Booman Tribune

Thinking About Gerald Ford

by BooMan
Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 11:44:02 AM EST

Gerald Ford died yesterday. He was our 38th President even though he was never elected as President or Vice-President. He was appointed as Vice-President when Spiro Agnew was forced to resign over income tax evasion. He became President when Richard Nixon was forced to resign by the Watergate revelations.

We were fortunate to have a man like Gerald Ford in the position of Vice-President at such a traumatic period in our history. Ford was well respected within Congress, was easily confirmed as Vice-President, and the country was generally relieved when he took over for Nixon telling the nation:

“I am acutely aware that you have not elected me as your president by your ballots. I have not sought this enormous responsibility, but I will not shirk it. This is an hour of history that troubles our minds and hurts our hearts. Therefore, I feel it my first duty to make an unprecedented compact with my countrymen. Not an inaugural address. Not a fireside chat. Not a campaign speech. Just a little straight talk among friends..."

“..My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works. Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here, the people rule.”

A month later Ford destroyed most of the goodwill he enjoyed when he issued a blanket pardon of Nixon. It was an immensely unpopular decision. Ford later explained himself:

Those who were critical of the pardon, he said, “haven’t thought through what would have happened over the next 18 months, 24 months, 36 months; that whole episode would have been on the front page."

While the pardon outraged the nation, it has become more controversial in recent years.

In May 2001, Mr. Ford was honored with a “Profile in Courage” Award at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. Senator Edward M. Kennedy spoke and said he had originally opposed the pardon. “But time has a way of clarifying past events,” he said, “and now we see that President Ford was right.”

Ford is reported to have taken great comfort in the acceptance of his decision by the Kennedy clan. Acceptance did not come quickly or uniformly enough for Ford to win re-election in 1976. He was defeated by a relatively unknown Governor from Georgia, Jimmy Carter.

Ford's brief stint as President came at a pivotal time in our nation's history and in many ways he failed to heal the nation and, in particular, the Republican Party. The reactionary tendencies of the Nixon administration were not so much uprooted as put on ice. Some of his most important advisors, like his Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, his Director of Central Intelligence George Herbert Walker Bush, and his chiefs of staff Alexander Haig and Dick Cheney, would come back to haunt the nation.

During Ford's Presidency Congress undertook a soul-searching reevaluation of our foreign policy, our intelligence agencies, and the role and powers of the Executive Branch. You can revisit these debates by looking at the transcripts of the Church Committee, the Pike Committee, and the Rockefeller Commission. I'll have a lot more to say tomorrow about the Ford era and how it pertains to today.

I do not want to be overly critical of Jerry Ford today. The dead deserve a day of respect when we honor their better traits. Ford was a decent man that took over the Presidency at a very difficult time. He represented the reasonable and steady part of the Grand Old Party. He was neither a Goldwaterite nor a Reaganite. Aside from his decision to pardon Nixon, he made few enemies. He surrounded himself with some pretty awful characters, but he led the nation according to his own character, which was traditionally conservative, but not overly ideological.

Gerald Ford was a flawed but good man. And, for today, I think I will leave it at that.



Display:
Ford's brief stint as President came at a pivotal time in our nation's history and in many ways he failed to heal the nation...

So Ford did it to heal the nation, failed at that, and then still claimed that it was the right decision, at least as recently as 2001.

Acknowledging 20/20 hindsight and all, wouldn't it have been better to get the sturm und drang out of the way?  Nixon would have faced charges and we likely wouldn't be dealing with his administration dregs as we are today.  Attempts to promote "tranquility" can't justify Ford's actions.

Oh, there you are, Perry. -Phineas -SLB-

by boran2 (blogistan@yahoo.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:03:37 PM EST
Thank you for this gentle post, Boo.  I've been worrying about those of us who are unwilling to forget past animosities and let the dead bury the dead.

Events like this remind us that peace lives in some hearts, but not all -  and is still a long way off.

by Alice on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:04:52 PM EST
I was a child but my Aunt was in the streets marching and she is like many of the rest of you for very good reason, she lived it, she saw it, she was there and it is a part of her.  You guys will bury it when it dies its death as all things do, until that day it has a reason for being here among us.

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by Militarytracy on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:24:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
of that time, and the fact that Watergate (and in a way, Vietnam) was swept under the rug because of Ford's pardon.

What we didn't do in 1974, we've had to deal with right now. And we're still not doing anything about it.

An untypical Negro

http://thisblksistaspage.wordpress.com

by blksista (gab1954@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:12:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm 100% with you on this one, Sistah!

"If you look for the social economic motive, you will not have to wait for history to tell you what was propaganda and what was truth." - George Seldes
by Real History Lisa (lpeaseRemoveThis@gte.net) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:45:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]
To some degree, I understand the reluctance to speak ill of the dead. As far a social instincts go, it isn't the worst. The unfortunate tendency, however, is to allow death to wash away the sins of the well known and the well connected. Gerry Ford may well have been a great guy to go golfing with and he may have been kind to small animals, small children and kept his breath minty fresh at all times, but what matters to me and the 300 million other Americans who didn't get to go golfing with Gerry or smell his fabulous breath are his policies and they were for shit. Far from ending our national nightmare, his pardon of Nixon plunged us headfirst into the into the shithole of public policy we find ourselves in today where the Executive is never held accountable, no matter how heinous the crime. If I'm to believe what I'm reading today, Ford's death is transforming that horrible miscarriage of justice into an act of healing. Disgusting.
by Chris on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:38:48 PM EST
he just doesn't look like he had minty breath.
by BooMan on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:44:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]
And apparently he avoided the heartbreak of psoraisis.

Oh, there you are, Perry. -Phineas -SLB-
by boran2 (blogistan@yahoo.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:53:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]
or reading any of it at the moment.  By the time this day is done though the left blogs will be screaming......as they well should be.  I might have to soldier up and get dressed or something today to go out and kick a little history rewriting ass.  The mainstream media is the fucking National Enquirer these days.  I never thought I would ever see the National Enquirer sink to such unbelievable unbelievableness as they have been forced to just to find a market niche.

PMS Purchase More Shoes
by Militarytracy on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 12:46:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]
He spared us a national nightmare of a trial?

Puh-leeze.

THE COUNTRY WANTED A TRIAL, NOT A PARDON.

Let's look over some more Ford 'accomplishments' as prez and otherwise:

-Told New York to drop dead when it went broke.
-Brought in and continued Rummy and Cheney's dubious public service career.
-Attack dog on President Johnson's social programs.
-Dumb WIN campaign.
-The Mayaguez incident.
-Bogus swine flu scare and response.
-Kept falling down and stumbling.  Today, it would make one think that he was drinking.
-Brought in Bush Senior to be ambassador to China and later CIA director.
-Had Nelson "Attica" Rockefeller as Veep and who was also unelected.
-Tried to get very liberal Justice William O. Douglas impeached.
-Said there was no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe during a debate with Carter.
-Last survivor of the Warren Commission, which didn't solve anything to anyone's satisfaction. It's also said he SPIED on and reported on the commission at the behest of J. Edgar Hoover himself.

His wife Betty is more commendable than he is, and not just because of the clinic.

He's gone to where he's always said he would be: right next to Nixon in hell.


An untypical Negro

http://thisblksistaspage.wordpress.com

by blksista (gab1954@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:04:32 PM EST
It's easy to forget he helped give us Rummy and Cheney. Here's a nice picture of Gerry with those two bloodthirsty motherfuckers.

by Chris on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:20:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Thank you Chris. These are not the only cruel and  bloodthirsty motherfuckers who remain with us due to various efforts to 'heal' the Nation but they're sure the most obvious ones in the new millenia.

Ford didn't 'heal' the Nation when he pardoned Nixon. He established a precedent which destroyed any pretense of equal justice under the law and which allow monsters like Cheney to reign as VP and John 'Death Squad' Negroponte to oversee all the intelligence operations in the country.

by the other colleen on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:40:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]
.
These goons got rid of Henry!


Rumsfeld and Kissinger with Nixon

YOUNG RUMSFELD

The Nixon tapes reveal that Rumsfeld often worked with and was a special favorite of John Mitchell and Charles Colson, Nixon's roughest political operators ...

