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Monday, January 01, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
Gerald Ford: The In-between president
by Paul Greenberg
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Good ol' Gerald Ford, people would say. The way Southerners say, "Bless your heart" - as an expression of both affection and dismissal.

It seemed the man could scarcely get out of Air Force One without bumping his head or stumbling down the stairs; he was a kind of walking sight gag. Once, campaigning in San Antone, a Midwestern stranger in a strange land, he bit into a tamale corn shuck and all.

There was a happy absence of malice in the man - an easy-going, go-along-to-get-along quality about him that put him in the Washington picture at almost every crucial moment during the 1970s. But he was always in the background even when he was in the foreground. When he appeared with Dr. Kissinger, you always looked at Kissinger.

Naturally he was the man Richard Nixon would turn to when he needed a vice president to succeed the Spurious Spiro as vice president. Now there was a guy who stood out, all right, but in all the wrong ways. Spiro Agnew was the un-Jerry Ford; he set off an automatic shudder among some of us even before he was exposed as a small-time grafter - unlike good ol' Jerry Ford. By then We the People were hungry for an honest man in that office - the way you crave an anti-acid after too much bad chili. Back then relief was spelled F-O-R-D.

Do you remember Woody Allen's Zelig? The Hon. and honorable Gerald R. Ford was the Zelig of national politics, the unidentified man in the background who - it was always a surprise when one realized it - had been present at an impressive number of creations in the country's mid- to late 20th century history. Even if he went unnoticed.

In a Shakespearean drama, Jerry Ford would have been in a barely supporting role, a character who might feed a line or two at most to the Prince Henrys and Iagos, not rising even to a Falstaff or Macduff. In that sense he was the perfect member of the repertory company that is American politics, his own man but not showy about it, someone to keep in reserve. Like a vice president.

Who after all would object to good ol' Jerry Ford? Certainly not his colleagues in Congress, who were as comfortable with him as they were with the columns and cornices they walked by every day. He was the center on the football team you wouldn't notice once the plays began. He actually was the center on Michigan's national championship teams of 1932 and '33. Perfect.

Jerry Ford would go on to become a congressman from Michigan in the bland Willkie-Vandenberg, bipartisan Republican style back in the '40s, when the party was comfortable with Dewey and defeat. He was the mild-mannered good fella who was best after a crisis, when the country needed somebody who could calm it down.

Congressman Ford would soon be confirmed as vice president, joining the long line of forgettable portraits of same. It was expected that he would restore mediocrity to its safe place in the history of the Republic, all would go on as before, and...

And then lightning struck. Also thunder and the whole raging flood called Watergate, with the result that good fella Gerald R. Ford, without ever having been elected either vice president or president, found himself placed atop the greasy pole in the stormy wake of our own Richard III.

Bob Dole, who never could constrain his wry wit, and so was naturally disqualified for the presidency, once spotted a line of ex-presidents at some White House ceremony, and, seeing Messrs. Carter, Ford and Nixon all in a row, he observed: "There they are. See no evil, hear no evil, and Š evil."

What a post-Nixon comfort it was to have an unobjectionable figure like Jerry Ford replace one of the most objectionable figures in the country's whole long presidential pageant. "Our long national nightmare is over," the new president announced. "Our Constitution works. Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule."

It was just about the first memorable thing Jerry Ford had ever said, and the country began the long recovery from the criminal conspiracy and moral insult that R. Nixon & Unsavory Co. had been.

It was also just about the last memorable thing Jerry Ford ever said. Within a month, he had pardoned Richard Nixon, short-circuiting justice and assuring (a) his defeat in the next election, and (b) the victory of one of the most naturally incompetent, innocently destructive and utterly demoralizing American presidents of the 20th century: Jimmy Carter.

Some would later call Gerald Ford's pardon of his predecessor courage, but it was more the kind of instinctive conflict-avoidance that was always his strength - and weakness. It was only as the president between Nixon and Carter that Gerald Ford, whatever his miscues, would look like a towering figure.

