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Richard Nixon: Speeches, Writings, Documents (The James Madison Library in American Politics) PDF

364 Pages·2008·0.84 MB·English
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Richard Nixon THE JAMES MADISON LIBRARY IN AMERICAN POLITICS The James Madison Library in American Politics of the Princeton UniversityPressisdevotedtorevivingimportantAmericanpolitical writings ofthe recentand distant past.American politicshas pro- duced an abundance of important works—proclaiming ideas, de- scribing candidates,explaining the inner workingsof government, andanalyzingpoliticalcampaigns.Thisliteratureincludespartisan andphilosophicalmanifestos,pamphletsofpracticalpoliticaltheory, muckrakingexpose´s,autobiographies,on-the-scenereportage,and more.TheJamesMadisonLibraryissuesfresheditionsofbothclas- sicandnow-neglectedtitlesthathelpedshapetheAmericanpolitical landscape. Up-to-date commentaries in each volume by leading scholars,journalists,andpoliticalfiguresmakethebooksaccessible tomodernreaders. TheConscienceofaConservativebyBarryM.Goldwater TheNewIndustrialStatebyJohnKennethGalbraith LibertyandtheNewsbyWalterLippmann ThePoliticsofHopeandTheBitterHeritage:American Liberalisminthe1960sbyArthurM.Schlesinger,Jr. RichardNixon:Speeches,Writings,Documents,edited andintroducedbyRickPerlstein Richard Nixon Speeches, Writings, Documents EditedandintroducedbyRickPerlstein PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON AND OXFORD Copyright©2008byPrincetonUniversityPress PublishedbyPrincetonUniversityPress, 41WilliamStreet,Princeton,NewJersey08540 IntheUnitedKingdom:PrincetonUniversityPress, 6OxfordStreet,Woodstock,OxfordshireOX201TW AllRightsReserved LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Nixon,RichardM.(RichardMilhous),1913–1994. [Selections.2008] RichardNixon:speeches,writings,documents/edited andintroducedbyRickPerlstein. p. cm.—(TheJamesMadisonLibraryinAmericanpolitics) Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN978-0-691-13699-8(pbk.:alk.paper) 1.Nixon,RichardM.(RichardMilhous),1913–1994—Archives. 2.Presidents—UnitedStates—Archives.3.UnitedStates—Politics andgovernment—1945–1989—Sources.4.Speeches,addresses, etc.,American.I.Perlstein,Rick,1969–II.Title. E838.5.N52 2008 973.924092—dc22 2008014928 BritishLibraryCataloging-in-PublicationDataisavailable ThisbookhasbeencomposedinSabonwithHelveticaNeue andDidotdisplay Printedonacid-freepaper.∞ press.princeton.edu PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents GeneralEditor’sIntroduction ix Introduction xiii BibliographicNote lxxi I. Youth 1. From RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon (1978) 3 2. Two letters (1923 and 1924) 5 3. “Our Privileges under the Constitution” (1929) 7 4. From the Frank Gannon interviews (1983) 14 II. Congress 5. “The Hiss Case—A Lesson for the American People” (January 26, 1950) 19 6. The “Pink Sheet” (1950) 60 7. The “Checkers Speech” (September 23, 1952) 64 III. Vice President 8. “When you go out to shoot rats” (March 13, 1954) 83 9. The “Kitchen Debate” (July 24, 1959) 88 10. Opening Statement, The Great Debate: Kennedy v. Nixon (September 26, 1960) 97 IV. Comeback 11. “Gentlemen, this is my last press conference” (November 6, 1962) 105 12. “The irresponsible tactics of some of the extreme civil rights leaders” (February 12, 1964) 113 13. “Appraisal from Manila” (November 4, 1966) 117 14. “What Has Happened to America?” (Reader’s Digest, October 1967) 121 15. “Asia after Viet Nam” (Foreign Affairs, October 1967) 128 16. “The first civil right of every American is to be free from domestic violence” (August 8, 1968) 145 V. President 17. “To lower our voices would be a simple thing” (January 20, 1969) 153 18. “The present welfare system has to be judged a colossal failure” (August 8, 1969) 163 19. “The great silent majority of my fellow Americans” (November 3, 1969) 170 vi Contents 20. “The postwar period in international relations has ended” (February 18, 1970) 191 21. Four Vietnam Statements (1970) 200 22. Two political statements (1970) 209 23. “Our best days lie ahead” (August 15, 1971) 217 24. “One China” (February 24, 1972) 223 25. “He can undisappear if we want him to” (June 23, 1972) 232 26. “Her name was Tanya” (August 23, 1972) 238 27. “There can be no whitewash at the White House” (April 30, 1973) 242 28. “I am not a crook” (November 17, 1973) 255 29. “I made clear there was to be no coverup” (April 29, 1974) 259 30. “My mother was a saint” (August 9, 1974) 269 Index 277 Contents vii This page intentionally left blank General Editor’s Introduction The American political tradition is preeminently practical.Ideas,sometimesofgenuinephilosophi- calgrandeur, havecertainly motivatedthe getting andexerciseofpower.Americanpoliticalrhetoric, whether delivered in speeches, written in pam- phlets and treatises, or incorporated in state pa- pers,hasinspiredcountlessmillions,athomeand abroad.Buttheheartoftheday-to-dayAmerican politicalsysteminvolveslesselevatedyetessential tasks,includingoverawingorevenbetrayingapo- litical opponent, cajoling and compromising in order to win legislation (or, sometimes, to defeat legislation),orbuildingawinningcoalitionoutof disparate political constituencies. Ironically, two of the most profound, and profoundly American, documents in American history, the United States ConstitutionandtheFederalistPapers,offeredand defended, with great intellectual care, a national polity that insures the primacy of the practical, re- jecting the flight toward abstraction and uncer- tainty in favor of a realization that men are not angels,andthatgovernmentsmustbedesignedwith apragmaticsenseofthedangerofhumanfrailtyas wellasthepromiseofhumanachievement. Richard Milhous Nixon, a man of numerous frailties, was in many ways an odd and even unique figure, but his career describes an im-

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The first book to present America's most controversial president in his own words across his entire career, this unique collection of Richard Nixon's most important writings dramatically demonstrates why he has had such a profound impact on American life. This volume gathers everything from schoolbo
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