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Reviewers Praise ‘Playing President’Posted on Jun 8, 2006
A reviewer from the The Chicago Reader is the latest to join Gore Vidal and Buzzflash in praising Truthdig editor Robert Scheer’s new book “Playing President.”
Veteran journalist Robert Scheers subtitle doesnt begin to suggest the wealth of history captured in this retrospective collection of interviews and other writings. The strongest of the lot is his 1976 Playboy interview with then-presidential candidate Jimmy Carter. It launched Scheer into the mainstream of American journalism and is included here in its entirety with new commentary. But its the final section, a smattering of columns written during Scheers tenure on the Los Angeles Times editorial page before he was controversially jettisoned last year, that really packs a punch. The portrait the columns create of George W. Bushthe first truly electronically projected Presidentstands in sharp relief against those of the other presidents Scheers come to know in his long career. Through the administrations pre-9/11 coddling of the Taliban to its deception over the invasion of Iraq, Scheer refused to toe the White House line. While he acknowledges that none of Bush IIs predecessors were perfect either, the complexity of their thoughts and ideas as hes captured them here should be enough, for those of you on the fence, to convince you of the crisis at the heart of the American presidency. Scheers not done yetlately hes launched the independent political Web zine Truthdig.combut this is a fine testament to his career. | Todd Dills
(original entry here) The twentieth century produced a great deal of writing about American politics, much of it bewildered when new notions like empire started to sneak into nervous texts whose authors were not quite certain if empire could ever be an applicable word for the last best hope of earth. The bidding then changed dramatically after World War Two, when Harry Truman armed us with nuclear weapons and gave us an icy sort of permanent war against Godless Atheistic communism, as personified by Joseph Stalin, standing in for Hitler, whom we had got rid of with rather more help than we liked to admit from the new world demon Stalin. How, why did Truman lock us all into a national security state, armed to the teeth? The simple story was dread of communism everywhere on the march, but those of us who had served in World War Two knew as well as our political leaders that the Soviet Union, as of 1950, was not going anywhere very soon: They had lost twenty million people. They wanted, touchingly, to be like us, with consumer goods and all the rest of it.
What actually happened was tragic for the Russian people and their buffer states: Truman, guided by that brilliant lawyer Dean Acheson, was quite aware that by 1940 the world Depression of the early 30s had returned. The New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt had largely failed. What was to be done? FDR took a crash course in Keynesian economics. As a result, he invested $8 billion into re-arming the United States, in order to hold our own against the Fascist axis of Germany, Japan, Italy. To the astonishment of Roosevelts conservative political enemies, the U.S. suddenly had full employment for the work force and a military machine of the first rank with which we were able to defeat Fascism, and just about anyone else who defied us. Truman and friends learned and never forgot an important lesson: It was through war and a militarized economy that we became prosperous with full employment. After victory in Europe and the Pacific, Truman himself began to play the war drums. Stalin was menacing Turkey and Greece (Acheson threw in nearby Italy, and why not France?). We must stop the rising Red tide, while acquiring that eras latest propaganda toy, a TV set. This wearisome background was well known to historians like William Appleman Williams, but hardly suspected by too many of the usual publicists of the American way of life. Robert Scheer has had the good fortune to observe first-hand the last half-dozen Presidents, from Nixon to W. He has also had the perseverance as a journalist to insist that he be able to conduct one-on-one conversations with the odd sort of men who were playing (or trying to play) President. This makes for a fascinating immediacy in the book at hand, particularly when he is giving his protagonists a harder time than they had expected. Scheer has always suspected that he would be one of the last journalists able to use the print medium fully in the electronic age that had dawned around 1960. Scheer makes a telling analysis of Nixon and his frozen smile, with the comment that despite being unquestionably the best prepared of all modern Presidents before assuming office, it was his indelibly awkward and secretive style that did him in. Scheer is impressed by this Presidents mind despite himself, as was Walter Lippmann, whom I once teased for supporting Nixon. Walter was serene: I only know, he said, if I had a difficult lawsuit on my hands, I would go to him as a lawyer. He presents you an entire case before your eyes: He is simply brilliant, unique in public life. Print journalism is a challenge to the writers intelligence, as well as to that of his subject. Of course, few journalists and player Presidents are up to Scheer and Nixon. Yes, Nixon did much that was evil along the way (Cambodia, Watergate), but he usually managed to harm himself mosta form of good manners. He was primarily interested in foreign affairs and the opening up to China; détente with the Soviets; these were significant achievements, and he had no strong domestic policies, which should have been a great relief for Us the People. No wartime tax breaks for