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|
- THE US PRESIDENTS - A study of their Life
Path numbers
- On this
page, I have calculated the Life Path number
for each of the US Presidents. The purpose of this study is to
determine how the nine Life Path numbers each score in producing
quality individuals to serve as our leader. Then, how do these leaders
lead based on this important factor associated with their
birth?
-
- The Life Path numbers
will be discussed individually
identifying the Presidents having that number. When we think about
leadership, the Life Path 1 and the Life Path 8 pop up as probable
winners. Sure enough, both have had their fair share of success,
especially the Life Path 8. But they certainly don't stand alone. Each
Life Path number, 1 through 9 has produced multiple Presidents.
In the analysis, the
Presidents have been ranked. There
are any number of Presidential rankin
gs available, but I found that
some seem to have a partisan bias. I attempted to avoid any political
slant by using the C-span survey which was developed using the thinking
of approximately 90 historians and Presidential experts. These
historians and scholars rated the Presidents on 10 criteria including:
1. Public Persuasion, 2. Crisis Leadership, 3. Economic Management, 4.
Moral Authority, 5. International Relations, 6. Administrative Skills,
7. Relations with Congress, 8. Vision/setting agenda, 9. Pursuit of
Equal Justice for All, and, 10. Performance Within the Context of the
Time. If you want to examine any category individually, visit
here and take a look. You can also use this page to check out
any particular President and see how he ranked in all of the individual
categories.
Just below is a listing of
the Presidents in the order
that they served, the historians' leadership ranking number, their
birth date, and the resulting Life Path number. If you are not familiar
with Life Path numbers, you can click
here to visit the page that will introduce you to this
numerology concept.
I've discussed the
presidency of at least one or 2
Presidents from each Life Path group, in most cases focusing on the
highest ranking example of each Life Path group.I also added our most
recent past President, George W. Bush while
reviewing the Life Path 6 Presidents.
-
- George
Washington - ranking 2
- b. February
22, 1732 - 10/1
|
- Benjamin
Harrison - ranking 30
- b. August 20,
1833 - 16/7
|
- John Adams -
ranking 17
- b. October 30,
1735 - 11/2
|
- William
McKinley - ranking 16
- b. January 29,
1843 - 10/1
|
- Thomas
Jefferson - ranking 7
- b. April 13,
1743 - 14/5
|
- Theodore
Roosevelt - ranking 4
- b. October 27,
1858 - 14/5
|
- James Madison
- ranking 20
- b. March 16,
1751 - 15/6
|
- William Howard
Taft - ranking 24
- b. September
15, 1857 - 18/9
|
- James Monroe -
ranking 14
- b. April 28,
1758 - 8
|
- Woodrow Wilson
- ranking 9
- b. December
28, 1856 - 6
|
- John Quincy
Adams - ranking 19
- b. July 11,
1767 - 12/3
|
- Warren G.
Harding - 38
- b. November 2,
1865 - 6
|
- Andrew Jackson
- ranking 13
- b. March 15,
1767 - 12/3
|
- Calvin
Coolidge - ranking 26
- b. July 4,
1872 - 11/2
|
- Martin Van
Buren - ranking 31
- b. December 5,
1782 - 17/8
|
- Herbert Hoover
- ranking 34
- b. August 10,
1874 - 11/2
|
- William Henry
Harrison - ranking 39
- b. February 9,
1773 - 20/2
|
- Franklin D.
Roosevelt - ranking 3
- b. January 30,
1882 - 5
|
- John Tyler -
ranking 35
- b. March 29,
1790 - 13/4
|
- Harry S.
Truman - ranking 5
- b. May 8, 1884
- 16/7
|
- James K. Polk
- ranking 12
- b. November 2,
1795 - 8
|
- Dwight D.
Eisenhower - ranking 8
- b. October 14,
1890 - 15/6
|
- Zachary Taylor
- ranking 29
- b. November
24, 1784 - 10/1
|
- John F.
Kennedy - ranking 6
- b. May 29,
1917 - 16/7
|
- Millard
Fillmore - ranking 37
- b. January 7,
1800 - 8
|
- Lyndon B.
