It is a question that  has  been floating  around the “blogosphere”  for  years.    From there it migrated to bumper stickers,  t-shirts and  buttons.   Yet this past week, the question  of whether  George W. Bush  is the “worst  president” in American history made the leap from  web pages in the left lane of  information superhighway to the pages  of the  Washington Post.  Finally making its way  to  the talking heads of cable television and talk radio.
It  is a  particularly  American habit, this  business of  wanting to  classify the best and worst of something.   We are nation obsessed with  statistical  rankings.   Be it  who is  “the sexiest man alive”,  or  who made the  best/worst dressed lists.  Our popular culture abounds with   David Letterman’s top ten lists and Keith Olberman’s  “worst person in the world”.   What fan of  college  football or  basketball  doesn’t  start the day  without checking  their team’s standing in the top 25 coaches  and press polls?    We  have a  real need as  a nation to not just  quantify, but  also to qualify  both  our  successes and  our failures.
To  call  someone  the “worst” of  anything can be a  dangerous  generalization.  Yet  when  talking about  the American Presidency,  the question itself is not so much the issue, as  are  the reasons  for asking it.
The  presidency of  George W. Bush  has had  far more  failure than success.   During his  time in the White House George W. Bush  has excelled  at  dividing  this nation,  perfecting a  strategy of “ fifty percent plus one.”     It is a strategy that  won him and his party  three  elections.  Yet  aside from  that  electoral record,  it has  produced no real  accomplishments  while  governing .   
Presidents at this point in their terms, especially their second term,  find themselves obsessed with the idea of “legacy”.   The legacy of George W. Bush can be summed up in one word:  Iraq.  It  is his war.  A war  that for the majority of  Americans,  the President’s   reasons  for it  remain   suspect,  his  conduct of  it remains dubious,  and the end of it  remains unclear.  Under the banner of  “Keeping  America Safe”,   we are  now  a nation isolated from our allies,  faced with emboldened adversaries, and  bereft of   the  diplomatic  credibility and  strategic  influence  needed to  deal  with  both the threats  and opportunities of a post 9-11 world.
This administration’s one  notable domestic achievement , the Medicare prescription  drug plan,  is  a complicated maze of  red tape  mired in what appears to be  a way for  drug companies to  avoid  the  forces of  a free market.  The impending collapse of both  Social  Security and  Medicare,   while  great fodder for his party’s campaign  ads,  proved  “too hard” to deal with in the reality of  governing.
The problem with  asking if  any President is  the “worst”,  is the implication  that   the success or failure of our  republic  hangs on the  abilities  and flaws of a single human being.    Our country has faced the consequences of our leader’s failings many times before,  and has survived.   As  we  face the  end of  this flawed presidency,   the question is not was this the  “worst”  President,  but rather  what  do we as nation want  from our next  President?    Therein lays a vision  for what a “best” Presidency  would look like.
That  vision  is not hard to find..   You need look no farther than a few lines from an old song…
O beautiful for patriot dream That sees beyond the years
The best President would   have a sense of stewardship, not ownership of the presidency.   The best President would strive not just to make life easier for “the base”, but ensure a better life for all our citizens, and the generations of Americans yet to come.
Thine alabaster cities gleam Undimmed by human tears!
The best President would never accept that any American  lives in hopelessness, or   lacks  the  opportunity to learn in safe schools,   or live in safe neighborhoods.  The best President would never accept that Americans should be forced to compete on an economic field that is anything but fair and level.  The best  President would see the environment not as a resource to be exploited, but as a legacy to be protected.   The best President would never accept that any American would have to choose between health care and economic survival.  
America! America! God shed his grace on theeThe best President would never invoke God as a tool of division.  The best President would never use religion as way to marginalize groups of our own citizens.   The best President would never seek to codify religion into civil law  as a way to score political points.  The best  President  would not  wear faith on his sleeve  while  disregarding  the most basic  tenets  of  that  faith. The best President  would live his faith far more loudly than he would  talk about  it.
And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea!
The best President  would  understand that  true homeland  security  is  collective.  Strong friendships  are  the best  defense   against  strong  adversaries . The  best  President  would  see our  freedoms  as our  strength  not  our  weakness.   The best  President  would see war as  the very last  resort to defend our nation’s vital  interests, not the first  resort to advance  any one constituency’s  political or economic  interests.  
The best President  would embody  our hopes,   advance  our  dreams and  embrace our diversity , our  “E Pluribus Unum”.   The  best  President  would listen,  would learn and would  lead.  
Using this simple standard,  we  find that the Washington Post  is asking the  wrong  question.   The question is not  “is George W. Bush  the worst President?”.   The real question  is,  when  will we  as nation,  stop settling for anything less than the best?