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5842. The Kennedy Half-Century The Presidency, Assassination, and Lasting Legacy of John F. Kennedy, by Larry J. Sabato (read 22 Apr 2024) This book, published in 2013, details, extensively, the influence JFK has had in the years since he was assassinated on 22 Nov 1963. It is a fascinating account and I found it fascinating. Most of what it has to say I agreed with. The research is mind-boggling.½
 
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Schmerguls | 7 andere besprekingen | Apr 22, 2024 |
He has some great ideas. Every American should be exposed to his ideas. It is clear that the constitution was meant to change as our country grew.
 
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CMDoherty | 5 andere besprekingen | Oct 3, 2023 |
While I don't agree with all of the proposals, this is definitely a worthwhile read to recognize/grapple with constitutional/structural issues that exist.
 
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alrajul | 5 andere besprekingen | Jun 1, 2023 |
Well written history of the American Government. Focuses on what every voter should be aware of prior to voting or evening listening to politics.
 
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AnnaHernandez | 1 andere bespreking | Oct 17, 2019 |
Some interesting ideas, some less so.
 
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ckadams5 | 5 andere besprekingen | Jun 19, 2019 |
The subtitle of this chunky volume gives you an idea of the scope of the work: "The Presidency, Assassination, and Lasting Legacy of John F. Kennedy." It can easily be read in parts. Sabato covers what is known, suspected and suggested about Kennedy's assassination in a well-organized, objective and enlightening fashion, based on years of research using all the documentation available as of 2013. (Additional documents are just now being released, or re-released without redactions, and Sabato refers to those from time to time, indicating that while he expects them to be of interest, he does not believe there will be anything particularly startling in them, nor will they answer, once and for all, the 50-year-old questions about Kennedy's murder.) Sabato did not set out to prove anything, which makes this the best book I've ever read about this highly charged subject. Sabato also has a reader-friendly style of narrative that kept me going strong through over 400 pages of text. If all you're interested in is the assassination, you can stop around page 256. But as fascinating as that all is, the subsequent chapters, in which the author examines closely how the next nine U. S. Presidents quoted, praised, invoked, imitated, misrepresented, appropriated or ignored JFK and his legacy, are must reading for all political junkies and plain old history buffs. If this had been my own book, it would be studded with page-point markers. It isn't just good narrative non-fiction, it's a valuable reference work as well, with over 150 pages of end notes, and an extensive index. Highly recommended.
July, 2017
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laytonwoman3rd | 7 andere besprekingen | Jul 28, 2017 |
Robert Bausch’s first person narrated “Far as the Eye Can See” is the best historical novel that I have read this year. It is instructive about hostile relations between Native American tribes and whites (and, especially, the U.S. Army) in the West during the 1870s, it is character driven with important romantic elements, it is an adventure story -- I was to the very end of the novel concerned about the protagonist’s fate -- and it is philosophical.

Bausch’s protagonist is a twenty-nine year old man that calls himself Bobby Hale. We are told that much of Hale’s childhood was devoid of affection. His mother died of cholera when he was nine. His father abandoned him immediately thereafter. He was raised in Philadelphia by a spinster aunt, who “never once looked upon me with anything but impatience and disparagement.” During the Civil War he joined the Union army seven times to collect enlistment bounties: each time joining, collecting his bonus, deserting, moving to a different Northern city, changing his name and enlisting. Near the War’s end, not able to desert, he experienced fierce combat. “I seen men dropping next to me in rows like something cut down by a thresher in a wheat field.” After the War he stayed in the Richmond, Virginia, area for four years working menial jobs but dreaming vaguely of living a free life in the Far West “where land was there for any fellow with the nerve to stake it out and call it his.” Eventually, he bought a horse, a 32-cartridge repeating carbine, and other essential equipment and accompanied a wagon train out of St. Louis headed for Oregon. All of this is important for us to know prior to the first major event that Hale narrates.

