Posted on 08/18/2019 4:25:35 PM PDT by poconopundit
Edited on 08/18/2019 5:00:24 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
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Mark Twain is known as a "great American author", but not enough Americans have firsthand knowledge of his best work.
In this vanity, I hope to interest you in rediscovering this witty social critic and humorist.
I'm probably like you: I read a bit of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn in grade school. At the time, those American-slang "classics" didn't thrill me, and maybe it's because those books were not written for kids anyway.
Twain wrote for readers who have a few decades of life experiences behind them. And when he did speak through the voice of a child (or animal), Twain was usually poking fun at — or deftly critiquing — adult stupidity, lies, prejudices, pride, and mischief.
A few months back I fell in love with many of Twains short stories. And I believe this is where his best treasures lie.
What got me hooked was a terrific audio CD compilation I found at my local library: a 7-hour audio CD series entitled, The Mark Twain Audio Collection (Harper Collins).
Now working as a tech industry pundit, Twain's humor and storytelling style give me great lessons in plain English talk and keeping reader engaged. |
So being a fan of both Twain and Trump, it's natural for me to notice parallels in the two men's lives and skillsets. So I'm now going to highlight a few of those parallels in six categories:
NOTE: There's a lot to read here — and I've also furnished links to one-page samples of Twain's work. So I suggest you bookmark his page. Or, you can always find this story indexed in my FR profile.
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In my Navy days aboard a destroyer, when we arrived outside a port like Hong Kong or Kaohsiung, Taiwan, a boat would come alongside and drop off a pilot.
The job of a nautical pilot is to steer a ship through the dangerous waters of an inner harbor. Now a pilot may not know much English, but what the pilot does know — backwards, forwards, and sideways — is every peculiarity and hazard in the harbor. And by custom, not even the captain of the ship can meddle with the pilot's steering commands inside that harbor.
Mark Twain famously became a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River. After studying under an expert pilot for a few years, he served as a full pilot for two years till the Civil War arrived which brought steamboat commerce on the River to a near standstill.
But though his years as a pilot were short, the risk-bearing responsibility and burden of learning the Great River — and keeping abreast of its constant physical changes — strongly molded Twain's character. It made him utterly confident in his own abilities.
Some of the best parts of Life on the Mississippi are when Twain talks about the challenges of piloting:
You must know them so accurately that you can instantly name the one you are abreast of when you are set down at random in that street in the middle of an inky black night. If you can do that, then you have a tolerable notion of the amount and exactness of a pilot's knowledge who carries the Mississippi River in his head.
And then, if you will go on until you know every street crossing, the character, size, and position of the crossing-stones, and the varying depth of mud in each of those numberless places, you will have some idea of what the pilot must know in order to keep a Mississippi steamer out of trouble.
Next, if you will take half of the signs in that long street, and change their places once a month, and still manage to know their new positions accurately on dark nights, and keep up with these repeated changes without making any mistakes, you will understand what is required of a pilot's peerless memory by the fickle Mississippi." |
The meticulous nature of steamboat piloting and being constantly mindful of the risks to the safety of passengers: that sounds a lot like the vigilance and smarts a builder and financer of skyscrapers must have.
During the 2016 campaign, I chuckled whenever someone at CNN would say, "Trump is not really qualified to be President of the United States." Hogwash. No man has ever been better prepared for the Office than Donald J. Trump. Throughout his entire career, Trump dealt with clever bankers, corrupt politicians, shady contractors, demanding customers, and people of many cultures.
What's more, Donald J. Trump, as a businessman, carries on his back today the tremendous responsibility of safety to the people living and working in his buildings. To succeed for decades at that job requires a high degree of mindfulness and managerial talent that very few men possess.
A good President isn't measured by the number of bills signed or foreign dignitaries met. He's measured like a pilot is -- on results, on the safe passage of passengers, and on steering clear of sunken wrecks that if carelessly run over could tear a steamboat to pieces.
Now a pilot's never-ending alertness to danger often has a long range influence on the way he sees the world.
