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Our Jesse
The American Spectator ^ | 8/11/2005 | R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr.

Posted on 08/12/2005 4:18:50 PM PDT by jla


   


Our Jesse

By

Published 8/11/2005 12:07:53 AM

WASHINGTON -- I have been reading an advance copy of memoirs written by Jesse Helms, the retired North Carolina senator who braved the liberals' indignation to create the politics that now prevails on Capitol Hill and in the White House, namely, modern American conservatism. Helms did not do this alone, and arguably he was only a member of the first-string team whose quarterback was Ronald Reagan. Yet Helms was very important, particularly on the social values issues that average Americans now deem so compelling. His memoir, Here's Where I Stand (Random House), is a very good refresher course on how America moved from the dreary, futile governance of Jimmy Carter to the present vigor of a proud, can-do America.

Helms writes in straightforward prose from a foundation of beliefs that are solidly conservative. He tells a good story. In reading Here's Where I Stand I have not been able to slay the fear that when this book comes out on August 30 the dominant liberal culture, the Kultursmog, is going to rain down on him. It will malign his motives and values and belittle his achievements. What will be left is another grotesque image of the conservative public figure: a bigoted, small-minded, not very intelligent, provincial. And so Jesse Helms will be interred in the liberals' burial ground along with Ronald Reagan, Richard Nixon, and all the other political leaders they have opposed. Across the street is the liberal museum of leadership. Franklin Roosevelt is there with all his famous successors, John Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and various of Helms's colleagues from the Senate: Teddy Kennedy or his sidekick Christopher Dodd -- the blood runs thin. Strangely Lyndon Johnson is hardly visible.

The Kultursmog has been writing American history for us for decades. Review it for yourself. It contains no admirable or impressive conservatives. Yet here we are in 2005 with much of the country governed by conservatives and conservative values. No wonder the liberals are so perplexed and angry. They are a strange band of rastaquoueres living in what for them is a strange land. Nonetheless they still have the capacity, owing to their hold on the culture's centers of influence, to belittle those whom they do not like, and to present them as grotesqueries. Watch the liberals go to work over the next few weeks on President George W. Bush's perfectly sensible Supreme Court nominee, John Roberts. This week one of their leading polluters, NARAL Pro-Choice America, is airing fraudulent television advertisements presenting Roberts, when he was deputy solicitor general during the presidency of George H. W. Bush, as a supporter of "violent fringe groups and a convicted clinic bomber." Well, as memoirist Helms says of so many of the deceits he had to deal with, horsefeathers.

In Here's Where I Stand Helms chronicles reminiscences of scores of friends, Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Reagan, and his great friend Lady Thatcher. At the end of the senator's long career a frail but spirited Lady Thatcher came to the dedication of his Helms Center in rural North Carolina. She stayed for the entire three-day ceremony. She knew she was with friends. Helms also remembers those with whom he has disagreed. That would be every liberal Democrat from the past thirty years. Unfortunately he is too much the gentleman to pass on a bad word about any of them. Even Boy Clinton gets a polite send off.

There are two topics on which Helms is particularly worth reading, race relations and the United Nations. On race relations he manfully comes out and makes the case for states' rights and the integration that he seems to think could have been worked out in the last quarter of the 20th century without heavy-handed federal involvement. I am not sure his optimism is warranted. The denial of constitutional freedoms had been suffered by blacks for a long time. A jolt of federal power did the trick. The extension of federal power into areas not recognized by generations of Americans (and not always salutary) now seems to be receding. Blacks have their rights, and with the exception of affirmative action's enduring use the constitutional balance seems to be remerging. I accept Helms's insistence that he favored equal rights. I just doubt his approach would have worked.

On the United Nations he has my vote every time. Wherever he mentions that arrogant corrupt organization he is on the money. At the very end of his memoir he reprints his very compelling speech to the United Nations as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. There he notified the assembled crooks and agents of tyranny that American sovereignty cannot be usurped. It is dependent of the "consent of the American people." He reminds them of the dreadful job they have done as peacekeepers and conflict managers. And he urges an end to corruption.

Bearing in mind that this past week saw the first conviction of a UN oil-for-food crook in what is the largest fraud case in world history, I think we can conclude that old Senator Helms' memoir makes for timely reading. Pre-order now on Amazon.


R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. is founder and editor in chief of The American Spectator, a contributing editor to the New York Sun, and an adjunct scholar at the Hudson Institute. His most recent book is Madame Hillary: The Dark Road to the White House (Regnery Publishing).


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: bookreview; hereswhereistand; jessehelms; memoir
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The American Spectator's laudable, and eloquently verbose, R. Emmett Tyrrell writes a very good review of the memoirs of a true conservative and unabashed American, the Honorable Jesse Helms.
1 posted on 08/12/2005 4:18:50 PM PDT by jla
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To: jla

Jesse Helms is truly racist scum and I will never spend a dime to make him richer no matter where we agree on other issues.


2 posted on 08/12/2005 4:23:04 PM PDT by youthgonewild
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To: Mia T; FBD; Gipper08; GipperGal
Jesse Helms supported Ronald Reagan in '76, despite the know-it-all's grief over the fact that these conservatives would dare challenge the status quo of the G.O.P.
3 posted on 08/12/2005 4:23:24 PM PDT by jla
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To: jla

Whenever I saw or heard Jesse Helms, I could always hear the theme from "Deliverence" playing in the background.


