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- Path: sparky!uunet!infoserv!infoserv.com!erics
- From: erics@infoserv.com (Eric S. Smith)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.dan-quayle
- Subject: Re: Have some respect
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 92 17:09:15 PDT
- Organization: Reigning Cats and Dogs
- Message-ID: <D2150056.j87dqs@erics.infoserv.com>
- Reply-To: erics@infoserv.com
- X-Mailer: uAccess - Macintosh Release: 1.6v1
- Lines: 63
-
-
- ralph@cbnewsi.cb.att.com (ralph.winslow) writes:
-
- > erics@infoserv.com writes:
-
- > >Well, in fairness to the American people, the series of scandals known
- > >collectively as "Watergate" mostly either became public knowledge or
- > >else occurred after Nixon's re-election. The Watergate break-in occurred
- > >before the election, but it wasn't until after the election that the
- > >break-in and subsequent cover-up was traced to key Nixon aides and to
- > >Nixon himself. Other Watergate-related scandals such as the break-in of
-
- > This is true enough if you demand "proof" that Nixon aides were invloved,
- > but it didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out who was responsible
- > for the break-in. Who stood to gain anything by it? No cash or objects
- > of value were removed, only documents relating to campaign strategy and
- > things of that type were tampered with. I went to bed the night of the
- > election with joy in my heart that no-one could possibly not clearly
- > understand that Tricky Dick (or at least his closest pals) was/were
- > crooks, and hence, not to be voted for. Imagine my shock the next AM
- > at a 49-1 landslide (electoral, not a big plurality, though).
-
- I'd say that in America we do demand proof before assigning responsibility
- for crimes. I'd agree that there was never any question who reaped the
- ultimate benefit from dirty tricks and criminal activities directed
- against Democratic party candidates, and while that may figure into
- the decision about who to vote for, it's not enough to hold the top
- people ultimately responsible without clearer evidence.
-
- If you went to bed the night before the 1972 election thinking there
- was a chance that Nixon would lose, then you must be one of about five
- people who felt that way. Don't get me wrong; I opposed Nixon as much
- as anybody. I voted for the first time in 1972, I made my first ever
- campaign contribution to the McGovern campaign even though I couldn't
- afford it, I campaigned for McGovern in the Michigan primary (which
- George Wallace won with 50% of the vote) and voted for him in the election.
- But by the end I had no allusions as to the final outcome and it was
- quite obvious that no one, including anyone in the McGovern campaign,
- did either. The next day was one of the worst of my life (comparable only
- to a similar one in 1980) and I remember our student newspaper printed
- a black page, headlined simply "Four More Years". And I don't know what
- you mean by "not a big plurality", but Nixon got almost 62% of the vote,
- and won by 18 million votes.
-
- But with regard to Watergate, I stick to my point that no one knew the
- magnitude or the true dimension of the scandal at the time. The first
- inkling of what had really happened came out in John Dean's testimony
- to the Senate subcommitee in 1973. What facts about Watergate were
- available before the election were not in the nature of an "October
- surprise" either. The break-in occurred in June and the polls clearly
- showed that the investigation was a non-issue as far as the campaign
- was concerned; it was just a back-page story nagging at the Republicans
- until more facts started coming out after the election. In my opinion
- there's no way that Nixon would have been re-elected if the voters had
- known all the facts before the election, just as there was no way for
- him to have saved his presidency once the facts did become known.
-
- -----
- Eric Smith
- erics@infoserv.com
- CI$: 70262,3610
-
-
-