Bamma say in time he be the greatest leader. Bamma say he see future. Bamma say right now Timex leader in time. Bamma have new way of telling time. Bamma say glows under skin. Bamma a super duper inventor. Bamma say made by Wham-o. Bamma say so.
2006-12-24 05:56:55
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I would say the greatest leader of all-time was Octavian or Augustus. He didn't extend the boundaries of the Roman empire much, but he won a huge civil war at an incredibly young age. The real thing that made him great was that he essentially completed Caesar's work of creating a "imperial" Rome". Caesar was murdered for this, but Augustus' charisma and his ability to conceal the newly formed principate in the facade of the Roman Republic was uncanny. Imagine if Bush killed off all the democrats, named himself Pope, and installed his daughter to be the next leader of the US and in doing all of this become Rome's greatest leader as declared by the Roman people.
Augustus' legacy is the Roman Empire itself. He guided the Principate from the Republic and made sure his family would continue to rule even thought it was not a hereditary monarchy.
2006-12-25 02:37:10
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answer #2
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answered by Jake 2
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt
2006-12-24 14:01:59
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answer #3
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answered by jeff 4
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George Washington
IT took great courage to start off a country with no political background that's why I think he is the best leader of all time, in the USA at least.
2006-12-24 13:56:17
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answer #4
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answered by hawthorne_heights_421 2
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I think to date, Martin Luther King,JR.. He predicted desegregation, economic leveling and the end to Jim Crow. He also predicted the fact that all children will play together. Through his movement and his guidance, he used the Right To Travel Laws to end Segregation. Where there was no way, he found a way.
2006-12-24 14:01:23
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answer #5
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answered by Sports Maven 1
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Winston Churchill.
Churchill was a statesman, orator, author, historian and Prime Minister who rallied the British people in the Second World War and took them from the edge of defeat to victory.
Churchill’s leadership during the war is legendary. He became Prime minister when the Cabinet were on the verge of seeking terms with Hitler and Germany. But Churchill would not contemplate defeat or even a honourable truce. His saying was ‘We will never give in’. Churchill is credited with conducting the war single-handedly. He made himself Minister for War as well as being Prime Minister and delegated the running of home affairs to junior ministers. Churchill sat at his desk in the Cabinet Office, dictating memos and orders and giving instructions but letting others get on with it. Churchill’s true talent was leadership, not performance. Churchill had a bed in his office suite and habitually slept in the afternoon. He had by a side, in his office, a mixture of brandy and water, which was continually refreshed. Critics say that this put him in a continuously drunken state.
Churchill was a historian. He wrote The History of The English Speaking Peoples, an account not just of English history but also of the British Empire and United States. This work was designed to demonstrate that the British people and their colonies are a unique culture distinct from European civilisations.
Churchill was an author. His book My Early Life, although outwardly an autobiography, is in fact novel with the young Churchill as one of the characters. In the book, Churchill sits the entrance examination for Harrow but on taking the Latin paper, carefully wrote the title, his name and the question number 1. After further thought, he adds brackets to the number but cannot think of anything to write and his paper is smudged by an inkblot. Churchill’s comments on the wisdom of the headmaster in accepting him despite this is an ironic comment not on the inability of his younger self but on the educational system of the time.
Churchill was known for his eloquence and his ready wit. On being accused of being a turncoat for changing parties twice, Churchill reposted ‘anyone can rat, but it takes a certain ingenuity to re-rat.’ When an official criticised other writers for ending sentences with propositions, Churchill added a note ‘This is the sort of English, up with which I will not put’. On one occasion a lady heckler shouted ‘Sir, you are drunk’. Churchill replied ‘And you, madam are ugly, but I shall be sober, tomorrow!’
2006-12-25 12:31:45
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answer #6
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answered by Retired 7
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Alexander the great, followed closely by Attila the Hun
2006-12-24 14:18:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Abraham. He was obedient to the Lord. He listened to the Israelites, he did his best to lead them right and even though they were seriously annoying and disobedient and dumb he did'nt give up on them. He stuck in with them till his end.
Btw: Merry christmas!!
2006-12-24 13:58:18
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Hitler. I know he was evil, but he got people to follow him and do things for him, isn't that the definition of a good leader?
2006-12-24 14:02:47
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answer #9
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answered by Random Person 4
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hawthorne took the words right out of my mouth...Washington. The whole crew back then were great men Jefferson, Franklin.
2006-12-24 13:58:29
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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