It's pretty much guaranteed that Obama is going to be remembered as a "great" President. I mean, look at FDR. By all logic, he ought to at least be considered an extremely controversial President. He presided over the longest depression in US history while supporting such questionable policies as price supports in the face of a falling money supply. He vastly increased the power of the Federal Government, well beyond its previous high-water mark.<p>Yet the historians and journalists that form popular opinion on FDR almost universally consider him great. Why? He made people feel good. In the midst of a crises, he connected with citizens through regular "fireside chat" programs on the radio. In the weak, Disney-weaned minds of journalists, emotion trumps substance. The general feeling of, dare we say it, "hope" that FDR instilled in people was more important than any actual policy decisions.<p>So, even if Obama's Presidency is an absolute trainwreck, he has been already guaranteed greatness. His face is already on the t-shirts and lunch pails of today's left-wing students that will be tomorrow's historians and journalists. The hope that he brings to the easily led will trump any actual consequences of his policy.