There is much to be said for mediocrity, and surely it will be at the state funeral now in the offing. There are worse things. Certainly few things are more perilous than man's eternal striving for greatness and the hubris it engenders. Look what happened to Woodrow Wilson and Lyndon Johnson, and is happening to George W. Bush.

At such times we are tempted to think, oh, yes, better someone who can wrap up an indecent defeat as decently as possible, the way Jerry Ford did in Vietnam. It wasn't his fault. He was just there in the White House at the time, like Zelig. Give us another Zelig, the people cry. A nice unknown quantity who will soothe things over - a Jerry Ford. (And now a Barack Obama?)

It's exhausting, always acting on principle, seeking to shape history rather than be shaped by it. There comes a time when the country just wants it all to be over, and that is the time when a Gerald R. Ford earns our gratitude, or at least gets it. And let it be noted that Mr. Ford was a good citizen even if he was First Citizen - no easy thing.

Much like Gerald Ford himself, most of us want to do the decent thing and overlook some other things in the interest of a little peace and quiet for now, whatever whirlwind we are sowing for later. Let it be said that Gerald Rudolph Ford was just the man for his time - a time not unlike this discouraging one, a time yearning for a return to a normalcy that never was.

In the end the country was happy he came along; we could relax for a while. It gets tiring, always striving for principle.

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Sardine 101
Mea culpa regarding the shot I took at the Democrats. Of course, being from Missouri, having seen how the machine politicos of Kansas City and St. Louis operate; having seen my state elect a dead guy to the Senate, haveing seen St. Louis routinely have a higher voter turnout than the national average, in a city with a declining population, I think I have earned a little rhetorical license.

Regarding the Pardon of Nixon, I can argue for or against. In a perfect world, Nixon would have stood in front of his accusers been judged upon the evidence presented and either convicted or exonerated. Unfortunately, such is not the case in the political world.

Bill Clinton's impeachment is directly linked to Watergate, and I don't mean by reference to where Monica had an egg-white omlette. It was the Watergate investigation that begat the Special Prosecutor's Office. Bill Clinton had an opportunity to eliminate the Special Prosecutors Office, but chose to reauthorize it because historically, it had been a tool used by a Democrat controlled Congress to scrutinize a Republican controlled Executive Branch. The rest is history.

Flameout! Mayday! Mayday!
jetpilot writes:
Oh Gosh that's how republicans brain [sic!]

"Other thing Carter did, [sic] Camp David Accords which is [sic] still working and has kept peace between Egypt and Israel. Egypt is the only major force in the region that could seriously threaten Israel. His work as [sic] helped Israel peace [sic]."

Well, can jetpilot brain at all?!

Anyway, try this real fuel excerpt to restart your engine:

Rethinking the Egypt-Israel "Peace" Treaty
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun
November 21, 2006

[NY Sun title: "Time To Recognize Failure Of Israel-Egypt Treaty"]

'Ninety-two percent of respondents in a recent poll of one thousand Egyptians over 18 years of age called Israel an enemy state. In contrast, a meager 2% saw Israel as "a friend to Egypt."

'These hostile sentiments express themselves in many ways, including a popular song titled "I Hate Israel," venomously antisemitic political cartoons, bizarre conspiracy theories, and terrorist attacks against visiting Israelis. Egypt's leading democracy movement, Kifaya, recently launched an initiative to collect a million signatures on a petition demanding the annulment of the March 1979 Egypt-Israel peace treaty.

'Also, the Egyptian government has permitted large quantities of weapons to be smuggled into Gaza to use against Israeli border towns. Yuval Steinitz, an Israeli legislator specializing in Egypt-Israel relations, estimates that fully 90% of PLO and Hamas explosives come from Egypt.'


Got ignition yet? Oops, turbine blades missing...

Stevens?
"Ford also appointed John Paul Stevens to the Supreme Court."

And we wonder why he gets so much praise from the Democrats.

I agree with some of the sentiments here, particularly the one regarding the lack of ideology possessed by the conservatives. However such a lack of ideology is not consistant with a pro abortion policy. The state has the responsibility to protect the weak and the helpless, not to abandon them to allow the strong to make 'choices' to kill them in the privacy of their own abortion clinic.