Johnson - ranking 10
- b. August 27,
1908 - 26/8
|
- Franklin
Pierce - ranking 40
- b. November
23, 1804 - 11/2
|
- Richard M.
Nixon - ranking 27
- b. January 9,
1913 - 15/6
|
- James Buchanan
- ranking 42
- b. April 23,
1791 - 18/9
|
- Gerald R. Ford
- ranking 22
- b. July 14,
1913 - 17/8
|
- Abraham
Lincoln - ranking 1
- b. February
12, 1809 - 14/5
|
- Jimmy Carter -
ranking 25
- b. October 1,
1924 - 9
|
- Andrew Johnson
- ranking 41
- b. December
29, 1808 - 13/4
|
- Ronald Reagan
- ranking 10
- b. February 6,
1911 - 20/2
|
- Ulysses S.
Grant - ranking 23
- b/ April 27,
1822 - 17/8
|
- George Bush -
ranking 18
- b. June 12,
1924 - 16/7
|
- Rutherford B.
Hayes - ranking 33
- October 4,
1822 - 9
|
- Bill Clinton -
ranking 15
- b. August 19,
1946 - 20/2
|
- James A.
Garfield - ranking 28
- b. November
19, 1831 - 7
|
- George W. Bush
- ranking 36
- b. July 6,
1946 - 15/6
|
- Chester A.
Arthur - ranking 32
- b. October 5,
1829 - 8
|
Barack
Obama
b. August 4, 1961 - 20/2 |
- Grover
Cleveland - ranking 21
- b. March 18,
1837 - 13/4
|
|
-
- The
Life Path 1
Natural Skill Set: An original thinker, natural leader, forms strong
opinions, forcefulness in word and deed, inventiveness, courageous,
innate executive ability. With excessive 1 energy or negative
application of 1 energy: Overly assertive or aggressive, dominating,
impulsiveness, egotistical, uncooperative.
-
- The Life Path 1
Presidents: George
Washington, Zachary Taylor, and William McKinley
- The Life Path 1 served
us extremely well and no doubt
was an great choice for our first President, George Washington.
George Washington
took office as the
first US President acutely aware of the need to build an executive
structure that could be a mold for future presidents. It was his to
decide what was really meant by the term "executive power" in the
Constitution, and to fix the place of the presidency in the government.
He had to hold the new nation together, get the government working, and
attract first-rate people to run it. Washington established the power
of the President. It was his idea that the President was to represent
all the people, placing the office above political parties and battles.
He was to be the leader at home and in foreign affairs, as well. He was
to be a symbol of the people and of the nation. He was never to abuse
his power, but he was never to fail to use the power that the people
and the Constitution had entrusted to him. He had to set its finances
in order, get its commerce going again, protect the frontiers against
the Indians, and defend the nation against threats from Britain and
Spain.
Congress, under his
leadership, established the first
executive departments. With the aid of his cabinet and the Congress,
Washington got the machinery of government going. A financial system
was established that got the United States out of debt and enabled it
to pay its way. The supremacy of federal (or national) law over state
law was established. Peace was made with the Indians, and new lands in
what was then the West were acquired, including the future sites of
Detroit and Chicago. Three new states, Vermont, Kentucky, and
Tennessee, were admitted to the Union.
Clearly, this was a time
when the original thought,
assertive leadership, will, and determination of a Life Path 1
President was absolutely essential. George Washington, in accepting
this task, established himself as one of our greatest Presidents.
- back
to top
-
- The
Life Path 2
Natural Skill Set: A diplomat, an arbitrator, master of tact and
persuasion, sincerity, builder of consensus, spiritually influenced,
extroverted, a gather of facts. With excessive 2 energy or negative
application of 2 energy: Caught up in too much detail, timidity,
failure to take action, shyness, lack of courage.
