The Resurrection of Robert Young
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
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Robert Young
has made a remarkable political comeback, made all the more remarkable
by the fact that Mr. Young has been dead for many years. You didn’t
know Robert Young was in politics? Then you are either very young
or have not been paying attention – or both.
I noticed the
political value of Robert Young more than a quarter of a century
ago, when former President Gerald Ford published his memoirs, titled
A Time to Heal. Until then, I thought Ford, who became
President because Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned in disgrace
nearly a year before President Richard Nixon did, was an accident
who had happened to happen. But when I saw his memoirs, I realized
at once that he was America’s physician, waiting for an ailing nation
to recognize the need for his healing touch.
The cover of
the book showed a profile of Ford looking rather pensive, while
smoking a pipe. The picture clearly was meant to convey the idea
that the former president, who lost his bid for reelection in a
remarkably close contest with that ol’ peanut-picker, former Georgia
Governor Jimmy Carter, was a thoughtful man who would always follow
the first rule of Hippocrates: "First, do no harm." Jimmy
Carter promised he would never lie to us. What made Ford somewhat
reassuring was his unspoken commitment to the task of ensuring that
truth would never kill us in an overdose. Truth may often be painful,
but it should never be fatal.
Looking at
that picture, it occurred to me at once whom the former president
was emulating. A TV series that was quite popular when Ford was
president was Marcus Welby, M.D. The kindly, gray-haired
gentleman playing Marcus Welby was, of course, Robert Young. Ford
was still working on his bedside manner when the America the patient
ran out of patience and chose a new doctor.
It is remarkable
we were permitted to do this when the federal government had not
yet authorized a "comprehensive health care plan." But
we Americans have an annoying habit of holding elections at regularly
scheduled intervals and we tend to turn out in force when we are
ready to turn out whatever F-troop regime is occupying the White
House at the time. We had decided that, whatever the man’s personal
virtues may have been, it was time for Ford the president to go.
Take two aspirin, Jerry and avoid strenuous activities, like running
for president, from now on.
Ford, now 93,
is still lingering in retirement, but Robert Young has come back
in a reprise of his most famous TV role. The cover of Newsweek
after the fall’s election showed the former President George H.W.
Bush in the foreground, looming rather large, while "Georgie,"
the semi-honorable "incrumbent" looked small in background.
The headline: "Father Knows Best?"
The neocons
and others who helped propel the current President Bush to the White
House may have had another TV series in mind. Mission
Impossible, perhaps. Or, given the younger Bush’s western
roots, Roy
Rogers, King of the Cowboys. Maybe even Bonanza,
with the script altered to put Ben, "Hoss" and Adam Cartright
into semi-retirement, while Little Joe steals the show. Instead,
we got a remake of Dukes
of Hazard – without Jessica Simpson.
What might
the sequel be in the last two years? Well, if I were George W. Bush,
I would be a bit more restrained in rejoicing over the death sentence
for Saddam Hussein. As Robert A. Taft, whom you might call as a
"Paleoconservative," warned about the Nuremberg trials,
they set a troubling precedent. If the world takes a notion to expand
the trial and sentencing of war criminals, Bush’s war-making activities,
"cutting off limbs and lives, making orphans and widows out
of children and wives," may get some unfavorable reviews. What
famous character of the movie and TV screens will Bush resemble
then? Well, David Janssen comes to mind. Harrison Ford, too.
Stay tuned
for The Fugitive, next on the Bush Family Network!
November
17, 2006
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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