4 posted on 08/12/2005 4:25:25 PM PDT by Clemenza (Intelligent Design Isn't Very Intelligent)
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To: youthgonewild; mhking; Constitution Day; Old Sarge; Zavien Doombringer; dighton; Poohbah; ...

Check out this n00b, gang. My sniffer's goin' off. He also insulted Strom on another thread.


5 posted on 08/12/2005 4:26:50 PM PDT by TheBigB (Gum would be perfection!)
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To: youthgonewild
Awww, go ahead, man! Don't hold back. Tell us how you really feel.
6 posted on 08/12/2005 4:26:59 PM PDT by mcg1969
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To: TheBigB
Indeed. Check out this morsel of his:
I think also Republicans like Bush should stop winning primary elections by accusing the opponent of fathering a mullato child (his opponent was McCain in SC).

7 posted on 08/12/2005 4:29:06 PM PDT by mcg1969
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To: mcg1969
Indeed. Check out this morsel of his: I think also Republicans like Bush should stop winning primary elections by accusing the opponent of fathering a mullato child (his opponent was McCain in SC).

That one is taken out of context, I said McCain should be attacked on his other issue stances. I do however stand by my statement that Jesse Helms is racist scum. The man voted against a nonbinding resolution opposing apartheid in South Africa. Conservatives oppose apartheid, Jesse Helms is just a weasely racist demagogue.

8 posted on 08/12/2005 4:34:22 PM PDT by youthgonewild
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To: Clemenza

"Whenever I saw or heard Jesse Helms, I could always hear the theme from "Deliverence" playing in the background."

I wouldn't feel quite so smug, being unable to spell "deliverance," if I were you.


9 posted on 08/12/2005 4:41:49 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry (Esse Quam Videre)
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To: jla

Jesse Helms, a genuine conservative. Where did they go? Where are the Jesse Helms of today? We sorely need them.

On his stand for the sovereignty of the US and against the UN, he gets top billing as a hero...in my opinion.

Some despise him because of his accent, of course it was southern, he is from North Carolina, for heavens sake. Some try to smear him as racist. Being southern does not automatically make one a racist. He was not.


10 posted on 08/12/2005 4:42:37 PM PDT by sasportas
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To: RegulatorCountry

I've never claimed to be an excellent speller. I went to a Publik Skool ya know. Besides, who needs to spell when there is spell check?


11 posted on 08/12/2005 4:43:14 PM PDT by Clemenza (Intelligent Design Isn't Very Intelligent)
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To: youthgonewild
"Jesse Helms is truly racist scum and I will never spend a dime to make him richer no matter where we agree on other issues."

Then I'll order two of his books and give one to someone who's not so young or maybe just not so ignorant, historically.

 

12 posted on 08/12/2005 4:43:52 PM PDT by Shamrock-DW
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To: youthgonewild

"The man voted against a nonbinding resolution opposing apartheid in South Africa"

There were reasons other than race. What do you know about the ANC? Not much, I'd say.


13 posted on 08/12/2005 4:44:14 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry (Esse Quam Videre)
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To: youthgonewild

Let me guess...you were "educated" in a left wing indocrination center (that's public school to you).


14 posted on 08/12/2005 4:47:19 PM PDT by Fledermaus (I wish those on the Left would just do us all a favor and take themselves out of their misery.)
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To: RegulatorCountry

No, he's an indoctrinated fool in his early 20's if you believe his profile. From Maryland to boot.


15 posted on 08/12/2005 4:49:26 PM PDT by Fledermaus (I wish those on the Left would just do us all a favor and take themselves out of their misery.)
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To: Clemenza

"Besides, who needs to spell when there is spell check?"

Well, then... I'd suggest using it, if you're going to cast aspersions upon the intelligence of another, LOL.


16 posted on 08/12/2005 4:51:41 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry (Esse Quam Videre)
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To: youthgonewild

"Jesse Helms is just a weasely racist demagogue."

How do you "feel" about Robert Byrd?


17 posted on 08/12/2005 4:54:50 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry (Esse Quam Videre)
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To: youthgonewild; Zavien Doombringer; 4mycountry; Constitution Day; VRWCmember; Poohbah; dighton; ...

My eyebrow just went up questioningly...

Youngster, would you care to elaborate? I'm no fan of Helms', but your blanket dismissal, especially on the heels of your statements regarding Thurmond (whose past sins were attoned for before his death) are somewhat....questionable...

18 posted on 08/12/2005 4:55:07 PM PDT by mhking (The world needs a wake up call gentlemen...we're gonna phone it in.)
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To: jla

Mr. Helms was a courageous voice in the wilderness during bleak times. We owe much to him.


19 posted on 08/12/2005 5:23:25 PM PDT by Engraved-on-His-hands
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To: Shamrock-DW
Then I'll order two of his books and give one to someone who's not so young or maybe just not so ignorant, historically.

The same thought crossed my mind.

20 posted on 08/12/2005 5:24:28 PM PDT by jla
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