Lady in waiting: what Hillary really reveals in her new memoir.LIVING HISTORY by Hillary Rodham Rodham is an English surname which may refer to a number of persons or places. People Family of Hillary Rodham Clinton
U.S. publishing company. It was founded in 1924 by Richard L. Simon (1899–1960) and M. Lincoln Schuster (1897–1970), whose initial project, the original crossword-puzzle book, was a best-seller. , $28.00 THE WEEK PRIOR TO THE RELEASE of Sen. Hillary Clinton's (D-NY) memoir Living History was humorless Washington at its best. With their trademark tin ear for their own absurdity, cable punditocrats vied to see who could comment more definitively on a book that had not yet even been released--and thus, none of them could have read. Tucker Carlson Tucker Swanson McNear Carlson (born May 16, 1969) is a libertarian-conservative political news pundit who formerly co-hosted Crossfire and currently hosts Tucker, a national television news show, which is broadcast weekdays at 6 p.m. ET on MSNBC. , the conservative co-host on CNN's "Crossfire A multi-GPU interface from ATI for connecting two ATI display adapters together for faster graphics rendering on one monitor. CrossFire machines require PCI Express slots, a CrossFire-enabled motherboard and, depending on which models are used, either a pair of ATI Radeon adapters or one ," even offered to "eat his shoes and tie" if Living History sells a million copies. (That the book sold 600,000 copies in its first week is apparently making Mr. Carlson a tad queasy QUEASY - An early system on the IBM 701. [Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959)]. .) Every First Lady since Betty Ford has published a memoir within four years of leaving the White House, a fact that doesn't dampen conjectures that Living History is positioning Hillary Clinton for a 2008 presidential run. Aha--it's a sly grab for power! As Chris Matthews This article is about the journalist. For the cricketer, see Chris Matthews (cricketer). This biographical article or section needs additional references for verification. Please help [ to improve this article] by adding additional sources. and Christopher Hitches decided. Imagine what she would do? (Why, everyone might get health insurance!) But what would the comments be if she hadn't written the book? Aha! A sure sign that she's running! Clearly she wants to distance herself from the White House scandals! It is of course unthinkable that Hillary Clinton may have actually revealed something of her true self in Living History. As someone who knows Hillary personally--as I do every other living First Lady--I believe she does. Living History is not only a pleasure to read--an articulate, well-written, and detail-rich account of the Clintons's historic time in the White House that will hold up as a solid work of autobiography for years to come; it is also a book that conveys, with surprising candor, a quiet conservatism at the heart of a woman who has spent years in public life being vilified for her liberalism. Versed Lady No previous First Lady assumed the position with a greater knowledge and interest in her predecessors than did Hillary Rodham Clinton. Yet while she learned a lot of biographical facts about the likes of Eleanor Roosevelt, Dolley Madison, Nellie Taft, and Mamie Doud Eisenhower (who, like Hillary, insisted on always using her maiden name maiden name n. A woman's family name before she is married. Used of a surname that is replaced by a woman when she marries. Also called birth name. ), her greatest mistake in her first months as First Lady was that she missed the important subtext sub·text n. 1. The implicit meaning or theme of a literary text. 2. The underlying personality of a dramatic character as implied or indicated by a script or text and interpreted by an actor in performance. : Use covert symbols and methods to impart influence, and you'll get away with more--and with less criticism--than if you honestly disclose it. Intellectually, Hillary Clinton may have recognized that a First Lady's "power is derivative." But even after a lengthy Ladyship-training session with Jackie Kennedy days after her husband's inauguration, she did not fully grasp how delicately this power must be exercised, and just how much America reveres the mystique of First Lady. Whether a First Lady wants to get the welfare system restructured or ascertain if the President is sticking to his diet, her most significant power is access to the heart and mind of the most powerful person in the world. And as long as presidents have spouses, fear of that power will be there. Nancy Reagan didn't have to invent perestroika to earn the resentment of administration officials who opposed Reagan's friendship with Gorbachev--she just had to discuss its benefits with her husband. And it is not a phenomenon merely of our time. The editorials denouncing Abigail Adams's influence in the 1790s have the same ring of those denouncing Hillary Clinton in the 1990s. Presidents and their wives have always been targeted by their political enemies. Witness the visceral hatred of Clinton by right-wing Jihadists, of Nixon by liberal revolutionaries, of Lincoln by rich states-rights Southerners, and of FDR by greedy Northern capitalists. But you'd have to add up all the dire partisan warnings about Eleanor Roosevelt (that she was part of a Red network), the innuendos about Edith Wilson (that she was running the country), the politically-motivated attacks on Nancy Reagan's entertaining style and White House renovation, the outraged mail campaigns against Betty Ford (protesting her support for Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. and the ERA), the media exploitation of Jackie Kennedy's private life, the petty charges against Pat Nixon (that she "stole" state gifts of jewelry), and the outrageously boldface-lies published about Mary Lincoln Mary Lincoln may refer to:
