lolBut suppose I HAVENT heard of some of them?Please update title to: timschochet's thread- 100 People tim's heard of
IK, Yankee, Rover, Tommygunz, and Tobias would all have simultaneous cross-partisan brain explosions.Obviously I have a lot of people ranked ahead of Marshall. I'm sure I'll be hearing more about this from you law school types.
Yankee, my original list included Ayn Rand, but I was forced to leave her off. Would that have made your head explode?
Apropos of nothing, but doesn't Stonewall Jackson's last year of life read like it was written by George RR Martin.81. Stonewall Jackson
Always mystify, mislead, and surprise the enemy if possible.
Thomas J. Jackson was only famous during the last year of his life: from March of 1862, when the Valley Campaign began, to May of 1863, when he was shot by friendly fire at the Battle of Chancellorsville. During those 14 months, Stonewall Jackson was the most popular man in the Confederacy, bigger than Jefferson Davis or Robert E. Lee. He was also regarded by the north as invincible. And he created a legacy as one of the greatest military minds in world history- and one of the strangest.
Jackson received the nickname "Stonewall" during First Manassas (Bull Run) when another General, Barnard Bee of South Carolina, cried, "look at Jackson, standing there like a stone wall!" Though this was regarded as a compliment, some historians believe it was actually a complaint because Jackson wasn't moving fast enough for Bee. The truth of this will never be known because Bee died almost immediately after making the statement. Jackson was a minor hero after that battle, and his troops became known as the Stonewall Brigade. But it was in the Shenandoah Valley that Jackson became world famous. During the Valley campaign he was outnumbered by federal troops 3 to 1, yet he fought 5 engagements, and each one Jackson had the majority at the point of attack. He accomplished this feat through speed and by taking advantage of the technology of trains for the first time in warfare. Jackson's strategy is still studied by military historians today.
In the Seven Days Campaign which followed, Jackson faltered- most historians blame this on exhaustion. But following that lapse, he continued to perform brilliantly until his death. Jackson was very secretive about his orders; he explained very little to his subordinates. Military experts believe that Stonewall had an implicit understanding with Lee and that Lee didn't have to give him direct orders; Jackson knew what to do. This theory is used to explain part of the reason why Lee lost at Gettysburg: **** Ewell, who took over Jackson's troops, didn't understand Lee's implicit commands and so failed to take the heights early on. (Other historians believe this justification was part of the "Lost Cause" movement which attempted to glorify Lee at the expense of all other officers.)
As I wrote, Jackson had strange habits, such as sucking on lemons all day during battle and standing straight without moving for hours because he believed that his blood circulated better. He was a deeply religious man, a Presbyterian, and he was said to have treated all blacks he met with equal respect. However, he also believed that God had ordained slavery. Like Lee he was a Virginian (my reference to the Virginia Military Institute is because Jackson taught there and is revered there), and he felt greater loyalty to the state than to the Union. Next to Lee, Stonewall Jackson remains the most famous military leader of the Confederacy.
Next up: The illustrator who became a doctor...
She shouldn't be on a list of the top 100 people in the world named Ayn.Obviously I have a lot of people ranked ahead of Marshall. I'm sure I'll be hearing more about this from you law school types.
Yankee, my original list included Ayn Rand, but I was forced to leave her off. Would that have made your head explode?
That is damn brilliant.Apropos of nothing, but doesn't Stonewall Jackson's last year of life read like it was written by George RR Martin.81. Stonewall Jackson
Always mystify, mislead, and surprise the enemy if possible.
Thomas J. Jackson was only famous during the last year of his life: from March of 1862, when the Valley Campaign began, to May of 1863, when he was shot by friendly fire at the Battle of Chancellorsville. During those 14 months, Stonewall Jackson was the most popular man in the Confederacy, bigger than Jefferson Davis or Robert E. Lee. He was also regarded by the north as invincible. And he created a legacy as one of the greatest military minds in world history- and one of the strangest.
Jackson received the nickname "Stonewall" during First Manassas (Bull Run) when another General, Barnard Bee of South Carolina, cried, "look at Jackson, standing there like a stone wall!" Though this was regarded as a compliment, some historians believe it was actually a complaint because Jackson wasn't moving fast enough for Bee. The truth of this will never be known because Bee died almost immediately after making the statement. Jackson was a minor hero after that battle, and his troops became known as the Stonewall Brigade. But it was in the Shenandoah Valley that Jackson became world famous. During the Valley campaign he was outnumbered by federal troops 3 to 1, yet he fought 5 engagements, and each one Jackson had the majority at the point of attack. He accomplished this feat through speed and by taking advantage of the technology of trains for the first time in warfare. Jackson's strategy is still studied by military historians today.
