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|    alt.history    |    Pretty sure discussion of all kinds    |    15,187 messages    |
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|    Message 14,680 of 15,187    |
|    Jeffrey Rubard to Jeffrey Rubard    |
|    Re: *Critica*: About Robert W. Merry    |
|    24 Dec 21 00:19:35    |
      From: jeffreydanielrubard@gmail.com              On Saturday, December 18, 2021 at 10:42:08 PM UTC-8, Jeffrey Rubard wrote:       > On Thursday, June 11, 2020 at 12:03:37 PM UTC-7, jeffr...@gmail.com wrote:        > > Merry's Big Books        > >        > >        > > A topic I recently raised in Clark County, Washington: "What can you just       say about Robert W. Merry, the mysterious doyen of American cryp       o-conservatism hitherto unknown to Washington journalism?"        > >        > >        > > My answer was this:        > >        > >        > > There are two important books by "Merry", *A Country of Vast Designs*       about James K. Polk and *McKinley: Architect of the American Century*.        > >        > >        > > Polk was actually a Whig and McKinley a Republican, but the distance       between two ought not to be reckoned great: the Republicans were arguably a       "successor" party to the Whigs purified of the influence of people like Henry       Clay.        > >        > >        > > I have never been a Republican; I never even vote for Republican       candidates. Still, if you want America you must cope with its historical       tradition and people "distasteful" to you who are part of it. (Ardent       Democrats ought to remember there is not a        "standard of excellence" associated with joining the Democratic Party, if you       will.)        > >        > >        > > I can find fault with neither of these two men on account of the "models"       they offered to later Americans and what they chose to, or had to, do. Polk       was associated with the real "opening of the American West", a phrase which       not ought to hold        terrors for those familiar with what the Louisiana Purchase buys you.        > >        > >        > > It is very arguable that there would have been no Abraham Lincoln without       James K. Polk, as Lincoln's early years in Illinois and Illinois politics.       Similarly, if McKinley was not quite the "architect of American empire" that       Roosevelt was he was        something of a model for even how a man of wealth and distinction could have       (almost) "Just One Wife".        > >        > >        > > Could be said.        > > Jeff Rubard       > Yeah, no, nobody in Washington state ever heard of a real person named       "Robert W. Merry". (They still care a bit, too.)        > I do look a bit like the guy.        >        > Jeffrey Rubard              In other words, 'to all appearances' images of Robert W. Merry were derived       mechanically from my literal face. Etc.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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