“Far as the Eye Can See” opens with a prologue. Hale has done something not yet revealed that has caused him to abandon his job of scout for the army, whose mission is to find and collect all of the Indian tribes in the Yellowstone River area and move them to specific areas near specified forts. The act that Hale has committed has him believing that both soldiers and Indians have good reason to track and kill him. Traveling hastily toward Bozeman, Montana, he discovers that he is being followed. Hiding behind an outcropping of large boulders, he sees what appears to be an Indian crawling through underbrush seemingly intent on attacking him unawares. He wounds the Indian and discovers the person is a young woman. The shot has ripped a shallow tear across her abdomen. She tells him that she is a half breed, has escaped from a Sioux village, and is fearful that her Indian husband is tracking her to kill her. Hale treats her wound and they leave, together, determined to find a distant sanctuary.

The novel now backtracks to Hale’s experiences prior to his meeting “Ink,” the half-Indian, half-white woman. We read of Hale’s adventures of being a part of the wagon train headed out of St. Louis. We meet several white characters possessing varying degrees of bad character. (They reappear later in the novel) We meet also two individuals who will influence positively Hale’s evolving character. One is Theo, the wagon train leader, wise of the shortcomings of mankind, of life on the trail, and of Indian values and behavior. The other is Big Tree, Theo’s wagon master, a six and a half foot massive Crow. Both men believe that when Indians and white men interact more often than not it is the white man who is the savage.

Theo, Hale, Big Tree, and several other members of the train ride out ahead of the wagons. Indians suddenly appear. Surrounded by a party of galloping, yipping Sioux braves, not understanding that individual braves are taking “coup” – touching the tops of white men’s heads with the tips of their lances not to kill but to enhance their reputation for courage and to make good medicine – Hale shoots one of them. Theo is disgusted. He must now prepare the wagon train for certain attack. He tells Hale, “But the truth is, we went into Indian country and murdered a brave. That’s what we done. There ain’t no other way to look at it.” Big Tree’s assessment of whites, expressed after a later incident, is “Wasichus [white men] kill for gladness.”

Theo stops the wagon train at Bozeman and nearby Fort Ellis to wait out the winter. Deciding to reside permanently in Bozeman, he urges Hale to lead the train to Oregon in the spring. Hale refuses to take the responsibility. Theo then recommends that Hale accompany Big Tree on a winter hunting, trapping expedition through the wild lands of the eastern Rocky Mountains. Hale and Big Tree do this for seven years. What Hale learns about Indian life from Big Tree and from his experiences is the second major section of the novel.

When Big Tree and Hale eventually part, Hale returns to Bozeman. In route, he overtakes a wagon owned by two white women whose husbands, missing for more than a year, are presumed to be dead. He helps them reach Bozeman. During this third major section of the novel we observe an evolving relationship between Hale and one of the women that tests Hale’s reluctance to make commitments. Hale eventually promises to escort the two women to Oregon in the spring. He chooses in the meantime to scout for the army because it will provide him an income and warm shelter when he is not on the trail. Hale witnesses firsthand the intractable thinking of the officer class regarding “the Indian problem.” We experience the incident that causes Hale to flee and, eventually, to wound the half-breed girl called Ink. The final section of the novel depicts the dangers he faces and the extent to which he is willing to accept the obligations he feels he must honor regarding the women in Bozeman and Ink’s safety and future.

What interested me most in the novel was Hale’s journey toward commitment to others. Because of his experiences, he has, justifiably, a harsh opinion of mankind. At one point in the novel, he and other wagon train members witness a bald eagle seize a puppy and carry it to its nest. The puppy, observing the humans below, wages its tail, then whimpers, then commences to howl. The train moves on. We do not need to be told the puppy’s fate. Hale comments: “I couldn’t help but think that maybe we’re all a little bit like that dog. We occupy our little space of earth and wait for the damn bird to strike.”

