I have a confession to make. Up until the day he resigned in 1974, I was a fervent supporter of President Richard Nixon, because I thought he was a victim of political opponents and the “liberal media.” Of course, I was a mere kid at the time, but I was still a True Believer of the worst kind.
When Nixon resigned on Aug. 8, 1974, I finally accepted the truth that had been right in front of me for a long time. I sat down and wrote the letter you see here and it ran on Aug. 18 as a letter to the editor in The Birmingham News. The paper had no way to know it was running a letter from someone who wouldn’t even be eligible to vote for years to come.
I don’t bring this up just to point out my own gullibility — although there’s that, too — but to point to something painfully common. People have a natural instinct to trust politicians who they agree with. They have a tendency to accept almost anything from the ones they like, even though they hold their enemies to a much different standard.
I think about this every time there’s a scandal involving a popular politician. I’ve thought about it recently when it comes to supporters of Barack Obama, who are determined to keep supporting their candidate, even though it should be clear by now that he’s just a black Democrat playing the part of George W. Bush.
Brutal truth is that we will never be able to fix all of world’s evils
Real love is spiritual experience that connects me to the cosmos
Fear and shame can leave us in a fog that destroys relationships
Please read this: If you love books and smart women, you might cry, too
Why do we create families? It’s a ‘matter of the heart,’ not head
Dems, GOP name Charlotte Clinton and future Bush baby for 2056
What if most money spent for university degrees is useless?
Shallow thinking and arrogance led to ruin of once-great society