Posted June 15, 200519 yr Website. Seems like a neat enough show, but I don't agree with the peoples' choices for the top 25. I'm going to make up my own list. Jump on in and do the same! Yay. I guess you can do either 5 and/or 25. Include reasons for your picks, and for your non-picks that seem like obvious choices if you want. Muhammad Ali - loud-mouthed, brash, arrogant, but he could back it up. Later, an incredible man who transcended beyond the boxing world as a diplomat and a truly magnanimous person. Andrew Carnegie - what a capitalist should be.. serves as a replacement for Henry Ford because of his generosity/charity and because I can't stomach anti-Semitism. George Washington Carver - humble, brilliant man (he actually turned down a six-figure job from Thomas Edison just to keep on doing what he loved on his own terms). Frederick Douglass - an MLK before there was one. I usually think of him as the symbol of the struggle for civil rights, even if it was 100 years in the making. Thomas Edison - simply a genius who was pretty crafty as well. Albert Einstein - a genius as well, and an incredibly sensitive guy, too (read some of his thoughts about religion and war). Benjamin Franklin - sort of sagely, in my mind. I consider him a sort of grandfather of America. Billy Graham - impeccable character and integrity.. one of the few men who if you say something bad about, you're actually saying something about yourself rather than your target. Bob Hope - simply a great man who can make you laugh at the world. Katharine Hepburn - image of what a proud, strong woman should be. Thomas Jefferson - LA purchase, Declaration of Indepence, and their effects. Jacqueline Kennedy-Onassis - in a similar vein to Katharine Hepburn. Martin Luther King Jr. - civil rights, so strong but subtle with his ideas and delivery. Abraham Lincoln - excellent politician, lots of perseverence, didn't hold a grudge against the South. Malcolm X - King appealed to peoples' minds, Malcolm appealed to peoples' hearts.. more a man of the people. Marilyn Monroe - American icon, sex symbol. Audie Murphy - greatest war hero, in my opinion. Jackie Robinson - broke the color barrier, but only able to because he was courageous and smart about it. Theodore Roosevelt - brass balls, conservation, extension of federal powers, social justice, foreign policy. Franklin Delano Roosevelt - bit the bullet and pulled the nation out of the Great Depression.. good policy-maker in my opinion. Babe Ruth - symbol of American culture. Frank Sinatra - same as above. Jimmy Stewart - great personality, symbol of American culture again. Mark Twain - personal hero. George Washington - Cincinnatus, incredible leader, father of America in my opinion. --- Top 5: Frederick Douglass Albert Einstein Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson George Washington [Edit: added reasons, to keep up with Robinson ]
June 16, 200519 yr Awesome topic Don!Top 25 who and whyMartin Luther King Jr.- Civil rights heroJames Madison-diplomatic geniusJames K. Polk-diplomacist presidentBenjamin Franklin- diplomatic geniusAlbert Einstein- brilliantAndrew Carnegie (when he was old)- made money, charitable, patriotDaniel Webster- brilliant lawyer and brilliant negotiatorTeddy Roosevelt- amazing presidentWilliam Walker- badass filibuster/army privateerSusan B. Anthony- women's rightsFrederick Douglass- black rightsJohn McCain- my personal heroHenry David Thoreau- civil libertiesAudie Murphy- great soldierGeorge Patton- fantastic commanderDwight D. Eisenhower- great general, great president, worked for civil rightsThomas Edison- inventorJackie Robinson- broke color barrierJohn F. Kennedy- good president, faught for civil rightsWright Brothers- first aviatorsMalcom X- black rightsHenry Ford- excellent businessman, invented assembly lineColin Powell-great americanJohn Quincy Adams- best diplomat in history, held together countryChuck Yeager- aviation hero and pioneer
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.