-
- The Life Path 2
Presidents: John Adams,
William Henry Harrison, Franklin Pierce, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert
Hoover, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and now, Barack Obama
- The strength of the Life
Path 2 in high office is
surely their skills in diplomacy and their ability to persuade both the
Congress and the American people. To masters of persuade with highly
different agendas are found in recent Presidential history - Ronald
Reagan and Bill Clinton, and clearly our new President has attain his
meteoric rise owing to his powerful skills in oratory and persuasion.
-
- Ronald Reagan
- Early in Ronald
Reagan's presidency, Congress passed his requests for cuts in taxes and
a number of government programs. He also won increased funds for
defense. But the increased defense spending and tax cut had led to a
record budget deficit. Democrats attacked Reagan for cutting social
welfare programs and called for reduced defense spending and a tax
increase in order to lower the deficit.
In 1983, Reagan sent U.S. Marines to Lebanon as part of a peacekeeping
force. The Marines were recalled in 1984, after some 240 had been
killed in a terrorist attack. Reagan also sent U.S. troops to Grenada
in 1983, to prevent what the administration saw as a Cuban attempt to
take over the Caribbean island nation. The president denounced the
left-wing Sandinista government of Nicaragua as a threat to peace in
Central America, and he repeatedly sought military aid for the
anti-Sandinista guerrillas, known as contras. The Iran-Contra Affair
proved embarrassing to the administration. Congressional hearings in
1987 revealed that presidential aides had acted illegally by selling
weapons to Iran and diverting the money to Nicaraguan rebels.
-
- His call for extensive
changes in the federal income
tax laws helped bring about passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986. A
stock market crash in 1987 lead to new bill to balance the federal
budget became law , but the huge deficit continued to trouble the
government.
-
- Reagan ordered the
bombing of military targets in
Libya in 1986 in retaliation for its role in international terrorism.
His policy of reflagging (flying the U.S. flag on) Kuwaiti oil tankers
and providing them with a U.S. naval escort in the Persian Gulf led to
clashes with Iran in 1987. The president's greatest diplomatic
achievement was the 1987 treaty with the Soviet Union banning
intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF), approved by the Senate in
1988.
-
- Reagan's skills in
persuasion led the nation toward a
far more conservative brand of government. Indeed, his leadership made
the mold for the conservative movement in national politics, and has
been the model for the two Republican leaders since his Presidency. His
dogged determination to expand the military might of the United States
is often credited as being the action that resulted in the breakup of
the Soviet Union. Despite the many problems of these troubled times,
Ronald Reagan's ability to instill confidence in his leadership through
convincing oratory was without equal in our history.
Bill Clinton
- Early in his
presidency, Clinton called for nearly $500 billion in tax increases and
spending cuts. Congress narrowly approved. Clinton also won approval
for the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and
Mexico. However, one of his top priorities--health reform--met with
stiff opposition, and he had to abandon the idea.
Clinton was plagued with
allegations of misconduct prior
to his election as president. Months were spent on an investigation of
his and his wife's involvement in the failed Whitewater Development
Corporation, an Arkansas real estate development firm. The other
concerned charges of sexual harassment made by Paula Jones. These
issues contributed to the Democratic Party's defeat in the 1994 midterm
elections.
In international matters,
Clinton helped bring about an
agreement between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) concerning self-rule for Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip. And in the Balkans, he sent 20,000 American troops to serve as
part of an international peacekeeping force.
In his second term, his
first major accomplishment was
reaching an agreement with the Republican-controlled Congress on a plan
to achieve a balanced budget. Despite tax cuts worth $95 billion, the
plan also trimmed $263 billion from federal expenditures. Meanwhile,
the number of people receiving welfare dropped, in part because of the
welfare reform law Clinton pushed through Congress in 1996. Seeking to
ease racial tensions, Clinton in 1997 launched a yearlong campaign of
town hall meetings and conferences. He called for reconciliation
between the races, defended affirmative action, and pointed out that by
the end of the next half-century there would no longer be a majority
race in America.
Soon after another scandal
disrupted Clinton's
presidency. This controversy stemmed from charges that he had an
improper relationship Monica Lewinsky, and then tried to cover it up.
