My skin isn’t thick enough to endure criticism trailblazers like Harris, Pelosi, Gandhi, Meir, and Thatcher have had to suffer; but I have been inspired to follow in their footsteps, in my own ways. As Harris told Marie Claire magazine, “I want [young] women to know, you are powerful and your voice matters." Amen, Sisters. Amen.
Thankful for Past, Edgy for Our Future
Note to Readers:
After the exhausting campaigns, too-close-for-comfort election, and subsequent Trump shenanigans, The Modern Moderate needed a break and some time away from politics – like most Americans.
So we revisited our Thanksgiving commentary from a year ago (November, 2019) and found it’s still relevant today, if we do say so ourselves. “The more things change, the more they stay the same”, in other words. Or as famous philosophers Bon Jovi put it, “It’s the same damn song with a different melody”.
So much so, we decided to update last year’s post with some photos and rerun it. Hope you enjoy it. We’ll return soon with some new ones. BTW, one fact we need to update: President Trump’s tally of documented falsehoods since becoming president now totals 25,000 (15,000 more than a year ago).
In the spirit of Thanksgiving, I’m grateful for:
- Inspiring leaders we’ve been blessed with, during times we needed them.
George Washington led our patriots to victory in the Revolutionary War; presided over the Constitutional Convention of 1787, which established our Constitution and federal government; and served as first President. He famously said (according to myth) “I cannot tell a lie” when confessing he chopped down a cherry tree.
Contrast Washington’s record of service and honesty with that of our current President, who used a questionable bone-spurs claim to AVOID serving in the Vietnam War. According to the Washington Post, Donald Trump has made more than 10,000 false or misleading claims as president, averaging more than 12 PER DAY.
Ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, Devin Nunes (R-CA), recently compared Trump to Washington, saying both used back-channel communications with foreign countries and therefore, it’s acceptable. Washington secretly negotiated with Great Britain to secure a treaty, while Trump bribed Ukraine to investigate a political rival, Joe Biden.
Senator Lloyd Bentsen, VP candidate in a 1988 debate with Dan Quayle, Republican VP candidate who had compared himself to John Kennedy, famously scolded Quayle: “Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy”. Paraphrasing Bentsen, one could confidently remind Trump, “President, you’re no George Washington”.
- The courage of Congressional leaders, almost 200 years after Washington’s selfless example, who prioritized country over party when another president’s unethical behavior was uncovered.
In 1972, President Richard Nixon knew Republican operatives had broken into Democratic Party headquarters and planted bugging devices; he then directed the cover-up after those burglars were caught.
In subsequent Watergate investigations, brave Republican leaders called out Nixon when it became apparent he was guilty of abusing power. Senate Leader Hugh Scott (R-PA) and House Leader John Rhodes (R-AZ) demonstrated the backbone required to hold their own party’s President accountable. Scott described “deplorable, disgusting, shabby, and immoral” behavior by Nixon and his aides. Rhodes recommended Nixon “ought to consider resigning”. Senator Barry Goldwater, elder GOP statesman, joined Scott and Rhodes in privately convincing Nixon to resign before being removed from office.
Contrast that with current Republican Congressional leaders, none of whom have shown that kind of bravery. Some bolstered Trump’s argument “there was no quid pro quo” with Ukraine to release desperately needed military aid in return for a promise to investigate the Bidens. Then, after Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney admitted there WAS a quid pro quo, and EU Ambassador Gordon Sondland confirmed it, Republicans acknowledged it did happen – but wasn’t an impeachable offense.
Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) insisted, with a straight face, Trump didn’t mean it when he publicly encouraged China to investigate the Bidens, he was just joking. Senator Corey Gardner (R-CO) dodged the question entirely, muttering “it’s an answer that you get from a very serious investigation”. Senator Lyndsay Graham (R-SC) offered the bizarre excuse that Trump’s administration wasn’t competent or organized enough to engineer a quid pro quo, so they should be exonerated.
Will we someday give thanks we had leaders such as Trump, Nunes, Jordan, Gardner and Graham to inspire us? Will they compare favorably with historic figures like Washington? If these are the best and brightest one of our major political parties can come up with, I’m not optimistic about our future.
But I am thankful for one more thing: history is written by historians, not opportunistic politicians.
Images: Google Images
Trump with Washington painting: The Wall Street Journal
Constitutional Convention painting: SlidePlayer
McCarthy, Nunes and Trump: San Francisco Chronicle
Bentsen and Quayle: History.com
Watergate Scandal: SlidePlayer
Scott, Goldwater and Rhodes: Twitter
Mulvaney: Vanity Fair
Jordan: Ohio Capital Journal – GettyImages
Trump and Gardner: The Journal
Trump and Graham: The Guardian
Community Guidelines
The Modern Moderate welcomes readers’ ideas and discussions of issues. We do insist, in Moderate fashion, that comments should be as respectful and informed as possible, to keep our site constructive for our readers. Therefore, posts deemed hostile, obscene, untrue, or misleading will be deleted, and authors of those comments may be blocked from posting comments in the future. Thank you for your cooperation.
Good to see you back.
THANKS!
I’m not ѕure why but this web site is loading extremely slow for me.
Is anyone else haѵing this issue or is іt a problem on my end?
I’ll check back later on and see if the problem still exists.
Hey very nice blog!
Very good post. I’m facing many of these issues as well..