cronies is quite enough for us to applaud him in other roles. Presidents are trapped in history as well as in their own DNA codes. After Watergate, Nixon starred as Coriolanus for a while, but when he saw that this got him nowhere, he realized he was so steeped in blood that he could not turn back, so he went on as Macbeth, to our benefit at times. Scheer is not the first of our journalists to recognize how like classical players the Presidents tend to be if they have the right war or disaster to contend with. Scheer is generally good-humored about them, though Bush Is implacable self-love seems to rub him the wrong way; also, Reagans rambling does not get either of them very far, yet Scheer has grasped what few others have: Mrs. Reagans importance not only to her somewhat listless husband but to our country, where she seems to have understood before other politicians that the Cold War was getting us nowhere. Scheer had problems with Jimmy Carter and, perhaps, with Southern politicians in general. He struggled with the mans compulsive fibbing about himself and his place in an imaginary Plains, Georgia, which kept changing to fit his restless re-imagining of his career, recalling homely barbershop quartets as well as killer rabbits at large in catfish ponds. Scheer had an edgy time with Carter, but it was to Scheer that Carter confessed he had lusted in his heart for ladies, causing much of the nation to admire and smirk. Scheer concedes Clintons brilliance as a player but frets over (as many of us did) the end of welfare as we know it. It is with this President that Scheer is most interesting, largely because Clinton is as intelligent as he, at least on the subjects they discuss. Clinton has dared occasionally to touch the third rail of American political discourse: the superiority of other nations economies to that of America the Beautiful and the Earmarked.
This is very grown-up stuff. The final chapter, perhaps in every sense, deals with George W. Bush. Scheer confesses he was ill-prepared for someone who seems to have no idea of, or interest in, playing President, as opposed to playing Wartime President, easily the trick of the week when Congress has modestly declined to declare war on anyone. Certainly, with these observations on a section of our history, Scheer joins that small group of journalist-historians that includes Richard Rovere, Murray Kempton, and Walter Lippmann.
(original review here Even if Robert Scheer wasn’t fired last year from the Los Angeles Times because he dared to tell the truth, we’d still admire the guy. But he was clearly a breath of pugnacious, trenchant fresh air for the LA Times—and that annoyed the heck out of the editor. (No doubt, the Tribune Company, which owns the LA Times, was getting heat from the White House because Scheer took no prisoners among the Busheviks.) Scheer is one of those rare journalists who actually hasn’t gone through the looking glass. His insights appear all the more astounding because he stood virtually alone in making them for so long among mainstream journalists. Paul Krugman is his closest counterpart on the East Coast, but Scheer has a bit more instinct for where the Bushevik jugular vein is located. Fortunately, Scheer hasn’t left journalism. He now is ensconced at the website Truthdig.com and writes for other publications. We often link to him on BuzzFlash.com. His new book (May 2006) is a delightful romp through his interviews with presidents going back to Nixon. Scheer has the rare talent to get politicians to open up and utter astounding remarks, which Scheer then goes onto actually include in his interviews. The fact that Scheer doesn’t censor his interviews to make politicians look better has angered at least one of them, George H.W. Bush, who was furious that Scheer actually printed the elder Bush’s remark—and ain’t this ironic—that “you can have a winner” in a nuclear war. (The bad apple doesn’t fall far from the tree is all we can say about the current occupant of the White House.) The elder Bush went after Scheer with a vengeance, denying (Cheney-like) that he ever uttered such a statement, even though he was caught on tape. As for the younger Bush, Scheer, who fills the book with fresh commentary on the figures he interviewed, notes (in a chapter entitled “George W. Bush’s Perpetual Adolescence”) that he never interviewed him one-on-one, so Scheer includes columns he wrote about Bush. Scheer introduces the Dubya chapter with these observations: “But the basic problem for anyone attempting to understand Bush’s motivations is that they may not be driven by a recognizable engine. His charm, which I take to be his most formidable asset, lies largely in the assertion of the prerogatives of perpetual adolescence, in his insistence that we judge him as a well-intentioned screw-up rather than a responsible adult.” Well said, Robert Scheer, well said. We should note that Scheer was the interviewer who got Jimmy Carter to reveal that he had “lust in his heart.” But, in retrospect, what most intrigues Scheer about Carter was that the man from Plains was our first window into the emergence of the “born again Christians” as a political force, even though they, in the end, repudiated one of their own (Carter) because he was too “liberal” on social policies. “Playing President” is a delightful collection of banter with the occupants of the White House in the last 35 some years—and Scheer’s incisive, no holds barred commentary makes it all the more enjoyable. Previous item: Norman Solomon: The Gay Marriage Ban Isn't Just Politics as Usual Next item: Ann Coulter Challenges President of Iran to Insane-Comment Contest Elsewhere: . Are you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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