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, who had been investigating the
Whitewater case, launched an inquiry. His probe focused on whether
Clinton had committed perjury by denying the affair with Lewinsky in a
sworn deposition in the Paula Jones case, and also whether Clinton had
tried to get Lewinsky to lie in her own sworn statement in the Paula
Jones lawsuit. At first Clinton denied the charges, but when Lewinsky
confirmed the affair in testimony before a grand jury, he was forced to
admit he had not told the truth. Starr meanwhile issued a report,
contending that the president's actions could be grounds for
impeachment. Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives on
charges of perjury and obstruction of justice. After a trial in the
Senate, the president was acquitted on both the impeachment and perjury
charges. Despite these difficulties, Clinton was able to reach an
agreement with Congress on a program designed to bolster the Social
Security system in the long run. In 2000 the Clintons were cleared of
any wrongdoing in the Whitewater matter.
Clinton's scandals at home
did not prevent him from
playing an active role abroad. He persuaded Russian president Boris
Yeltsin to accept the expansion of NATO by admitting some former Soviet
Bloc countries as members. Following terrorist bombings of U.S.
embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Clinton
unleashed retaliatory strikes at terrorist sites in Afghanistan and
Sudan. He also ordered the bombing of Iraq when Iraq refused to allow
the UN to inspect its weapons facilities. He helped negotiate a Mideast
pact between Israeli and Palestinian leaders. Israel agreed to withdraw
its troops from land claimed by the Palestinians in return for a
promise to stop terrorism against Israel.
Soon after his impeachment
trial ended, Clinton set in
motion the biggest military operation of his presidency, joining other
NATO countries in a massive bombing campaign against Yugoslavia. The
aim was to force Yugoslavian president Slobodan Miloevi to stop attacks
on ethnic Albanians in the province of Kosovo. After ten weeks of
bombing, Miloevi agreed to withdraw his forces from Kosovo, and Clinton
claimed victory. The United States did not lose a single soldier in
combat.
In the last year of his
presidency, Clinton made yet
another effort to ease Mideast tensions. But at a summit meeting at
Camp David, Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader
Yasir Arafat failed to reach an agreement on the establishment of a
Palestinian state.
Clearly this ultimate
diplomat set the bar high in
foreign affairs. He is the classic good example of the 2 Life Path.
Sadly, he suffered in the rankings owing to his last place finish in
Moral Authority, which he clearly earned.
Barack Obama
- From his first day in
office, Barack
Obama faces challenges of a magnitude equaled only by Washington
(ranked 2), Lincoln (ranked 1), Wilson (ranked 9), and Franklin
Roosevelt (ranked 3). Our nation is in a major recession and
for
some parts of the country, a depression; the budget deficient is out of
control and the national debt has become a national disgrace; we are
engaged in two wars, and our image and reputation around the world has
been battered in the past eight years of the Bush administration.
The country also faces huge challenges in health care, energy
independence, education, and global warming. If Mr. Obama can
guide the nation through this mine field of problems, his future
ranking will surely be amongst this illustrious group.
- back
to top
-
-
- The
Life Path 3
Natural Skill Set: Gifted use of speech and written communication,
inspired thinking, visionary plans, accurate insights, a positive and
inspirational spirit. With excessive 3 energy or negative application
of 3 energy: Extravagance, lack of direction, moodiness, overly
critical, unforgiving.
-
- The 3
Presidents: John Q. Adams, Andrew
Jackson
- By 1829 the 3 Life Path
had scored two very competent
Presidents, but it hasn't been heard from since.
-
- John Quincy
Adams was indeed a man
of letters. Serving as his father's secretary, he became an
accomplished linguist and writer. Under President Monroe, Adams was a
key player in the formulation of the Monroe Doctrine. As President, he
urged the United States to take a lead in the development of the arts
and sciences through the establishment of a national university, the
financing of scientific expeditions, and the erection of an
observatory.
-
- Adams' excessive 3
energy derived from both his name
and birth adding to that number may have added to his moodiness which
give the public the image of an aloof and uncaring leader. Ideologic
conflicts with his successor, Jackson, diminished his career and
reputation.