There are no shocking revelations in Living History like those in the memoirs of Hillary Clinton's predecessors. The very first published First Lady memoir--Nellie Taft's 1914 Recollection of Full Years--stunned the country with its description of Mrs. Taft's overt political ambitions. Clinton drops no bombshells in Living History, as Rosalynn Carter did in her memoirs--revealing her battle with her husband to take bolder actions during the Iranian hostage crisis--or Nancy Reagan did in My Turn, with its cutting assessments of James Baker, Ed Meese, and Ollie North. Though Clinton offers us a glimpse of what passed between her and her husband when he finally told her that he had indeed had an affair with Monica Lewinsky Monica Samille Lewinsky (born July 23, 1973) is an American woman with whom the former United States President Bill Clinton admitted (after initially denying) to having had an "inappropriate relationship"[1] while Lewinsky worked at the White House in 1995 and 1996. (after denying it to her and the rest of the country for seven months), there is not much we couldn't guess. What she also does not say is perhaps revealing. She calls Gennifer Flowers's claim of a 12-year relationship with Clinton to be a "whale of a tale," and that her husband denied this was true: She does not dismiss Flowers as an outright liar. And if she writes of the Lewinsky debacle in that appropriately-parsed, take-the-high-road First Lady language, Clinton's also capable of Bar-like barbs barbs the primary, delicate filaments that are given off the shaft of a bird's contour feather. They project from the rachis and bear the barbules. . Reflecting on a summer gig where she yanked the guts from salmon, she writes: "Of all the jobs I had, sliming fish was pretty good preparation for life in Washington." But there are some surprises, especially for readers unfamiliar with her suburban-public-school-Methodist-youth-ministry-babysitting-in the heavily-Republican Chicago suburb of Park Ridge Park Ridge, city (1990 pop. 36,175), Cook co., NE Ill., a suburb adjacent to Chicago, on the Des Plaines River; inc. 1873. It is chiefly residential. Several national and international corporations have their headquarters in Park Ridge. Nearby is O'Hare International Airport. and barefoot-summers-at-a-cabin-without-plumbing upbringing in rural Pennsylvania or of just how staunchly Republican she was. Indeed, in 1960, convinced by her father and one of her teachers that John F. Kennedy "John Kennedy" and "JFK" redirect here. For other uses, see John Kennedy (disambiguation) and JFK (disambiguation). John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917–November 22, 1963), was the thirty-fifth President of the United States, serving from 1961 until his assassination in had stolen the election from Nixon because of Chicago Mayor Daley's "creative vote counting," an outraged young Hillary joined a local Republican-led effort to uncover voter fraud. As part of that effort, she was dropped off, "fearless and stupid," in a poor and dangerous South Side neighborhood, where she triumphantly found, among other evidence, a vacant lot listed on polling documents as the residence of about a dozen voters. Interestingly, Clinton does not suggest that she now thinks Kennedy won the election fairly. At Wellesley, Hillary Clinton was president of the Young Republicans. Her first great political hero was Barry Goldwater “Goldwater” redirects here. For other uses, see Goldwater (disambiguation). Barry Morris Goldwater (January 2, 1909 – May 29, 1998) was a five-term United States Senator from Arizona (1953–1965, 1969–87) and the Republican Party's nominee for . Her admiration for Goldwater is not just some bit of cute retro whimsy whim·sy also whim·sey n. pl. whim·sies also whim·seys 1. An odd or fanciful idea; a whim. 2. A quaint or fanciful quality: stories full of whimsy. . As she writes, "Years later, I admired his outspoken support of individual rights, which he considered consistent with his old-fashioned conservative principles: 'don't raise hell about the gays, the blacks and the Mexicans. Free people have a right to do as they damn please.'" As late as 1968, Clinton worked at the Republican convention to help nominate Nelson Rockefeller Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller (July 8, 1908 – January 26, 1979) was the forty-first Vice President of the United States, governor of New York State, philanthropist, and businessman. . It was Vietnam that fomented the first challenge to