The MSM’s Love For President John F. Kennedy

Over the past two weeks, I’ve been letting the audible version of Vincent Bugliosi’s Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy run all night as I drift in and out of sleep.

Here’s an excerpt that grabbed my attention overnight:

1:33 p.m.
The large double classroom in the medical school, room 101–102, is jammed with noisy, excited reporters who have difficulty calming down when Malcolm Kilduff takes his place at the teacher’s lectern. He starts to speak, then stops. “Excuse me, let me catch my breath.” Kennedy has been dead for half an hour and everyone in the room knows it, but Kilduff still can’t think of what to say or how to say it. He wonders whether he will be able to control his quivering voice. Finally, he begins, “President John F. Kennedy…”
“Hold it,” someone calls, as cameras click. Kilduff starts over.
“President John F. Kennedy died at approximately one o’clock Central Standard Time today here in Dallas.”
“Oh God!” a reporter blurts out.
Kilduff welcomes a moment of respite as the wire reporters rush out to find a telephone.
“He died of a gunshot wound in the brain,” Kilduff continues. “I have no other details regarding the assassination of the president. Mrs. Kennedy was not hit. Governor Connally was not hit. The vice president was not hit.”
Reporters will discover Kilduff’s error about the governor soon enough.
Tom Wicker, the New York Times White House reporter, starts to ask whether Johnson has been sworn in as president, but breaks down. Kilduff’s voice also breaks as he tries to answer.

I can’t imagine this grief overpowering reporters today if something happened to Donald J. Trump.

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Will Love, Inclusion & Constitution Knit France and America Back Together Again? (7-3-23)

01:00 Craftory: 4th of July Declaration Ceremony, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SHU0AbKdJE
08:00 The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Age_of_Entitlement:_America_Since_the_Sixties
10:00 Dennis Prager on leadership, https://www.lukeford.net/Dennis/indexp2.html
15:00 Dennis Prager on values over blood, https://www.lukeford.net/Dennis/indexp2a.html
38:00 July 4, 2020 Judge Jeanine Piro speaks with Dennis Prager
40:00 FT: After the flames, France needs a new social mission
https://www.ft.com/content/ece632e3-60e0-4f15-a00f-89ad5c9cd40e?shareType=nongift
43:00 CROB: Ungovernable France: A divided country lurches toward nationalism, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=149011
47:00 Rabbi Thomashow – The Fourth of July Seder Plate – 7/2/2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FRFYNMvB4U
48:00 A 4th of July Celebration & Declaration- Endorsed by Dennis Prager, Celebrate Our Country, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6s5teHkWyQ
52:00 Tom Friedman’s book, The World Is Flat, https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-world-is-flat/id1651876897?i=1000615267206
1:00:20 Stephen Kotkin. Did Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Revolt Undermine Putin’s Authority?, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wd5iunobjsY

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Leadership

In his 2015 book, Key Concepts in Politics and International Relations, Andrew Heywood wrote:

In some respects the subject of political leadership appears to be outdated. The division of society into leaders and followers is rooted in a pre-democratic culture of deference and respect in which leaders ‘knew best’ and the public needed to be led, mobilized or guided. …democracy itself has enhanced the importance of personality by forcing political leaders, in effect, to ‘project themselves’ in the hope of gaining electoral support. This tendency has undoubtedly been strengthened by modern means of mass communication (especially television), which tend to emphasize personality rather than policies, and provide leaders with powerful weapons with which to manipulate their public images. Furthermore, as society becomes more complex and fragmented, people may look increasingly to the personal vision of an individual leader to give coherence and meaning to the world in which they live.

The question of political leadership is nevertheless surrounded by deep ideological controversy. Its principal supporters have been on the political right, influenced by a general belief in natural inequality and a broadly pessimistic view of the masses. In its extreme form this was reflected in the fascist ‘leader principle’, which holds that there is a single, supreme leader who alone is capable of leading the masses to their destiny, a theory derived from Friedrich Nietzsche’s (1844–1900) notion of the Übermensch (‘superman’). Among the supposed virtues of leadership are that it:

• Mobilizes and inspires people who would otherwise be inert and directionless
• Promotes unity and encourages members of a group to pull in the same direction
• Strengthens organizations by establishing a hierarchy of responsibilities and roles.

Liberals and socialists, on the other hand, have usually warned that leaders should not be trusted, and treated leadership as a basic threat to equality and justice.

Radio talk show host Dennis Prager said Jun. 28, 2011 about the Brandeis-Bardin Institute, which he directed between 1977 and 1983: “Individuals make and break the world… Do you know how many organizations I’ve seen that were great because its leader was great and then the leader died or retired and the place became nothing? It just shriveled up and died.

“I know of what I speak on a personal level where the leader leaves and the people thought that what was great about the institutions was its policies, its methodologies. Doesn’t matter who led it. Then when good leaders left, the methodologies were useless.”

On the other hand, Mar. 23, 2010, Dennis said: “Leaders don’t make America, Americans make America… I don’t want leaders to shape America.”

“God was entirely opposed to having a king. The Israelites asked for a king. Instead, He just wanted the prophets to tell people what is right and wrong and let them lead their own lives.”

“I don’t want leaders. I have a leader — God. We lead ourselves in America. The very notion that leaders will lead us is left-wing.”

So when is Dennis for leadership and when is Dennis opposed to leadership? It’s hard to avoid thinking that Dennis loves leadership when it allows him to assert himself above others and he doesn’t like leadership when it allows others to assert themselves above him. 

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International Law

In his 2015 book, Key Concepts in Politics and International Relations, Andrew Heywood wrote:

International law is an unusual phenomenon. As traditionally understood, law consists of a set of compulsory and enforceable enforceable rules, reflecting the will of a sovereign power. And yet no central authority exists in international politics that is capable of enforcing rules, legal or otherwise. International law is therefore ‘soft’ rather than ‘hard’ law. Some, as a result, dismiss the idea of international law as nothing more than a collection of moral principles and ideals.

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Identity Politics

In his 2015 book, Key Concepts in Politics and International Relations, Andrew Heywood wrote:

All forms of identity politics nevertheless exhibit two characteristic beliefs. First, group marginalization is understood not merely as a legal, political or social phenomenon, but is, rather, a cultural phenomenon. Second, subordination can be challenged by reshaping identity to give the group concerned a sense of (usually publicly proclaimed) pride and self-respect – ‘black is beautiful’, ‘gay pride’ and so on.

While identity politics can be traced back to the emergence of the black consciousness movement in the early decades of the twentieth century, it has had its greatest impact since the 1970s. The upsurge in identity politics occurred in the light of growing attacks on liberal universalism, as greater emphasis was placed on the issues of difference and diversity, and the decline of socialism , which, until the 1970s, had been the dominant means through which the interests of subordinate groups had been expressed. The potency of identity politics derives from its capacity to expose and challenge the deeper processes through which group marginalization and subordination take place. As such, it goes beyond conventional approaches to social advancement, based on the politics of rights (liberalism) and the politics of redistribution (social democracy), and instead offers a politics of recognition, based on an assertion of group solidarity.

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