No matter which major party won America’s presidential election in 1920, the country was destined for another chief executive from Ohio. Both major party candidates, Republican Warren Harding and Democrat James Cox, hailed from the Buckeye State. The likable Harding emerged as a landslide victor, died in office two and a half years later, and is poorly regarded by the bulk of professional historians. It’s not the first time, however, that the self-anointed “experts” deviated from the masses. (Have you seen the scores on RottenTomatoes.com for the nauseatingly unctuous film “Fauci”? The so-called top critics, numbering 16, awarded the hagiography a 94 percent Tomatometer rating. The “audiences” score drew from 500+ people and it’s a measly 2 percent. Count me with the proletariat on that one.) Harding was popular among Americans as a whole, largely because—unlike his meddlesome and preachy predecessor Woodrow Wilson—he left us alone, cut our taxes, and kept the …