Tuesday, November 21, 2023

JFK, Stripped of “Camelot”


[“Alan J. Levine, Possibly America’s Last Great Living Historian, on british Historian Max Hastings’ Book on the Cuban Missile Crisis.”

Full disclosure: Nicholas Stix freelanced for Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture from 1992-1999, where he wrote a series of classic articles (e.g., “black English,” “Crime Stories,” and The black Nationalism of George S. Schuyler”). In 1999, editor-in-chief Thomas Fleming purged him, while cheating Stix out of a publication and fee (he didn’t even pay him a “kill fee”) for a profile he’d written of new york city mayor Rudy Giuliani, and on which Stix had worked app. 150 hours (and which would have earned him only $150).

The purge was apparently part of a one-sided proxy war by Fleming, following the departure of Ted Pappas, who had been the magazine’s managing editor for ten years, during which time Pappas had carried Fleming. Around that time, a highly placed source told Stix that Fleming had attended a meeting of the League of the South in a state of extreme inebriation, where he had engaged in a stream of profanity. Another member told Fleming to immediately stop cursing, and when Fleming persisted, punched him out. Fleming never thanked Pappas for his service, but simply posted a terse note on the letters page, saying that he no longer worked there.

Stix concluded from Fleming’s misconduct at Chronicles that Pappas had been Stix’ “rabbi” at the magazine.

Nicholas Stix’ Chronicles archive.]


Jackie Kennedy was America's most beautiful, tasteful, and heroic First Lady. However, she was also the creator of the Camelot Myth. (How heroic was Jackie? Just take a look at the Zapruder film of the communist Lee Harvey Oswald's assassination of the President. Mrs. Kennedy risked being also killed, throwing her body across that of her mortally wounded knight, as if she were a Secret Service agent.)

By David in TN
tuesday, november 21, 2023 at 5:32:00 p.m. est

Alan J. Levine, America's Last Great Living Historian, wrote “John F. Kennedy Remembered Without Tears.”

The essay is in the November Chronicles Magazine.

“On this anniversary, the media will probably continue to prop up the legends of the 1960s, especially those concerning JFK. Once again, the old stories will be trotted out, with perhaps a few modifications, to cover certain embarrassing matters that have become too public. JFK will be presented as a glamorous war hero, unmatched orator, an author and devotee of the arts and intellectual pursuits, the man who got us to the moon, furthered civil rights and liberal causes. He’ll be portrayed as the victor in the Cuban Missile Crisis, the greatest crisis of the Cold War, and the man who saved the world from nuclear war almost single-handedly, except for the help of his brother, against the reckless advice of most of his advisers. Finally, to many, JFK is the man who would have saved us from Vietnam, if only he had lived.


N.S.: Ted Sorensen (1928-2010) at his White House desk. Sorenson ghostwrote Profiles in Courage, which I read at the age of eight. All I recall of it was a sentence that ran on for over one full page. Since everyone knew that the late President was a genius, and everything he did was great, I concluded that one of the signs of genius was in being able to write never-ending sentences. The book, part of Joe Kennedy Sr.'s campaign to put his son in the White House, sought to depict JFK as a great intellectual. In an earlier chapter of said campaign, Kennedy Sr. engaged new york times columnist Arthur Krock to "edit" Jack's Harvard master's thesis, Why England Slept, into a book, which with the senior Kennedy's publishing pull and Krock's press connections, was turned into a bestseller. Whether Jack Kennedy had ever written any of the thesis/book, or even read it, has never been publicly determined.

Pulitzer-prize winner Arthur Krock (1886-1974) was called the “dean of Washington newsmen.” Krock edited Jack's Harvard master's thesis, Why England Slept, into a bestselling book. Had Krock ghosted the thesis, as well?

“All these mythmaking portraits were marshalled by veterans of his administration, such as former White House Counsel Ted Sorensen and the historian and former White House Special Assistant Arthur Schlesinger Jr. They have been repeated to this day, notably in Mark K. Updegrove’s recent book, Incomparable Grace (2022), which is far from the most extreme example of Kennedy worship.

Kennedy "court historian" Arthur Schlesinger Jr. was given a no-show job as "Albert Schweitzer Professor of the Humanities" at my grad school alma mater, the City University Graduate School. We once rode in the elevator together. I didn't say anything to him. (I stood under indictment for years there for a Ph.D. in Philosophy. Eventually, the departmen chairman offered me a plea bargain: an M.A. and time served.)

“Despite all this adulation, the real JFK was a man who can only be described with a four-letter word: Fake.

“Of all American presidents, JFK’s reputation for honesty and nobility is the most fraudulent. Kennedy was something fortunately rare in a modern democratic country, at least until recently; a man whose WHOLE LIFE was a lie, whose reputation has so little basis in truth that it requires explanation.”

