I was born under the reign of Truman.
He’d delivered the A-Bomb to end the World War three years before I arrived. I
was born in the beginning of the Cold War but also the bloom of baby boomers.
There were electrical appliances, televisions, monster movies, automobiles and
single-family homes called the suburbs.
Ike, the famous general who oversaw
D-Day, followed ( for General Doug was too controversial when he wanted to
start WWIII and was fired by the haberdasher to fade away) and
started the highway system so all the cars could use cheap gasoline and travel
through the states to promote tourism and easily move the military.
He was followed by JFK who seemed like a
young good-looking speaker who convinced the republic as a Catholic he was
better than a vice president who looked bad on black and white television.
My parents didn’t talk about politics and
the local newspaper was concerned about liberal civil rights taking over Dixie and
commies. None of my friends talked about politics so we just went merrily on
our way until the president got his head blown off in Texas.
On the way back to Washington, the vice
president, LBJ, got sworn in next to the bloodied widow. After a few days out
of school watching the parade of a caisson carrying a flag draped box followed
by a riderless horse to the constant thump, thump, thump drum beat, we moved
onto the Beatles.
LBJ decided he didn’t want the problems
of the Vietnam War (Truman had already gotten us into the Korean war to fight
the commies, who were our allies in WWII, but had a more authoritarian agenda
after their Bolshevik revolution and when dividing up the spoils of war, wanted
a bigger piece of the pie) with Ike using the same goal of defeating the
commies in Vietnam, which he handed to JFK, but he also had to worry about Cuba
so he decided not to run for the next election. That was in 1968. That was my
first voting experience.
I voted for Humphrey because I thought he
could further the War on Poverty and Civil Rights agenda LBJ was pushing
through congress; but he lost to Nixon who learned how to shave.
In 72, Nixon got reelected though I think
my vote went to McGovern or John Hospers (Libertarian) received one electoral
vote from a faithless elector in Virginia?
After tricky Dicky couldn’t find a way
out and resigned, Jerry Ford pardoned him from his transgressions but will be
remembered for his bad golf game, fumbling upstairs and getting shot at by
Charlie Manson’s girlfriend. He lost the next election to a peanut farmer from
Georgia.
Carter got wrapped up in
an oil embargo while trying to find a peace process for Israel and Egypt, but
the American Embassy in Iran was invaded with all personnel held hostage.
An actor came on the
stage and was elected in 1980. Regan was a good speaker and greeted the
hostages back from Iran. He tried to get rid of the commies in south America,
but that didn’t work well either. His wife wanted a war on drugs, but elected
officials don’t do well at fighting wars. By now I’d settled into a polling
station of my ole elementary school two blocks away, though I may not have
voted for the winner.
Ronnie got reelected in
‘84 but the democrats’ Mondale was a wuss (a problem that befalls them). Regan
brought down the Berlin wall as the Soviet Union fell apart. Getting wounded in
an assignation attempt just endeared him to the population as Ronnie lost his
mind.
After his two terms, his oil baron vice
president was elected over another weak democrat. Bush, the elder, continued
the conservative agenda and enjoyed the Gulf War, but regrated not finishing
off Hussain. He’d leave it for his son.
A strong democrat
huckster from Tennessee came along and got the attention of America with a
campaign of promise and Fleetwood Mac. Clinton showed the youth factor and was
a good speaker and seemed to get along with everyone. He had enough energy to
get reelected but ran into problems with an intern and lost all credibility.
At the turn of the
century, HW’s son, George W was elected over Clinton’s vice president by
hanging chads. Then 9/11.
As the country collected
in horror of being attacked, the president had to become more than a cowboy to
commander in chief. Invade other lands trying to wipe out the evil from
‘terrorist ideology’ that would convince someone to strap a bomb vest on and
blow up whoever was around. Can we pay for it? Don’t worry about debt, we’ve
got caves in mountains to bomb.
By 2008, the country was
ready for a change. A black man from Hawaii (yes, that is a state) came along
with the campaign of hope and America turned a page. A young man named Obama
with a vice president Biden, who had worked congress the way LBJ did for
Kennedy, was overwhelmingly elected over weak republicans. He tried to set up a
universal health system but the congress wasn’t so quick to spend more money.
After two terms, he turned the democratic party values to the wife of a former
adultery president and it did not go well.
On the scene came a real
estate mogul and another television actor with no political experience, but
with a forceful threatening message won the hearts of the misguided and set
about renovating the people’s house to his grandiose taste. For four years, the
news was filled with Trump’s actions to the joy of some and the horror of
others. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic happened and he didn’t know what
to do. He assigned his vice president to inform the public of the plague, but
he kept stepping in throwing politics and accusations before the well-being of
the public. The daily reports with the charts and graphs and the log lady and
Yoda, only wasted air time. “Wear a mask”. “Stand 6’ apart”. “Don’t worry we
have plenty of ventilators”.
The next election in
2020 did not go so well for him, so he complained and people listened, to the
point when his vice president with the fly on his head was to officiate the
transfer of power, his MEGA band attacked and invaded the halls of Congress.
The next four years were
Clinton’s vice president Joe (now rightly elected president after some ague)
trying to repair foreign trade agreements. Inflation was high but there were
more jobs and the stock market grew. In the background, the constant
complaining by the former president kept the social media busy.
I’ve watch several of
these inauguration procedures on black and white television. Many old white
folk get bundled up (because it is cold outside in January on the Congress
steps) and quietly wait for some old preacher or judge reach out a book (could
be the holy scripture or the Sear’s cataloged) to take the oath and swear
before all that are present and before whatever mystical religious spirit that
following the words said through the ages that he (so far) will abide to the
ancient constitution and the laws of the land and proceed to take the office of
the leader of the free world with the purpose of providing safety for all the
nation and a promise to further the prosperity of all people who live here.
In most of these
procedures the previous president attends to give a hand shake and past the
torch to the new administration. This transition passes the atomic codes and
the keys to the White House.
Following in the
swearing in to the oath of office, everyone sits back to enjoy a parade. Every
state in the union is represented by a marching band or military unit (no
tanks) but no floats or balloons like Macy’s. After all these proud Americans
walk by, the ‘new’ president and his entourage of hanger-on’s and security
personnel climb into armored limos to drive to the White House to the frozen
cheers and flag waving watchers who have been waiting to see someone wave at
them. It is free to stand on the sidewalk and wait in the cold.
There is a formal dance
at the end of the day, but most television has moved onto the nightly roundup
of sitcoms and commercials.
From what I remembered,
the presidential transition was the promise of a new idealism and a hope for
better days to come. The ‘new’ CEO of the United States of America has to
settle down in the Ovel Office with a new staff of folks who will advise and
provide current data to help make positive decisions. We will all stand when he
walks in the room.
Yet this election has
been so controversial and the citizens of this nation are so polarized fired by
religious fervor and constant media productions of violence and death on
screen. There is anticipation for the inauguration and what follows, but I have
no control over the future.
As the podcasters
speculate what tomorrow holds, I will settle back and watch the show and hope
to live long enough for all of this mess to be over. One step at a time.