Escape From College Station
13-Jan-08
The Bush Library goes downmarket:
Remembering history the way they wished it had been
The Bush Library goes downmarket:
He was many things, but in our world Philip Agee will be remembered for his associations with the Bush family.
President Bush senior shared the intelligence community view of Agee’s 70s actions in revealing CIA names and methods, largely from public records.
Agee’s acts, and the 1975 assassination of the Athens CIA Station Chief led to the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, an effort after the fact to criminalize what Agee did. The father’s quote later provided a useful club to beat George W. Bush during the investigation into the leaking of Valarie Plame’s name and status with the Agency.
Agee tangled with another Bush as well.
“a small field of usefulness*”
Who’s Firemens Field’s friend?
The question is posed by dueling Oyster Bay Long Island web sites.
www.savefiremensfield.org was formed by opponents of a proposed Teddy Roosevelt Museum to be located on Firemens Field near the town center. A mischievous proponent of the project then launched www.savefiremansfield.org, apparently to snare the unwary.
The Theodore Roosevelt Association wants to build the museum, and claims no relationship with either site. But the pro-museum site uses a TR photo with the Association’s permission on it’s banner:
What was Roosevelt saying and to whom in this endlessly quoted “Man In The Arena” speech?
Roosevelt’s speech was in part a mash note to the French from America, “the only two republics among the great powers of the world.” Roosevelt swooned for France, how “the lesson her whole history teaches, that a high artistic and literary development is compatible with notable leadership narms and statecraft*.”
The French were certainly up to their necks in the “rough work of the world*” as they stumbled into a century of slaughter and surrender at home, and then massacre and withdrawal from their colonies.
The speech and most of Roosevelt’s public persona today are a relic, a fetish for nostalgists pining for the days of manly, unapologetic imperialism over the lesser races. And some spectacularly wordy tough talk.
*Who’s the Man?
Rehab efforts continue at the Nixon Library.
Hundreds gathered to mark Nixon’s 95th birthday, the Navy sent a wreath, and Admiral Raymond Berube identified the Disgracedformerpresident as that fail-safe superlative, a difference maker.
“He inherited a country weighed down with war and political instability,” the Orange County Register quotes Berube, implying Nixon in some way moderated these phenomena.
One Register reader ain’t buying it:
“He woul dhave been 95 and if there was justice in this country he would just now be eligible for parole.”
“Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or to lose*.”
Just in time for the Lyndon Johnson Centenary, a new version of proof that the launch of his great crusade to bring the Great Society to Southeast Asia, the Vietnam War’s causa bella, the basis of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, never happened.
“Skunks, Bogies, Silent Hounds, and the Flying Fish: The Gulf of Tonkin Mystery, 2-4 August 1964” is the National Security Agency’s once classified review of the non-events. An earlier version was released in 2005, following reports declassification had been delayed lest haunting parallels be found to Iraq intelligence troubles.