Thursday, March 01, 2007

Eisenhower's Worst Nightmare Now Harsh Reality For U.S.A

By John Hanchette

02/20/0 "Niagara Falls Reporter " - -- OLEAN -- I have come to believe Dwight David Eisenhower, our 34th president, is one of the most underrated and unappreciated men ever to hold that office.

Until recently, Eisenhower was generally regarded as a terrific general (commander of all Allied Forces in World War II) but mediocre president. Now, he is proving to be one of the most prescient visionaries of our modern age.

All of my high school years occurred during Ike's second term. Think "Happy Days" of TV fame, with Fonzi and the malt shop. To most parents, the biggest crisis seemed to be this terrible rock 'n' roll music that was sweeping the nation and corrupting our youth. The new dance sensation the Twist (in which partners never even touched each other) was banned at my high school, despite being downright puritanical by today's standards.

The White House coverage was pretty boring, and so was Ike. The American public loved him because not much all that bad was happening and he'd gotten us out of the Korean War, but he was viewed by most commentators as an unimaginative avuncular type.

Young people paid so little attention to him that my birth cohort was dubbed the Apathetic Generation. (We dispelled that unfair tag when Vietnam came along.)

Eisenhower, however, in January of 1961, in his last speech before vacating the White House to make room for the just-elected John F. Kennedy, warned America of a "disastrous rise of misplaced power" if we continued allowing the germination of a new historical entity he called "the military-industrial complex."


link

And then, my generation, who were taught "duck and cover" and didn't buy into the hysteria. Heck, I remember being issued dog tags and an Army blanket during the Cuban missile crisis and being told we would be sent to Seattle directly from school, without our parents. (From Alaska). We all thought it would be one big adventure, but dutifully memorized the air raid siren information. Now the war machine tries to keep us all scared on a daily basis. I think I am too jaded. I was not afraid of the bomb and I am not afraid of terrorists. What I am afraid of is the Bush crime family and the neocons, like Darth Cheney, and the military industrial complex. They will bring us to rack and ruin, while they line their pockets. Eisenhower was oh so right.

No comments: