Presidential Historian Answers Presidency Questions
Released on 01/14/2025
I'm Lindsay Chervinsky, Presidential Historian
and Head of the George Washington Presidential Library.
I'm here today to answer your questions from the internet.
This is President Support.
[upbeat music]
townandthat asks, Can Trump run again in 2028?
No, Trump is constitutionally barred
for running for a third term.
The 22nd Amendment, which was passed
after FDR ran for four terms,
says that presidents can only run for two full terms.
Prior to FDR,
presidents generally followed George Washington's precedent
of only serving for two terms,
but that was voluntary and not required by law.
Grizzly-Redneck asks, What's going on with Joe Biden
pardoning his own son?
Well, in Article II of the Constitution,
the president is given almost unilateral authority
to issue pardons on federal offenses
except for those relating to impeachment.
So while lots of presidents have issued pardons,
we don't necessarily like or maybe feel a little bit gross,
a president's pardon power is almost unilateral.
George Washington was the first president to issue a pardon.
One of his first was to a rum smuggler in April of 1794.
Sludgegaze asks, Was the political divide always this bad?
There certainly have been times
where we've had very bad partisan tensions and a big divide
between the two different political parties.
The 1790s, the 1850s, the 1890s, and the 1960s
were all times when political rhetoric
and how people talk to one another were really intense
and often quite nasty.
John Adams often referred to one of his political rivals,
Alexander Hamilton, as a puppy,
which was the ultimate insult to masculinity in the 1790s.
And John Adams' critics
said he had a hermaphroditic character
because his values constantly shifted.
There have been times when things have been better,
when political campaigns weren't quite so awful,
but this moment that we're in now is probably as bad
as some of the other ones we've lived through.
HiCatWhisperer asks, How did we end up
with two stupid unpopular political parties
that are pretty much our only alternative?
Excellent question.
We have what's called a two-party system.
There have been other parties
over the course of American history
generally as one of the major parties breaks down
and there are various different factions.
So for example, in the 1840s and 1850s,
there was a Know Nothing party, there was the Freedom Party,
then eventually the Republican Party
merged a lot of those different factions into one new party.
Because of the way our primary system works
and the way our Congress works,
it's really hard for a third party to gain any traction,
but that's not necessarily the case
in other types of systems.
For example, if you have a parliament like in Great Britain,
there are lots of parties that have to build coalitions
in order to have governing power.
AlecEmley asks, Why do we even have a State
of the Union address anymore?
It's a waste of everyone's time.
The State of the Union is actually required
in the Constitution.
Article II says that the President shall from time to time
give updates to Congress on the State of the Union.
George Washington called these his addresses to Congress
and he noted that they were indeed a required act.
What's interesting about the states of the Union
is from Thomas Jefferson to Woodrow Wilson,
they were in writing
and the president would deliver a written address.
Woodrow Wilson went back to delivering this speech in person
and they have been in person at Congress ever since.
And here at George Washington's Presidential Library
at Mount Vernon, we have what's called an Acts of Congress.
In January of 1790, as George Washington prepared
to deliver his first address to Congress
or State of the Union, we think that he made these notations
in his copy of the Constitution
where you can see that he has written a notation
that says required next to the responsibility
to give Congress an update.
And indeed he did.
Every year of his presidency, he went to Congress
and delivered a spoken address
telling them what had happened while they were on recess
and giving some suggestions for what they might consider
in the upcoming term.
Ky_marsh asks, Did you know Teddy Roosevelt
was shot before a speech and proceeded to give
the entire 90-minute speech with a bullet in his chest?
Yes, I did know that.
A man named John Schrank thought that he was having visions
that told him to try and defeat Theodore Roosevelt
from winning the presidential election in 1912.
Now, what's amazing about why Theodore Roosevelt survived
was he had the speech folded up in his pocket
and because the speech was so long, the paper was so thick
that it actually slowed down the bullet and saved his life.
After he was shot, Theodore Roosevelt said,
you can't bring down a Bull Moose,
which is where the name Bull Moose party comes from.
RheaSoccerCrazy asks, So apparently teddy bears
were named after former US Prez Theodore Roosevelt.
But why?
Why?
Theodore Roosevelt went on a bear hunt after his presidency,
but he wasn't successful, and he couldn't get any,
and it made him really mad.
So the people he was with actually captured one
and tied it up to a willow tree
so that he would have the opportunity to shoot a bear.
