monk222: (Monkey Dreams)

Those who believe that a kindly Providence keeps a watchful eye on America's welfare can cite the fact of Gerald Ford. On Aug. 9, 1974, at a moment when the nation was putting aside an unhappy, tormented president, and was aching for serenity in high places, to the center of national life strode an abnormality -- a happy, normal man as president.

Watergate and a presidential resignation were only two of the nation's problems that August. The mid-'70s were years when everyday things could no longer be counted on -- inflation was undermining the currency as a store of value, and lines at gasoline pumps testified to the power of foreigners to get between Americans and their best friends, their automobiles. Ford was a political sedative for a nation with jangled nerves.

He was one of five presidents who never got elected to the office. (The others were John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson and Chester Arthur.) He was the only person to be president without receiving any popular or electoral votes for president or vice president. He was about as exotic as . . . well, as he was fond of saying, he was "a Ford, not a Lincoln."


-- George F. Will for The Washington Post

I did not intend to mark President Gerald Ford's death, but Mr. Will makes it easy.

xXx
monk222: (Monkey Dreams)

Those who believe that a kindly Providence keeps a watchful eye on America's welfare can cite the fact of Gerald Ford. On Aug. 9, 1974, at a moment when the nation was putting aside an unhappy, tormented president, and was aching for serenity in high places, to the center of national life strode an abnormality -- a happy, normal man as president.

Watergate and a presidential resignation were only two of the nation's problems that August. The mid-'70s were years when everyday things could no longer be counted on -- inflation was undermining the currency as a store of value, and lines at gasoline pumps testified to the power of foreigners to get between Americans and their best friends, their automobiles. Ford was a political sedative for a nation with jangled nerves.

He was one of five presidents who never got elected to the office. (The others were John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson and Chester Arthur.) He was the only person to be president without receiving any popular or electoral votes for president or vice president. He was about as exotic as . . . well, as he was fond of saying, he was "a Ford, not a Lincoln."


-- George F. Will for The Washington Post

I did not intend to mark President Gerald Ford's death, but Mr. Will makes it easy.

xXx
monk222: (Noir Detective)

George Will did a nice profile on Ms. Hirsi Ali, another refugee from the Islamists, those lovers of peace, equality, and tolerance. She wrote the script for that film that got Theo van Gogh assassinated by those same lovers of peace and tolerance. The column is below, and someone was good enough to post the film on YouTube.



Will column )

xXx
monk222: (Noir Detective)

George Will did a nice profile on Ms. Hirsi Ali, another refugee from the Islamists, those lovers of peace, equality, and tolerance. She wrote the script for that film that got Theo van Gogh assassinated by those same lovers of peace and tolerance. The column is below, and someone was good enough to post the film on YouTube.



Will column )

xXx
monk222: (Bonobo Thinking)

A survey by the Pew Research Center shows that conservatives are happier than liberals -- in all income groups. While 34 percent of all Americans call themselves "very happy," only 28 percent of liberal Democrats (and 31 percent of moderate or conservative Democrats) do, compared with 47 percent of conservative Republicans. This finding is niftily self-reinforcing: It depresses liberals.

-- George F. Will for The Washington Post

Let it be noted out front that this is not just about the current era, when one might expect conservative, religiousy Republicans to be giddy and gloating, but as Mr. Will notes this is a trend that goes back to the early seventies, when this issue of 'happiness' and politics was first surveyed. This is the first I've heard of this happiness deficit, and I thought it worth keeping - as perhaps part of my liberal masochism.

Of course, it is also said that ignorance is bliss.

Or as Wonkette jokes: "THIS JUST IN: RICH WHITE PEOPLE ARE HAPPY."

George Will column )

xXx
monk222: (Bonobo Thinking)

A survey by the Pew Research Center shows that conservatives are happier than liberals -- in all income groups. While 34 percent of all Americans call themselves "very happy," only 28 percent of liberal Democrats (and 31 percent of moderate or conservative Democrats) do, compared with 47 percent of conservative Republicans. This finding is niftily self-reinforcing: It depresses liberals.

-- George F. Will for The Washington Post

Let it be noted out front that this is not just about the current era, when one might expect conservative, religiousy Republicans to be giddy and gloating, but as Mr. Will notes this is a trend that goes back to the early seventies, when this issue of 'happiness' and politics was first surveyed. This is the first I've heard of this happiness deficit, and I thought it worth keeping - as perhaps part of my liberal masochism.

Of course, it is also said that ignorance is bliss.

Or as Wonkette jokes: "THIS JUST IN: RICH WHITE PEOPLE ARE HAPPY."

George Will column )

xXx

Profile

monk222: (Default)
monk222

May 2019

S M T W T F S
    1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 3rd, 2025 01:55 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios