Posted on 05/04/2009 9:04:03 AM PDT by Conservative Coulter Fan
Jack Kemp passed away this weekend, of cancer at age seventy-three. Former vice-presidential candidate, congressman, and Housing secretary, he was the most improbable and the most important hero of the Reagan Revolution after the Gipper himself. Without Jacks true-believers passion for tax cuts as a remedy for the stagflation of the 1970s, Reagan would not have staked his presidency on an untested and controversial theory. His death should remind us how lucky we were to have leaders like Reagan and Kemp, and a political system that allowed improbable leadersan ex-actor and a retired quarterbackto appear at providential moments.
It was impossible to be cynical in Jacks vicinity. He radiated sincerity and optimism. Corny as it sounds, Jack was the real thing, an all-American true believer in this country and in the capacity of its people to overcome any obstacle once given the chance.
Jacks coach in matters of economics was a flamboyant Wall Street Journal editorialist, Jude Wanniski. In 1975, Jude published the first manifesto of what later become known as supply-side economics in Irving Kristols ideas journal, The Public Interest. Shortly afterward he met Kemp, then representing Buffalo in the House of Representatives after a decade as the star player for the Buffalo Bills. The rest is history. It was a marriage made in that low but solid heaven known as American politics. A devout Catholic, Jude was convinced that God had chosen him to bring prosperity to the oppressed masses of 1970s of America. Jack bragged that he had taken more showers with black guys than anyone in the U.S. Congress and, as a professional athlete, was the Republican least tainted by racism.
What attracted Jack Kemp to supply-side economics was the promise of advancement for ordinary people. At the end of a long cycle of economic expansion, it is easy to forget how it all began. Jack had been associated with future President Reagan since 1969, when he worked on the California governors staff in Sacramento. As a U.S. Congressman representing a working-class constituency in the traditionally Democratic city of Buffalo, Jack got elected on his sports-hero credentials. He passionately believed in individual opportunity and free markets, and he needed an argument to take to the union rank-and-file who made up the bulk of his districts voters. Supply-side economics, the premise that tax cuts and corresponding regulatory reform would unleash the creative energies of Americans, persuaded him, and he became its great missionary.
The transmission of ideas in the Reagan Revolution was one of the stranger developments in intellectual history. Robert Mundell, the Canadian economist who in 1999 would win the Nobel Prize, had already been chief economist of the International Monetary Fund and was teaching at the University of Chicago. Arthur Laffer (whose famous Laffer Curve would summarize supply-side economics) was Mundells colleague at Chicago. Mundell is an authentic genius who sported shoulder length prematurely gray hair, with Siamese-cat blue eyes that had an unnerving way of fixing on his conversation partner. The professionals in economics shunned him because his views were so novel as to threaten all their settled opinions.
Laffer translated Mundells insights into terms that Jude Wanniski could understand, and Jude then explained it all to Kemp. Through this game of telephone, there emerged the 1981 Kemp-Roth Tax Cuts, one of the few really decisive turning points in American economic history. And it was accomplished entirely outside the usual channels of policy transmission. There were no Wall Street gurus, no strings pulled by investment banks, no academic consensus, only a broken-down actor, a broken-down quarterback, an outsider of an economist, and a newsman with pronounced messianic tendencies.
Knowing the story in detail is one of the empirical observations that led me to conclude that there is a special providence for the United States. I was Jude Wanniskis business partner at a long-since-defunct consulting firm between 1988 and 1993, when the glory days of the Reagan reforms were long since past. I first met Jack during his tenure as Housing secretary in 1989, in Mexico City during an official visit. My job was to brief him on the Mexican economy and Mexican politics, which I did in two-minute segments during breaks in a Seattle Seahawks game. His son Jeff was playing quarterback that day, and Jack had no questions about priority.
Jack was a leader who loved his country and put it before personal gain. When he left office he had the equity in his house and not much else. But he had four children, including two sons who played professional football, and seventeen grandchildren. By the time I got to know him he was full time on the lecture circuit, putting his family finances in order before joining the Washington thinktank Empower America. He considered a run for president in 1996 but deferred to Steve Forbes, then running as the tax-cutting candidate. His outstanding career as a Republican leader was coming to an end, but what a glorious run it was.
A devout Christian, Jack made far more of a difference than an ex-quarterback with a physical education degree from Occidental College had a right to. He earned our gratitude not only for what he accomplished, but for what he proved about the character of the United States.
I have always thought of Jack Kemp as the first Secretary of HUD who wasn’t a crook.
Because of that Kemp was part of the problem..
Kemp was a coward for not using hyperbole in a hyperbolic situation..
Not using hyperbole in a hyperbolic situation is MISINFORMATION.. OR
Worse.. propaganda.. or agitprop..
Democrats have been taking over Washington D.C. for decades.. its not new..
Cowardly assessments(Kemp) of the situation aided the "espionage"..
I remember hearing about Jack Kemp walking out when Thomas DiLorenzo gave a talk on his book critical of Lincoln. I would call a lot of Democrats socialist...even FDR, Johnson, and now Obama are going to be the most noteable socialist presidents.
No democracy ever invented was democratic..
Democracys are always Oligarchys..
Mob Rule by mobsters.. always..
Thats why the American Constitution has NOWHERE in it the words democracy or democratic..
To be a democrat is to be a socialist supporting Mob Rule by mobsters.. ALWAYS
Rest In Peace, Jack Kemp, and prayers up for your loved ones.
One negative thing I remember about Kemp. When Pat Buchanan gace his culrure wars speech at the 1992 convention, the cameras showed Jack as very upset. Jack was emotionally committed to pro-life but unlike his economic views, they were not fixed in reason.
God receive his soul....
I hope someone who knows little about you calls you a coward and pisses on your corpse before your funeral.
If she does, she will be a RINO... and my cadaver may enjoy the view..
So you fantasize re a babe urinating on your corpse.
FR is not the forum for you.
LoL...
Let me know if you suspect you have another deep thought.
Agreed. Jack Kemp started Empower America with Bill Bennett; he was all about economic freedom. To pick out something about a person you disagree with and say such nasty things while his family is mourning is disgraceful.
And par for the course.
Amazing << Hear this. Feel this, and tell me that this isn't music.
Oh, dear...
I will follow you.. keep it clean this time.. potty mouth...
Not really. "Coward" is the wrong word. The guy had a pair on him.
I'll give you "mistaken" or maybe "wrongheaded", but the problem back then was, what the hell DO you do about a crooked press that's trying to screw you and help the other side?
They've been rotten for years, since the 1950's.
So what do you do? Get up and get all mad at the press people like Nixon did in 1962? That got him real far. He got elected in 1968, and in 1970, pissed at the Pentagon Papers treason, he tried to up the ante, and we all know how that turned out.
I remember a scene in the fall of 1970. My watch section and I had pieces of a New York Times spread out on our plotting tables and desks, members of the watch section taking a few minutes when time permitted to read the Sheehan stories as the Times committed serial espionage and treason against the United States. It was surreal: we were surrounded by equipment and reports classified "SECRET LIMDIS CANUS EYES ONLY" and "SECRET NOFORN" -- and the stuff in The New York Times was hotter than our hottest work products. Some of it included verbatim quotes, including headers, of CINCPACFLT cables classified "TOP SECRET" and higher, stuff that at one time was radiantly hot.
So what do you do with people like that? How do you fight that evil?
Jack Kemp was a good man and unlike the average politician, was good for his country. Piss on you.
A pair... you mean like when he buddied up with Jimmuh "the retard" Carter?.. more than once if I remember correctly..
Average..... meaning like Arlen Specter?..
Kemp was always looking for some good in your average democrat...
That was his problem.. he didnt know what/who he was dealing with..
like most republicans in D.C. and other places..
UnLESS they DO know and are complicit (like Arlen Specter, Snowe,Collins)..
Few republicans are "conservatives" at all...
On the other hand.. Could be... Kemp was as dumb as he looked..
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