But he felt like that wasn't very sporting
and wasn't really fair to the bear,
so he refused to kill it.
A political cartoonist depicted this scene
and a candy maker who had a toy and candy store
saw this cartoon and thought it would make
an excellent children's toy.
The toy maker received permission to use Teddy's name
for the bear, and the teddy bear was born
and has been known as such ever since.
BillShine8 asks, Has the peaceful transition of power
ever been in more doubt?
Well, we have had a number of very dramatic transitions.
So for example, when President Abraham Lincoln was elected
in 1860, the South seceded before he became president,
so that's about as bad as it gets.
Then in 1932, when Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected,
it was in the midst of the Great Depression
and economic conditions were horrible,
but Herbert Hoover really rejected the New Deal programs
that Franklin D. Roosevelt had suggested
during the campaign, and they spent several months bickering
over what to do with the election
before FDR was finally inaugurated in March of 1933.
The difference with January 6th
was that it was a contested transition.
We have never had one candidate to reject the outcome
of an election, and we've never had people
try to overthrow the results of an election.
The South didn't like the result in 1860
and so they left the nation.
That's a very different thing.
yatpay asks, In the United States,
does the president have access to all levels
of classified information?
Yes, the president has access to all classified information
and all of the top secrets in the United States.
Hockeymadman asks, What does the
do all day anyway?
So the president does a lot of different things.
The president consumes intelligence.
The president talks with foreign leaders,
makes really difficult decisions 'cause no easy choices
come to the Oval Office.
The President meets with business leaders,
and labor leaders, and members of Congress,
and state governments.
The president hosts really important social receptions.
Those can be for visiting dignitaries like state dinners.
They can be from championship teams
that we see sometimes at the White House
or they can be students or kids
who they're trying to encourage
to pursue their studies.
What you can see here is an invitation
from President George Washington to come to an event
at the President's House in Philadelphia.
This social component of the presidency
was there from the very beginning
and George Washington hosted events every single week
during his presidency.
davidkwong asks, What does the S in Harry S, Truman
stand for?
Nothing.
He added it in later
because he thought that he needed a middle initial.
Rordan508 asks, Wow, the Supreme Court in America
shows the world USA does not do democracy.
Apparently, any incoming
can stack its highest court like it's a perk of office.
while the Supreme Court size
is not actually in the Constitution,
it's totally up to Congress how many seats
there are going to be on the Supreme Court
at any given moment.
And indeed that number has changed.
The original Supreme Court was six justices
and George Washington appointed all six,
and then the replacements as they left.
The Supreme Court has evolved over time,
sometimes for political reasons.
For example, the Federal Judiciary Act of 1801
reduced the size of the Supreme Court making it harder
for Jefferson to appoint a replacement
because he would be from a different party.
Tychus_Balrog asks, Why are American elections so long?
Why not just have them last two to four weeks?
I agree, that would be great, and a lot of other elections
in other nations are much shorter.
Ours have actually expanded over time,
especially in the last couple of decades
as they've become more expensive,
as they've become competitive.
But there isn't really anything that says
how short or how long they can be.
The problem is if we try and limit that by law,
that could be a restriction of freedom of speech
and we have a First Amendment, which makes it very difficult
to limit political speech especially.
SavannaahLeigh asks, Damn, did anyone know
the President Roosevelt had polio and hid it
because of how the community saw disabled people?
Yes, indeed.
FDR did have polio and he spent most of his presidency
in a wheelchair.
He was able with the use of braces
and support from his sons and his aides to prop himself up
for speeches and press conferences,
but by and large, he was unable to walk.
He hid it because at the time there was a sense
that if you were physically disabled,
that meant you were somehow mentally impaired as well,
and he understood that it would make it much harder for him
to become president and much harder for him
to meet with other foreign leaders
and exercise the type of power
that a president is required to use.
The secret largely remained such
because the press were willing to cooperate.
It was pretty clear to people who were around him
that he couldn't move around,
but there was sort of a gentleman's agreement
with the press at the time that this was private information
and it was not their story to share.
FDR never really talked about this
and this was only something that came out much later
as people began to share photos
and his family began to discuss his battle with polio.
EmployeeAromatic6118 asks, What do you think
of George Washington's take on political parties?
George Washington warned against political parties
in his farewell address, which he published in September
of 1796 when he announced his retirement.
But his ideas about political parties
are often misunderstood.