-
- Andrew Jackson
was a frontiersman,
an army general, a lawyer, a senator from Tennessee, and a judge. His
toughness earned him the nickname "Old Hickory." A strong leader, he
made the office of the president more powerful than it had been before.
He was also one of the founders of the Democratic Party. About Jackson
it was said "A writer brilliant, elegant, eloquent, and without being
able to compose a correct sentence, or spell words of four syllables. "
Andrew Jackson came from the backwoods, and was the people's popular
choice, a favorite as only a inspiring Life Path 3 could be. Jackson,
like Adams before him, suffered in a numerology sense from an overload
of 3 energy since his name also produces a 3 Destiny. This may explain
his extravagances, criticism, and unforgiving nature.
-
- back
to top
- The
4 Life Path
- Natural Skill Set:
Excellent management skills,
common sense thinking, scientific approach, concentrated effort to
achieve goals, determined, overcoming obstacles, careful planner,
attention to detail, steadfast. With excessive 4 energy or negative
application of 4 energy: Stubborn very fixed opinions, argumentative,
slow to change when change is needed, caught up in detail, slow
decision-making.
-
- The 4
Presidents: John Tyler, Andrew
Johnson, and Grover Cleveland
- The 4 hasn't fared too
well in providing great
leaders, scoring only three Presidents. The latest and only notable,
Grover Cleveland, serving in the late 19th century. .
Grover Cleveland -
As a lawyer in
Buffalo, Cleveland became notable for his single-minded concentration
upon whatever task faced him.
Cleveland was the only
President to serve two,
nonconsecutive terms. After his first term, he was narrowly defeated by
Benjamin Harrison , grandson of William Henry Harrison. Cleveland, in
turn, defeated Harrison four years later.
As President, his dogged
determination and abrupt
manner, typical Life Path 4 traits, became obvious. Cleveland
vigorously pursued a policy barring special favors to any economic
group. He signed into law the Interstate Commerce Act, the first law
attempting Federal regulation of the railroads. Regulation and control,
more 4 tendencies, highlighted his term. Grover Cleveland was not one
of the great presidents, but for courage, honesty, and patriotism he
has never been surpassed.
Grover Cleveland's blunt
and stubborn ways curtailed his
popularity and probably explains why the "strictly business" Life Path
4 fails to deliver more good Presidents.
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to top
The
Life Path 5
Natural Skill Set: Progressive ideas, inventive, resourceful, fights
for freedom, independent, quick thinker, inquisitiveness, excellent
administrator, energetic. With excessive 5 energy or negative
application of 5 energy: Overly critical, impatient temperament, a
sharp tongue, hasty decisions, impulsiveness, restlessness, nervousness.
The 5 Presidents:
Thomas Jefferson, Abraham
Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin. Roosevelt When you
look at the Life Path 5 Presidents, with ranking 7, 1, 4 and 2,
respectively, you wonder why we don't make this Life Path a
prerequisite for serving as US President. The Life Path 5 has been the
clear winner in terms of quality. All four must be admired.
Jefferson may be the best
example of the four in
expression the love of freedom and liberty so strong in the Life Path
5. Before his presidency, at age 33, he drafted the Declaration of
Independence and authored a bill establishing religious freedom,
enacted in 1786. As President, he slashed Army and Navy expenditures,
cut the budget, eliminated the tax on whiskey, yet reduced the national
debt by a third. Although the Constitution made no provision for the
acquisition of new land, Jefferson boldly acquired the Louisiana
Territory from Napoleon in 1803.
Lincoln, as an exemplary
Life Path 5, issued the
Emancipation Proclamation that declared forever free those slaves
within the Confederacy. He never let the world forget that the Civil
War involved one huge issue. Dedicating the military cemetery at
Gettysburg he said: "that we here highly resolve that these dead shall
not have died in vain--that this nation, under God, shall have a new
birth of freedom--and that government of the people, by the people, for
the people, shall not perish from the earth." Great Life Path 5 stuff
that landed him the the top ranking.
