Wednesday, November 7, 2012

American History (best I can remember)



 I guess it’s because there is now a global audience for everyone who has a thought to express it (including me) but it is downright alarming how many folks seem perfectly ready to jump off the nearest bridge over the latest election returns. Some of the things that people say make me wonder if human beings have lost their collective minds or just want to rant because they suddenly have a big microphone.
  You people who have lived a little bit have no excuse. But for the sake of you youngsters…
   I was born in the ‘50s when Eisenhower was president. He was a Republican who was, generally, well thought of. He had the distinction of being an ex-general war hero and the US was at war with Korea. All in all, he is ranked as a good president but a sharp recession before the election of 1960 probably hurt his popularity and Democrat John Kennedy was elected.
  You may have heard something about JFK other than the fact that he was assassinated. There was turmoil brewing in the US. Anti-communism sentiment was at a fever pitch after McCarthy’s witch trials and much of the time we were afraid Russia would attack us through bases setup at Cuba. This lead to something called the Bay of Pigs you should read up on. The Civil Rights Movement was building rapidly. The Berlin Wall was built and the space race was big news. Ultimately, someone hated his politics enough to shoot him in the head. It is still widely speculated that it may have been a conspiracy and not just a lone gunner.
  He was replaced by his vice president, Lyndon Johnson. Johnson was a domineering guy who was known to squash those who were his political adversaries by whatever means necessary. His term brought the upholding of some “social government” that was widely condemned by Republicans at the time, including laws to guarantee Medicare, Medicaid, civil rights and public broadcasting. He also escalated US involvement in the unpopular Viet Nam War from 16,000 troops to 550,000 by 1968. By the end of his terms, anti-war sentiment was so high he was doomed.
  The answer was to elect Republican Richard Nixon. Initially, he increased American involvement in the war. But then he began to de-escalate our presence there after massive pressure, particularly from young people. After his first term he was re-elected in a landslide. This was due to popular actions such as making a trip to “Red” China to begin to open lines of diplomacy, starting the Environmental Protection Agency and initiating wars on cancer and drugs.
  After his re-election, bi-partisan politics was rampant, with Democrats and Republicans fighting in ways that people had never imagined possible in the good old USA. When it was determined that Nixon had authorized the covert breaking into the Democratic Headquarters in the Watergate Building in Washington and that he had attempted to lie and cover up his involvement he was pressured into resigning as president. He left the office of president in disgrace and the country disillusioned about our commander in chiefs.
  His successor was Republican Gerald Ford. During his term our economy was at an all time sustained level of weakness with recession deeper than the US had seen since the Great Depression. Honestly, I don’t remember much about him other than he did take steps to end the Cold War with the Soviet Union and he pardoned Richard Nixon.
  He was replaced by a southern Democrat named Jimmy Carter. Carter is remembered as a humanitarian who received the Nobel Peace prize years after his presidency. His popularity eroded gradually through his term due to a hostage crisis with Iran that lasted a year and a half, the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island and growing unrest due to Soviet aggression towards Afghanistan. Ironically, the 52 American hostages in Iran that had hurt Carter’s popularity were released just minutes after his term in office ended.
  Next was two terms with Republican Ronald Reagan. His economic philosophies (called Reaganomics at the time) had the effect of reducing taxes and government spending. He did spend a lot of tax money on the arms race against the Soviets (who he openly called the Evil Empire). All in all, he was a very popular president other than being criticized for being old and unable to focus in meetings. It was revealed after his presidency that he had been in the beginning stages of Alzheimer’s disease while president.
  He was succeeded by Republican George Bush, Sr. Bush pushed hard for progress with foreign policy. He reneged on his classic 1988 campaign promise “Read my lips- I will NOT increase taxes.” This proved to play a prominent part in his losing a re-election bid to Democrat Bill Clinton.
  You are probably old enough to remember the scandal surrounding Clinton and sex with a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky. But during his two terms he got high numbers of approval from all but the conservatives in the US. He is credited with instigating welfare and health care reform and the congress even reported a surplus during his last three years of office.
He was impeached for perjury but acquitted by congress and has the distinction of serving during the longest period of sustained peacetime prosperity in the US in my lifetime.
  Republican George Bush, Jr. was next in line. Only 8 months into his first term on September 11, 2001, the terrorist attacks of 9/11 occurred. This lead to the war in Iraq which pretty much dominated his first term. Beginning in the 2nd term of his presidency, we slid into the longest, post World War 2 period of economic recession. Events like the Financial Crisis of 2008 and his apparent mishandling of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina lead to a fall in favor with Americans and the election of Democrat Barack Obama.
  If you are reading this in the US, it’s a safe bet you woke up this morning to something other than the sound of tanks rolling down the street, goose stepping troops outside or screaming and pandemonium as folks lit themselves on fire in despair. Life goes on and the apocalypse has not come and gone with the re-election of Obama.
  It is good to have opinions when they are rooted in fact and reasonable arguments, as opposed to parroting something you read somewhere. Read your history. Engage in meaningful political discussion- not incessant ranting or regurgitating something you heard. History will likely judge President Obama as a pretty good president who did not grow up in Kenya and is not a Muslim. To me, he’s just another one in a growing line of guys who got it a little right and a little wrong.
  Think, people. And most importantly…vote. You may not always like the results but the pendulum swings and the will of the people is enacted. My guess is we will have 4 more years of Obama and then somebody else will get a crack at it. Life will go on. Through it all, try your best to understand the views of those who do not agree with you. They are not stupid, necessarily wrong or to be scorned just because they do not share your ideology. You only show your ignorance if you believe your party, religion or traditions enlighten you in some way that others are not privy to. Those are the same misguided beliefs that lead someone to crash airplanes into buildings and kill thousands of innocent people who have the misfortune of not believing what they do.
  Our nation was founded on the principle of compromise. It is the purpose of term limits, two parties and having both a House and Senate. It’s up to you how you want to proceed. We can bicker and rant or we can sit down and try to find solutions. Either way, God bless America.