In Chapter 9 of Life on the Mississippi, Twain explains how becoming a skillful pilot caused him to no longer notice the great splendor of the River he enjoyed as a youth.
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Donald J. Trump is a Class A Entrepreneur. He parlayed a million dollar loan from his Dad to build a multi-billion dollar private company. Though Trump struggled mightily to save his company in the recession of the early 90's, he made a spectacular comeback — to the point where his Organization today is financially solid and self-funded, and thus not controlled by banks, venture capitalists, or Wall Street.
Leveraging that financial self-reliance, Trump built his American dream. With great pride in workmanship, he led his Organization to pioneer its future. How? . . . by working hard and constantly tinkering with business ideas to discover what works and what creates new value — then putting those winning ideas into practice.
Trump explained his mission in what I call his Farewell to Real Estate speech, given at the October 2016 opening of Trump International Hotel in Washington:
This [Old Post Office] building is a historic landmark, a true American original. It had all the ingredients of greatness, but it had been neglected and left to deteriorate for many, many decades. It sat there so beautiful and was left to deteriorate for many, many decades.
It had the foundation of success: all of the elements were here. Our job was to restore its former glory, honor its heritage, but also to imagine a brand new and exciting vision for the future. To create a new place for people and families to come together and a magnificent place at that." |
Mark Twained loved the independent life he carved out for himself via lectures and book sales, but he was not financially savvy. In particular, he went heavily in depth investing in a new typesetting machine that never became a commercial success.
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The new media Donald J. Trump pioneered as entrepreneur, politician, and President is pretty extraordinary:
Media was limited in Twain's day: movies, television, and radio hadn't been invented yet. But he made blazed new trails with the media outlets available to him:
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In his 2017 Inaugural Address, President Trump courageously told the truth, that our Nation's government is a fraud:
And every day since, President Trump has tirelessly told the truth about dishonest Fake News, traitorous witch hunts, violence and fraud on our Southern Border, and globalist policies that harm America's interests.
President Trump has is a one-man wrecking ball to Political Correctness: a key element of his strategy is simply exposing the Truth that politicians, special interest groups, and crony capitalists have been been hiding for their own benefit.
Fortunately he's an Equal Opportunity Critic and Cheerleader. It doesn't matter what your race, gender, religion or politics are, if you're doing something good for America, you'll hear words of praise. If you're out to drag America down, you'll hear some pushback.
Twain was also a friend of Truth. Reading Life on the Mississippi you get exactly what the book title advertises: an interesting discussion of the customs, attitudes, commerce, and ways of the people who lived along the Mississippi River in the 1800s.
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As a rule, Twain doesn't tell the unvarnished truth to his readers directly, but lets his characters reveal it through their actions. However, one great exception to this practice is a passage in his Autobiography entitled, The Character of Man. Interestingly, Twain had his Autobiography published only after his death, enabling him to pour out his true feelings in that text.
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Perhaps America has never produced a more skillful "publicity hound" than Donald J. Trump. In fact, his masterful ability to get press as a New York real estate mogul eventually allowed Trump to diversity into new trades: best selling book writer/publisher, golf courses, licensing the Trump name on commercial properties, The Apprentice TV show, and more.
Of course, the billions of dollars in free publicity he earned during the 2016 Presidential campaign and continues to earn today as President is amazing.
Publicity also played a big role in Mark Twain's career. After the Civil War when his steamboat pilot days were over, Mark Twain traveled West and briefly held a job as a newspaper reporter in San Francisco (1864). Though he came to hate the druggery of city reporter work, that experience led him to break new ground as a writer of humorous stories.
Visiting a California Gold Rush town called Angel Camp, he conceived the outrageous tale of a country bumpkin who loved betting on animal contests: horse races, dog fights, and frog jumping bouts. He submitted the story, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County to an editor in New York. When published, it became a sensation, paving the way for new opportunities.
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Next, Twain got an reporter's assignment to visit the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) and write a series of stories about the Islands, its culture and people. And this experience enabled Twain to become a national lecturer.
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One of President Trump's key goals has been to been to root out injustice. Chief among his concerns is to get Washington leaders to stop lining their own pockets and start caring about We the People.
