Posted on 03/02/2017 9:52:45 AM PST by gattaca
Former President Barack Obama was named Thursday as the winner of the 2017 John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage award.
The John F. Kennedy Library Foundation said Mr. Obama is being honored for his enduring commitment to democratic ideals and elevating the standard of political courage in a new century.
Caroline Kennedy, daughter of the late president, and her son, Jack Schlossberg, will present Mr. Obama with the award on May 7 in Boston.
Mr. Obama said on Twitter that he is humbled to be recognized by a family with a legacy of service.
The foundation said Mr. Obamas presidency consistently reflected in so many ways, big and small, the definition of courage cited by JFK in his 1957 book, Profiles in Courage.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
He’s getting the Profiles In Courage award for running for president as a black man while Robert Byrd was the “Dean” of the Senate.
About the book the award is named for as per wiki.
Authorship controversy[edit]
Questions have been raised about how much of the book was actually written by Kennedy and how much by his research assistants. On December 7, 1957,[4] journalist Drew Pearson appeared as a guest on The Mike Wallace Interview and made the following claim live on air: “John F. Kennedy is the only man in history that I know who won a Pulitzer Prize for a book that was ghostwritten for him.”[5] Wallace replied “You know for a fact, Drew, that the book Profiles in Courage was written for Senator Kennedy ... by someone else?” Pearson responded that he did, and that Kennedy speechwriter Ted Sorensen actually wrote the book. Wallace responded: “And Kennedy accepted a Pulitzer Prize for it? And he never acknowledged the fact?” Pearson replied: “No, he has not. You know, there’s a little wisecrack around the Senate about Jack ... some of his colleagues say, ‘Jack, I wish you had a little less profile and more courage.’”[5]
It was later reported that the statement “I wish that Kennedy had a little less profile and more courage” was actually made by former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.[6]
Joseph P. Kennedy saw the broadcast, then called his lawyer, Clark Clifford, yelling: “Sue the bastards for fifty million dollars!”[5] Soon Clifford and Robert Kennedy showed up at ABC and told executives that the Kennedys would sue unless the network issued a full retraction and apology. Mike Wallace and Drew Pearson insisted that the story was true and refused to back off. Nevertheless, ABC made the retraction and apology, which made Wallace furious.[5]
According to The Straight Dope, years later historian Herbert Parmet analyzed the text of Profiles in Courage and wrote in his book Jack: The Struggles of John F. Kennedy (1980) that although Kennedy did oversee the production and provided for the direction and message of the book, it was clearly Sorensen who provided most of the work that went into the end product.[7] The thematic essays that comprise the first and last chapters “may be viewed largely as [Kennedy’s] own work”, however.[3]:401
In addition to Kennedys speechwriter Sorensen, Jacqueline Kennedy recruited her history instructor from Georgetown University, Jules Davids, to work on the project. Davids told a Kennedy biographer that he and Sorensen had researched and written drafts of most of the book. Kennedy’s handwritten notes, which Senator Kennedy showed to reporters to prove his authorship, are now in the Kennedy Library, but are mostly preliminary notes about John Quincy Adams, a particular interest of Kennedy’s, and are not a readable draft of the chapter on Adams. During the six-month period when the book was being written, Sorensen worked full-time on the project, sometimes twelve-hour days; Kennedy spent most of the same period travelling, campaigning, or hospitalized. Kennedys preserved notes show that he kept up with the books progress, but historian Garry Wills remarked that Kennedys notes contain no draft of any stage of the manuscript, or of any substantial part of it.[8]
In May 2008 Sorensen said, according to Sorensen’s autobiography, Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History, he wrote a first draft of most of the chapters of Profiles in Courage and helped choose the words of many of its sentences.[9][10] Sorensen also said, in his autobiography: “While in Washington, I received from Florida almost daily instructions and requests by letter and telephone books to send, memoranda to draft, sources to check, materials to assemble, and Dictaphone drafts or revisions of early chapters.” (Sorensen, p. 146) Sorensen wrote that Kennedy “worked particularly hard and long on the first and last chapters, setting the tone and philosophy of the book”. JFK “publicly acknowledged in his introduction to the book my extensive role in its composition” (p. 147) Sorensen claimed that in May 1957, Kennedy “unexpectedly and generously offered, and I happily accepted, a sum to be spread over several years, that I regarded as more than fair” for his work on the book. Indeed, this supported a long-standing recognition of the collaborative effort that Kennedy and Sorensen had developed since 1953.
Accuracy[edit]
David O. Stewart has questioned the accuracy of the book’s chapter on the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. Of Johnson’s defenders in the Senate, Profiles in Courage stated that “Not a single one of them escaped the terrible torture of vicious criticism engendered by their vote to acquit.” However, Stewart wrote of the supposed suffering: “It is a myth, ...” and “None was a victim of postimpeachment retribution. Indeed, their careers were not wildly different from those of the thirty-five senators who voted to convict Andrew Johnson ...”[11] However, Ross lost his bid for re-election two years after casting the vote acquitting Johnson. There is also evidence that Edmund Ross was bribed to vote for Johnson’s acquittal,[12] which is not mentioned in Profiles in Courage.
Kennedy also praised Lucius Lamar, who, while working in the public eye towards reconciliation, privately was an instigator of growing racial agitation.[13] In the profile of Lamar, Kennedy had also included a single paragraph condemning Adelbert Ames, the Maine-born governor of Mississippi from 1873 to 1876, as an opportunistic Carpetbagger whose administration was “sustained and nourished by Federal bayonets”. Ames’ daughter, Blanche Ames Ames, was outraged, and regularly wrote to Kennedy for years afterward in protest, demanding a retraction of the “defamatory insinuations” and accused him of pandering to Southern readers.[14] The letter-writing continued even after Kennedy had been elected to the Presidency; this prompted Kennedy to turn to George Plimpton, Blanche’s grandson and a classmate of Robert F. Kennedy at Harvard, asking him if he could get his grandmother to cease and desist, claiming her letters were interfering with government business. Blanche Ames Ames would eventually publish her own biography of her father in 1964.[15]
Oh puke.
If he was brave he would’ve come out during his first term
great, and Obama can place it right next to the other award Obama equally earned... his nobel peace prize!
Appointed the head voter and presenter as ambassador to Japan. One phony gesture deserves another.
Snuck in Reggie Love while Michelle was in the next room?
The moral, spiritual, and mental vacuousness of the left knows no bounds.
What has Obama ever done that was courageous?”
...used an entire can of Raid on a spider.
What a Bloody travesty to the memory of JFK.
Say what you want about JFK but he was never the Liberal that the Myth makers would like us to believe. Also at least he was a Patriot and fought in W.W.II, unlike the Scum now that makes up the Democrat Party. Different Era.
Obama on his best day could not Lick JFK’S shoes clean.
Liberals back in JFK’s time might have been “conservative” by today’s standards, but they would have continued to move further Left over time as it became more politically acceptable to do so, no doubt JFK would have moved Left right with them.
“What has Obama ever done that was courageous?”
Won a Nobel Prize for doing nothing, and accepting it without a hint of irony.
That takes some real balls.
Paying him back for being appointed ambassador to Japan.
He won the Nobel Prize for not having an “R” next to his name.
“The John F. Kennedy Library Foundation said Mr. Obama is being honored for his enduring commitment to democratic ideals....
Isnt this the guy who was overturned by the courts for acting unconstitutionally a time or two?
Junky Industrial Waste Puke!
Obama appoints Caroline Kennedy Ambassador to Japan ... where at least initially an experienced state department type was tasked with guiding her thru the initial months. This, as a result of the state department staff in Japan sensing she was in way over her head. This was an ambassadorship that couldn't be allowed to fail due to incompetence.
Now Obama gets his payback ... it's the democ'rat way.
Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what your country can do for you.
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