Showing posts with label Reagan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reagan. Show all posts

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Reagan on the Democrats' Platform

Classic Reagan.

 

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Bias and the 'Heroine of Popular History"

Barbara Tuchman
The Teleprompter, Barbara Tuchman told an interviewer in the early 1980s, "allows an inadequate, minor individual to appear to be a statesman" wrote Bruce Cole in the Wall Street Journal.[1]  Mrs. Tuchman (1912-1989) was a historian, probably best known for her 1962 history of the beginning of World War I, The Guns of August.  The WSJ’s Cole is careful to point out that, given Mrs. Tuchman’s “liberal leanings” (her father owned the leftist publication The Nation and Barbara Tuchman began her writing career as a correspondent for the magazine, covering the Spanish Civil War), she was actually referring to President—and statesman—Ronald Reagan.
Of course, when one reads just the bare statement, without any clueing in as to its background, the image one immediately conjures up is of one sad excuse for a statesman—and president—Barack Hussein Obama, mmmm-mmmm-mmmm.
In his effort to present Barbara Tuchman as a ‘heroine of popular history,’ Mr. Cole unwittingly sheds light on more of the writer’s biases than intended.  (No judgment here, we all have them).  Describing her thinking as a writer and historian, Cole emphasized that Mrs. Tuchman stressed “the importance of using primary sources and unpublished material, the necessity of visiting the sites where history was made, the use of corroborative detail—‘history by the ounce’ as [Mrs. Tuchman] called it—to keep the historian from "soaring off the ground into theories of his own invention."[2]
All very well, an ideal for which all historians should strive, and quite interesting in light of what follows.  For Mr. Cole goes on to point out that Mrs. Tuchman also “believed sensibly that it's better to ‘arrive at theory by way of evidence than the other way around, like so many revisionists today.’”[3]
Again, sage advice; but, one cannot help but wonder if this was how the “heroine of popular history” arrived at her conclusion about Teleprompters and the fortieth president of the United States.



[1] Bruce Cole, “a Heroine of Popular History,” The Wall Street Journal, March 10, 2012, http://online.wsj.com/
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Reagan vs. Obama

President Reagan was wrong about one thing.  He did not live to see the end of communism. Communism succeeded him into office four administrations later ...

Sunday, October 23, 2011

"The bestial nature of those ..."

President Reagan's remarks to reporters on the death of American and French military personnel in Beirut, Lebanon, October 23, 1983 ... twenty-eight years ago, today.

I'm not going to take any questions this morning because we're going right into meetings on the events that have taken place on this tragic weekend. But I would like to make this statement:
I know there are no words that can express our sorrow and grief over the loss of those splendid young men and the injury to so many others. I know there are no words, also, that can ease the burden of grief for the families of those young men.
Likewise, there are no words to properly express our outrage and, I think, the outrage of all Americans at the despicable act, following as it does on the one perpetrated several months ago, in the spring, that took the lives of scores of people at our Embassy in that same city, in Beirut.
But I think we should all recognize that these deeds make so evident the bestial nature of those who would assume power if they could have their way and drive us out of that area that we must be more determined than ever that they cannot take over that vital and strategic area of the Earth or, for that matter, any other part of the Earth.
Thank you.

Read more at the American Presidency Project:   www.presidency.ucsb.eduhttp://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=40673#ixzz1bdnG9o9K 



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