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PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 4:34 pm 
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With a 40 year perspective, Woodward and Bernstein write that Nixon was worse than we thought.

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Woodward and Bernstein: 40 years after Watergate, Nixon was far worse than we thought

By Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, Friday, June 8, 10:35 AM

As Sen. Sam Ervin completed his 20-year Senate career in 1974 and issued his final report as chairman of the Senate Watergate committee, he posed the question: “What was Watergate?”

Countless answers have been offered in the 40 years since June 17, 1972, when a team of burglars wearing business suits and rubber gloves was arrested at 2:30 a.m. at the headquarters of the Democratic Party in the Watergate office building. Four days afterward, the Nixon White House offered its answer: “Certain elements may try to stretch this beyond what it was,” press secretary Ronald Ziegler scoffed, dismissing the incident as a “third-rate burglary.”

History proved that it was anything but. Two years later, Richard Nixon would become the first and only U.S. president to resign, his role in the criminal conspiracy to obstruct justice — the Watergate coverup — definitively established. Another answer has since persisted, often unchallenged: the notion that the coverup was worse than the crime. This idea minimizes the scale and reach of Nixon’s criminal actions.

Ervin’s answer to his own question hints at the magnitude of Watergate: “To destroy, insofar as the presidential election of 1972 was concerned, the integrity of the process by which the President of the United States is nominated and elected.” Yet Watergate was far more than that. At its most virulent, Watergate was a brazen and daring assault, led by Nixon himself, against the heart of American democracy: the Constitution, our system of free elections, the rule of law.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 4:47 pm 
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At its most virulent, Watergate was a brazen and daring assault, led by Nixon himself, against the heart of American democracy: the Constitution, our system of free elections, the rule of law.
Wow, and ObamaFraudForgeryUsurperMuslinGate is 100 times worser, I read somewheres ...

Nixon's resignation restored my faith in America. It took too long, but the system worked, and we ran the bastard out of town.

America: We make mistakes, then we correct them, then we make new mistakes and then we correct those, and 40 years later it's a better country. It's messy but it works. I gave up advocating the violent overthrow of the U.S. government. Did you know he wrote 9 books after resigning?

The night he resigned, I was in Bathysphere, Md. or wherever it is, where I went to high school. I jumped in my car with a couple buddies and drove down to the White House immediately. What a scene, the only totally spontaneous demonstration I ever saw: thousands of people there who nobody invited, horns honking, wine bottles waving in the air, and a flood of pure joy that washed right over the White House fences and into the Oval Office. An unforgettable night.

But if Nixon could have ordered out the military and declared himself president for life, I have no doubt in the world that he would have instantly done it. The president is the most powerful man in the world, but he can't do that. He can not do that.

I looked at that, wild uncouth stoned-out hippie that I was, and said, "Y'know what? This country ain't so bad after all!"

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 5:02 pm 
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I just got through a few pages of the comments. I'm a bit surprised at how many posters still believe that Nixon was somehow innocent in all of this.

Then again...


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2012 5:50 pm 
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DaveMuckey wrote:
I just got through a few pages of the comments. I'm a bit surprised at how many posters still believe that Nixon was somehow innocent in all of this.

Then again...



Pshaw. G. Goordon Liddy and Chuck Colson made careers out of said denial. :P

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PostPosted: Mon Jun 11, 2012 8:31 pm 
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Wonder if someone will bother to do this to ronny raygun, since he's by and far worse than tricky dick ever thought about being.


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