Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

John Derbyshire: Seismic 79, The year the ice cracked.
NRO ^ | May 27, 2004 | John Derbyshire

Posted on 05/27/2004 6:55:48 AM PDT by Tolik

Anniversaries are, of course, of merely numerological significance. If God in His wisdom had given us six fingers on each hand instead of five, then we should have to wait 144 years to celebrate the centenary of a great man, and there would be 1,728 years in a millennium. As it is, we nod in perfunctory recognition as the tenth, 25th, 50th, or 100th anniversary of some momentous event passes by. There is no harm in this. It is good to cast a backward glance once in a while, and these numbers, though arbitrary, are convenient pegs on which to hang our remembrances.

A 25th anniversary has some slight extra significance, as 25 years make up more or less one human generation. In 25 years a new cohort of humanity is born, grows to maturity, and begins to accomplish things in the world. This is also about the period that a middle-aged person can look back over with complete understanding, having lived through it in full and worldly consciousness.

Let us look back 25 years from the present day, then, to 1979. I believe a case can be made — I am going to try to make it — that 1979 was a key year in modern history, the year a great logjam began to shift and break up.

The major events of that year can easily be listed:

Communist China and the U.S. established diplomatic relations, and Deng Xiaoping came visiting.

Iran underwent a revolution. The Shah left, Ayatollah Khomeini returned from 15 years of exile, and the U.S. embassy hostage crisis began.

Pope John Paul II visited Poland.

Margaret Thatcher was elected prime minister of the U.K.

The Carter presidency began its slow disintegration, and Ronald Reagan announced that he would be a candidate in the 1980 presidential election.

China invaded Vietnam, Vietnam invaded Cambodia, Russia invaded Afghanistan.

Every one of these events cast a long shadow forward through time. For example: China's Deng Xiaoping had already determined upon economic reform and put forward the slogan: "To get rich is glorious!" Others in his party still needed convincing, though. Deng's U.S. trip, and the TV broadcasts of it beamed back to China, opened the eyes of Deng's colleagues to the distance their country had fallen behind the West, and made the necessity of reform plain to all. Back home again, Deng launched the free-trading New Economic Zones. At the same time he cracked down savagely on those seeking political liberalization, crushing the Democracy Wall movement and jailing Wei Jingsheng, the highest-profile dissident, after a show trial. The main outlines of Chinese policy were thereby set for the rest of the century and beyond: verligte economics, verkrampte politics.

The Iranian revolution was, of course, an appalling disaster for that country. It was also a key factor in the implosion of the Carter presidency. In retrospect, it is hard not to feel sorry for Jimmy Carter. As often happens with failing projects — Herbert Hoover comes to mind — once the Fates had decided against him, they piled on, and misfortunes came thick and fast. The first were already showing up in 1979: the Three Mile Island catastrophe in March, the 24-percent OPEC price hikes in June, the resignation of Andrew Young in August. Then, at the end of the year, in quick succession came the Chrysler bailout, the takeover of our Teheran embassy, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

Carter's famous "malaise" speech of July 15 makes melancholy reading now. A clever and sincere man, filled with public spirit and the desire to do good, Carter had the misfortune to be president at time when his particular weaknesses were just those most disastrous to the nation and his plans. Abroad, amoral despots and madmen with bazaar-trading skill-sets behind their glittering eyes combined to make him look like a babe in the woods. At home, as David Frum chronicled in his book about the 1970s, Carter presided over a time when the great shifts of thought and behavior that the baby-boom rebels of the 1960s had pioneered — hedonism, anti-authoritarianism, "loathing" of the military, the obsession with equality and rights and "root causes" — had soaked deep into American life. Possibly the country was ungovernable by 1979. Certainly it is depressing to see an earnest man telling the nation plain truths that it did not (and, a cynic might add, still does not) care to hear:

What you see too often in Washington and elsewhere around the country is a system of government that seems incapable of action. You see a Congress twisted and pulled in every direction by hundreds of well financed and powerful special interests. You see every extreme position defended to the last vote, almost to the last breath by one unyielding group or another. You often see a balanced and a fair approach that demands sacrifice, a little sacrifice from everyone, abandoned like an orphan without support and without friends.

Tell it, preacher! But Carter's own faults — his naivety, feebleness of will, and obsession with detail — contributed much to the malaise he complained of. The year closed with an annual inflation rate of 11.3 percent, the highest in 30 years.

Of the three great figures who together took up arms against the negative trends of that time, the first had already mounted the world stage in 1979. In October of the previous year, Karol Wojtyla had been elected Pope at the comparatively young age of 58. A vigorous man of firmly conservative convictions, John Paul II swiftly asserted his church's role in world affairs, mediating a dispute between Argentina and Chile, receiving the Soviet Foreign Minister in audience, and then, in June of 1979, paying the first-ever Papal visit to a Communist country, his own native Poland. Those nine days in Poland changed everything. From them came the rise of the "Solidarity" workers' movement the following year, and from that, in ever swifter steps, the collapse of Communism in Europe. As Mikhail Gorbachev himself ruefully testified: "It would have been impossible without the Pope."