There is so much viciousness that he witnesses, so much stupidity, so much hatred. Life daily is “strife and struggle.” Awaking each morning, he must “look for trouble again.” He wants to believe that there is goodness for him, goodness for any man. Thinking of the two women that he had left in Bozeman, he muses: “It’s a tragic kind of world we find ourselves in, all the time looking for some way to have what we want, hoping for nothing but a reason to hope.” And, “we don’t know all the time what is taken away and what is given. Sometimes we know what we have been given only when it’s been lost.” In the novel’s final chapter he reflects that people talk of living in peace, of not wanting to go to war, of not wanting to kill or be killed. But these, he decides, are just words. “We’re all lying to ourselves and everybody else. … Something way down inside of me feels like it’s dripping and damp and completely evil. I know I am a animal that can talk and there ain’t nothing that will ever save me or no one else.” But, like every human, he has innate needs. Not like every human being he can be empathetic. Ink recognizes his goodness. The final five pages of the novel reveal whether or not he is strong enough to utilize it and whether or not the malevolence of others will eliminate the opportunity.
 
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HaroldTitus | 7 andere besprekingen | Sep 13, 2015 |
Unlike the stream of books released near the 50th anniversary of Kennedy's tragic assassination, this one doesn't have a historical axe to grind and is quite balanced in the treatment of his presidency and legacy. I thought he could have condensed the " conspiracy" discussion to a more manageable format; spent too much time plodding through multiple possibilities. I also found it interesting that one of the presidents who frequently quoted JFK and claimed to be carrying on his tradition, was Ronald Reagan. This was the same Reagan who was a constant critic of Kennedy during JFK's presidency. That hypocrisy aside, despite Kennedy's mixed record during his short presidency, he was such a charismatic figure that both political parties have claimed them as their own and try to capitalize on the JFK aura. As Sabato notes, as we get more decades distant from the events of '63, that aura will certainly fade.
 
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VGAHarris | 7 andere besprekingen | Jan 19, 2015 |
The author's premise is that the Kennedys have affected our national political history since JFK's election. This includes our strained relationship with Cuba, the Viet Nam war, the prominent role of anti-communism in all our foreign policy decisions (Joseph Kennedy was closely connected to Sen. Joseph McCarthy) , Keynesian economics with it's tax cuts and deficit spending, the space program and subsequent progress in technology and medicine, all of which began with Kennedy's presidency. One of the biggest legacies he sees is the general distrust of government which he feels began with the assassination and the inept Warren Commission report. He goes to great lengths to list all the conflicting witnesses and evidence which can prove either Oswald acted alone or that there were others involved. I found it a bit tedious to wade through all of this although he makes a good case for much information being ignored at the time. It was also interesting to look at how JFK's and Jackie's image was protected by the press, hard to imagine in this day of 24 hour news talking to death any small misstep. An interesting book which proposes that Kennedy didn't have the liberal agenda that he is credited with. It is well researched with many end notes and references cited.
 
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Oregonreader | 7 andere besprekingen | Jan 21, 2014 |
I thought I had heard and read all there is to know about JFK but, if anything, this book demonstrates that it's not what you say but how you say it. The first chapter takes the reader back to that fateful day 50 years ago in Dallas and closes with Lee Harvey Oswald's denial that he had shot the president leaving the door wide open for the reader to ponder who else would have done it and who could have benefited by it. The following chapters goes back even further to when Kennedy became a member of Congress, a Senator and his eventual rise to the presidency. Friends and rivals were made along the way but would any one enemy find it necessary to assassinate him? Sabato opens the discussion in the chapters which follow, the conspiracy chapters. Extremely interesting that security was lax, that his route was published in the papers days before his arrival. There are the obvious questions regarding Communist's, USSR, Castro, Mafia connections even LBJ himself. Sabato puts it all out there on the table for the reader to debate and mull over. I found the final chapters fascinating in that Sabato had a chapter on each succeeding president after JFK and how his legacy benefited future presidents or hampered them.
Whatever your politics, I highly recommend this book it is captivating.½
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Carmenere | 7 andere besprekingen | Nov 26, 2013 |
There have been many new books to commorate the fiftieth anniversary of the assassination of JFK. This is reported to be among the best. Written by Dr. Larry Sabato the founder of the Center for Politics at the Unviversity of Virginia.I quite like Billy Collins, my contemporary but Holy Cross not Georgetown. I guess we can excuse him. I have read most of his books. I liked the new poems in this edition and reread some of his old poems to great delight. I recommend this book. The initial chapters reviewing the assassination events are interesting though well known to anyone who lived through it. There follows many chapters on the various conspiracy and other theories which becomes quite monotonous but i advise you to skip that and hasten to the second half of the book which is quite interesting in citing the inheritances of JFK to all the subsequent presidents. A chapter is devoted to each and this made informative reading.
 
