Posted on 11/21/2002 9:14:27 PM PST by Pokey78
Edited on 04/23/2004 12:05:03 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The big things to say about the recent JFK allegations--amazing, isn't it, that "recent JFK allegations" is still an operative phrase in 2002?--are obvious.
But other thoughts arise. When the brilliant journalist Dorothy Thompson watched JFK's inauguration she--a longtime liberal and FDR supporter--fretted to a friend: "There's something weak and neurotic about that young man." She knew his story, knew of the charming monster of a father who was an isolationist in foreign affairs and a constant interventionist in all other spheres, especially his family. In Clark Clifford's memoirs, the old Democratic Party warhorse-in-lawyer's-pinstripes wrote of his first meeting with Sen. Kennedy, in the 1950s. JFK was pliant, pleasing, needed legal assistance. During their meeting old Joe called to bark instructions and yell at the senator and the attorney. Clifford found it chilling. JFK handled his father coolly. To read the scene with recent revelations in mind is to wonder what toll the facts of his life took on JFK, and to ponder a paradox. Old Joe's blind ambition probably made his son president; old Joe probably made his son sick, too.
(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...
Co-ed are weird. In my generation they thought Bill Clinton was sexy.
That explains how she stayed so skinny.
Wow, this is interesting stuff. I was born after Kennedy was assassinated and have only passing familiarity with this era. I can see I need to read some more, I have a tendency to blame everything on the baby boomers.
Right-on, John!
I think that my husband and I both voted for Kennedy. I remember my father and I sitting at the kitchen table and arguing politics. He couldn't believe I was for Kennedy. I had watched the last two democratic conventions and became a Kennedy "fan" because of that. My husband and I were 20 and were getting married that December.
It was when I first heard Reagan give his Goldwater speech that I realized that I was a conservative. My parents were conservative even though "everyone" in Alabama back then had to be a Democrat. Elections were decided in the primaries.
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