He wasn't saying that people shouldn't have political ideas
or that they shouldn't form groups
to try and get things done.
What he was saying is that when we form political parties,
we often identify as a Democrat or a Republican first
and as American second, and that was really pernicious
to the long-term health of the nation.
Instead, he wanted people to remember
that they had more in common than what separated them
and political parties tended to exacerbate
those differences.
Talksexwithsue asks, Did George Washington
deal with any infectious diseases
like we see today during his presidency?
Yes, he did.
During the Revolutionary War,
George Washington had the Continental army
inoculated against smallpox, and then during his presidency
there were several outbreaks of yellow fever
in Philadelphia, and New York, and other coastal cities.
At the time, there was really a sense that disease outbreak
like this one was not a responsibility
of the federal government.
It was a local or state issue.
So a lot of times the governors would issue quarantines
to try and limit the spread of the disease,
but Washington and a lot of the other federal officials
would leave the city to avoid contamination
and did not have any role to play in suppressing it.
nephiguymom asks, I wonder how it would be
if it was required that the vice
be from the opposite political party of the president?
Well, we've actually had this happen once before.
Thomas Jefferson was the second vice president.
He was the vice president for President John Adams.
They were from the opposite political party
and it was a disaster.
Jefferson actually came remarkably close
to committing treason when he met with the French minister
and encouraged France to continue its attacks
on American shipping and encouraged France
to avoid any sort of diplomacy with John Adams
because he felt that he would win the next election
and he would offer them a better deal.
jpmoonv1 asks, Has any US president ever been fluent
in a second language?
Yes, they have.
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both spoke French.
They learned several other languages,
especially reading and writing.
Perhaps the most fluent was John Quincy Adams,
who by the age of 12, spoke almost five languages
and served as his father's secretary
when John Adams went to Europe as a diplomat.
John Quincy Adams continued to teach himself new languages
throughout the course of his life.
Some of the more recent presidents
have less facility with language, though there are some
who have tried to learn some phrases
to be able to meet with foreign leaders.
And for example, George W. Bush did speak Spanish.
Bossman13156 asks, What was the greatest
or most impactful speech in the history
of the United States?
Well, I think that has to be
probably FDR's Four Freedom speech in which he argued
that in order for the United States to survive
as a democracy and take care of the American people,
it had to provide for freedom of speech and expression,
freedom of worship, freedom from want,
which basically means freedom from hunger or poverty,
and freedom from fear because fear caused people
to pursue things like authoritarian governments.
And the speech was really important
because it was done in the context
of the looming World War II.
It was inspiring to people
who had to understand why they had to fight for democracy
at a time when it didn't always seem like it was working.
GySgtUSMC2 asks, Who do you think was the most influential
first lady?
I think that's probably Eleanor Roosevelt.
Eleanor Roosevelt served as FDR's eyes and ears
because he couldn't necessarily travel
due to having to spend most of his time in a wheelchair.
So she would travel around the country,
she would meet with average Americans
and report back to him what she was seeing.
She also wrote a newspaper column
and was the first first lady to have press conferences
and she only invited female reporters,
which allowed women to actually carve out a space
in the journalism profession for the first time.
Brightclaw431 asks, Did any of the first presidents
have any realistic chance of nipping slavery in the bud
if they chose to do so?
So this is a really interesting question.
12 of the early American presidents
owned enslaved individuals,
but they didn't necessarily all feel the same way.
President George Washington emancipated the individuals
that he owned when he died.
And some of the other presidents like John Quincy Adams,
while he didn't necessarily speak out
while he was president,
afterwards, he became a member of Congress
and he regularly spoke out against slavery
and the power of slavery in the South.
PlainsViewer asks, How many presidents have died
while in office?
Eight presidents died in office, four were assassinated,
and four died of natural causes.
Which is actually pretty surprising
because we've only had 45 men serve,
which means just under 18% have died
while they were president.
_kierk asks, What the hell does the vice president do?
The vice president has two responsibilities.
One, they are to cast a tie-breaking vote
if the Senate is divided on a piece of legislation.
Second is to have a pulse, to be a living replacement
to take over the office of the presidency
if he dies in office.
For the modern vice president,
that is still their primary constitutional responsibility,
but depending on their relationship with the president,
sometimes they are also tasked with other responsibilities.
For example, Joe Biden was tasked
with overseeing the recovery
after the 2008 economic collapse.
