Jonathan Buttall, former Retired Professional in Behavioral Health Field at Private Sector; Public Sector.
Updated Jan 5 · Upvoted by Brayden Swanson, Studied history extensively for six years and Bhavya Kundu, studies at Indian Institute of Management Indore (2022)
Well, first, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson and Donald Trump would be kicked out of the room by Teddy Roosevelt (with actual kicking) with perhaps 2/3 of the crowd cheering and Andrew Jackson criticizing this. The rest would keep a careful distance from Jackson after that, remembering what he was capable of, if angered.
Abe Lincoln and Washington are likely to be leaders for a while in the meeting, while newer Presidents would eventually contribute more and more. FDR will also be a powerful force in the rooms discussions.
Things would soon get somewhat awkward as they compared the actions of each other based on the very different values and policies that existed in different generations. As those values and policies hugely differed over time, some in the past and present would be offended by each other but slowly accept the differences and calm down some more with the help of the above leaders of the discussion.
Some tension by the early slave owning presidents would be present due to the friendly greeting likely to come from President Obama, who would know how to win them over. He’ll succeed in doing so, except for a careful poker face on Jackson.
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