A few hours before taking office on January 20, Donald Trump promised his supporters that he would have "the most extraordinary first 100 days of any presidency in the history of the United States," and it is undeniable that he has more than delivered.

Historians, analysts, political strategists, and citizens themselves tend to evaluate presidencies based on rational and traditional criteria. By their successes and failures, by their legislative or industrial capacity, by approval ratings and the global impact of their decisions.

A presidency is considered good if it is effective, efficient, and decisive. It is considered bad if it is ineffective, irrelevant. And it is extraordinary if it achieves what very few do: truly transforming the country.