Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Analysis

A Georgian reflects on the life of Jimmy Carter

A Georgian reflects on the life of Jimmy Carter
Francisco M. C. de Oliveira

We Georgians have always had mixed feelings about Jimmy Carter, who died today, Dec. 29, 2024, at age 100.


I was 12 when he was elected president, and I remember many people I knew, even some who liked him and voted for him, felt he’d been a mediocre Georgia governor who’d won the White House by accident. They dismissed him as simply the charming everyman America needed to purge the nation of the cynicism and disgust that flowed from the war in Vietnam and the Watergate scandal. Many Georgians felt he was in over his head.

As president, he had his accomplishments, none bigger than brokering peace between Israel and Egypt. But to many, he never seemed forceful enough for the job. In 1979 came the famous “malaise speech” in which he told Americans facing high inflation, high unemployment, and an energy crisis (I remember waiting in line 45 minutes with my mother to buy gasoline) that they should turn inward and reconsider their values.

The long hostage crisis in Iran made Carter seem small and lost. In 1980, Ronald Reagan easily defeated him, making Carter the first president to lose a bid for re-election since Depression-era Herbert Hoover in 1932.

But ask a Georgian today, or any day, what they think of Jimmy Carter now, and you’ll hear some variant of: “A disappointing president, but a truly good man.”

That’s because, after his stinging defeat, Carter spent decades helping to build homes for people who couldn’t afford them, building the Carter Center as a global philanthropic organization of note, and offering his services wherever they might be accepted. These were his greatest achievements.

Jimmy Carter wasn’t a political performer. He farmed peanuts. He served in war. He and his late wife Rosalynn supported one another through 77 years of marriage. For decades, he taught Sunday school every Sunday. He made peace.

Rest in Peace, Jimmy.



Willis Sparks is a senior writer for GZERO Daily — and a native Georgian.

More For You

Trump’s farm troubles

U.S. President Donald Trump holds up a "Make Our Farmers Great Again" cap during a roundtable discussion on workforce development at Northeast Iowa Community College.

REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Is US President Donald Trump going whole hog for the farm vote?Today, Trump is expected to announce two new efforts designed to help the agriculture industry: new guidance on farm equipment and an expansion of government loan guarantees. It’s his second overture to the farm sector in three months. In December, he announced a $12 billion aid [...]
​Smoke rises following an explosion, after Israel and the U.S. launched strikes on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 3, 2026.

Smoke rises following an explosion, after Israel and the U.S. launched strikes on Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 3, 2026.

Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
Syria was the first social media war, where the Syrian government harnessed the power of social media to spread misinformation. Ukraine was the first drone war, taking combat beyond the trenches. Now, the Iran conflict is the first artificial intelligence war, as the world’s strongest military embraces the technology.Admiral Brad Cooper, the head [...]
​A foreign tanker carrying Iraqi fuel oil damaged after catching fire in Iraq's territorial waters, following unidentified attacks that targeted two foreign tankers, according to Iraqi port officials, near Basra, Iraq, March 12, 2026.

A foreign tanker carrying Iraqi fuel oil damaged after catching fire in Iraq's territorial waters, following unidentified attacks that targeted two foreign tankers, according to Iraqi port officials, near Basra, Iraq, March 12, 2026.

REUTERS/Mohammed Aty
Four weeks into a war nobody planned to still be fighting, President Donald Trump issued Iran an ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or watch your power grid get obliterated. Iran said no and threatened to retaliate against desalination plants and other civilian infrastructure in Gulf countries. Trump must have found this [...]
​German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer sit at the start of the E-3 meeting in Munich, Germany, on February 13, 2026.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer sit at the start of the E-3 meeting, during the Munich Security Conference (MSC), in Munich, Germany, on February 13, 2026.

Thomas Kienzle/Pool via REUTERS
For the first three weeks of the Iran conflict, Europe made its position clear: this isn’t our war. Many countries on the continent joined the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, a move that wrought casualties and sweeping political backlash at home. They want to avoid a repeat – especially when the European public largely opposes this war, too.Then, [...]