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The Timely Death of Gerald Ford: FRANK RICH - Saigon to Baghdad +

by FRANK RICH - The New York Times
RICH: Our long national nightmare in Iraq, far from being over, is about to get a second wind.

THE COMPLETE ARTICLE WITH ALL HYPERLINKS AND MORE
OP-ED COLUMNIST
The Timely Death of Gerald Ford
By FRANK RICH
Published: January 7, 2007

THE very strange and very long Gerald Ford funeral marathon was about many things, but Gerald Ford wasn't always paramount among them. Forty percent of today's American population was not alive during the Ford presidency. The remaining 60 percent probably spent less time recollecting his unelected 29-month term than they did James Brown's "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag." Despite the lachrymose logorrhea of television anchors and the somber musical fanfares, the country was less likely to be found in deep mourning than in deep football. It's a safe bet that the Ford funeral attracted far fewer viewers than the most consequential death video of the New Year's weekend, the lynching of Saddam Hussein.

But those two deaths were inextricably related: it was in tandem that they created a funereal mood that left us mourning for our own historical moment more than for Mr. Ford.What the Ford obsequies were most about was the Beltway establishment's grim verdict on George W. Bush and his war in Iraq. Every Ford attribute, big and small, was trotted out by Washington eulogists with a wink, as an implicit rebuke of the White House's current occupant. Mr. Ford was a healer, not a partisan divider. He was an all-American football star, not a cheerleader.

He didn't fritter away time on pranks at his college fraternity, Delta Kappa Epsilon, because he had to work his way through school as a dishwasher. He was in the top third of his class at Yale Law. He fought his way into dangerous combat service during World War II rather than accept his cushy original posting. He was pals with reporters and Democrats. He encouraged dissent in his inner circle. He had no enemies, no ego, no agenda, no ideology, no concern for his image. He described himself as "a Ford, not a Lincoln," rather than likening himself to, say, Truman.

Under the guise of not speaking ill of a dead president, the bevy of bloviators so relentlessly trashed the living incumbent that it bordered on farce. No wonder President Bush, who once hustled from Crawford to Washington to sign a bill interfering in Terri Schiavo's medical treatment, remained at his ranch last weekend rather than join Betty Ford and Dick Cheney for the state ceremony in the Capitol rotunda.Yet for all the media acreage bestowed on the funeral, the day in Mr. Ford's presidency that most stalks Mr. Bush was given surprisingly short shrift — perhaps because it was the most painful. That day was not Sept. 8, 1974, when Mr. Ford pardoned his predecessor, but April 30, 1975, when the last American helicopters hightailed it out of Saigon, ending our involvement in a catastrophic war.

Mr. Ford had been a consistent Vietnam hawk, but upon inheriting the final throes of the fiasco, he recognized reality when he saw it.Just how much so can be found in a prescient speech that Mr. Ford gave a week before our clamorous Saigon exit. (And a speech prescient on other fronts, too: he called making "America independent of foreign energy sources by 1985" an urgent priority.) Speaking at Tulane University, Mr. Ford said, "America can regain the sense of pride that existed before Vietnam" but not "by refighting a war that is finished as far as America is concerned."

--MORE--
http://mparent7777-2.blogspot.com/2007/01/timely-death-of-gerald-ford-frank-rich.html



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CRIMES AND CORRUPTIONS OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER NEWS

MARC PARENT
mparent7777
mparent
CCNWON
by cynic (tuesday [at] weld.com)
Did they remember to drive a stake through his heart?
It seems to have taken a long time to get him into the ground.
by Marc
:)

Dragging Ford's body around America for 6 days prior to burial seemed a bit much.
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