From the beginning, he's worked closely with law enforcement to break up criminal gangs like MS-13. He's now in a terrific fight against the Mexican cartels who commit an estimated 150,000 murders at our Southern Border each year.
President Trump continues to call out politicians for their corruption and foolish polities that do grave injustice to small business and private job creation, especially the inner cities.
Mark Twain also had a strong mind to fight injustice, and he fought using his skill as a writer to put a spotlight on humanity's corruption and sins.
He lived through a period of American history when slavery was an accepted social custom. And after the Civil War, Twain wrote a short story titled, A True Story, Word for Word as I Heard It.
The story is a moving first-person account by a former black slave woman who was outwardly cheerful, but harbored a deep sense of injustice when her young son was taken away from her, and sold to another family.
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Another powerful story about injustice is A Dog's Tale. What's special here is the story is told through the voice of the dog who narrates about life.
Incidentally, Twain was a big fan of cats and once wrote: "When a man loves cats, I am his friend and comrade without further introduction."
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Not in every case, apparently - or after two decades, Id be a genius at it.conservatism_IS_compassion - Since Feb 27, 1999
Funny, I have had Germans describe the sound of American English, as opposed to English English, much the same, as though we have no inflection in our voice whatsoever. I usually inform my German friends that it is for the same reason that they talk funny, they have no idea where to put the accent.
Thank you for commenting on the post, it is one of which I am very proud but I am curious to know how you ran across it eight months after the fact?
Heh, I do believe it was a “belated” post from Freeper Conservatism_is_Compassion who was discussing in post #35 how he has an inbred bias against posts that are presented in a fancy format and how he is more interested in the content...which I agree with, except we all know that presentation counts too! (I think of how useless it is to read a block of text from a post where someone may have introduced a single HTML tag somewhere and forgot about it)
While I was reading it, I saw your post, and did not realize that the thread was older. (I had a similar disorienting experience from a post several years ago that invited a post from someone else to me in much the same fashion!)
I always read your posts when I see them NB. I find your perspectives presented to be just a little angled from what we are accustomed to see here on FR, and in a good way.
Anyway, hope all is well in your corner of the woods...:)
BookMark
Today the sheltering in place requirements have been loosened and vehicular as well as pedestrian traffic has increased noticeably. Facemasks are now apparent.
Always sensitive to Marxism masquerading as political correctness, I observed throughout the time that Germany was more fully shut down that bicycles were still very much in evidence on the roads but golf courses were and still are shut. I recall when we were building a golf course here we had trouble getting zoning approval because it was regarded as an upper-class activity but walking and bicycling are very much approved of by the greens. Even then class consciousness was part of green ideology.
As a not so innocent conservative abroad, I am curious to see what emerges in the marketplace and the workplace in the wake of this virus.
Hoo boy, that does remind me of this graphic from a Saturday Evening Post (I think) article back in the 1940's from Hayek's The Road To Serfdom:
Thanks for the ping back to this great thread, c_I_c. Tremendous posters here.
let it rip
Way more often than not, that’s me. I’m old. I was going to attach Phil Collins “I don’t care anymore” music to my post here. Instead I’ll leave everyone with this...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hw_6kRiNF28
Respect and love
The authors 9
Foreword by Edwin J. Feulner Jr 11
Introduction: Hayek, Fisher and The Road to Serfdom by John Blundell 14
Preface to the Readers Digest condensed version of The Road to Serfdom 26
Summary 27
The Road to Serfdom (condensed version) 31
Planning and power 32
Background to danger 34
The liberal way of planning 37
The great utopia 39
Why the worst get on top 43
Planning vs. the Rule of Law 49
Is planning inevitable? 51
Can planning free us from care? 53
Two kinds of security 58
Towards a better world 62
The Road to Serfdom in cartoons 63
About the IEA 82
Readers' Digest Condensed Version of the Road to Serfdom (in PDF format)
(Your particular cartoon frame, page 80)
Dang it, kind of scary to read, now that I think of it.
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