Nixon and Rumsfeld seem to have formed a curious but strong bond early on. Rumsfeld saw Nixon as a mentor. In a series of lengthy one-on-one conversations in the White House, Rumsfeld repeatedly sought both to advance to a Cabinet job and to obtain Nixon's advice on his political career. Rumsfeld was, of course, gaining private tutelage from America's most skilled political infighter.

"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."

by Oui on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:41:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]
that were much worse.

An untypical Negro

http://thisblksistaspage.wordpress.com

by blksista (gab1954@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:45:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
How many countries is Henry unable to go to because he may be arrested and questioned? I think it's three.

I was driving on a freeway when I first heard the announcement that Kissenger was Bush's first pick to chair the 9/11 commission and had to pull over and park untill I stopped laughing.
These guys never go away and they're never, ever held accountable.

by the other colleen on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:11:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm glad I wasn't driving when I heard the news.
by BooMan on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:35:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]
warm fuzzies my heart ever contained for Gerald Ford right in the ass.  I'm a very visual person you know and there are words I can read and then there are a thousand fucking words!

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by Militarytracy on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:39:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Having to live around fuckers like these day in and day out for period of time and make sure I'm always smiling makes me want to have a drink and maybe a few fucking pills to wash them down with!  And then a drink for dessert!

PMS Purchase More Shoes
by Militarytracy on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:42:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]
.
The First Lady behind the U.S. President explains much about the man, often more so than his own actions as a politician. The choice of advisors is also a good indicator of the Man in the Oval Office. One appointee you didn't mention was Brent Scowcraft as National Security Advisor.

Gerald Ford was a moderate Republican, against Big Government and a loyalist to the GOP with a firm conviction and believe in the Constitution. My perception, Ford did fear damage to the presidency while acting on the Warren Commission. Till the end he believed the Presidential pardon for Richard M. Nixon was the right decision. My believe, he misjudged in both instances. Tricky Dicky had been his friend since 1949 when he arrived in Washington D.C. Nevertheless I have great respect for Gerald Ford (he nearly lost the 1976 primary to Ronald Reagan) and First Lady Betty Ford. President Ford wanted to be close to the American people and wouldn't let two assassination attempts put fear in his attitude to reach out to the people.

The rest is for historians to decide. Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter tried to intervene in the Congressional impeachment procedure started against Bill Clinton, by proposing a bipartisan resolution of censure by the Senate instead. Once again not to complete a process damaging the Presidency and/or the U.S. Constitution.

"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."

by Oui on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:07:55 PM EST
caretaker.  That's why Nixon got him appointed Veep.  

Betty Ford essentially raised the kids by herself, which is something in my experience.

I felt sorry for Mrs. Ford when she publicly began to have problems and later to account for them and help others by saying that it wasn't a moral failing that people were depressed or mentally ill.

I liked how her kids turned out.  Her daughter was cool.  Better than Jenna and not Jenna.

Now I am going to genuinely mourn when she goes.  But I have nothing but dry eyes for Ford, no matter what he tried to do for Clinton.

An untypical Negro

http://thisblksistaspage.wordpress.com

by blksista (gab1954@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 01:21:50 PM EST
[ Parent ]
by Oui on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:46:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
We were fortunate to have a man like Gerald Ford in the position of Vice-President at such a traumatic period in our history.

Well, I'll beg to differ. I hope to do a post on this before the week is out... I was pretty ill after hearing all the praise lavished on him this morning. His record is quite a bit darker. More later.

"If you look for the social economic motive, you will not have to wait for history to tell you what was propaganda and what was truth." - George Seldes

by Real History Lisa (lpeaseRemoveThis@gte.net) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:41:31 PM EST
It's all relative.  We could have had Spiro Agnew.  We could have had a real partisan.  Almost any conceivable alternative to Ford would have pardoned Nixon and most would have been far worse on domestic policy.

And as for foreign policy, Ford was weak and relied on a gaggle of sick, twisted, power mad borderline lunatics.  But so did Reagan and the latter Bush.

I think we both have enough ammo to eviscerate Ford's foreign policies.  For example, East Timor.

by BooMan on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:48:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm not convinced Agnew would have been worse. Seriously. More later.

