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Richard Nixon on Russia - 1992, (a remarkably accurate prediction)
Richard Nixon on Russia - 1992, (a remarkably accurate prediction)
Quotes from Nixon's last book, written after the fall of the government of the Soviet Union were remarkably prescient.
The reestablishment of a dictatorship and a command economy in Russia would give encouragement to every dictator and would-be dictator in the world. Since an authoritarian Russia would be far more likely to adopt an aggressive foreign policy than a democratic Russia, freedom’s failure would threaten peace and stability in Europe and around the world. If Russia turns away from democracy and economic freedom and we have not done everything possible to prevent it, we will bear a large measure of responsibility for the ominous consequences.
In developing a policy toward the new Russia, we must begin by recognizing that the Russians did not lose the Cold War. The communists did. We should therefore treat the Russians not as defeated enemies but as allies who joined with us in defeating Soviet communism in its heartland—Russia.
I am convinced that the Russian people will not turn back to communism. But if they have no choice, they will turn to some kind of political dictatorship, which will at least promise the safety-net guarantees that were supposed to have been delivered by the communist regime.
·nixonfoundation.org·
Richard Nixon on Russia - 1992, (a remarkably accurate prediction)
"How To Lose The Cold War" Richard Nixon 1992
"How To Lose The Cold War" Richard Nixon 1992
Seldom does one come across a prediction so accurate as this one. Nixon warns that if the United States does not throw significant aid into Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Russians will turn back to an authoritarian nationalist dictator that will work to expand the borders of Russia. Much of this is exactly what happened
·cdn.nixonlibrary.org·
"How To Lose The Cold War" Richard Nixon 1992
gopac - Language, a mechanism of Control
gopac - Language, a mechanism of Control
"This document, a working paper from GOPAC, Newt Gingrich's political action committee, was circulated to freshman Republican members of the 104th Congress in 1995. It functions as a rudimentary rhetorical handbook, providing inexperienced political speakers with a lexicon of terms that drive a wedge of distinctions between themselves and members of the opposing party.
·users.wfu.edu·
gopac - Language, a mechanism of Control
Opinion | Sidewalk Surfing With My Disabled Parents - The New York Times
Opinion | Sidewalk Surfing With My Disabled Parents - The New York Times
Good writing, but more importantly, this unveils a population entirely absent from the taught narrative canon. These people live in our country, have always lived in our country, and we never, ever talk about them.
But those early trips with my mom made obvious for me something I’d always known implicitly: that both skateboarding and navigating daily life with a disability involve surprisingly similar ways of engaging with the built environment.
Spaces that are inaccessible are indicative of failures in design rather than the human body, and those failures require creative solutions. It is an idea that is expressed daily by people like my parents.
In an interview in Psychology Today, Ms. Hendren explained that her goal was to create “a weird Venn diagram” between the skateboarding and wheelchair use “because people never think of those two things together.” The skaters, she explained, were seen as executing “this rebellious, athletically virtuosic thing,” while wheelchair users were seen as engaging in “a kind of sad version of not walking.”
You could look at a staircase and say, ‘I can do this one,’ ” she said, “in the same way that I can look at something and tell you exactly whether I’m going to have trouble with it.” In time, navigating the world with my parents helped me grow as a thinker and problem-solver: I learned that sometimes the best solution is an imperfect one, and that few things matter more than the ability to think in the moment, to improvise.
The first curb cuts — friends to users of all wheels — were created in Kalamazoo, Mich., in response to an influx of disabled veterans returning from World War II.
The list goes on: In myriad ways in the past 50 years, disabled citizens and activists have “hacked” the built environment — and the political system — to effect change, including the 1990 passage of the A.D.A., a law that The Times’s Michael Kimmelman wrote “<a class="css-yywogo" href="https://www.curbed.com/2015/7/23/9937976/how-the-americans-with-disabilities-act-transformed-architecture" title="" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">has reshaped American architecture</a> and the way designers and the public have come to think about civil rights and the built world.” That’s radical.
·nytimes.com·
Opinion | Sidewalk Surfing With My Disabled Parents - The New York Times
Episode 5, Lesson 3: Building Community Consciousness and Coalitions | Asian Americans Advancing Justice - LA
Episode 5, Lesson 3: Building Community Consciousness and Coalitions | Asian Americans Advancing Justice - LA
"This lesson plan helps students understand the context of the 1992 L.A. civil unrest (L.A. riots). Korean Americans in solidarity with Black Americans and others, formed coalitions to call for racial justice, community healing and rebuilding. Various police reforms, community programs and rebuilding efforts came about after. It covers the importance of building community consciousness and coalitions to fight systemic racism. By using the transcripts from the segment this lesson plan will ask the students to analyze the movement by using guiding questions to identify the issue, research the problem, respond to the problem and reflect on why learning about this topic is important to their lives and current social movements."
·archive.advancingjustice-la.org·
Episode 5, Lesson 3: Building Community Consciousness and Coalitions | Asian Americans Advancing Justice - LA
Buchanan, "Culture War Speech," Speech Text - 1992 Republican Convention
Buchanan, "Culture War Speech," Speech Text - 1992 Republican Convention
Pat Buchanan was invited to speak at the 92 convention, he expressed view about women in the military that might surprise students of the 2020s. The phrase "This war is for the soul of America" was used by Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential campaign
“Bill Clinton and Al Gore represent the most pro-lesbian and pro-gay ticket in history.” And so they do.
The agenda that Clinton &amp; Clinton would impose on America – abortion on demand, a litmus test for the Supreme Court, homosexual rights, discrimination against religious schools, women in combat units – that’s change, all right. But it is not the kind of change America needs. It is not the kind of change America wants. And it is not the kind of change we can abide in a nation that we still call God’s country.
we stand with him against the amoral idea that gay and lesbian couples should have the same standing in law as married men and women.
We stand with President Bush for right-to-life, and for voluntary prayer in the public schools, and we stand against putting our wives and daughter and sisters into combat units of the United States Army. And we stand with President Bush in favor of the right of small towns and communities to control the raw sewage of pornography that so terribly pollutes our popular culture.
There is a religious war going on in this country. It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as was the Cold War itself, for this war is for the soul of America.
·voicesofdemocracy.umd.edu·
Buchanan, "Culture War Speech," Speech Text - 1992 Republican Convention
Ronald Reagan and the End of the Cold War: The Debate Continues |
Ronald Reagan and the End of the Cold War: The Debate Continues |
London School of Economic professor's essay on the ways in which the end of the Cold War are explained. Teachers would be well served to spend five minutes reading this before teaching any lessons about it - at the very least to appreciate the complexity underneath simplistic explanations that are so often shared with students
·ap.gilderlehrman.org·
Ronald Reagan and the End of the Cold War: The Debate Continues |
Speech at 2nd World Climate Conference | Margaret Thatcher Foundation
Speech at 2nd World Climate Conference | Margaret Thatcher Foundation
Margaret Thatcher was unequivocal in 1990, clearly calling out the danger to the world
But the threat to our world comes not only from tyrants and their tanks. It can be more insidious though less visible. The danger of global warming is as yet unseen, but real enough for us to make changes and sacrifices, so that we do not live at the expense of future generations.
No-one should under-estimate the imagination that will be required, nor the scientific effort, nor the unprecedented co-operation we shall have to show. We shall need statesmanship of a rare order.
The real dangers arise because climate change is combined with other problems of our age: for instance the population explosion; — the deterioration of soil fertility; — increasing pollution of the sea; — intensive use of fossil fuel; — and destruction of the world's forests, particularly those in the tropics.
·margaretthatcher.org·
Speech at 2nd World Climate Conference | Margaret Thatcher Foundation