Chamberlain
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Elizabeth Blackwell
Carrie Chapman Catt
Robert Johnson
Miles Davis
James Brown
Benedict Arnold +
Jim Thorpe +
Todd Beamer ('Let's Roll')
Mike Modano (hockey)
Sitting Bull
Grigori Rasputin
Chris Chelios (hockey)
George Berkeley
Pat Lafontaine (hockey)
Walt Disney
William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Norman Ernest Borlaug
Chuck Norris
Mark Twain (S. Clemens) +
Lewis
Clark +
Sacagawea
Frederick Douglas
Wilbur Wright
Orville Wright
Bill Gates +
Elvis Presley
Ulysses S. Grant
Chief Joseph
James K. Polk
Walt Whitman
Mr. T
Melvil Dewey
Lyndon B. Johnson
Henry Clay
Henry Ford +
Sam Houston
Davy Crockett
Chesty Pullman
Steve Jobs
John F. Kennedy
Devastatin Dave
Paris Hilton
John Carmack
William Allen
Joseph Brant Thayendenegea
William Franklin (son of Benjamin)
Beverly Robinson
William Stark
Alexander Graham Bell
Benjamin Thompson
Samuel Seabury
Herman Melville
Lewis Morris
Susan B. Anthony
Harriet Tubman
Clara Barton
Cheryl Tiegs
Hugh Hefner
Tecumseh
Stonewall Jackson
George W. Carter
William Johnson
















=93 names
9 front-runners, with 3 or more votes

edit: added Fisherking's names

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 17:15
Non-US posters (15):
Louis VI the Fat
Duke of Gloucester
Petrus
Fenring (Kralizec)
Insane Apache
AdrianII
doc_bean
Stig
Vladimir
Gerard Byram
Hiji
Husar
Duke Malcolm
Ronin
Fisherking

Nominated:

Benjamin Franklin + +
Thomas Jefferson
Bruce Springsteen
James W. Monteith
James Madison + + +
George Lucas
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Charles Lindberg
Bill Clinton +
Hillary Clinton
Abraham Lincoln
Martin L. King
George Washington
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Richard Feynman
Joshua Chamberlain
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Elizabeth Blackwell
Carrie Chapman Catt
Robert Johnson
Miles Davis
James Brown
Benedict Arnold +
Walt Disney
William Hanna
Theodore Roosvelt +
Walt Whitman
Mr. T
Bill Gates
Henry Ford
Steve Jobs
John F. Kennedy
George Patton
Devastatin' Dave
Paris Hilton
John Carmack
William Allen
Joseph Brant Thayendenegea
William Franklin (son of Benjamin)
Beverly Robinson
William Stark
Alexander Graham Bell
Benjamin Thompson
Samuel Seabury
Herman Melville
Hugh Hefner
Joseph Barbera
Chuck Norris
James K. Polk
Sam Clemens (Mark Twain)
George R Clark
Tecumseh
Stonewall Jackson
Robert E. Lee
George Washington Carver
William Johnson

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 17:16
US posters (according to IP address) (13)

Proletariat
Gelatinous Cube
Sasaki Kojiro
Crazed Rabbit
Big Tex
KukriKhan
Reenk Roink
Pindar
Gregoshi
Lemur
Divinus Arma
Strike For The South
Marshal Murat

Nominated:

Thomas Jefferson + + + + +
George Washington + + + + + +
Ben Franklin + + +
Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Du

Motier
Harry S Truman
John Steinbeck
Abraham Lincoln + + + + +
Theodore Roosevelt + +
Ronald Reagan +
George Patton +
Douglas MacArthur
Andrew Jackson
Crazy Horse
James Madison +
Martin L. King + +
Thomas Edison +
Robert E. Lee +
Albert Einstein
Jim Thorpe +
Robb
Mike Modano
Sitting Bull
Grigori Rasputin
Chris Chelos
George Berkeley
Pat Lafontaine
Norman Ernest Borlaug
Mark Twain (S. Clemens)
Lewis
Clark
Sacagawea
Frederick Douglas
Orville Wright
Wilbur Wright
Bill Gates
Elvis Presley
US Grant
Chief Joseph
Melvil Dewey
LB Johnson
Henry Clay
Henry Ford
Sam Houston
Davy Crockett
Chesty Pullman
Lewis Morris
Susan B. Anthony
Harriet Tubman
Clara Barton
Cheryl Tiegs

Pindar
04-09-2007, 18:26
My vote is Lincoln.

A simple why: Lincoln is The American Civil War. The Civil War is the touchstone where the colonial root meets the nation that followed. It was at that point the sacrifice was made that created the secular faith of the nation. Lincoln not only preserved the Union, but turned the conflict from a base national preservation, to a moral campaign where the land was forced to reckon with the bigotry instilled in the founding legal document of the country: the Constitution. He thereby combined national interest with moral clarity. The moral dimension, as noted by Tocqueville among others, is what fed into and feeds the psyche of the American Experiment.
I dont want to derail the thread but that is a very sugar-coated history of Lincoln.


Really! How so? Does "Lincoln is The American Civil War" sound sugar-coated? Given the blood spilt that conclusion would surprise me. To the other claims made:"Lincoln preserved the Union". This is historically correct. I'm not sure where the sugar would be. Also, "(He) turned the conflict from a base national preservation, to a moral campaign..." This also is historically accurate. The war did change in its rhetoric. The rhetorical posture did take on a larger moral posture over and above national preservation. That change is sourcable to Lincoln. Whither the sugar?

Louis VI the Fat
04-09-2007, 19:16
Thanks, Kukri! :2thumbsup:

I've opened up another thread for your votes.

KukriKhan
04-09-2007, 19:43
You're welcome. We'll close this one to avoid confusion.