Posted on 05/15/2013 8:44:57 PM PDT by neverdem
The comparisons of the Obama and Nixon White Houses are suddenly coming—pardon the expression—fast and furious, and why not? The IRS investigations; the administrations fixation on leaks and leakers and its obsession with enemies; the cover-ups, the blame-shifting to subordinates, the defiant chief executive, even the sweating, pathetically dissembling press secretary; it all has the odor of that earlier time. Again, its all happening early in the second term, following a triumphant reelection. Again, the operative terms are arrogance, contempt for law, and thuggery.
The growing awareness of administration malfeasance is evident in the numbers on Google: more than 59 million hits for Obama and Nixon and 24 millionplus for Obama and Watergate. For those interested, the 44th presidents face can already be found morphing into the 37ths. Then theres the rising tide of commentary. Obama knee-deep in Nixon-esque scandal runs the headline of columnist Joe Battenfields piece in the Boston Herald, which notes that Obamas campaign slogan would have been more appropriate if it were not Forward but Backward—All the way to, say, 1972. Benghazi, IRS—Son of Watergate? asks Cal Thomas. In IRS Scandal, Echoes of Watergate, observes the Washington Posts George Will.
Such talk is mostly confined to the Right so far, but a handful of principled liberals have also weighed in. Theres no way in the world Im going to defend that, said U.S. Representative Michael Capuano of Massachusetts of the IRSs going after the Tea Party. Hell, I spent my youth vilifying the Nixon administration for doing the same thing. Former Michigan Democratic congresswoman Lynn Rivers echoed him: For anyone over 50, this news couldnt help but stir memories of Richard Nixons Political Enemies Project. . . . To use Dan Rathers duck test, the IRS probe of hostile ideological groups looks like, swims like, and quacks like government dirty tricks. One of the heroes of Watergate weighed in, too. This is outrageous, and it is totally inexcusable, Carl Bernstein raged about the revelation that the Department of Justice had secretly seized the phone records of Associated Press journalists. There is no reason that a presidency that is interested in a truly free press and its functioning should permit this to happen.
Thus it is that questions that once seemed unfathomable take on unexpected plausibility. Where and how far will it all go? Is it remotely conceivable that where Richard Nixon led, Barack Obama might follow? The answer, of course, depends primarily on the nature and severity of the crimes committed—if, indeed, they are crimes—and whether presidential culpability can be established.
But such an observation instantly gives rise to two other considerations. Lest we forget, while Democrats led the congressional inquiries into the Nixonites misdeeds—Sam Ervins committee in the Senate, Peter Rodinos in the House—in the end, it was principled Republicans, led by Barry Goldwater (who told Nixon he could count on no more than 15 Republican votes in the Senate), who forced the presidents resignation. Can we expect such nation-above-party behavior on the part of todays Democrats? Can you imagine Patrick Leahy ever deserting Obama? Or Al Franken? Or Barbara Boxer?
Then theres the role of the press. Unsurprisingly, the media on the far left have circled the wagons in defense of the president. Desperate for a Scandal, Foxs Dobbs Attacks Obamas Inner Nixon, read a dismissive headline on Media Matters for America, while DailyKos has harped on previous GOP-Fabricated Non-Scandals that went nowhere. And its true that, whether it was the presidents associations with his racist pastor or the Fast and Furious boondoggle, such allegations have gone nowhere—but primarily because the press has protected Obama. So it is a given that the media will again play a key role in determining whether the current scandals are pursued to their logical conclusion or are allowed to fizzle out.
Recent history suggests which outcome is more likely.
Benghazi? With a few notable exceptions, such as CBSs Sharyl Attkisson and CNNs Jake Tapper, reporters shrugged off the administrations cover-up in the immediate aftermath of the attack, when it might have harmed Obamas presidential fortunes. They have at last been forced by whistleblowers to start asking obvious questions, but their impulse to protect Obama is presumably undiminished. The IRS scandal? Reporters have as little sympathy for the Tea Party as other liberals do, but this story cant be ignored, at least for the moment. Even administration apologist Joe Klein opines: I dont think Obama ever wanted to be on the same page as Richard Nixon. In this specific case, he now is. But the specific case wording is telling; Kleins piece is generally tepid, arguing that the IRS matter is an exception to what has been a generally scandal-free administration. It is a line that many in the media are apt to adopt.
