I have said this before but I have one last chance to say it again: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president and we all should appreciate it while we can.
That isn't going to happen, of course. I know from how my past expressions of gratitude to Obama were received, from polls and from the recent election that roughly 40 percent of the country's voters feel the opposite of gratitude for the president. They hate him without qualification. That will change over time.
I have no doubt that history will rank Barack Obama as a great president at a troubled, confusing time. I suspect a more respectful and appreciative view of his legacy and presidency will emerge sooner rather than later. This will be due to the character and values of the man who will succeed Obama at high noon on Inauguration Day, Donald Trump.
Just how Trump's presidency turns out is anyone's guess and I make no specific predictions. There is a good chance that the economy will do well in the coming years, and Trump will get credit for that. There is a chance Trump's reign will succeed — and certainly there is hope. But there is no chance that Donald Trump can or will ever represent and nurture our best values, behavior, aspirations and ideals.
That is the great contrast between Barack Obama and Donald Trump.
It's an irony, for sure, that Obama — a man of discipline, dignity and intellect — will yield the office to Trump — a man of impulse, vulgarity and demagoguery. A tragedy is really what is.
A president's legacy is forged by much more than some kind of historical cost-benefit analysis of his myriad policies, appointments and actions. If that were the case, John F. Kennedy's legacy would be no legacy.
Alone among the two-term presidents in the media era, Obama didn't lose the last two years of his tenure to inquisitions and dishonor. Ronald Reagan's last years in office were shackled by the Iran-contra affair; Bill Clinton's by impeachment proceedings; and George W. Bush's by the Iraq war. Obama avoided similar land mines despite facing more ferocious partisan enemies (in Congress and the media) and that will come to be seen as a political miracle some day.