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Monday, July 16, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Newest Nixon: The Comeback Ghost
by Paul Greenberg
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Will Sarah Palin make a run at the GOP Nomination in 2012?


"I want everyone to like me
That's one thing I know for sure
I want everyone to like me
Cause I'm a little insecure."

- Randy Newman

  "Tell him the truth, Loretta, they find out anyway."
-
Cosmo Castorini's advice to his daughter in the final scene of the movie, "Moonstruck"

Americans of a certain age will remember the procession of New Nixons that once marked American politics. Richard Nixon, it turns out, was the original Comeback Kid. He was about to be dropped as the Republican vice-presidential candidate in 1952 because of an overrated and now forgotten scandal (the Nixon Fund) but just about forced Ike to keep him on the ticket by delivering a televised appeal that shamelessly exploited every red-blooded American's love for man's best friend (the Checkers Speech).

Anybody who could outmaneuver Dwight Eisenhower - a savvy general staff officer who as Allied commander in Europe had managed the likes of Patton, Montgomery and De Gaulle in his time, and who as a politician had mastered the art of only looking simple - surely deserved the sobriquet Tricky Dick.

Having lost a razor-close election for president in 1960 to John F. Kennedy, Nixon was then decisively defeated when he ran for governor of California two years later. What a comedown. After that, even Richard Nixon must have thought Richard Nixon's political career was over. ("You won't have Nixon to kick around any more, because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference.")

But by 1968, Nixon had become the Comeback Middle-Aged Man. He would be elected president that year over Hubert Humphrey by a hair.

Then came the whole agglomeration of White House follies, scandals and crimes collectively known as Watergate, and in 1974 Richard Milhous Nixon would became the only president of the United States ever forced to resign that high office in utter and deserved disgrace.

At the time surely no one could have envisioned Richard Nixon's making still another comeback - except Richard Nixon, who by dint of sheer persistence proceeded to transform himself yet again, this time into a respected foreign-policy guru. Call him the Comeback Geezer.

When he died in 1994, Richard Nixon would be given a state funeral attended by five presidents and their first ladies. In his funeral oration, the wry,quirky but insightful Bob Dole would declare: "I believe the second half of the 20th century will be known as the Age of Nixon." His words now begin to sound prophetic. Maybe because every time Richard Nixon looked finished, he was just starting all over again.

This week even Nixon's presidential library staged a comeback. There was a time when the Nixon Library at Yorba Linda, Calif., was the only presidential library in the country denied presidential papers. And rightly so. Its namesake simply couldn't be trusted with historical evidence.(Remember the 18 1/2-minute gap on the White House tapes?) The library's exhibits were laughably one-sided and nary a discouraging word about Nixon was allowed under its roof. The result: Like the man it honored, his library would be treated as a pariah.

But last Wednesday, after almost 17 years outside the official system, the Nixon Library became part of the National Archives. One of the first acts of its new director, appointed last year, was to dismantle its exhibit on Watergate, which dismissed that whole cancerous mass of scandals and worse as a conspiracy on the part of Richard Nixon's enemies.

Now the Nixon Library is less a shrine and more a real library. Some 78,000 Nixon papers - plus 11 1/2 hours of audio tape - are being made available to the public, and some of us are actually looking forward to hearing that familiar, hollow basso profundo voice again.

At long last we're all invited to pay attention to that man behind the curtain, and once again we're fascinated. Call him the Comeback Ghost this time. He's now become a star of opera ("Nixon in China"), of stage and screen ("Nixon/Frost"), the subject of a string of new books (like"Kissinger and Nixon" by Robert Dallek) and some juicy excerpts from his tapes should be on the airwaves soon. Nixon mania is back. Continued...

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A disgrace
Nixon represents the epitome of an unprincipled Republicans. What did the man consistently stand for? His supposed anticommunism clearly didn't prevent him from recognizing Mao (and vicariously condoning the repression of millions of Chinese) and shunning the Republic of China (not the PRC, but the democratic and free Taiwan). It was Nixon who stated that "we are all Keynesians now," and whose disastrous economic policies helped lead to the economic stagnation of the 1970s (This was the man who imposed national price controls, created the EPA , and instituted the first significant federal affirmative action program.) Republicans have a bad tendency to defend this scoundrel, and other failed Republican presidents (like Ike and Ford), in order to bolster criticisms against the left. We should not admire any president or politician with an (R) next to their name; instead we should look for leaders who stood for those things we hold dear. Look to Reagan and Goldwater (who described Nixon as “the most dishonest individual I have ever met in my life”) as the embodiment of our party’s ideals, not Nixon and Ford.

Nixon
Gawd,we've got so much more on our plates, now...spare us the dusting off and re-examination of Nixon activity. Pull-ezze!
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