As Bernsteins outburst makes clear, the media generally saves its greatest outrage for government attacks on . . . the media. Thus, the DOJ/AP episode may be the most dangerous to the administration of the mushrooming scandals. Its likely that a prominent head or two will roll, perhaps even Attorney General Eric Holders. Reporters are nothing if not creatures of the pack, and the pack has been dissed here, big-time. How hard will they go after the president? Probably not very. Think battered-woman syndrome: he may be an abuser, but hes still their man—the one they covered for when he was caught with Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers, the one they played along with on the faux war on women and the anti-Islam video as the cause for the Benghazi attack. With Nixon, by contrast, once the media picked up the faintest scent of blood, they were relentless and increasingly joyous in pursuit.
As George Will writes: Episodes like this separate the meritorious liberals from the meretricious. The day after the IRS story broke, The Post led the paper with it, and, with an institutional memory of Watergate, published a blistering editorial demanding an Obama apology. The New York Times consigned the story to page 10. So its also the case that, amid all the stunning events of the past few days, the story that will likely prove the most relevant is this one, courtesy of hotair.com: Top CBS, ABC, CNN execs all have relatives working as advisors for White House.
It won’t be the race card—it will be the race *deck*. He’ll try to get all of our cities burning.
Not that I’ll shed a tear over it.
After Obama throws his his staffers under the bus, they can get jobs working for the Chinese media. One former Democratic Party operative has his own talk radio show in Beijing where he defends Obama and trashes Republicans daily, but don’t worry he has no more than 3 listeners. Check this guy out: http://english.cri.cn/7146/2011/07/20/2361s649528.htm
Neither the press nor the democrats went after President Nixon because of the Watergate break-in. Watergate and his so called dirty tricks was just politics as had been practiced for years by both parties. McGovern was not well liked by the old line democrat leadership but when Nixon defeated him by such a large majority, they were embarrassed and humiliated. Taking Nixon out was more to unite their party and save their power than to restore good government. Watergate was just a handy excuse used by a hostile press and a few powerful and ruthless committee chairmen to take down a popular president. I am still convinced that had he adopted the same scorched earth defense as President Clinton, he could have survived. In the end, he cared more for his country than for himself.
Obama and Nixon...hmmm. Ones a Muslim, the other was a Quaker...couldn’t be any more different
LOL!
Nixon wasn't tanywhere this bad. In fact, he was a pretty decent man and a reasonably good President. He was a political partisan, but he was an American first. I never had any doubt he was doing the best he could for this country.
The media and the Left never forgave him because he successfully went after that Communist spy in the State Department, Alger Hiss, and got him convicted. They were supporters of Hiss even after it was proven he was a Soviet spy and guilty of treason.
Im sure Im missing other MAJOR seditious events by ObaMao. Feel free to fill in the major issues (but adding the medium and low levels problems would fill a library)
The STASI have come across the pond.
The reality was a total failure and Nixon was lying to get elected.
Excellent points and I would like to add, I am still convinced that had he contested the 1960 election as many urged he could have won. But the cost was too great for the country. In the end, he cared more for his country than for himself.
we need a simllar list for shillary for 2016. Starting with her college thesis going through the watergate committee and on and on
LOL
While "not as bad" (how can it be worse than a bunch of ACORN/CPUSA flunkies?) - the Nixon I knew was a typical statist and atypical tyrant. Price, wage, and market controls (Phase I, II, III), EPA, OSHA, expanding Vietnam while dictating Rules of Engagement that lost the war... and so on.
LOL! That needs a Like button!
I am glad to find someone else who has a good word for President Nixon. I find it sad that his memory is so often brought forth to exemplify evil or corruption. I don't remember him that way. I will never forget his impromptu speech as he was leaving the White House after resigning. The following quotation from that speech has stayed with me these many years.
"Always remember others may hate you, but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself."
With that sentence, he summed up his downfall. For the remainder of his life, he worked to rehabilitate his reputation but never complained about unfair treatment.
Obama doesn't.
"Nixon's plan [to get North Vietnamese Communists back to negotiate an end to the war] worked and in early January 1973, the Americans and North Vietnamese ironed out the last details of the settlement." Here
Yes I remember election November 1972 and those charges.. those charges likewise were election rhetoric. Didn't work. Nixon won 49 of the 50 states IIRC.
Neither did the peace settlement work except to pull our troops out; meanwhile
"The American commitment to defend South Vietnam, described as unequivocal by Nixon and Kissinger, had been vitiated by the Watergate scandal and Nixon's subsequent resignation. By that time, the Paris Accords seemed memorable only as the vehicle on which the United States rode out of Southeast Asia."
So Watergate became a Communist super weapon it appears to me.
All those military assistance (except for troops) commitments we made to South Viet Nam that were associated with the peace agreement -- in the event that the Communists broke the agreement -- became null and void not only by Watergate but by the Congress; and I am not 100 percent sure how the public would have reacted if we started supplying South VN with war materiel but no troops.
Maybe even a Quaker... :^)
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