Nixon: Our Man In Africa

Birth of the Legend nixons-ghana.jpg

A retired Ghanaian Army man is making an outsider run for President, and one of the barriers he must overcome is his name: Richard Nixon Tetteh.

Nixon had a history in West Africa.

Ghana’s independence celebration attracted political personalities from throughout Africa and the world as the first country freed from colonial rule. Eisenhower dispatched the Vice President to carry the flag amidst the Marxists and Pan-Africanists. At the celebratory ball Nixon legendarily slapped a man on the back, asking “How does it feel to be free?” The man replied “I wouldn’t know, I’m from Alabama.”

In one version, Nixon’s encounter was with Martin Luther King, who was in Ghana for the celebration.

Civil Rights Legend

The Uses of the Past ford-willis-ward.gif

“I came by my support of that year’s Voting Rights Act naturally. Thirty years before Selma, I was a University of Michigan senior, preparing with my Wolverine teammates for a football game against visiting Georgia Tech. Among the best players on that year’s Michigan squad was Willis Ward, a close friend of mine whom the Southern school reputedly wanted dropped from our roster because he was black. My classmates were just as adamant that he should take the field. In the end, Willis decided on his own not to play.”

– Gerald Ford supporting affirmative action in a 1999 New York Times Op/Ed.

Shorter Ford: U of M accommodated racists, Ford and teammates went along with reservations.

From these tender beginnings the legend of Gerald Ford, Civil Rights Pioneer has grown, helped along by the hagiographic explosion for Our Most Athletic Presidenttrademark1.gif since his death.

Ford’s role and opposition to racism grows with every telling. Son Steven Ford toured a school named for the President last ford-steve-ford-at-ford-school.jpg week, and told the tale.

“Dad was so incensed, he was going to quit football to stand up for his friend,” said Ford, adding a friend eventually convinced his father to stay with the team.”

 

In an earlier version of the story, Steve had Ford actually quitting the team.

bush-ford-coffin.jpg George Bush gave the full glory version at Ford’s funeral.

“Gerald Ford was furious at Georgia Tech for making the demand, and for the University of Michigan for caving in. He agreed to play only after Willis Ward personally asked him to. The stand Gerald Ford took that day was never forgotten by his friend. And Gerald Ford never forgot that day either — and three decades later, he proudly supported the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act in the United States Congress.”

[Bonus fun fact: Bush’s father opposed the Civil Rights Act as a 1964 Senate candidate]

Between them, Ford and Bush’s versions of history launched the legend. Others soon acclaimed Ford’s premature anti-racism, or to echoed the claim that Willis somehow excluded himself from the game. Jack “He Showered With Them” Kemp joined the parade, recycling Bush’s version.

um-paper.gif But the University of Michigan Daily looked back at the incident in 1999, before Ford wrote on it, and Ford was not mentioned. Neither was Ward’s taking one for the team.

In this version, Michigan’s caving to Georgia Tech extended to hiring spies to infiltrate and disrupt the student “United From Committee On Ward,” lest protest actually occur.

And if the Daily is correct, Willis Ward faced some severe difficulties in “deciding on his own.”

“Ward wasn’t even allowed to watch the game from the press box, or even from the bench of his own stadium. Instead, he spent the afternoon of Oct. 20 in a fraternity house.”

In a PRESIDENTSRUS first, I’ll now quote Wikipedia. wik.jpg Yes its a mess, and we’ve all enjoyed the regularly erupting editing scandals, but as others have excused themselves, it’s irreproducible results just speak to me.

And contradict much of the above.

“In 1976, Ward, then a probate court judge in Wayne County, said that Ford never mentioned the incident to him, but that Ford’s brother later told him about it.[27] “Jerry was very concerned,” Ward recalled. “His brother told me, ‘Jerry was so upset he wrote father asking him if he should quit the team. He was that angry.’” Interviewed in the 1976 election year, Ward felt Ford’s record on racial matters left something to be desired. “I can’t say Jerry’s performance there is all that I’d ask for. But he is not totally indifferent to the problem. You can’t say he’s antiblack or not concerned.”[27] [32]

Lost Leaders

Loser davis-loan.jpg

Your Washington Times continues to perform magnificently as the daily diary of the Confederate Dream. Their latest is an esquisitly detailed roundup on all the festivities unfolding in this, the Jefferson Davis Bicentennial Year.

The creepy efforts to ape real President’s commemorations will be at full force in 2008. There appear to be at least two reenactments of Davis’s swearing in as secessionist President, and strained efforts to tie Davis to Black History Month have been presented with a straight face. The festive schedule will climax with the the reopening of the Davis Beauvoir home in Gulfport Mississippi, the “Mount Vernon of the Confederacy.”

katrina.jpg Beauvoir was largely destroyed by Hurricane Katrina,

proving there is a God. davis-wrecked.jpg

The neighboring Davis “Presidential Library” was flattened. davis-library.jpg

Its all being rebuilt at a cost of $20 million, provided in part by serial bankrupt Donald Trump and the federal government, over the objections of the NAACP.

But for all this, the first Davis oath reenactment attracted a few hundred. The post-Katrina relaunch of Beauvoir was so sparsely attended they used odd cropping to hide the size of the crowd. davis-dedication-side.jpg

The Lost Cause appears to be getting loster.

Founding Fugitive

Philadelphia Freedom presidents-house.jpg

Philadelphia is recognising a George Washington slave who escaped while he lived in the city. Oney Judge was one of nine slaves the Father of Our country brought with him to the nation’s first capitol, and one of two who escaped. Their experiences have been in the news with the excavation of The President’s House site in Independence Square.

Judge lived the remainder of her life a fugitive in New Hampshire.

Reagan: Seek Him Everywhere

Word Pictures reagan-radio-iowa.jpg

We all have questions about Ronald Reagan, but few look for answers on sites devoted to improving our fishing skills.

reagan-stripers-online.jpg“Albacized,” AKA Rich in Framingham, knows no such limitations:


“I know that at some point before he got into politics (at least ‘big time politics’) he did some sports broadcasting. Is there any audio available on line of Reagan calling a game? I checked out YouTube and ‘struck out’…”