Theodore Roosevelt
expressed the view that the President
as a "steward of the people" should take whatever action necessary for
the public good unless expressly forbidden by law or the Constitution."
As President, he held the ideal that the Government should be the great
arbiter of the conflicting economic forces in the Nation, especially
between capital and labor, guaranteeing justice to each and dispensing
favors to none. Serving the people and freeing them from the tyrants of
the time he became know as the trust buster bringing antitrust suits
under the Sherman Act. A legendary peacemaker and our greatest
environmentalist, Roosevelt proves that the love of liberty inherent in
the 5 Life Path does provide top Presidents.
Franklin D. Roosevelt, our
longest serving President (4
terms) took office at the height of the great depression and gave the
people hope when he asserted in his Inaugural Address, "the only thing
we have to fear is fear itself." His leadership freed the country from
the poverty by initiating a sweeping program to bring recovery to
business and agriculture, relief to the unemployed and to those in
danger of losing farms and homes, and reform, especially through the
establishment of the Tennessee Valley Authority. His resistance to
involving his country in war, and finally his leadership during the
second world war after the country for forced to enter the hostilities,
cemented this Life Path 5 leader as our second best President.
All of these greats were
progressive thinkers and
energetic fighters for freedom and liberty. All are certainly deserving
of the elevated rankings, and together they establish the Life Path 5
as the ideal for "leader of the free world."
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to top
The
Life Path 6
Natural Skill Set: An idealist, determined humanitarian spirit, service
to fellow man, righteousness, conventional thinking, fixed opinions,
steadfast in beliefs. With excessive 6 energy or negative application
of 6 energy: Stubbornness, obstinacy, self-righteousness, dominating
posture, easily victimized by adulation, slow decision-making.
- The 6
Presidents: James Madison, Woodrow
Wilson, Warren Harding, Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, and George W.
Bush - This has been a popular Life Path choice probably
because of the "Father-Knows-Best" attitude they project. The results
of the 6 Presidents is mixed, with three that did well, and the others
not faring so well.
-
- Woodrow Wilson
- The highest rated
of the 6 Presidents was Woodrow Wilson, ranked our 6th best. As
President, developed a program of progressive reform and asserted
international leadership in building a new world order. In 1917 he
proclaimed American entrance into World War I a crusade to make the
world "safe for democracy." A great progressive President,
accomplishments included achieving a lower tariff, the Underwood Act;
attached to the measure was a graduated Federal income tax. The passage
of the Federal Reserve Act provided the Nation with the more elastic
money supply. In 1914 antitrust legislation established a Federal Trade
Commission to prohibit unfair business practices.
-
- In 1916, a new law
prohibited child labor; another
limited railroad workers to an eight-hour day. After winning
reelection, Wilson concluded that America could not remain neutral in
the World War. On April 2,1917, he asked Congress for a declaration of
war on Germany, eventually tipping the scales in favor of the allies
and gaining victory.
-
- Wilson was a good
example of how great the
humanitarian Life Path 6 President can be.
-
- George W. Bush
- I won't attempt
to write the history for the Bush administration as they are generally
rating low enough marks. Here are, however, a few thoughts on our
current
President. George Walker Bush with his Life Path 15/6, Destiny 15/6,
and birthday 6, is up to his neck in 6 energy. The excessive 6 energy
invites some of the negative traits associated with the number. These
include: stubbornness, obstinacy, self-righteousness, dominating
posture, easily victimized by adulation, and slow decision-making.
Critics would argue that he has demonstrated all of these throughout
his tenure. Additionally, the negative energy associated with this
number may find him rejecting responsibility altogether for major parts
of his life. This appears to have been the case for the first forty
years of his life. His reputation was pretty much that of a playboy.
-
- The sub challenges in
his life were that of the
number 1. The challenge of the number 1 suggests he would feel
dominated by others with strong influence, probably his famous father.
The challenge of the number 1 is avoidance of being dominated, but
doing so in a fashion that does not impose upon or dominate others.
