Posted on 02/25/2002 10:50:03 AM PST by NormsRevenge
William Manchester, described by the Palm Beach Post as "a historian with [a) giant reputation for impeccable research and clear thinking" sounds a lot like Rush Limbaugh these days instead of the author notorious for his ultra liberal views.
Interviewed by the Post about the current ACLU and allied leftist campaigns to banish George Washington's portrait from school rooms, Manchester thunders "Oh, God, hang the portrait." during a phone interview.
Responding to the news that the American Civil Liberties Union says hanging the portrait amounts to forced patriotism the old liberal revealed that "I ceased my affiliation with them a few years ago. "It's all about guilt now. Guilt. Victims and guilt."
Asked to explain, Manchester said he didn't know why that's so. "But we're supposed to feel guilt about things that happened or are said to have happened in the faraway past. Do you know what George Washington's real sin is for these people? He was a white, Anglo-Saxon Protestant. Period. He doesn't fit in with today's prescribed correctness. Hang the portrait. Maybe some child will see it and ask a teacher, `Who's that?' And then that child might just get a history lesson."
When asked how important history is he said "A fundamental premise for a functioning democracy is that the citizens will be literate enough, educated enough to see through the bull, know what's good for the democracy and what's dangerous. Washington embodied that premise, championed it.
"If you let education slide in schools and in the home, if your citizens are not aware of their own history, you open the door for self-appointed arbiters of truth," he warned. "And their so-called truths may not be true at all. It's a bad thing. The real question here is: Are our children learning enough history in school? I think not.
"But," he added "it must be good history, real history. Bad enough we don't teach more about World War II in our schools, for 55 years the Japanese have gotten away with teaching a false history of the war in their schools." Manchester, an ex-Marine wounded in action by the Japanese on Guadalcanal in WW II added "To catch the lie you have to be educated."
Noting that "Manchester is an old FDR liberal, adviser to the Kennedys, loather of Richard Nixon," the Post said that he has never ducked controversy, and "actually wrote a book of essays titled Controversy. His other works included almost 20 other books about JFK, Churchill, Douglas MacArthur, the Krupp family, the Pacific theater in World War II, H.L. Mencken.
"But, wrote the obviously shocked and notriously liberal Post, "he's sounding as if maybe Rush Limbaugh sneaked into his house and purloined the phone."
"Truth trumps politics, or should," he says. "Some who call themselves liberals are not liberal thinkers. History has been appropriated, stolen. Hanging a portrait of George Washington shouldn't involve politics, guilt, revisionism. You look at the man and judge him worthy or not. Who's more worthy than Washington? Who else was there? Hang the portrait."
And while you're at it, he seems to be saying, hang PC liberalism along with it.
I'm sorry, I'm not buying this assessment of Manchester. He probably was a Democrat like everyone else was back in the 40s, 50s and 60s. That doesn't make him a leftist. Reagan was a democrat in there too.
Oh, I don't know -- the first two volumes of his biography of Churchill mark him as a pretty good historian, regardless of his personal views.
No surprise that when the became civilians they thought the Feds could solve almost any problem.
The term liberal is not a perjorative to me. It describes an old and honorable political philosophy which I do not happen to share. The term leftist, to me, is the perjorative, because that describes a mindset that is inherently destructive to this country and its values.
His old WASP habits are particularly evident in his superb biography of Churchill (rabid Anglophilia) and his so-so book on Krupp (rabid Germanophobia).
His "Goodbye Darkness" is one of the best US war memoirs ever written.
...Semper fi!
I can understand the above, wht about those of us that were poor through circumstance.
In the Intermountian West the depression hit about four years before the general depression, noone ever felt poor. The attude was, things happen we are still together.
I have never been able to understand obsession of people with the deprression, my Grandmothers Family lost all in the panic of 1892 and we survived, there were 20 children, noone said it is all over I'm going to die..
Losing Our HistoryIdeology trumps truth.
January 17, 2002 8:25 a.m.
Has Brooklyn gone nuts? First there was the decision of the city's fire-department leadership to place a politically correct FDNY memorial statue outside department headquarters in downtown Brooklyn. Now the newly elected Brooklyn borough president, one Marty Markowitz, tells the New York Post that he's going to take down the portrait of George Washington that hangs in his Borough Hall office.
Markowitz, a Democrat, told the Post that he would probably replace the image of the "old white man" --- Markowitz's phrase for the Father of Our Country --- with a portrait of a black or a woman.
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