David in TN: The previous time Mr. Levine wrote on this subject he didn’t use the term “until recently.” Now he does. As he continues, Mr. Levine gives the explanation.




JFK & Jackie in the Inauguration Day limo: Who was the real giant? To this day, pretenders to her throne hopelessly attempt to imitate her!



6 comments:

  1. You want to hear something "funny"?There's a video on YouTube of JFK on the Jack Paar Tonight Show(1960) and I was stunned(I watched it yesterday)by how much of a war hawk he attempted to sound like.In fact,Biden's speech a couple weeks ago was probably plagerized from Kennedy's remarks to Paar.

    (abc news)Solemn throughout his remarks, the president stressed what he saw as America's role as a defender of democracy and as a "beacon to the world, still," while seeking to reassure the nation amid a time of rising anger, grief and unrest in the wake of Hamas' terror attack on Israel and Israel's resulting war on Hamas in the Palestinian territory of Gaza.

    (GRA)Kennedy said basically the same thing in 1960--campaign rhetoric--maybe--but in spite of the Cuban Missile Crisis,I've always heard JFK was a pacificist and that's why he was killed by the CIA.

    Pretty confrontational sounding on the Paar show.

    --GRA

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  2. As I recall Kennedy was headed for defeat in the next election. He failed to get the socialist crap passed whereas Johnson succeeded. The Russians regarded him as a weakling--hence their missiles in Cuba. In the Navy he got his vessel lost and sunk. If he wasn't handsome and hadn't gotten killed he would be remembered as a failure.

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  3. The entire PROFILES IN COURAGE TV series is available here: https://www.youtube.com/@joesphalexander1900/videos Unfortunately the video quality isn't so great, which is a shame, as this is a high-quality series. Uniquely, it seems to have been made as a tribute to JFK, and probably wasn't intended to last more than one season (1964-65). The other historical series on this channel, THE GREAT ADVENTURE, is also very well-made and worth seeing. -RM

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  4. Nixon 1960 would have been a better President than was Nixon 1968. He had more focus on rooting out the commies in the deep state. The dam hadn't broke open yet with the great society socialism and he might have kept it constrained to new deal levels. Should have fought that crooked chicago election stealing all the way instead of acquiescing.

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  5. KENNEDY HAD TWO KILLERS HIT HIM WITH BULLETS,60 YEARS AGO TODAY.
    --DR.CYRIL WECHT(PATHOLOGIST)


    PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — Sixty years ago today, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas.

    The Warren Commission was created to determine what happened and concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the sole assassin. It's a conclusion that Dr. Cyril Wecht continues to reject, as Wecht told KDKA-TV political editor Jon Delano.

    At age 92, Wecht, a noted forensic pathologist, doctor and lawyer, is convinced that Oswald — if involved at all — did not act alone to kill the president.


    "There were two shooters," he said. "One from the rear and one from the right front behind the picket fence on the grassy knoll. I don't believe Oswald was the shooter, but I'm not uptight about that. If they wanted Oswald as a shooter, we still have a conspiracy, two or more people involved."

    Wecht says there was a cover-up to hide the truth, beginning with the failure to use expert pathologists in the autopsy and the failure to examine the president's brain.

    "There's no question about it," he said. "Two shots were fired. They covered up. The autopsy was by two military pathologists who had never done a medical, legal gunshot autopsy in their entire careers. The brain was never examined. It was never dissected because it would have shown two hemorrhagic tracks through the brain by the bullets."

    The unanswered question remains: Who was responsible for the conspiracy to kill Kennedy?

    Delano: "Do you believe the CIA is responsible for President Kennedy's death?"

    Wecht: "Mostly the CIA, maybe a small number of military-type people. Yes, absolutely. They were looking at five more years of John Kennedy followed by eight years of Robert Kennedy, and they saw America going to hell in a basket.."


    Wecht says he doesn't know who the perpetrators were, but he says the government has still not disclosed everything they know about the assassination.

    "Each of the last three presidents have said that they would release materials and then overnight they change their minds," he said. "So, how do we get to it – when we get the release of all these materials? Complete disclosure."

    Wecht says we need to know the truth to keep it from happening again, but he's pessimistic.

    Delano: "One-hundred-twenty years from now, we may not know the answer."

    Wecht: "That's right, and then it will be forgotten."

    GRA:Possibly the first thing I remember--rhe rat-a-tat tat
    of the drums at the procession in D.C.Somber day on the black and white tv we had.Probably only exceeded by 9/11 for our worst day in my lifetime.
    --GRA

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  6. Took illegal drugs too and was heavy into analgesics during his time as Pres. Suffered bad from back pain. Probably many times was dopey from drug use. That was why an abbreviated autopsy was done too. They did not a toxicology report to become public.

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