"If you look for the social economic motive, you will not have to wait for history to tell you what was propaganda and what was truth." - George Seldes
by Real History Lisa (lpeaseRemoveThis@gte.net) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:52:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The time to pardon someone is after they have been convicted or at least charged with a crime. By cutting off all investigations before they even had a chance to get started Ford made it clear that he was paying back his old boss for making him Veep.

It was a whitewash and everyone knew it. The result was that those not directly involved in the Whitehouse got off scot-free. The same pattern was repeated with Iran-contra and is in play again now with the Bushies.

As Pinochet showed even if a person never goes to trial there is a value to acknowledging their misdeeds. Those who have been wronged feel that some sort of justice has been done.

Our democracy is under threat just because those who commit the biggest crimes seldom get punished. For each Jack Abramoff or Ken Lay there are hundreds who walk away with their ill gotten gains. Unequal treatment under the law is a sure way to destroy a civil society.  

Policies not Politics
--- Daily Landscape

by rdf (robert.feinman@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:44:46 PM EST
It wasn't his only whitewash either. Can we say Warren Commission? Rockefeller Commission? Oh, don't get me started. Later, later... I have work to do.....

"If you look for the social economic motive, you will not have to wait for history to tell you what was propaganda and what was truth." - George Seldes
by Real History Lisa (lpeaseRemoveThis@gte.net) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 02:53:37 PM EST
[ Parent ]
While I don't think Ford should have pardoned Nixon, I also don't think a trial would have necessarily saved us from what we have today. No one can say for sure, because if Nixon hadn't been pardoned, all sorts of things might have changed.

But my hesitancy to assume it would have prevented the stench we experience today comes from two things:

  1. Many thought the impeachment of Clinton was the republican "pay-back" for the impeachment of Nixon. Sometimes the truly disturbed are NOT cowed into defeat by accountabiity - but just fight back harder.

  2. My father, who is as republican as they come, supported Nixon all through and beyond the impeachment. He only began to question the man when the transcripts of the tapes were published and he saw how much Nixon swore. I don't think the die-hard supporters would have been changed by a trial.

Let me say again, I am NOT saying Ford should have pardoned Nixon, only that I'm not so sure it would have stopped the Cheney/Rumsfeld cabal from rising again.


Doesn't information itself have a liberal bias? Steven Colbert
by NLinStPaul on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 03:06:54 PM EST
I know some here are feeling warm and sentimental about the man but may he ROT IN HELL for his actions w/r/t giving Suharto the green light to invade East Timor and kill hundreds of thousands of people and cause untold amounts of suffering that only NOW is beginning to end...

Just my two cents.

Pax

Night and day you can find me Flogging the Simian

by soj on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 03:46:40 PM EST
for the man.

I'm still trying to recover from the AMC Pacer.

An untypical Negro

http://thisblksistaspage.wordpress.com

by blksista (gab1954@gmail.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 03:58:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Amen Soj!! People also forget his (or this country's) role in Iran(and therefore the taking of the hostages), operation Condor. May he be impaled and then go to hell!!
by cruz del sur (nicodekoenigsberg@yahoo.com) on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 04:01:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Shall we heap vitriol on a dead corpse, or learn from a mistake and prevent the same thing happening again?

The DOJ has got a special bureaucracy devoted to presidential pardons.

The criminals bush, Rummy and Cheney et al are still with us, and bound for freedom from accountability.  

The constitution grants the president power to pardon crimes against the United States.  It's been a long time since that document has been changed, but it can be done.

Seems to me it's all up to the people to get involved.  I still think Gerry did the best he knew how to do.

by Alice on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 04:25:40 PM EST
Some people DID get involved, but it didn't matter.  Every one of Ford's aides was dead-set against pardoning Nixon, but despite a plethora of reasons, they couldn't convince Ford out of his decision.  

I doubt that Ford did it as "payback" for being appointed v.p., though.  He really didn't have an ambition to be President;  he was appointed because he was non-controversial and would sail through the Senate confirmation.  

A president who truly cares first about the welfare of the country and knows a V. P. is only a heartbeat (or impeachment) away from the presidency will carefully select a replacement V. P.   Nixon was no such president (look at Spiro Agnew).

by latanawi on Wed Dec 27th, 2006 at 10:37:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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