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Saturday, January 26, 2019

The Resignation Speech of President Richard M. Nixon

The Nixon sequence of American history provide be considered one of the most luxuriant times the country has faced. Elected in 1968, Nixon was faced with a nation divided by the War in Vietnam, racial tension and scotch disparity. International tensions were no less Communist China was a prominent un cognize enemy and the Cold War with Russia seemed on the verge of bit into a hot and potentially nuclear conflict at all moment. Six years later, following the infamous break-in at the Watergate Hotel and approach impeachment, Richard M. Nixon delivered his resignation speech on August 8, 1974.His speech is clearly a primary document necessary for understanding Nixon and his perspective on himself as well as on the Watergate fiasco. Obviously Nixon did not have a generous amount of time to prepare the speech, such as he would have with a typi-cal State of the Union solicit. It is also likely he wished, in retrospect, to have more time to craft a fine product. Nonetheless, he re alized the magnitude and uniqueness of the document, although at the time he probably did not realize the candid insight into his atti-tude and personality that it would provide.Facing impeachment as well as the possibility of criminal charges, it is likely Nix-on strongly mat up the legal implications of both entrance moneys he would make. Whether inten-tional or not, his speech gave strength to his detractors who considered him the delusive Tricky Dick. Few if any of his supporters, much less detractors, evaluate him to shoul-der any blame for the illegal activities and cover-ups. The closest he could come to an admission of wrong-doing carried a self-serving caveat I regret deeply any injuries that may have been done in the course of the til nowts that led to this decision.I would reckon only that if about of my judgments were wrong, and some were wrong, they were made in what I believed at the time to be the best interest of the nation. Later revelations brought about through with(predicate) the White House Tapes would indicate Mr. Nixon had other interests, in-cluding his own political survival, in mind as well. Nixon took the approach of being a wounded warrior full grown up a just cause for the best of the country.He does not refer to the act or use impeachment rather, he calls it the constitutional work at and although he matt-up strongly to see it through, he incongruously tell to do otherwise would be unfaithful to the spirit of that deliber-ately difficult demonstrate and a dangerously destabilizing precedent for the future. He claims he has never been a quitter and had always taken elatet in Theodore Roose-velts man in the arena speech, and quotes it in its entirety. It would be nothing short of delightful to hear Teddy Roosevelts response.He claims he preferred to carry through to the burnish whatever the personal agony it would have involved and despite his family exhort him onward, he reluctantly resigns because the interests of the nation must always come out front any personal considera-tions. therefrom, he believes he can take recognition for making the nation better I hope I will have hastened the start of that border of healing which is so desperately needful in America. In other words, America has me to thank for removing the noose well-nigh the governments neck which I so carefully knotted.Nixon was known as a man who often forgot his friends but never forgot an ene-my. Therefore it was pleasant to see his reformation And to those who have not felt adequate to(p) to give me your support, let me say I leave with no cheekiness toward those who have op-posed me, because all of us, in the final analysis, have been concerned with the good of the country, however our judgments might differ. Once again, later revelations would indicate Nixon was beyond bitterness, and fully capable of destroying any real or poten-tial enemy, if it was in his power to do so without accountability.In retrospect, after thirty-plus years, the document really is, in a sense, Richard Nixon. A career politician, he was indeed a fighter from his days in Congress to facing off with Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the U. N. small-arm Eisenhowers Vice President. As president he shut down a ghastly war he inherited in Vietnam and took it upon himself to open dealing with China and strengthen relations with the Arab states. Yet there was Tricky Dick, craw-fishing to the nation, claiming some judgments were wrong, but you know, I did it because I had the nations interests at heart.Truly a man of complexity and contradictions, his rehabilitation with the American public took years, and he never re-ally reached the senior statesmen rank more easily carried by Jimmie Carter and even Gerald Ford. No doubt anyone in his position would like to go clog and redo such a unique and pivotal document. In todays political arena even a finger-wagging I did not have relations with that woman Clinton, himself a veter an of the constitutional process can find rapid rehabilitation. One wonders whether some keen-sighted and non-exculpatory editing on Nixons part would have hastened his recovery.Ending his presidency as no predecessor had, Nixon found it necessary to use al-most half of his address to extol the virtues and accomplishments of his presidency. Sad-ly, it sounds hollow, as if no one else will tell you I left the world a better maculation, than I will. In essence, it is a very sad document indeed, and Nixon supporters at the time felt the sting of humiliation and the disgrace of a remarkable hero while his opponents could point to his final words as president as a fitting memento of a failed and bitter man. His final speech helped place him in history in a way he never could have imagined.

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