And more recently, Vice President Kamala Harris
was given the responsibility of the relationship
with the nations that primarily lead to immigration
to the United States from the southern border.
Everything else is really up to the president,
and most vice presidents have been totally irrelevant
in history.
stirfried_WEISS asks, What did Ulysses S. Grant do
to deserve being placed on a $50 bill?
Well, Ulysses S. Grant did two really important things.
First, he was the victorious general in the Civil War
when the Union Army defeated the Confederate Army.
So winning the Civil War is a pretty big deal.
Second, as president, I think he's really underappreciated.
He worked really hard
to try and bring the union back together
after the Civil War.
He worked hard to defend the civil rights
and suffrage of recently emancipated African Americans,
and he defended their rights and their liberties
against violence from the Ku Klux Klan.
So I think he generally deserves a lot more credit
than he gets.
Sine_Fine_Beli asks, Does Donald Trump
have unlimited authority to impose tariffs?
Well, first of all, a tariff is basically a tax
that the United States imposes on an item
that is coming in from a foreign nation.
Now, most people think that the foreign nation pays the tax
and that's the end of it.
But what happens is the foreign nation
actually increases the prices, and so that item
that is coming in is then more expensive for Americans
here in the United States.
The president does have broad power to put tariffs on items
or on things coming in from foreign nations.
However, Congress can check that power
if it then rejects a tariff through legislation.
But this is a really interesting part
of the President's responsibilities.
While the president does have a lot of power over tariffs,
their control over the economy is much more limited
than people typically think.
For example, Congress is the one that passes the budget.
Congress is the one that raises funds.
So if you're concerned about the deficit,
that is a Congress question.
Inflation is even more complicated.
Inflation is affected by things like supply chains,
conditions around the world, access to goods,
how much people want them,
and while the President can take steps
to try and ameliorate that inflation,
they don't have power to reduce it.
Additionally, things like interest rates
are controlled by the Federal Reserve,
and the Federal Reserve is supposed to be independent
from politics.
So while the president can make a request,
it's really up to them to change any sort of rate
or make any sort of cut.
dandinohill asks, When President Trump takes office
in January, he will be the second
to own two presidential numbers, 45 and 47.
Who was the first president to do so?
22 and 24.
No checking or cheating.
That would be Grover Cleveland.
In 1884, Grover Cleveland won his first election.
He was then defeated four years later.
In 1892, he came back and he defeated Benjamin Harrison
and won his second term.
A lot of the same concerns that voters had in 1888 and 1892.
Things like immigration, tariffs, and the economy
are issues that we are seeing today.
goodtobehuman asks, What is the deal with George Washington
and the cherry tree?
George Washington did have cherry trees on his estate
at Mount Vernon, and in fact,
recently we uncovered a discovery of preserved bottles
that had cherries in them.
The story with George Washington and the cherry tree
is that when he was a young boy, he cut down a cherry tree
and then when his father asked him about it,
he said, I cannot tell a lie and admitted to doing so,
but there is no truth or evidence that suggests
that he cut down a cherry tree when he was a child.
This is a myth that was made up by a man named Parson Weems
or Mason Locke Weems.
And he wrote a book about Washington
shortly after Washington's death that was frankly filled
with a whole lot of garbage, but it suited him
because he was trying to tell a story
about Washington's character and the national mythology,
and it sold really, really well.
alexalaurenxo asks, We're talking about
the Great Depression, and Anthony Moscato goes,
'Where did all the presidents live
before the White House was built?'
LOL
George Washington lived in several different houses.
He lived in two different residences in New York City,
which is where the seat of the federal government was
for about a year when he was first president.
The seat of government then moved to Philadelphia
and he rented a house,
which became known as The President's House,
and he lived there until he retired in 1797.
John Adams, the second president of the United States,
lived there until November 1800.
Then he moved to Washington DC
with the rest of the federal government
and became the first president to live in the White House.
Every president since has done so
with the exception of James Madison
once the White House burned down in the War of 1812,
and he moved just down the street to the Octagon House
until it was completed.
And Harry Truman also moved across the street
into the Blair House when there was a massive renovation
of the White House during his term.
hewhatwhat asks, How much blame could we actually give
to Herbert Hoover for the Great Depression?
It definitely wasn't Herbert Hoover's fault
that the economy collapsed.
There were a lot of structural weaknesses and impediments
in the way of a strong economy.
There was a big bubble that had collapsed once it was clear
that the speculation was not sustainable.