With the challenge of the number 1 it's extremely important to control
the ego, and avoid the negative aspect of individuality. False pride,
pomposity, egotism are issues to be guarded against now. He is
perpetually in a state of learning about self-reliance and how to solve
his own problems independently. Critics would say the challenge is yet
to be met.
-
- As President, again the
many critics would say the
negative 6 in Bush showed up in his determination to lead the country
into a questionable war. Supporters would support his actions and his
"stubbornness" would be viewed as "true grit." The historians will get
to decide how future generations will see his presidency. For the time
being, W has edged out Harding so for now he not our worst 6 president.
Was Harding really that bad?
-
- back
to top
-
- The
Life Path 7
Natural Skill Set: Careful researcher, investigation, circumspection,
foresight, analysis, scientific and inventive thinking, contemplation
in solitude, decisive, penetrating wit and acumen. With excessive 7
energy or negative application of 7 energy: Overly reserved and
secretive, shrewdness, bossy, sarcastic, cynical, over-analyzing,
argumentative, harsh temperament, conviction to a fault.
-
- The 7
Presidents: James Garfield, William
Henry Harrison, Harry S Truman, John F. Kennedy, George H. W. Bush -
The 7 Life Path makes a surprising (to me) showing as the number is one
that shouldn't even want to be President. It has done well with two
great leaders, Truman and JFK, and Geo. H. W. Bush wasn't that far
off the mark, as well. Two of the five were assassinated in office.
-
- Harry S Truman
- The greatest of
the 7 Presidents was Harry S. Truman. Truman was a vice President who
rarely saw the President he worked for and knew little about what was
going on such as the atomic bomb or the unfolding difficulties with
Soviet Russia. Suddenly these and a bevy of wartime problems became his
to solve when FDR died, and VP became President. As President, he made
some of the most crucial decisions in our history. Dropping the atom
bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and ending the war, proposing the
expansion of Social Security, a full-employment program, a permanent
Fair Employment Practices Act, and public housing and slum clearance, a
program that became known as the Fair Deal. In 1947 as the Soviet Union
pressured Turkey and Greece, he asked Congress to aid the two
countries, initiating the Truman Doctrine. The Marshall Plan, named for
his Secretary of State, stimulated spectacular economic recovery in
war-torn western Europe. He was negotiating a military alliance to
protect Western nations, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization,
established in 1949. In June 1950, when the Communist government of
North Korea attacked South Korea, Truman after conferring with military
advisers wrote, "complete, almost unspoken acceptance on the part of
everyone that whatever had to be done to meet this aggression had to be
done. There was no suggestion from anyone that either the United
Nations or the United States could back away from it." A long,
discouraging struggle ensued as U.N. forces held a line above the old
boundary of South Korea. Truman kept the war a limited one, rather than
risk a major conflict with China and perhaps Russia.
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- Truman made some of the
most difficult decisions
handled by any American President. His ability to think things through,
thoroughly analyze and contemplate, foresee consequences, make the
choice, and execute the decision of the face of stiff opposition,
earned this plainspoken man his elevated ranking as one of the finest
Presidents in our nation's history.
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- The
Life Path 8
Natural Skill Set: Executive and abilities, political skills, expert
handling of power and authority, working for a cause, master of gaining
recognition and respect, exercising sound judgment, organization, hard
working, decisive and commanding. With excessive 8 energy or negative
application of 8 energy: Lacks true humanitarian feelings, impatience
with subordinates, overly ambitious, repressing others, over reaching,
expressing anger, love of display.
The 8 Presidents: James Monroe, Martin Van Buren,
James K. Polk, Millard Fillmore, Ulysses S. Grant, Chester A. Arthur,
Lyndon B. Johnson, and Gerald R. Ford
The executive skills and
political savvy of the Life
Path 8 would lead one to assume that this would be a natural number to
dominate the oval office. Indeed, it has produced more Presidents more
(a total of 8) than any other Life Path number. Yet only three of the 8
have ranked as above average Presidents, and only one of these, Lyndon
B. Johnson, was ranked as one of the top ten Presidents.
Lyndon B. Johnson
- The assassination
of President Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963, elevated Johnson to the office
where he quickly showed his skills in domestic affairs. Legislation was
passed promoting economic growth and the Economic Opportunity Act,
launching the War on Poverty. He secured a strong Civil Rights Act in
1964, which became the legal authority against racial and sexual
discrimination.
