April 11, 2025

10 thoughts on “God Bless You, Jimmy Carter!

  1. President Carter was the first President that I was really aware of. My parents were big supporters, and like yours they were less then thrilled by his defeat.

    But Carter – for all his policy failings – was the real deal. A real Servant Leader. The stories of his work at Habitat are legend – in part because he went to swing his hammer, not take pics. And his continued jabs at the institutions of faith that had shaped him and sustained him were the kind of Christianity we should all be focused on practicing.

    When I was a senior in college (1991), Carter came to give a series of lecture at our small liberal arts college. His lecture to our senior western culture and history seminar still reverberates with me, in that he called us to servant leadership, he owned his failings as President, and he was truly humble.

    Jimmy Carter was the President we have needed ever since he left the White House. Our world is richer for his service, but it will be poorer for his passing.Report

  2. The good news is that we have given Carter the praise he deserves during his lifetime, that he knows he was loved by the Americancommunity, as he loved us.

    I fear we’ll not see his like again, not in positions of power. Would that the voters prove me wrong one day.Report

  3. It always struck me like Carter just slobbered over any kind of compliment. I’m not saying I’d hold up well after being rejected as president, and we’re seeing someone handle it worse these days, but you could tell that it left him craving admiration. I also remember him calling W effeminate, and he likely violated the Logan Act repeatedly.Report

    1. he likely violated the Logan Act repeatedly.

      Couldn’t let the man die in peace, huh?

      He went on a lot of missions aboard at the request of Presidents of both parties, and at the request of the UN. Both would seem to be 180 degrees away from the Logan Act prohibitions.

      It always struck me like Carter just slobbered over any kind of compliment. I’m not saying I’d hold up well after being rejected as president, and we’re seeing someone handle it worse these days, but you could tell that it left him craving admiration.

      Interesting take on a man who mostly shunned awards, rarely gave interviews, and spent more time building houses then anything else in retirement.Report

      1. I’m more inclined to honor him as a public servant. He drew a bad hand and played it out the best he could. He also elevated human rights issues in our foreign policy. However, after his presidency, he couldn’t find a dictator he didn’t admire. He’s not the first person to lose his way, but I’m not going to praise him for his faults.Report

    2. I also remember him calling W effeminate

      That was HW.

      Bigger than the historical error, though, but you could tell that it left him craving admiration this sounds a lot like the criticism of MrBeast that pretty much everyone here was rejecting the other day: Carter did a bunch of good things (like build houses, say), and he did them mostly very publicly. Does this fact mean that the acts were any less good?Report

      1. I wasn’t around for his presidency but always found his post presidential life and service pretty difficult to criticize. Whatever the politics it seems he did a lot of good for a lot of people.Report

        1. I was in Kindergarten when he lost to Reagan. My school, in one of the more conservative counties in Tennessee, held an election, and like 2 out of 80-something kindergarteners voted for Carter, one of whom was me (because I knew my parents were voting for him). I’ve only ever voted for one other Democrat in a presidential general election (though the other time was more official).Report

  4. Carter was enormously prior to my time but Noah Smith makes pretty good case that much of what Reagan in the 80’s got credit for was simply a continuation of policies Carter had started and implemented.
    https://noahpinion.substack.com/p/repost-much-of-what-youve-heard-about

    On the personal level, I felt Merri’s feelings on the passing of the man keenly. My Grandmother was an avid supporter of Queen Elizabeth II and helped make me the royalist I am today. I too keenly felt like a part of my Grandmother passed away when that grand old Queen passed into her final reward. You have my sympathy Merri and commiseration.Report

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