Where Hoover did receive a lot of blame
was his lackluster response.
He believed that the economy would right itself
and capitalism could be trusted to take over,
and he didn't do much to try
and take care of the American people
when they were really suffering.
So I think he could definitely be blamed
for not doing enough to try and fix the Great Depression.
HistoryinBrief asks, So was Edith Wilson
the actual president for a year
while Woodrow was recovering from a stroke?
#EdithWilson1stWomanPresident.
Well, she certainly didn't have the official title
or the official office, but yeah,
I think Edith Wilson was primarily acting as
for most of the time that Wilson was incapacitated.
She determined who came in to see him,
who got to talk to him.
She would report back his decisions at a time when we know
that he wasn't really able to speak
and were not really sure he understood what was happening.
So she had enormous authority that was not elected
or was given to her by the Constitution.
What's most important about this
is that most people didn't really know what was happening.
The cabinet had a sense that Wilson was far more ill
than people realized, but most people were not permitted
to actually see the president,
and so most Americans did not know
who was actually in charge.
mai_tai_ty_tie asks Alexa,
what presidents have been impeached?
Well, there have been four impeachments in US history.
The first, Andrew Johnson, was impeached
for trying to remove cabinet secretaries,
which violated the Tenure of Office Act.
Bill Clinton was impeached for lying under oath.
And Donald Trump was impeached twice.
First, for withholding funds from Ukraine
for political purposes.
And then for his role in the January 6th insurrection.
No president has been removed from office.
SouthBayBoy8 asks, There haven't been two presidents
in a row of the same party since Reagan and H. W. Bush.
Why do you think this is?
Well, I think the American people get frustrated
with a party.
They have relatively little patience
and frankly, sometimes short attention spans,
and so they want to elect something new.
That hasn't always been the case.
Franklin D. Roosevelt, of course,
won four elections in a row.
And then Harry Truman won an election in his own right
and he was from the same party.
chopstickfury01 asks, Which
would you have the hardest time beating
in a drinking contest?
That would have to be James Buchanan.
James Buchanan was known for being able to put down
quite a number of bottles of liquor and not even show it.
So he would definitely drink me under the table.
CratesofNutella asks, Just how much security
do past presidents get and how extensive is it?
Past presidents get Secret Service protection,
as do their spouses, and this was required
by a law passed in 1965 after Kennedy's assassination,
which recognized that both presidents and former presidents
often receive threats and need additional protection.
The early presidents had no protection.
There were no gates outside the president's house,
and there was no Secret Service.
Secret Service didn't start protecting the
until 1901.
So while some presidents like Abraham Lincoln
occasionally had a military guard,
it wasn't guaranteed by Congress.
Former presidents didn't start getting protection until 1965
when Congress passed legislation
ensuring that presidents and first ladies
receive protection for the rest of their lives.
Romanuva asks, Do Presidents age faster in office?
Absolutely.
Have you seen the pictures?
Presidents go gray so fast while in office
because the demands of the job are so intense,
there are no easy decisions or choices
that come to their desk.
The working hours are often quite intense
and you can really see the impact of stress on their face.
A Reddit user asks, How has the office
of the President of the United States changed over time?
Well, in some ways, the office of the presidency
really hasn't changed at all.
George Washington established a presidency
that was the primary actor when it came to foreign policy
and domestic crises and really carved out enormous powers
in jurisdiction for himself and his successors.
In other ways, the executive branch has really expanded.
We have far more executive departments,
their responsibilities are much greater,
and the number of employees in them is so far beyond
what could have been imagined in the 1790s.
So the scope of the federal government is much bigger,
even if the idea of the president is the same.
radiogirlkaren asks, Yep,
Abe Lincoln was the tallest US president,
but who was the shortest?
No political comments necessary.
Testing your presidential smarts.
Well, that would probably be James Madison.
James Madison was either 5'2 or 5'3 depending on reports,
and he was pretty frail as well.
What's interesting is his wife,
Dolly Madison was probably 5'8 or 5'9,
and she would wear these giant turbans
to really accentuate her height.
BarryGSexy asks, I wonder how many presidents
killed another human being
and do we suppose any did so outside of the army?
Andrew Jackson probably killed someone in duel, yeah?
You are right.
In May of 1806, Andrew Jackson killed Charles Dickinson
over a dispute over a horse that Jackson owned.
Jackson was also wounded in the chest, but he survived.