It has nothing to do with ideology, but simple notions of human dignity. When we tear at one part we tear at everyone, as we have seen in the last 30 years. Now we are fighting to perserve others who are weak and helpless, and we may still lose these battles too.

Ford and the full "Nixon" Pardon
As someone born in 1970, I don't recall much of Ford as President.
However, I am concerned when fellow Republicans act as if giving "Nixon" a full pardon was a good thing.
I've heard from repubs to the political pundants as well as Demos who were against the pardon all say now that letting Nixon get off scott free was a healing moment for the United States because of the chaos it was causing in government after the Watergate scandal.

Well duh, the American people were getting hosed by there own president doing things he shouldn't be doing with the peoples money.

In my opinion the full "Nixon" pardon, opened up the avenues to more corruption in government on a bigger scale that we see in our politics today.

When our leaders break the law and even rewrite the constitution they need to be punished and punished more than the average person who breaks the law if not the same.

Conservatives do need a "New Contract with America", it should deal with corrupt politicians, with a "three strike your out" law, so to speak that will begin to restore integrity in gov and keep the jack-booted thugs away from D.C., giving the reigns once again back to the people.
In essence if our elected official can't get government under control and back on track they can't run for office ever again.
They shouldn't be rewarded or elected again for failure.

Division I Playoff System
Since this we are talking about just about everything but Jerry Ford - what do you folks think about a playoff for Div I NCAA Football - last night Boise State stating that they should play Ohio State as they are the only two Div I unbeaten teams - whata tink ?????

Kudos
As previously stated kudos are standard at funerals and especially state funerals - the Dems did not ridicule him unless you consider Chevy Chase a Dem – all Prez fair game for comedians – you guys are paranoid about Dems – Liberals et al

It is time to watch your backside
when Dems start singing your praises. Gerald Ford was an honorable and integrous man, but one would never know it by the riduculing he took from the same Dems who only now praise him. I feel that they praise him in death simply because they never respected him in life. Ford was what Dems always want; a moderate Rep who they need not fear.

JJ
Tomorrow no funeral - they are going to Grand Rapids for more memorial and then to California where he will be buried - ?2 just bills and junk

Whats the itinerary
Where is tomorrow's funeral going to be held? Will I get any mail?

John Gilknoke or whatever
Couldn't let it go wihtout a shot at the Dems - as stated President Ford did the right thing with the pardon - it got it behind us - damn sure foks get a pat when they check out but this guy deserves most if not all of them

The problem with funerals and eulogies
is that the praise rarely reflects accurately upon the life of the decedant. It seems that once you are dead, your enemies become your friends and dominate the memorials.

Paul Greenberg has offered an honest assessment of the Presidency of Gerald R. Ford, a modest member of the House for 25 years who in the course of 6 months had to transition to a Chief Executive having never pursued this course of action. President Ford who was charachterized as an amiable klutz, partisan hack, and mangler of syntax by his opponents, is now by his demise elevated to the lofty pedastal of decent man in an indecent time.

A couple of things that are worth remembering.

1) Ford was not Nixon's first choice as a replacement for Agnew. The first choice of RMN was John Conley, former Governor of Texas. Why was Conley passed over? Texas John had been a Democrat Hawk. Following the left turn at the 68 Chicago Convention, he jumped parties. Texas John would not have garnered the support necessary to replace Agnew. The Democrats hated him as much as the RINO's distrusted him.

2) Alexander Haig approached Ford with a pardon proposal immediately after Ford became Vice President. Ford rejected the proposal out of hand. Machiavelli, he was not.

3) Ford's temperment was ideal for a legislator, but a detriment for an executive. An executive has to make decisions, and has to accept that some folks just won't like him. However, Ford did an admirable job of damage control regarding the Federal Budget. I shudder to think what it would have been like if he hadn't.

