I had forgotten what I had learned in Civics class, and, so, meant to say that Kennedy proposed the Civil Rights Act. Johnson just signed it into law. By my estimation, it seems to have been his bill.
Eisenhower, whatever. I don't really feel a need to contend this outside of that he is ranked well and Kennedy is not.
Truman, though...
the stated purpose of which — tim wood
What, to American Intelligence, that entailed was the arming, training, and funding of who, I guess, at the time, would've just been Fascists, as per what generally gets referred to as "Operation Gladio", as that is what has come out of the Italian courts, a set of clandestine actions that would later lead to a coup d'état in Iran, which we orchestrated, one in Greece, which we are known to have been involved with, and one in Chile, which we are long suspected to have backed, though the website for the Central Intelligence Agency still denies this.
An actual bulwark against Soviet expansion in Europe would've been comprised of regular standing armies. The CIA effectively became as it did under Truman which, though Operation Gladio isn't officially listed as having begun until 1956, does lead me to suspect that such machinations have been part and parcel to their praxis since its inception. There's an American G.I. who has an interesting bit on Klaus Barbie in the documentary on it. I'm also pretty sure that such operations were well underway in Italy before then, but the only real evidence that I have to support this is that the Gehlen Organization was set up immediately after the war.
A lot of this is speculation, but I do kind of think that Truman could be directly responsible for some of the more notorious abuses of power by the organization throughout more or less all of postmodernity. Everyone thinks that he was a fairly good president, though.
The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was also an atrocity and the origin of the Cold War.
Being said, it could've just been Eisenhower, though. It was one or both, but not neither of them, and, so, at least one of them should get a -1 and Kennedy should get a 3.
Edit: Taking a look at our involvement in regime changes on Wikipedia, I've decided to blame Eisenhower for this. We backed the Christian Democrats in the 1948 general election in Italy and subsequently blocked any Communists from participating within elections for the next twenty-four years, but the regime changes didn't really pick up until Eisenhower, which is how, though, perhaps, beginning before then, I'd suspect that the strategy of Fascist collaboration really took hold around then.
I'd give Truman a 1, Eisenhower a -1, Kennedy a 3, and Johnson a 1. I'm too lazy to complete this entire list. I'd also give Washington and Lincoln a 5, the abolitionists relatively high scores, Carter a 4, and mostly everyone else not all that great of a score.
Carry on with this thread, I guess.
Edit 2: Eisnehower a 0, for tim wood's aforementioned reasons.
Edit 3: Johnson a 1.5
Again, feel free to ignore this and just carry on.