The second of those three world-changing figures appeared on May 4 of that pivotal year. I was living in England at that time. Late in January I had left the country to visit friends in Hong Kong. The leaving, in bitterly cold weather, had itself been something of a trial. This was Britain's "winter of discontent," when the country was plagued by strikes, inflation, and economic mismanagement. The teams responsible for de-icing the runways were in some sort of dispute with the management of Gatwick airport, and I was stuck in the departure lounge all night with several dozen angry travelers. When we got into the air at last, I remember recalling an observation of Tim Garton Ash's, that when a plane outward bound from the U.S.S.R. crossed the Iron Curtain into the free world, the pilot would sometimes announce the fact, and the passengers would burst into applause. I felt inclined to do the same as the coast of late-socialist Britain passed beneath and behind us.

I came back three months later just in time to see Margaret Thatcher's party elected into government. It was actually at the home of some left-wing friends that I watched the election coverage on TV. My friends were in a sour mood, of course, and I felt vaguely sorry for them. I had not paid much attention to the campaign, being out of the country for its entire duration; but when I saw the news clips the next day of Mrs. Thatcher coming to Downing Street from the Palace, speaking plain clear words to a confused and unhappy nation, I knew that something great and good was in the air, that some corner had been turned. The words she spoke were actually, she told us, from St. Francis of Assisi: "Where there is discord, may we bring harmony. Where there is error, may we bring truth. Where there is doubt, may we bring faith. And where there is despair, may we bring hope."

My instinct was correct. In Britain, and soon in the world, a great reaction had commenced. On November 13, in the Grand Ballroom of the New York Hilton, Ronald Reagan announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in yet more plain, inspiring words: "A troubled and afflicted mankind looks to us, pleading for us to keep our rendezvous with destiny... [W]e will uphold the principles of self-reliance, self-discipline, morality, and — above all — responsible liberty for every individual."

The miserable shuffling retreat had been stopped. Western civilization had turned to face its enemies, both those inside the walls and those without. The war that then commenced is not yet over. Perhaps it never will be; but it was in 1979 that we got our nerve back, picked up our discarded weapons again, and resolved to fight. This was the year it all changed, the year the ice cracked.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 1979; carter; johnderbyshire; johnpaulii; killerrabbit; margaretthatcher; reagan
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-43 next last

1 posted on 05/27/2004 6:55:49 AM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Lando Lincoln; quidnunc; .cnI redruM; Valin; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...
Food for thoughts!

Interesting article PING.

2 posted on 05/27/2004 6:57:34 AM PDT by Tolik
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
'79 was the year it got so bad that we realized we might not win. The US election of 1980 reminds of the evocative scene in LOTR:The Two Towers where Theodan, King of Rohan throws Grima Wormtongue (or in our case Carter Goobertongue) out of office and casts of his malaise. Yes, 1979 and I'd add 1980, were great years in the history of the world. There is something awesome about watching a failed group of people pull their heads out of their 4th points of contact and kick it in gear.
3 posted on 05/27/2004 7:04:55 AM PDT by .cnI redruM (There can be no détente with the theocracy.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
"In retrospect, it is hard not to feel sorry for Jimmy Carter."

Given his recent behavior,I feel no pity for that clown.

If only that Killer Rabbit had scared some sense into him.


4 posted on 05/27/2004 7:14:14 AM PDT by Redcoat LI (You Can Trust Me , I'm Not Like The Others.....)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Good catch. One of my occasional reflections when things start looking too hopeless is that when I left college, we assumed the permanence of the Soviet empire and the nuclear stalemate, the intractibility of inflation, the impossibility of balancing the budget or reforming the welfare system, and the superiority of the Japanese economic model.

I will take our problems today over those any time. I also think, a decade from now, we will have dramatically expanded school choice and a reformed K-12 system, and the shift to an investment component in Social Security will be underway. If we could just add health care and tax reform, I'd be feeling pretty good about my generation's political track record.

5 posted on 05/27/2004 7:15:27 AM PDT by sphinx
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: .cnI redruM




'79 was the year it got so bad that we realized we might not win.

Yeah, but in '79 Disco peaked and began it's swift decline.

'79 was also the Steel Curtain's last Super Bowl season, and Joe Montana was drafted by the 49ers.

Hope was in the air.


6 posted on 05/27/2004 7:17:10 AM PDT by Sabertooth (Mohammed wrote: "Cut off their heads, and cut off the tips of their fingers." (Sura 8:12))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
If God in His wisdom had given us six fingers on each hand instead of five, then we should have to wait 144 years to celebrate the centenary of a great man

six fingers is the dominant gene - five is the recessive - least thats what they taught us in High School

7 posted on 05/27/2004 7:20:30 AM PDT by Revelation 911
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Derb bump...