All these things stated, I must confess that I didn't vote for Mr. Ford in 1976. I have a perfectly legitimate reason. I am a conservative Republican, who did vote for Ronald Reagan in 1980. But in 1976, I was only 16, and voter fraud is the preferred practice of Democrats. I wasn't willing to change my party affiliation, even while underage.

reply to toomuchsense
Yeah, I got the point that Greenberg was giving Ford faint praise, and disagreed with it, giving Ford high praise. Did you get the point of anything else in my post?

jetpilot
Thank God you're flying a jet on Microsoft's Flight Sim and not for real. I hope. Having someone like you in the air, with your limited thinking skills make me glad that I can drive to where I need to go on most missions.

PS: Please tell us IF you fly for real and if so, which airline, so I can avoid it.

Comments
How someone could not like Jerry Ford is beyond me - wow Jetpilot that was not a post it was a book - how did Clinton get into this thing - bottom line Jerry Ford Great American

Jerry Ford
I take the liberty of calling him Jerry because he was a regular guy - a great American who fought for his country in WWII - he got stuck with a dirty job that he did not aspire too - he did a good job and should have been elected in his own right - I certainly voted for him - more over I voted against Carter - who was a bigger disaster than Dubya - his pardon of Nixon was the right thing to do - it put the matter to rest and allowed us to go on from there - he took gas for it but stuck by his guns and he no regrets - Great American - Great Patriot - Great Guy - also not a bad football player - hey that counts a lot in Texas


Consider, "titaniczilla".....

...that after all the if's, and's and but's in your post, you Democrats were quite pleased with yourselves that you were able to throw Ford away for Carter. However, the Ford saga proves that a decent man, of either party, cannot be elected president. Ford was not elected to begin with and he was not reelected to end with. In between he was severely ridiculed. Now, even the Democrats pine for such a man. Those who thought the US deserved better than Ford have to ask themselves, instead, if the US was worthy of Ford. In between Ford and Reagan is the answer. The answer is no.

My God "jetpilot"...
....you're one sick puppy!

The last sane Republican President
I wasn't overly fond of Gerald Ford--I thought he let Tricky Dick off the hook and let him get away with his Watergate chicanery and he gave the middle finger to New York City during its fiscal crisis--but in retrospect he was probably the last sane Republican President the US ever had. OK, so what if he was dull and a bit of a klutz, thus inspiring many a Chevy Chase comedy skit on Saturday Night Live? The Nixon Pardon was simply a political tatic--Ford becomes president in exchange for Nixon's resignation. Then Ford agrees to pardon Nixon so we can all get on with our lives. Ford also appointed John Paul Stevens to the Supreme Court and didn't throw a major partisian hissy fit when Roe v Wade was finally decided. Ford thought the matter was one of privacy and should be treated as such. Gee, how dumb can one president be?! A woman actually had a right to make important decisions privately with out religious freaks blaring out "Gimmie that Ol' time Religion" over the loud speakers! Wow! How enlightened can one president get?

It was Ronald Reagan who completely ruined any chance Ford had of becoming president in his own right. Conservatives totally detested Ford and Reagan became a shark in the water smelling blood. Feeling Ford hadn't been elected, (doesn't this man read the newspapers?) St Ronnie mounted his white horse, determined to get rid of this upstart who was sitting in his chair. And it damned near worked. Reagan split the Republicans, the Republican convention was a total shambles, Reagan and Ford barely uttered a civil word to each other the whole rest of the time. this enabled Jimmy Carter to capture the White House, capitalizing on that nation's post Watergate disgust with the Republicans.

The best thing about Ford is that he wasn't some singleminded zealot who claimed to have all the answers. In retrospect, I'd settle for dull and ordinary any day of the week. Gerald Ford may very well have been the last sane Republican president America ever had.


Bless your heart, Mr. Ford
Once again, Mr. Greenburg demonstrates in his commentaries elegance that dare not be missed. As other have pointed out here, for the bulk of his political life, Ford WAS a staunch Republican. His entrance upon the presidential scene included the signal decision of his presidency, which did far less damage to justice than the combined pardons of Clinton and Carter, and helped to close the Watergate fiasco. In the end, President Ford was a president of very modest achievment, whose presidency did far less damage to rhe USA that that of the feckless, reckless, muddy-headed Jimmy Carter.

Bless your heart, President Ford.

And thanks to Paul Greenburg, the Will Rogers of our time, but smarter and yes, more elegant.