In the Seven Days Campaign which followed, Jackson faltered- most historians blame this on exhaustion. But following that lapse, he continued to perform brilliantly until his death. Jackson was very secretive about his orders; he explained very little to his subordinates. Military experts believe that Stonewall had an implicit understanding with Lee and that Lee didn't have to give him direct orders; Jackson knew what to do. This theory is used to explain part of the reason why Lee lost at Gettysburg: **** Ewell, who took over Jackson's troops, didn't understand Lee's implicit commands and so failed to take the heights early on. (Other historians believe this justification was part of the "Lost Cause" movement which attempted to glorify Lee at the expense of all other officers.)
As I wrote, Jackson had strange habits, such as sucking on lemons all day during battle and standing straight without moving for hours because he believed that his blood circulated better. He was a deeply religious man, a Presbyterian, and he was said to have treated all blacks he met with equal respect. However, he also believed that God had ordained slavery. Like Lee he was a Virginian (my reference to the Virginia Military Institute is because Jackson taught there and is revered there), and he felt greater loyalty to the state than to the Union. Next to Lee, Stonewall Jackson remains the most famous military leader of the Confederacy.
Next up: The illustrator who became a doctor...
Reader: "What the f^ck! This kickass character comes out of nowhere, is incredibly interesting, battlefield genius, religious nut, and you go and kill him off before the war is even over? By his own guy? And you let that alcoholic jackhole Grant live? F-ck it, I'm done reading this civil war saga."
I suggest you run a poll on this. See what the American people have to say.One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue fish is more important to American history than Marbury v. Madison and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
I'm floored I am, floored I say, that someone can think something so ridiculous this day.
The people that made Kim Kardashian rich? I'll pass.I suggest you run a poll on this. See what the American people have to say.One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue fish is more important to American history than Marbury v. Madison and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
I'm floored I am, floored I say, that someone can think something so ridiculous this day.
The people that made Kim Kardashian rich? I'll pass.I suggest you run a poll on this. See what the American people have to say.One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue fish is more important to American history than Marbury v. Madison and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
I'm floored I am, floored I say, that someone can think something so ridiculous this day.

You will be ok. He'll name Ronald Reagan at 64 and all will be forgiven.Wait, I'm starting to just wrap my mind around this flustercuck.
You have Stonewall Jackson ahead of Andrew Carnegie? Are you mother ******* insane? Forget John Marshall for a second because I'm not a huge fan anyway, but ahead of Andrew Carnegie? That Andrew Carnegie. Not some some guy you bumped into on the street who was trying to buy a commercial building to sell pagers a few weeks ago.
This list can't be real. It just can't. I'm treating it like a fishing expedition from this point on. I can't wait until John Wilkes Boothe gets named in the mid teens.
Neil Armstrongtimschochet said:No that's not it. I think my question to you was unfair, because the person I'm thinking of attended USC graduate school. He attended Purdue as an undergraduate.And that's the last clue I'm giving. If you know who it is, please don't reveal it here.jon_mx said:Stormin Norman in that case. A bit surprise by the pick, but can't argue with him as a great American.timschochet said:Guarantee you won't have a problem with the person I chose. But you'll have to wait a while.jon_mx said:If you picked Sam Donaldson over George Lucas, you need to be beaten.timschochet said:Good guess! But no.jon_mx said:George Lucustimschochet said:I'm impressed. Did you look it up or did you already know?Care to guess who the other famous Trojan is?jon_mx said:Must be John Wayne then.
I am not jon_mx.Nice. What part of don't reveal did you misunderstand?
I see. So you thought when I wrote that, I was only referring to him, but that anyone else could reveal it? Makes sense.I am not jon_mx.Nice. What part of don't reveal did you misunderstand?
That was a conversation between you two.I see. So you thought when I wrote that, I was only referring to him, but that anyone else could reveal it? Makes sense.I am not jon_mx.Nice. What part of don't reveal did you misunderstand?
Apparently to tim it is.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?
Nah. I was just trying to see how many people knew the Purdue/USC thing without having to look it up.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?
Ok, gotcha. Thought you were concerned about list spoilers.Nah. I was just trying to see how many people knew the Purdue/USC thing without having to look it up.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?
For the record, his inclusion surprises me. I sure hope he did something other than have that one event.Apparently to tim it is.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?
You aren't going to believe me but I was literally typing those numbers trying to figure out which ones would annoy you the most.
Really? We'll get to him later (MUCH LATER) but that one event is one pretty damn big event IMO- if it really happened, that is.For the record, his inclusion surprises me. I sure hope he did something other than have that one event.Apparently to tim it is.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?
The Congress category includes skill as the Executive. Wilson gets a 10 if you remove Congress from the equation completely.8 for Congress???
OK, that's total BS. Woodrow Wilson had total contempt for Congress, which is why the Treaty of Versailles was not ratified and we failed to join the League of Nations. The only guy who comes close to Wilson's hubris is our current occupant, but Obama has figured a way to get his deal through by sneakily not calling it a treaty, thus avoiding having to obtain 2/3rds. Wilson wasn't that smart. He was arrogant beyond belief, and the nation suffered for it.