And this dual was later used against him
in presidential elections, arguing that he was blood-hungry
and he was eager to kill people.
DrDigiPol asks, Trivia question,
how many US presidents have been arrested?
Bonus, name them.
During the presidency, just one, Ulysses S. Grant.
Ulysses S. Grant was arrested while
for speeding down Pennsylvania Avenue
in his horse and carriage,
and he had been warned repeatedly by police
that he was going to fast, but he couldn't help himself
and he really loved a fast ride.
tylersyck asks, Who do you guys think
was the most stylish president of the 20th century?
Well, Barack Obama got a lot of flack for his tan suit,
but I personally thought it looked great.
Other presidents that were known for being quite debonair
include John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan as well.
ifightpossums asks, What presidents had unusual interests
or hobbies?
FDR was an avid stamp collector
and his stamp collection is still available
at his presidential library.
cal_lovr asks, How much do presidents get paid?
Currently, Presidents make $400,000 a year.
Originally, the salary was for $25,000,
which was a huge amount of money in 1789
when George Washington became president.
But that money had to cover rent for the president's house,
labor, food, all expenses related to travel,
and anytime they hosted.
So it actually went really quickly.
And most presidents in the early Republic
left office in debt.
Humble-Translator466 asks,
Which president was the best practical joker?
This has to be Lyndon B. Johnson.
Johnson loved to play jokes on people,
and in fact, he even had a car
that could work in the water as a boat.
And so he would drive around guests on his farm in Texas
and he would go too fast down a hill
and cause them to think that they were gonna run
into the water and then the car would sink
and instead, it would float
and it would start puttering around like any other boat.
He always got a good laugh
and he really loved their reactions.
datboyChicas asks, Quick somebody,
why did President Truman decide to use atomic weapons
during World War II?
This was a decision that President Truman agonized over
because he understood the repercussions
and the scale of the death and damage
that was going to be done to the Japanese people.
But he believed that in doing so,
he was actually saving American lives.
His generals and his advisors had given him estimates
for how much it would cost
and how many lives would be sacrificed
to try and take additional Japanese territory.
And he believed that in doing so,
he would end the war as quickly as possible.
RealMrParamount asks, So what does Commander in Chief mean
as defined in the Constitution
of the United States of America?
Anyone?
As the Constitution originally defines it,
the Commander in Chief is the person that is in charge
of the armed forces of the United States.
So as president, they get to determine the officers,
they can appoint people,
but Congress is responsible for passing legislation
that determines the rules and regulations
that manage the Army, Navy, and other armed forces.
RemoveDifferent3357 asks, Do you believe Polk's war
with Mexico was justified
and should we view the war as a positive
or a negative of his legacy?
Polk's legacy is really interesting
because he was generally viewed
as actually one of the most effective presidents.
He came into office saying he wanted to accomplish
a couple of things, including annexing Texas
and getting more territory in the Northwest.
And he did those things and then he left after one-term.
So in terms of promises made, promises kept,
he is certainly up there.
However, the war with Mexico was very much ginned up
to try and seize additional territory,
and in doing so, it killed a lot of innocent people,
it displaced thousands of native Mexicans,
and it led to the expansion of slavery in the American West,
which was a major trigger that led to the Civil War.
myvotedoesn'tmatter asks, Who's your choice
for the best president on foreign policy?
It's really hard to choose best and worst
because there are so many options.
But one of the most effective presidents on foreign policy
was George H. W. Bush, who oversaw the end of the Cold War
in a peaceful way.
There were no nuclear explosions,
there was no World War III,
and he did so exercising restraint and humility.
He didn't gloat and he really could have,
but he was only a one-term president.
The thing is, the American people very rarely vote
on foreign policy, and we tend not to reward people for wars
that don't happen or for avoiding conflict.
We do reward presidents when they win wars,
and since George H. W. Bush didn't do that,
his contributions are often not as remembered
as they should be.
shu-ha-ri asks,
Why did Martha Washington burn George's letters?
Well, it's 'cause he asked her to.
Just like most people,
those letters probably contained all the snarkiness,
and the humor, and the love, and the really intimate stuff
that we tend to share with our loved ones.
That's not how he wanted to be remembered.
Instead, he wanted to be remembered
as a little bit more aloof, a little bit more reserved,
the image he had crafted.
Kind of like a marble bust just like this one.
Okay.
That's it.
That's all the questions.
I hope you learned something.
Until next time.
[upbeat music]
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