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SigmundFraud | 7 andere besprekingen | Nov 21, 2013 |
True to the its subtitle, the book covers the Kennedy presidency, assassination, and the legacy of JFK, particularly as it relates to the presidents who have come after him. This book is recommended for American political history wonks, naturally. However, I would also recommend it as an excellent overview of the past 50 years for anyone who would like to understand that period better, particularly as it relates to the American presidency.

There's an excellent website that's associated with the book:http://www.thekennedyhalfcentury.com/

Sabato has done a thorough job, and while of course not everyone will agree with all of his conclusions, fully one-fourth of the book is notes, many of which include further references to documents that can be accessed on the internet.

Highly recommended.½
 
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labwriter | 7 andere besprekingen | Nov 8, 2013 |
Mr. Sabato suggestions are an excellent starting point. That said I believe his suggestions applied in total will weaken the Federal form of government toward the problems of direct democracy. I do believe his suggestion to increase the membership of the House of Representatives is solid and if applied would go a long way toward enfranchising many of the disillusioned. Certainly smaller districts will produce candidates more familiar to the electorate and at the same time dilute the effect of lobbying.
 
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4bonasa | 5 andere besprekingen | Mar 7, 2008 |
In his new book A More Perfect Constitution (Walker & Company, 2007) Larry Sabato, the founder and director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics lays out a series of twenty-three proposals for constitutional revision. These amendments would, he argues, bring the Constitution into the twenty-first century by making the structures of our government more fair, more representative, and more effective.

Most of us are instinctively leery of major structural changes to the Constitution, and with good reason - it's lasted for more than two centuries, and has served the United States well. At first glance, some if not many of Sabato's proposals seem unnecessary, unpalatable, or both. But after reading his justifications for them, I was convinced by both the desirability and the necessity of nearly all of them.

Since Sabato's stated purpose with his book is to promote a great debate over these ideas, and to prompt what he terms a "generational process of moderate, well-considered change," I've begun a discussion here of his proposals by outlining them in brief and adding my own views as they currently stand (I will admit that some of them changed just in the course of reading this book). I have attempted as much as possible to keep Sabato's proposals separate from my own opinions so as not to influence others' perceptions of his ideas, but I do encourage everyone interested in this discussion to read his book, where he makes his case in much greater and persuasive detail.

I don’t agree with all of Sabato’s proposals; I doubt anyone will. I certainly don’t expect everyone to agree with my views either. But I do think these points are all worth debating, and I agree with Sabato that we shouldn’t simply accept the Constitution as it stands, but should examine how it works and what, if anything, we can do to make it better for the nation. Some of the changes Sabato suggests would, I submit, make our government work better, and I applaud him for putting out this plan for us all to discuss and consider. Whether anything will come of it remains to be seen, but certainly nothing will happen if we just ignore the proposals.

http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2007/10/book-review-more-perfect-constitution.ht...
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JBD1 | 5 andere besprekingen | Oct 13, 2007 |
The pain, the agony, the waste of tuition money that could have gone towards a class that isn't a repeat of what I had to take in 1990! Great for practicing walking with poise, since if it falls off of your head, it won't break anything other than maybe your nose.
 
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drinkingtea | 1 andere bespreking | Apr 20, 2006 |
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