Ford was not a moderate
Ford had a very solid record as a conservative in the House for 25 years prior to being appointed President when Nixon resigned.

After taking office he vetoed a record 39 consecutive measures passed by the allegedly "veto-proof" Congress. His vetos on nearly all of these were for the same reason; the Congress was about to spend lots of money without regard to where it would get the funds.

Despite Ford's vetoes the Democrat-controlled Congress succeeded in setting record deficits.

Ford also signed a $9 billion tax cut while President.

On defense Ford was unable to convince Congress to keep Nixon's promise to South Vietnam that US support would continue after US troops were withdrawn. The Democrats de-funded our financial and military aid to the South and their defeat was assured.

On the upside, Ford responded promptly, directly, and successfully when the Khmer Rouge over-stepped their success ashore by pirating the SS Mayaguez in the waters off of Vietnam. Ford ordered special forces of the military to re-take the ship, which was done successfully. Twenty-two members of a special military police unit were lost in the operation.

Ford was not as conservative as Reagan, but he was hardly a moderate. And his lack of success in dealing with Congress compared to Reagan was no doubt a product of his pardon of Nixon, the overwhelming Democrat majority in Congress at the time, and the fact that the four disastrous years of Jimmy carter had not yet turned so many Americans off to far left ideas and policies.

The Presidency went by default to Pres,
Make that...

The Presidency went by default to President Jimmy Carter...

An incompetent President (we remember the hostage crisis and high fuel prices) however a good man of faith.


For the good of our future
For the good of our future

Those of us of the Vietnam era owe him a great deal of thanks.

Those of us who remember his bravery pardoning Nixon appreciate him.

This goes for Democrats and Republican alike (now).

Even Teddy Kennedy that gave Pres. Ford such fits about the pardoning back then now understand it was important to get past the damaging of the Presidency by Nixon for the good of the future of our country.

Pres. Ford in his short time in office stood firm on so many tough stances... that few would tackle... so much so that it inevitably cost him the elected Presidency (along with future Pres. Reagan splitting the likely Rep. voters).

Gee the Presidency when by default to Pres. Jimmy Carter...

But that is the past; it was meant to be...

I admire that. Much in the tradition of one of our greatest Presidents, Harry Truman.

Gerald Ford will be missed and treated kindly in the history books.

The right person for the time.

Rich Galen: A Ford not a Lincoln

"When Congressman Ford became Vice President Ford he said, "I'm a Ford, not a Lincoln. My addresses will never be as eloquent as Mr. Lincoln's. But I will do my very best to equal his brevity and his plain speaking."

the choice of Ford
I remember at the time that Ford was brought into the Vice-Presidency that he was the logical candidate--the next one in the line of succession after the Vice-President is the Speaker of the House, and as Minority Leader, he was the Republican equivalent. I also find it interesting what sort of leadership we get when someone finds themselves in high office without having sought it. Not to mention what we get when candidates make a career out of running for office.

Calling Jet Pilot, Calling Jet Pilot....
Is anyone there? Your 11:53a.m. transmission was garbled, and did not make sense.

Please restate your mutilated thoughts.

Thank you. Ground control signing off.

Gestell, gee wiz
The column was meant to be faint praise.

Your denseness, is amazing.

Only one major error in the article
Jimmah was never "innocently destructive" It was all done apurpose. Anf he hasn't changed a bit.

Talk about faint praise!
This is a sad column. Ford is dissed, dismissed, and ridiculed. What's worse is that he is characterized as a president and a man without principle. Greenberg confuses "principle" with "ideology." His approach to politics is evidently grounded in the premise that all politics is supposed to be about the pursuit of and the attempt to implement some grand principle or other.

There was a time when conservatives opposed this whole way of looking at politics. Greenberg has probably never read a line of Michael Oakeshott, for instance, or Russell Kirk. Today, many, perhaps most, conservatives, can't even comprehend Kirk's view that conservatism is the "negation of ideology."

