Now More Than Ever

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The historic toothlessness of the National Archives is reviewed at History News Network by a former Archives employee who worked on the Nixon tapes. Maarja Krusten recounts once more the sordid history of Nixon whining and demanding, rapidly followed by Archive caving.

She says overturning Bush’s Executive Order which has knotted up document releases of any past president would be only a beginning:

“That the Archives felt unable to say no to Nixon, a president who resigned from office, suggests that it needs more legal protection.”

Return to Turkeygate

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Reprieve, Not a Pardon

Today’s Washignton Post has TwinSpin on Tuesday’s Presidential turkey pardon.

Dana Milbank leads off with an account of the actual ceremony Tuesday, pausing to mention PETA’s continued unhappyness with the fate of the birds. As discussed previously, shipping the birds to Disney World is but a delayed death sentence – the 2005 birds died within a year and the fate of 2006’s is unknown.

Then Monica Hesse rips the lid off the the White House turkey pardon myth. She has trolled back through the archives and concludes that the ceremony’s alledged beginnings in the Truman admistration are false, that the Trumans ate theirs.

In fact the first documented Presidential turkey pardon came under the first President Bush. bush-1989-turkey.jpg

As Hesse reports, it’s right there on the Truman Library web page.

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So Close

arrow-down.gif The Lowdown

Mark Silva points out that George Bush’s low, low approval numbers won’t surpass Richard Nixon’s until December, assuming Bush stays down. And the beloved Harry Truman is still all time champ.

Silva is using continuous months below 40% approval in the Gallop Poll as his measure. Nixon and Bush have both been there for 13 months, but Truman rode out his term at below 40% for a solid 26 months.
bush-polls-down.jpgAnother year to go for Bush.

bush-stamp-face-albania.jpg He’ll always have Tirana! bush-tirana-street.jpg

Ronald Reagan: Fighting Racism

The Krugman/Brooks/Herbert New York Times round-robin on the Neshoba Country Fair, reagan-neshoba-county-fair.gif Ronald Reagan, and racism has reached all portions of the universe, with some truly peculiar arguments now being advanced in Reagan’s defense.

At National Review Online Deroy Murdock defends going to Neshoba, writing that

“Though some staffers worried about this appearance, Reagan believed in honoring his scheduled commitments, not canceling them.”

Sticking to his appearance commitments would go on to serve Reagan well at reagan-bitburg.jpg Bitburg, and gosh, whatever did those staffers think might happen?

Murdoch’s examples of Reagan’s anti racism range from the odd:

“Ronald Reagan Jr. recalls the day at a California barbecue when his father dived into a pool to save a black child from drowning.”

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…to making the case against Reagan. Murdoch excuses Reagan’s opposition to a Martin Luther King federal holiday as thrift, but then wanders into Reagan’s snide response when asked about Jesse Helms’ red-baiting of King.

‘ “We’ll know in about 35 years, won’t we?” Reagan telephoned Mrs. King to apologize for that comment.”

But it got all better when he invited Mrs. King to the White House! reagan-signs-mlk-day-csk-present.jpg

wapshot-chroniclesf.jpg Murdock links to an even more strained defense of Reagan by Nicholas Wapshott, author of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher: A Political Marriage.

Wapshott brings up examples of Reagan’s alleged antiracism which reveal more about Wapshott than Reagan.

Did you know that “The Reagans were so poor that he played in the street with black children and thought little of it.“?

By fourth grade however, Reagan’s elementary school class appeared to be Negro-free. reagan-4th-grade-2nd-row-far-left.jpg

Wapshott hurts Reagan without knowing it, dragging poor old Housing and Urban Development Secretary Samuel Pierce around one more time:

Reagan appointed a black to his Cabinet, Samuel Pierce as secretary of Housing and Urban Development, though they were hardly close.

So not close, of course, that when Pierce and some mayors were at the White House Reagan didn’t recognise Pearce. “Mister Mayor,” Reagan said, “how are things going in your city?””

In the back. The black guy. reagan-cabinet.jpg

David Greenberg in Slate sums up the case for the prosecution:

“No one who used the phrase “states’ rights” in living memory of the massive resistance movement against forced desegregation could be unaware of the message of solidarity it sent to Southern whites about civil rights… But because the term also connoted a general opposition to the growth of the federal government’s role in economic life, nonracist whites could comfort themselves that politicians like Nixon and Reagan were using it innocently—and thus shrug off any guilt they might feel for being complicit in racist campaigning. It was a dog whistle to segregationists…Reagan succeeded in altering the terms of political debate when it came to race. Stripping away the crude bigotry that had cost the white South the rest of nation’s sympathy in the 1950s and 1960s, he and other conservative political leaders fashioned an ideology in which racial politics were implicit, and yet still powerful. Ever since, their followers have been able to indignantly claim that any allegations of racism are smears and slurs—and discredit the entire discussion by making it about personal prejudice rather than public policy.”

Great, Scott

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Among the desperately missed features of the Writers Guild strike shuttered “Daily Show” is the continuing “Now You Tell Us“series, in which former handmaidens of disaster shed light on what went wrong with the Bush Administration.

bush-scott-mcclellan-cover.gif Up next in the new truth parade, former White House mouthpiece, featureless as the Texas plains which bore him, Scott McClellan!

Maybe.

All we have to go on is his publishers book blurb,which teasingly promises to tell “what exactly happened to take it off course,“and an excerpt hinting McClellan at long last recognises what he was left holding in the Valarie Plame affair:

I stood at the White house briefing room podium in front of the glare of the klieg lights for the better part of two weeks and publicly exonerated two of the senior-most aides in the White House: Karl Rove and Scooter Libby. There was one problem. It was not true.

I had unknowingly passed along false information. And five of the highest ranking officials in the administration were involved in my doing so: Rove, Libby, the vice President, the President’s chief of staff, and the President himself.”

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On the other hand, the book’s subtitle threatens to tell not only about “Inside the Bush White House,” but also “What’s Wrong with Washington,” which could take him into all kinds of excuses when the book comes out in April.