I am, I admit, a bit of an acquired taste
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Sunday, February 17, 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
The Eisenhower Years
I’ve finished 3 books on President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Mandate for Change and Waging
Peace are Ike’s memoirs of his first and second Presidential terms,
respectively. Going Home to Glory is the story of Ike’s final eight years of
life, as told by his grandson David Eisenhower, along with his wife Julie Nixon
Eisenhower.
The two White House memoirs are very dry and told in a
strictly factual, unemotional fashion. I still adored them, and finished with a
great appreciation for a President overshadowed by the unwarranted adoration
for his successor (JFK). Kennedy and his supporters campaigned on the idea that
the Eisenhower era was stagnant and parochial, an erroneous assertion that
survives to this day. The truth is far
different.
Here was a President who kept the peace in the face of near
constant Soviet and Chinese provocation, while simultaneously expanding the
ring of ‘containment’ that would eventually break the USSR; a President who balanced the budget multiple
times, at times refusing to cut taxes to do so, and led America to
unparalleled prosperity ; a President who included women in his Cabinet and
sent federal troops in to desegregate Little Rock schools; a President who
warned that any dollar spent on defense above the level of military adequacy
was a dollar misspent, and had the military reputation to enforce that
doctrine; a President who refused to intervene in Vietnam barring a coalition
effort; a President convinced that aiding Latin America and Africa was not only
moral but a means of fighting the Cold War; a President who valued
bipartisanship and the UN, advocated for a “United States of Europe”, and
expanded the reach of social security; but also a President who believed in
self-determination, the value of duty, limited Federal intervention, free
markets and the moral greatness of America.
His Presidency deserves a second look.
Their contents deserve an A, but given the dull style I can
only grade these two a B.
Going Home to Glory begins
with the conclusion of his administration and ends with his death in 1969. book
is the opposite of his Grandfather’s stylistically; it is warm and endearing
and a joy to read. Grade: A.
Also read so far this year: Belles on their Toes by Frank B
Gilbreth Jr and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey
and The Rise of Ransom City by Felix
Gilman.
I’d rate the former a B- and the latter a well served A.
Argo
Argo is a fine movie, just about as good as advertised, and I hope it does well at the Oscars.
Kudos to Ben Affleck, who never deserved all the hate the media piled on him over the last decade. I will say I thought the final airport scene was a little much, and the opening montage (which seeks to explain the political situation) is horribly skewed to favor a Democrat's rationale of events.
Excusing those two miscues, I’d rate this as well deserved A+
Friday, February 15, 2013
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Ash Wednesday
Has anyone ever told you, that for a guy with such dashing good looks and a well developed sense of humor, you have eyebrows designed and engineered by nature to make people fear for their lives? - Fred Bryan
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
A Friend's Van was stolen!
Last night around midnight my friend Erv came over to visit for half an hour. During that brief stay someone STOLE his van from directly in front of my house, in the middle of bleeping Bay View!
We spent the next three hours either talking with police or driving around the neighborhood looking for the punks. The van was recovered this morning - where else? - at Bay View High School.
Nothing was stolen from it; not his ladders, his radio equipment, or the three laptops he had in the back. Apparently someone just wanted a joyride in a 2003 Chevy work van.
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