Be that as it may, Ford was indeed a man and a president of principle. He sought a moderate solution to problems generated by a most immoderate man, Richard Nixon. His principles were those of many midwestern politicians--Democrats as well as Republicans--who learned their politics at a time when ideological posturing was not a substitute for competent leadership. Today we have preening, self-righteous drama queens (as the kids say) impersonating men of trust and responsibility, in both parties.

I respect and admire Ford. It is unfortunate for our country that his sort of politics, his prudence and his decency, have left little as a legacy for us today. It is our loss.

jetpilot, re: Clinton
jetpilot posted, "he had a problem in the pants not with politcs or corruption."

Clinton was impeached for PERJURY and OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE! You don't call that "corruption"??

He came extremely close to being tossed out of office during the Senate hearings. On the perjury charge it was 45 to 55 against removal and 50 to 50 regarding obstruction of justice.

Jetpilot, your prolix post doesn't convince or persuade, it merely illustrates your ignorance.


JetPilot
Quote: Carter was fairly successful in getting legislation through Congress.
A Democratic majority Congress at that

Quote: I see hate lives in your heart. You can't remember a former Pres with out saying all kinds of unsupportable or reasoned hate speech against? I don't know democrats, liberals, peaceniks or I guess anyone one who does not think like you

Do me a favor. Please. Take a tour of moveon.org, Alternet, and a few other "progressive" blogs and then tell me that hate speech and name calling is only on one side of the aisle. Some of them don't bother editing the obscenties used by the posters, but please check it out for yourself.

For Trapper Frank
Are you sure the Maverick would be the right model? I thought more the Pinto (as Ford's term ended badly due to being unelected and pardoning Nixon, just as Pintos/Bobcats tended to wind up in orbit--without NASA's help).

Of course, "Pinto" Ford was replaced by even worse "Moskvich" (a Russian-made car that generally needed to be pushed AT LEAST 3 miles to be able to get 1 on its own steam) Carter.

jet pilot
Jet Pilot must actually be a pilot. They are all self aggrandizing, egotists.

Good ole Ford
The only reason Nixon had Ford for a vice-president was the fact that he didn't want to rile an already upset Democrat party. In other words, Ford was an un-elected moderate Democrat put in to office by circumstances of the time. Unfortunately this set Ford up to run in the next election, an elitist RNC would not release funds to Reagan and the end result was the election of Jimmy Carter. We still suffer from the elites in the RNC.

Oh Gosh that's how republicans brain
Here a former president dies and you have to turn it into partisan rhetoric instead of respect the man.

First Ford could NEVER be a republican today. The neo-cons and anything but about healing, mending and unity as Ford is credited with. Today's republicans are wedge makers, dividers and have high jacked religion for political gain, win at all cost Rove-isum. Ford was a good man but way too liberal to be ALLOWED in the Rep club house. Shame.

Quote John H: "He had to resign in '73 because of tax evasion charges. He pleaded nolo condendere, and was later disbarred. A real Clinton."

Ahaaaa yes lets invoke CLINTON, a rally cry for partisan that has nothing important or intelligent to say. Clinton was successful deal with it, and he had a problem in the pants not with politcs or corruption. The Republicans from the start felt his presidency was invalided or legitiment. It was the start of Rush Limbaugh and hash hate in pollitacs thanks to the republican party.

Not one of the corruption claims, dispute million and millions spent on the Ken Star burn Clinton at the stake crusades. Yes he was a cad but a crook? No leave that to the Republican party with 16-19 under investigation, indited or in-jail from the last national tragity called the Bush administration and the 109th congress.

When it comes to corruption the Republicans do it better than anyone. The Democrats have idiot's like the Louisiana guy with 90 grand in the freezer. He is an amateur Crook. Republicans are Pros.


John H: Yes Spiro Agnew was a crook; Nixion was a crook long before the white house. Ford pardoned him because he said he wanted to move on, but there is no doubt Nixon was complicit. Tape missing, Ohooops I erased it by accident secretary. Classic repucblican coverup like Mark Foley. I love it when the rats scatter, "Me, not me, No I did not know." By the way the secritary lied about how the accident happened. It was shown you can't accidentally erase recordings with the equip she was using the way she said.

Quote John H: "We do know, by now, that the peaceniks are only peaceful when it comes to foreign enemies".

