Quote of the day: Alexander Cockburn offers the definitive word on "our greatest president"
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"Here at CounterPunch it has always been our position that Gerald Ford was America's greatest President. Transferring the Hippocratic injunction from the medical to the political realm, he did the least possible harm."
--Alexander Cockburn, in his "Farewell to Our Greatest President," on his CounterPunch website
http://counterpunch.org/
December 27, 2006
Adieu, Gerald Ford
Farewell to Our Greatest President
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
We bid a sad adieu to Gerald Ford. Here at CounterPunch it has always been our position that Gerald Ford was America's greatest President. Transferring the Hippocratic injunction from the medical to the political realm, he did the least possible harm. Under Ford's tranquil hand the nation relaxed after the hectic fevers of the Nixon years. And, of course, it was Ford who finally pulled the US troops out of Vietnam.
As a visit to the Ford presidential library discloses, the largest military adventure available for display was the foolish U.S. response to the capture of the U.S. container ship Mayaguez by the Khmer Rouge on May 12, 1975. As imperial adventures go, and next to the vast graveyards across the planet left by Ford's predecessors and successors, it was small potatoes.
Ford was surrounded by bellicose advisors such as his secretary of state, Henry Kissinger; his vice president, Nelson Rockefeller; his chief of staff, and later secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld and his presidential assistant, Dick Cheney. The fact that this rabid crew were only able to persuade Ford to give the green light for Indonesia's invasion of East Timor--an appalling decision to be sure -- is tribute to Ford's pacific instincts and deft personnel management. Unlike George W. Bush, Ford was of humane temper and could mostly hold in check his bloodthirsty counselors.
Kissinger was part of the furniture when Ford took over, after Nixon's resignation on August 8, 1974. With latitude to chose, Ford made sensible selections, none more fruitful than his Attorney General, Edward Levy [sic--it's actually "Levi"], who in turn prompted Ford to nominate John Stevens to the U.S. Supreme Court, where he has long distinguished himself and dignified Ford's choice by being the most humane and progressive justice.
As a percentage of the federal budget, social spending crested in the Ford years. Never should it be forgotten that Jimmy Carter campaigned against Ford as the prophet of neo-liberalism, precursor of the Democratic Leadership Council, touting "zero-based budgeting".
If Ford had beaten back Carter's challenge in 1976, the neo-con crusades of the mid to late Seventies would have been blunted by the mere fact of a Republican occupying the White House. Reagan, most likely, would have returned to his slumbers in California after his abortive challenge to Ford for the nomination in Kansas in 1976.
Instead of an weak southern Democratic conservative in agreement to almost every predation by the military industrial complex, we would have had a Midwestern Republican, thus a politician far less vulnerable to the promoters of the New Cold War.
Would Ford have rushed to fund the Contras and order their training by Argentinian torturers? Would he have sent the CIA on its most costly covert mission, the $3.5 billion intervention in Afghanistan? The nation would have been spared the disastrous counsels of Zbigniev Brzezinski.
Those who may challenge this assessment of Ford's imperial instincts should listen to the commentators on CNN, belaboring the scarce cold commander-in-chief for timidity and lack of zeal in prosecuting the Cold War. By his enemies shall we know him.
During Ford's all-too-brief tenure a mood of geniality was the rule. Even the attempted assassinations of the president by Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme and Sara Moore, in September, 1975, had a slapdash, light-hearted timbre. The arts flourished, as is attested by Vicki Carr's frequent appearance in the photographic record of White House galas.
At the side of America's greatest president was America's most sympathetic First Lady, Betty, whose enduring memorial is the Betty Ford Clinic, home port for beleagured boozers. We send our sympathies to the former First Lady.
3 Comments:
I don't know that Ford caused little harm, pardoning Nixon established an unfortunate precedent which has allowed Ford's republican heirs to openly break laws as a governing principle, with absolute impunity and to the admiration of their base voters.
Despite the fact that Ford appointed Stevens (an action which lost him the support of luminaries like Pat Buchanan) he also supported Nixon's plans to impeach William O Douglas. You'll have to forgive me if I disagree with Cockburn and you on this being the definitive word.
First let me say that I did not read Cockburns piece. Honestly, I just not interested in reading something that tries to soften the harm that Ford did.
By pardoning Nixon he put an end to the examination of Nixons criminal behavior. Ford closed the wound before it could heal. We needed to go through all the ugliness and get it all out in the open.
Ford thought he was saving the country from the embarrassment of revealing all the activities of that criminal executive. We are still dealing with the offspring of the Nixon years because of Ford. Because of the pardon, the problems were never addressed and now we are dealing with the true heir of the Nixon administration.
That doesn't even get into his role in launching the political careers of two of the biggest criminals in our history.
Look at it this way, he showed us what we do not want, presidential pardons of executive crimes.
All the worse for Bushie boy. If the public wanted Nixon on the hook, imagine how they want to skewer George.
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