her politics, and the GOP's rightward drift that helped push her into the Democratic Party. Some readers might find inconsistencies between her right-leaning twenties and her current political image, but Hillary finds continuity. As she puts it, in a take-off of a famous Reagan remark: "I didn't leave the Republican Party as much as it left me." We also discover that Hillary Clinton is a devout Christian who was part of prayer group with the likes of Joanne Kemp and Susan Baker, and that she relied on Biblical scripture and verse faxed to her by a member of the group to get through the most traumatic years of her tenure--all eight of them. I think I missed the coverage of this on: the "700 Club," but I do anticipate an ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union. suit against her for retroactive use of government property for religious purposes. Kidding aside, at least for me, Living History sends a powerful message for everyone: Don't judge others or yourself by any one label. Also surprising is her willingness to point out specific things she said Things She Said is single CD by the band Kent. Track listing
phraseology, wording, diction, phrasing, verbiage and my comment unleashed a torrent of angry reactions. I regretted the way I came across and I apologized to Tammy personally and later publicly in another television interview." Clinton also blames only herself for the fallout from the infamous "stayed home and baked cookies" sound bite. She regrets saying "vast rightwing conspiracy" not because of the intent but the wording--it wasn't a conspiracy, but largely open. Living History's last chapters tell the now familiar tale of the impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow. and Hillary Clinton's reactions to the events, but they contain a few interesting nuggets Nuggets can refer to several branches of interest:
Oh, Lady Be Good If a combination of ruthless political enemies and her own open policy activism made Hillary Clinton the most-criticized First Lady in history, the flip side Flip side In the context of general equities, opposite side to a proposition or position (buy, if sell is the proposition and vice versa). is that she also accomplished more than any Of her predecessors, Granted her own policy staff and the freedom to work Congress and the executive branch on behalf of issues she cared about, Hillary racked up (in addition to one massive failure on universal health care) an impressive list of achievements: health coverage for uninsured children, sweeping adoption reform, increased research funding for a host of devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. diseases that hit men (prostate cancer prostate cancer, cancer originating in the prostate gland. Prostate cancer is the leading malignancy in men in the United States and is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death in men. ), women (breast cancer) and children (epilepsy), and the largest private fundraising ever conducted for historic preservation. Clinton is also the "most world-traveled" First Lady--a distinction previously held by Pat Nixon--and she journeyed not just to attend state funerals but to advance her international causes, from IMF IMF See: International Monetary Fund IMF See International Monetary Fund (IMF). micro-loans for struggling village economies to education of poor rural women. Finally, Hillary Clinton left a legacy to the "Ladyship la·dy·ship also La·dy·ship n. Used with Your, Her, or Their as a title and form of address for a woman or women holding the rank of lady. " as monumental as Dolley Madison and Eleanor Roosevelt. She has opened wide the choices and options that the press and public will now expect from any potential presidential spouse. The media and public do not generally pay close attention to the real work that First Ladies do. So one cannot fairly blame Hillary-haters for ignoring the fact that, after studying new research on how vital it is to read to infants in terms of brain development, she convened a White House conference on early childhood development and promoted reading to infants through pediatrician offices. Or that she publicly spoke out against the Taliban's treatment of Afghan women as early as 1997. Or that she launched a breast cancer awareness campaign. Or that she herself started the federal Save America's Treasures to protect historic sites. Or that Laura Bush has continued these endeavors. Will Hillary run for President in 2008? Liberals hope she will because they think she can win. Conservatives hope she will because they think she will lose. And the media hopes she will because it would be the hottest story since OJ. Could Hillary Clinton ever be elected? Voters are unpredictable, and we cannot know. But I cannot be the only American tantalized by the idea of Bill Clinton, back at the White House--as First Husband. CARL SFERRAZZA ANTHONY, a former speechwriter speech·writ·er n. One who writes speeches for others, especially as a profession. speech writ for Nancy Reagan, is
the author of several books, including the two-volume First Ladies: The
Saga of the Presidents' Wives & Their Power, 1789-1990.
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