That is stupid rhetoric. I am not peacenik but getting into Iraq was a big mistake and we where miss lead. Almost everyone agrees with that, even many Neo-cons. Also if we go down the road of giving the executive branch more and more power, unilaterally take civil liberties away and treat prisoners like our enemies do than THE Terrorist are winning. That is what they want knuckle head.

The CONSTITUTION DOES WORK AS FORD SAID. READ IT. A "One Party System" does not work as we see. So stop hating half to 2/3rds of the country. We are all Americans.


Quote John H: "Political enemies they hate with an abiding hatred."

WOW that is the hypocrisy. I see hate lives in your heart. You can't remember a former Pres with out saying all kinds of unsupportable or reasoned hate speech against? I don't know democrats, liberals, peaceniks or I guess anyone one who does not think like you. I am glad the nation is not run like you would want, it would not be America any more you hater.

Quote John H: "Nixon and Agnew don’t seem to have been great friends, though. Agnew blamed Nixon for leaking reports of the bribery charges -- as a distraction from Watergate."

WOW unlike Ford who could not be a republican today, Nixon would be top front and center. Really the perfect republican, Cut throat and mostly concern about the his self and the "Party" and not the country. Sounds like many of todays Republicans. Nixon the perfect Republican for the 21 century.

Quote John H: "As for Carter (we'll get to know him better as "Obama")"

How dare you. First on this site and by people like you you defame Carter with complete vitriol and hate and than whine like a little baby because people are angry against Bush? Please grow up. Carter was politically inept but is a good many. Constantly I hear total BULL and lies about Carter. First he inherited America in stagflation; the late 70's post Kennedy assassination, Vietnam, Nixon, Ford (never elected to VP or Pres) and Nixons pardon. You forget about all the good Carter did and his vision about building the military special forces and energy conservation. He Rapid Deployment Forces CENTCOM in late 1979. CENTCOM is what is running the war in Iraq and did desert storm. Carter put solar panels on the white house.

One of Carter's first acts in office was to order the unilateral removal of all nuclear weapons from South Korea. Bush admin IGNORED N Korea and let them cheat. Bush has been derelict in his duties as president. Really its tough times and Bush is a man of limited abilities. Carter at least did the best he could and made gains where he could.

Other thing Carter did, Camp David Accords which is still working and has kept peace between Egypt and Israel. Egypt is the only major force in the region that could seriously threaten Israel. His work as helped Israel peace. Worked tirelessly on SALT II (nuclear disarmament) of USSR which lead to the eventual down fall of Communism. He "normalize" relations with the People's Republic of China.

I could go on but I ask, what did Bush do?

Lets get one thing straight
"Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid", was published in December 2006. Carter believes that "Israel's continued control and colonization of (certain and specific) Palestinian land have been the primary obstacles to a comprehensive peace agreement in the Holy Land." THAT IS ALL HE IS SAYING. He is not saying anything more. YES Israel has made some mistakes. Just because you believe Israel has made some bad moves does not make you an anti-semite.

Carter does not have a anti-semite bone in his body. His humanitarian work is with out question and he is a Nobel winner and Presidential Peace winner. What will Bush get? Watch what Bush does post office. Bush: "It's hard work (chuckle chuckle) we'er working hard (snort snort) it's not easy". I bet Bush does nothing! He does not know squat.

Quote Packrat writes: "I remember Ford as vetoing many of the Democrat's bills because they were bad bills. They were wasteful."

Yea not as wasteful as multi million dollar bridges to no where in Alaska.

Quote Parcrat writes: "Of course, the media back then made fun of his gaffs just like they do Bush's way of talking. Made fun of someone if you have nothing more valid."

BUSH, please it is not that he is inarticulate it is because he is a BAD president with a bunch of Neo-Cons (Cheney and Rumsfeld) and a rubber stamp congress and senate.

