Re: 2nd Term, Part VI: Burnin' down the House
By July 4, 1863 the Civil War was effectively over. The Union preserved. On Saturday the 4th, Vickburg fell. And the day before, Lee retreated from his disastrous defeat at Gettysburg. Sometime later, President Lincoln gave the most important, most eloquent most quoted speech in the history of the country on the occasion of the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg. But our president has something more important to do than honor that speech. A president, BTW, who announced his candidacy in Springfield and took the oath of office on the Lincoln Bible!
I'm reminded of the scene in Guarding Tess where Shirley MacLaine is preparing for a presidential visit to commemorate the opening of her late husband's library. At the last moment she's informed Secretary of Agriculture "Kika de La Garza" will be visiting instead. I think we can all sympathize with how she must have felt.
Thank God Reagan didn't send Earl Butz to Normandy when he spoke so movingly about the "boys of Pointe du Hoc."
The incredible lightness and smallness of this president is astonishing and is rapidly pushing him into Carter territory.
In what has to be a public relations gaffe of biblical proportions, the President will skip the Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Gettysburg Address this month. He's sending the Secretary of the Interior instead.
By July 4, 1863 the Civil War was effectively over. The Union preserved. On Saturday the 4th, Vickburg fell. And the day before, Lee retreated from his disastrous defeat at Gettysburg. Sometime later, President Lincoln gave the most important, most eloquent most quoted speech in the history of the country on the occasion of the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg. But our president has something more important to do than honor that speech. A president, BTW, who announced his candidacy in Springfield and took the oath of office on the Lincoln Bible!
I'm reminded of the scene in Guarding Tess where Shirley MacLaine is preparing for a presidential visit to commemorate the opening of her late husband's library. At the last moment she's informed Secretary of Agriculture "Kika de La Garza" will be visiting instead. I think we can all sympathize with how she must have felt.
Thank God Reagan didn't send Earl Butz to Normandy when he spoke so movingly about the "boys of Pointe du Hoc."
The incredible lightness and smallness of this president is astonishing and is rapidly pushing him into Carter territory.
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