Why Is JFK So Deified?

I think it is less that he is actually deified by anyone than it is his present-day critics enjoy believing him deified. It adds a certain je ne sais quoi to feeling all iconoclastic that makes it even more better.

I think that FDR’s quotes are the victim of time, not of being overshadowed by JFK’s aura.

I was an elementary student 20 years after FDRs death, in the 60s, and “Fear itself” was a familiar quote into the 70s. I think that JFKs quotables have about the same rate of retention, adjusting for time. I haven’t done a study, but, IME, that’s the way it appears. Kind of like “The business of America is business”, spoken by H. Hoover. I suspect not even a history professor knows of that one, now, but, into the 90s it was at least known, and put into some history books.

You are really desperate, aren’t you?

Nope. Just describing what I see. The same attitude is present from some on the left when they tear into Ronald Reagan. Either way, the delight in criticizing an iconic politician is typically all out of proportion to the substance of the criticism offered. Similar wankery is sometimes displayed by present day Abraham Lincoln critics.

Nitpick. FDR’s famous quote concerned the Great Depression and is from 1933.

[QUOTE=Franklin Delano Roosevelt (in his First Inaugural Address)]

So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is…fear itself — nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance. In every dark hour of our national life a leadership of frankness and of vigor has met with that understanding and support of the people themselves which is essential to victory. And I am convinced that you will again give that support to leadership in these critical days.
[/QUOTE]

Does anybody remember Calvin Coolidge? When asked about the US’s refusal to cancel the Allies war debts, Coolidge replied “they hired the money, didn’t they”-ah, Calvin…the soul of Vermont brevity!:slight_smile:

I always liked JFK’s speech to Berliners" Ich bin ein Berliner" (translation : “I am a jelly filled doughnut”!:slight_smile:

Except he didn’t say that…

He did leave behind a glamorous widow and two good looking kids.

Tear down this jelly-filled doughnut!

Coolidge: “The business of America is business” – a famously unfair misquote… - This Day in Quotes

There you go.

Thanks for correcting a longstanding wrong impression.

Well, the wartime version is less well-remembered. “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. And the Germans. And the Japs. They might kill us all.”

“The Italians… not so much.”

I think his most-remembered line is “a return to normalcy.”

Kennedy’s best quip ever, by the way, was his praising of Washington DC for its “Northern charm and Southern efficiency.”

Harding: Return to normalcy - Wikipedia

Ignorance fought, thanks!

I think that he was not a good President at all. I think his “accomplishments” such as the Test Ban Treaty amounted to cave-ins. One of his cardinal sins was to attend the Khruschev (sp) summit totally unprepared.

Even to resolve the Cuban Missile Crisis he had to pledge to remove missiles from Turkey ten years hence.

His image created an atmosphere of hope and excitement, much like Obama. His accomplishment record is similarly slender.

Kennedy continued the long patter of craven surrenders started with Eisenhower. During the period from January 20, 1953, when Eisenhower opened his terms by caving to the Communists in Korea, through Kennedy’s Test Ban Treaty and assassination of Diem in South Vietnam(the list goes on):

[ol]
[li]Korean armistice (Eisenhower);[/li][li]Stand-down in regard to Hungarian Revolution of 1956(Eisenhower);[/li][li]Forcing Britain, France and Israel to back off in regaining control over Suez(Eisenhower);[/li][li]Fueling harmful African and Asian “independence” under West’s financial tutelage and no-strings attached aid (Eisenhower);[/li][li]Standing down on Quemoy, Matsu and other South China Sea boundary issues (Eisenhower);[/li][li]Allowing Castro takeover within Cuba, clearly within American “zone of influence” from Monroe’s days (Eisenhower);[/li][li]Bay of Pigs (Kennedy);[/li][li]Cuban missile crisis agreements involving removal of missiles from Turkey and allowing Soviet domination to stand within American[/li]“zone of influence” from Monroe’s days (Kennedy);
[li]Merely rhetorical response to Berlin Wall construction (Kennedy);[/li][li]Test Ban Treaty (Kennedy); and[/li][li]Assassination of Diem (Kennedy)[/li][/ol]
Kennedy ran to Nixon’s right on foreign policy, promising, with soaring rhetoric, to fight the Cold War on America’s terms. The simple fact is he didn’t try. He even went to the Vienna summit meeting with Khrushchev utterly unprepared. That’s something a 26 year old first-year lawyer, not a President of the U.S. would do.

That was Warren Gamaliel Harding.

Should I use my power of invisibility for good, or evil?