Although Johnson had
increased the number of U.S.
military personnel in Vietnam from 16,000 at the time when he took
office to nearly 25,000 a year later, compared the challenging
Republican, Goldwater, at the time this seemed restrained. In this
election, he easily won his own term in 1964. A huge victory gave him a
mandate for the Great Society, his domestic program. Congress responded
by passing the Medicare program, approving federal aid to elementary
and secondary education, supplementing the War on Poverty, and creating
the Department of Housing and Urban Development. It also passed another
important civil rights law, the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
As the nation became mired
in Vietnam, racial problems
grew into widespread urban race riots between 1965 and 1968. Military
escalation in Vietnam proved to be Johnson's undoing. Overshadowing
domestic affairs, the war resulted in sharp inflation, and prompted
unremitting criticism, especially from the young who were subject to
the draft. The war dragged on and was not won. Johnson became more
secretive, dogmatic, and hypersensitive to criticism. His brilliant
political instincts were failing. With his popularity on the decline,
on Mar. 31, 1968, he announced he would stop the bombing in most of
North Vietnam and seek a negotiated end to the war, and that he would
not run for reelection.
Johnson was a power broker
in Congress and in the
presidency. A great example of the strength of the Life Path 8 chief
executive.
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- The
Life Path 9
Natural Skill Set: Compassionate, idealistic, concern for mankind,
highly spiritual, lives by philanthropic principles, inclination toward
amnesty, dramatic thinking and execution of ideas. With excessive 9
energy or negative application of 9 energy: Moods and depression,
impulsiveness, changeable behavior, scattered energies, too much desire
for personal recognition.
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- The 9
Presidents: James Buchanan, Rutherford
B. Hayes, William Howard Taft, and Jimmy Carter
- The Life Path 9 is
surprisingly the one number which
has failed to produce an above average President. For all of the good
works that 9s might choose to do, leading the free world doesn't seem
to be in their natural skill set. Jimmy Carter topped this group.
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- Jimmy Carter -
As President,
Carter signed a new Panama Canal Treaty turning the canal over to
Panama in the year 1999. Many criticized him for allowing the United
States to give up control of this strategic waterway. Carter's
dedication to working for human rights around the world angered some
countries. And in 1979, when Carter signed the SALT II Treaty with
Soviet President Brezhnev limiting nuclear weapons, the U.S. Senate
refused to approve the treaty. The American economy was in a slump. The
oil-producing Middle Eastern countries raised prices on crude oil,
which caused prices of many products to rise dramatically. It became
very expensive to borrow money, buy homes, or expand businesses.
Major accomplishments of
his time included the 1978
agreement known as the Camp David Accords. This set the groundwork for
a peace treaty the following year between Egypt and Israel. Carter had
invited the leaders of both countries to the United States so that he
could help them work out a fair peace treaty. He also established full
diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China. On the home
front, Carter created a national energy policy and created the new
Department of Energy. He expanded the National Park System, including
protecting more than a million acres (400,000 hectares) of the Alaskan
wilderness. He also appointed record numbers of women,
African-Americans, and Hispanics to government jobs. The final 14
months of the Carter administration were haunted by a crisis in Iran. A
group of Iranians kidnapped 66 Americans from the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran and held them hostage for 444 days. This episode probably cost
Carter a second term in office.
Jimmy Carter was a very
caring and religious President.
His words and deeds established him as one of our most righteous
leaders, if not one of stronger chiefs. His charitable ways have
continued throughout his post-presidency. His is a vivid example of the
9 Life Path President.
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© Michael McClain
2006-2011.
Permission is granted for unlimited noncommercial use.
All other rights reserved.
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