Carter was fairly successful in getting legislation through Congress, like canceling the B-1 bomber program (mainly production of the B-1 Lancer), but then he met with opposition from the leadership of the Democratic Party when he characterized a rivers and harbors bill as "pork barrel" spending. In apparent retaliation, Congress responded by refusing to pass major provisions of his consumer protection bill and his labor reform package. Carter then vetoed a public works package calling it "inflationary", as it contained what he considered to be wasteful spending. Congressional leaders sensed that public support for his legislation was weak, and took advantage of it. After gutting his consumer protection bill, they transformed his tax plan into nothing more than spending for special interests, after which Carter referred to the congressional tax committees as "ravenous wolves."

Carter signed legislation bolstering the Social Security system through a staggered increase in the payroll tax and appointed record numbers of women, blacks, and Hispanics to government and judiciary jobs. He also initiated a comprehensive urban policy. Carter enacted strong legislation for environmental protection. His Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act created 103 million acres of national park land in Alaska. He was also successful in deregulating the trucking, rail, airline, communications, oil and finance industries.

Now Carter may be hated by Neo-Cons for the above but it was for the good of the people not the most wealthy, special interest, large industries. By the way the B-1B bomber is way better than the A model would have ever been. Besides what does a B-1B do? Not much.

my two cents
Greenberg's tone in this piece is more than a bit condescending and to me this defeats whatever purpose he may have had.

But

At least we can thank Spiro Agnew for some memorable phrases - "Spiro is our hero" on some signs, not to mention SA's classic

"nattering nabobs of negativity".

Priceless

TV coverage of the President's funeral on C BS which I happened to stumble on a few nights ago with commentary by Katie Couric and Bob Schiefer.

Pathetic


Thoughts on President Ford...
He truly wasn't a Lincoln, just a plain ole Ford. Probably the car that best would sum up his presedency was the Ford Maverick. A mid-priced, vehicle that anyone could afford and identify with. As comfortable taking your grandmother to her weekly bridge game as it was taking your son out on a Friday night date. At the time, he was what this country needed, a go along to get along mid-level performer in the Republican party. After his pardon of President Nixon, the MSM went after him with a vengence, and villified both him and his family. History will look down kindly on him as the "tweener" president. The one between evil and the one between the do nothing outsider from Plains, GA.

WHAT?
Timing of this article is terrible. You
should be ashamed.

At least Greenberg
puts the whole Ford eulogy in the proper perspective. Ford was no more than an affable caretaker President, unknown for anything except pardoning Nixon. And as the interview with Bernstein reveals, he had no understanding of vision or fortitude. It is as if his whole purpose in life was collegiality.

Perhaps Ford was what we needed; a pause between the evil of Nixon and the utter incompetence of Carter. Perhaps Ford's only enduring legacy is that his mediocrity paved the way for the Reagan revolution.

I, for one, will not mourn him beyond the respect due a former President. All the gushing eulogies only serve to cheapen the accomplishments of those Presidents who truly led the country.

Gerald Ford

I rememeber Ford as vetoing many of the Democarat's bills because thay were bad bills. They were wasteful. Of course, the media back then made fun of his gaffs just like they do Bush's way of talking. Made fun of someone if you have nothing more valid.
I voted for him when he ran versus Carter. I had seen Carter running for office in Georgia ( when Carter lost to Maddox). That was enough to mke up my mind about him.

Spiro Agnew
was, as memory serves, the most hated politician in the history of the Republic. In world history, he ranks somewhere between King John and Nero.

He had to resign in '73 because of tax evasion charges. He pleaded nolo condendere, and was later disbarred. A real clinton. Yes, he took bribes. But he wasn’t hated for that. He was hated because he was Nixon’s hatchet man against the war protesters. We do know, by now, that the peaceniks are only peaceful when it comes to foreign enemies. Political enemies they hate with an abiding hatred.

Nixon and Agnew don’t seem to have been great friends, though. Agnew blamed Nixon for leaking reports of the bribery charges -- as a distraction from Watergate.

They never met after he left office. Well, Agnew went to the funeral in ’94. A reconciliation of sorts. Unless he pissed on the grave -- if so, it went unreported.

As for Carter (we'll get to know him better as "Obama"):

http://forgottenprophets.blogspot.com/2006/02/13-x-3-worst-president.html


J
Jhttp://forgottenprophets.blogspot.com
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