8 posted on 05/27/2004 7:22:09 AM PDT by Lyford
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sabertooth; All
And any mention of 1979 would be incomplete without the list of No. 1 songs from that fateful year, so here we go:|

No. 1 Hits of 1979

1 MY SHARONA - The Knack

2 HEART OF GLASS - Blondie

3 LE FREAK - Chic

4 I WILL SURVIVE - Gloria Gaynor

5 SUNDAY GIRL - Blondie

6 DA YA THINK I'M SEXY? - Rod Stewart

7 LAY YOUR LOVE ON ME - Racey

8 Y.M.C.A. - Village People

9 BAD GIRLS - Donna Summer

10 VIDEO KILLED THE RADIO STAR - The Buggles

9 posted on 05/27/2004 7:27:15 AM PDT by nwrep
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Redcoat LI
LOL!!!

I do need to warn you. The Jimmah Dum-Dum Deck is only permissible in a game of Dumb-Axe The Gathering. MTG rules do not support decks with a negative point value.
10 posted on 05/27/2004 7:27:48 AM PDT by .cnI redruM (There can be no détente with the theocracy.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Tolik; Sabertooth

Let us not forget the Miracle on Ice and the thunderous chanting of "USA, USA, USA" as a bunch of college kids crushed the Russians into the boardsin '80. That, coupled with the Iranians giving back the hostages ASAP once Reagan took office, were my first stirrings of patriotism as a young lad.


11 posted on 05/27/2004 7:30:39 AM PDT by MattinNJ (America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our people.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik
Interesting post.

Sort of along the same lines, I've been thinking about the other side of this -- the rise of the Great Villains. Who is the enemy, and when will they really make themselves known?

I'm thinking in particular of the Nazis and Communists -- thoroughly brutal and psychotic organizations, and you wonder how people could possibly allow them into power. The question I have is: for the people (our parents and grandparents) who eventually had to face these enemies, what was it like to see them gain power, and at what point did they figure out they'd have to fight and win?

Will the next Great Villain be Islamic? Will it be Chinese? How does one tell?

12 posted on 05/27/2004 7:35:00 AM PDT by r9etb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Tolik

One thing irks me about this article: Calling Carter sincere. Carter is a "Christian" baby-butcher. He was the first really aggressive pro-abortion President. His judicial and other appointments were made with a rigid pro-abortion litmus test. Judicial appointees were asked point-blank: "How will you rule in abortion cases?" And his lies. Check out George Will's columns from the campaign of 1980 for an endless catalogue of Carter's gross lies.


13 posted on 05/27/2004 7:35:44 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sabertooth
Yeah, but in '79 Disco peaked and began it's swift decline.

July 12, 1979 - Disco Demolition Night.

14 posted on 05/27/2004 7:38:34 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Teach a Democrat to fish and he will curse you for not just giving him the fish.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Tolik; DoctorZIn; nuconvert; F14 Pilot; faludeh_shirazi; knighthawk
Back home again, Deng launched the free-trading New Economic Zones.

Spent some time in one of those zones, Shenzhen, a few years ago. 25 years ago it was nothing. Now it's a more modern-looking city than any I've seen.

The Iranian revolution was, of course, an appalling disaster for that country. It was also a key factor in the implosion of the Carter presidency. In retrospect, it is hard not to feel sorry for Jimmy Carter.

I think there are some FReepers here who have posted material that has a very different take on Carter -- that his recent behavior is much more consistent with what he really was, as opposed to the image he projected, back then.

15 posted on 05/27/2004 7:40:59 AM PDT by sionnsar (http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com/ ||| sionnsar: the part of the bagpipe where the melody comes out)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: sionnsar

"In retrospect, it is hard not to feel sorry for Jimmy Carter"

??I have NO Problem not only NOT feeling sorry for him, but BLAMING him for Iran's situation and therefore OUR situation Now.


16 posted on 05/27/2004 7:44:14 AM PDT by nuconvert ("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( Azadi baraye Iran)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: sionnsar

Take a look at this one please!

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1143077/posts


17 posted on 05/27/2004 7:56:09 AM PDT by F14 Pilot (John ''Fedayeen" sKerry - the Mullahs' regime candidate)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: nwrep; nuconvert

You forgot The Wall by PINK FLOYD!


18 posted on 05/27/2004 7:57:25 AM PDT by F14 Pilot (John ''Fedayeen" sKerry - the Mullahs' regime candidate)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: nwrep

WoW.....I forgot what a BAD year for music that was!


19 posted on 05/27/2004 7:59:43 AM PDT by nuconvert ("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( Azadi baraye Iran)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Tolik

"...Carter had the misfortune to be president at time when his particular weaknesses were just those most disastrous to the nation and his plans"

This makes it sound like Carter was just unlucky. Carter was weak, it was obvious to our enemies and they took advantage of it. It wouldn't have made a difference on matter when he was president, the outcome would have been the same. This was confirmed when a STRONG president Reagan) was elected and our enemies immediately began to retreat.

BC, before Klinton, Carter was thought to be a good man who was a bad president. He kept his mouth shut, built houses and was generally harmeless. During the KKKlinton years Jimma decided to showcase his political idiocy and anti-americanism, thereby losing any respect he may have earned.


20 posted on 05/27/2004 8:22:57 AM PDT by BadAndy (Specializing in unnecessarily harsh comments.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-43 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson