Jimmy Carter’s one-term presidency was a mixed success — “unfinished” was how two biographers described it — but he deserves to be remembered as a light to the world. What stands out most was his profound decency. In that respect, he was a superior president. In words that may sound naïve today, he had promised “a government as good as the American people.” He was distinguished by virtues, not vices. Carter carried out his intentions not just in office, but in how he devoted his 54-year-long post-presidency to humanitarian service. He was not about money He had not profited from the presidency while the Georgia peanut farm he had put into a blind trust fell more than $1 million in debt.