You give him a 3 for Civil Rights and claim his record was "questionable". It wasn't questionable at all. It was putrid. Beyond his shameful treatment of African-Americans (worst in American history post the Civil War, and perhaps for all time), you failed to mention his completely illegal imprisonment of Eugene Debs and other pacifist leaders.
9 for foreign affairs??? This may be the worst of all. Wilson was completely incompetent here, both in his dealings with Latin America, (particularly Mexico which has cost us over the years), his naive push for democracy around the world (which ultimately served to destroy the British Empire, our biggest ally, and creating the mess that is today's Middle East), and his allowing Lloyd George and Clemenceau to walk all over him and demand punitive terms against Germany, which basically created Adolf Hitler. As far as I am concerned, we have never had a more disastrous foreign policy President, and that includes the dreadful Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush. A 9?? And you think some of my rankings are absurd. Un####ingbelievable.
Well, they're all wrong, and I'm right. This guy is by far our most overrated President, and a true embarrassment to this country.Tim's assessment on Wilson is FAR more outrageous than Yankee's. Pretty much every academic list has Wilson as a solid 2nd tier President. He's much closer to the greats than the guys at the bottom of the list by any measure.
Think of this like MVP voting, Tim. Someone can't be THE MOST IMPORTANT AMERICAN (or the MVP of whatever), if you can swap that person for a random guy in that person's chosen profession and that random guy does an adequately similar job that the MVP/Most important person did.Really? We'll get to him later (MUCH LATER) but that one event is one pretty damn big event IMO- if it really happened, that is.For the record, his inclusion surprises me. I sure hope he did something other than have that one event.Apparently to tim it is.Is revealing that the first person to walk on the moon will be on a list of the 100 Greatest Americans that big of a deal?![]()
That's a bold statement when John F. Kennedy is still treated as royalty by a majority of Americans.timschochet said:Well, they're all wrong, and I'm right. This guy is by far our most overrated President, and a true embarrassment to this country.
I like your take on "greatest." You've pretty well nailed what makes someone remarkable for their place in history.Sweet J said:Think of this like MVP voting, Tim. Someone can't be THE MOST IMPORTANT AMERICAN (or the MVP of whatever), if you can swap that person for a random guy in that person's chosen profession and that random guy does an adequately similar job that the MVP/Most important person did.
You switch out George Washington for one of the other random generals or military leaders of his time. Would the have gone on to be the president and leader that he was, and make the decisions he made?
Would a random preacher/pastor have been able to galvanize a country like MLK?
Who else would have had the balls, the brains and the intestinal fortitude to do what Lincoln did, what Teddy Roosevelt did? Jefferson?
How many other random inventors had a body of work like Edison. Hell, even Ben Franklin in the inventor category was close to irreplaceable (you add in the Statesman, diplomacy, political work he did, and he was peerless).
Contrast that with whether or not one of a DOZEN other random astronauts could have done the same thing at Armstrong? What did HE do SPECIFICALLY that sets him apart from his peers? I dunno, maybe there was something special about him. Maybe you will tell us. But no, just being "Part of some historic event," alone, should not qualify him. Was he the guy who made moon travel possible? (Put THAT guy on the list). Or was he just a guy with above-average courage and training who was given a job a whole bunch of other people could have done just as well?
Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
Why do you hate charismatic presidents who cut obscenely high tax rates, fought communism, gave historically great speeches, jump started faultering economies, and made Americans feel great about themselves?Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
Hate?Why do you hate charismatic presidents who cut obscenely high tax rates, fought communism, gave historically great speeches, jump started faultering economies, and made Americans feel great about themselves?Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
The hate part was the ole 'why do you hate America' shtick, but there seems to be something in common about those two that makes you lack appreciation for them.Hate?Why do you hate charismatic presidents who cut obscenely high tax rates, fought communism, gave historically great speeches, jump started faultering economies, and made Americans feel great about themselves?Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
Those "two"?The hate part was the ole 'why do you hate America' shtick, but there seems to be something in common about those two that makes you lack appreciation for them.Hate?Why do you hate charismatic presidents who cut obscenely high tax rates, fought communism, gave historically great speeches, jump started faultering economies, and made Americans feel great about themselves?Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
You make my point with the "666" crack. Reagan's idolization by half the electorate is mirrored by his villainization by the other half.Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
Villainization?You make my point with the "666" crack. Reagan's idolization by half the electorate is mirrored by his villainization by the other half.Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
I don't see a lot of people vilifying Kennedy.
Nounvillainization (countable and uncountable, plural villainizations)Villainization?You make my point with the "666" crack. Reagan's idolization by half the electorate is mirrored by his villainization by the other half.Maybe, if not for that 666 guy in the '80s. Ronnie something or the other.I can see a debate between which (Wilson or Kennedy) was the better President, but Kennedy's idolization pretty much crushes the overrated category.
I don't see a lot of people vilifying Kennedy.