Time was when a young person could dream of someday growing up
and becoming President of the United States. If he or she studied hard, got good
grades and was willing to travel to the Midwest. anything was possible.
No more. Today, a young person who even thinks of becoming President had better
forget about being a great scholar and just concentrate on taking two courses:
Fund - raising I and Fund – Raising II. It’s all about raising mucho dinero)
( if you want to know what that means in English, press ‘one’). Another good
course is How to Raise your Charisma Level. An expert in the field, a former
President, says it’s no longer about kissing babies: it’s been elevated to
kissing babes.
Becoming President is big business today and corporate sponsorship of a
candidate is not based on ability but rather it is an arrangement that is quid
pro quo. (If you want to know what that means in English, press ‘two’). Being
born into a wealthy family may lessen a candidate’s dependence on the corporate
world but by no means eliminates it. To restate, a President is no longer chosen
by the people for the people, he/she is selected by the corporation for the
corporation’s interests and ne’er the twain shall meet.
Interestingly, at the dawn and early morning period of our country, although
there were candidates who were wealthy landowners in addition to being
statesmen, it cost a lot less to run for President than it does today. You could
place ten thousand signs on ten thousand lawns in New Hampshire for the smallest
fraction of what it costs today for a 60 second Television spot on cable for
seven days, not even prime time.
Where is all this leading? Well, it appears that years ago, money or the ability
to raise it was not the prime quality by which a candidate was chosen; such
peripherals as education, scholarship, leadership, moral values, and
humanitarian concerns were often the deciding factor. Religious issues and a
belief in God were practiced with as much consistency as they were preached and
that in itself is a departure from what is taking place today.
From some of what I have read, * the Jews were given a fair shake by many early
Presidents, starting with George Washington, who, at his inauguration, included
Rabbi Gershon Seixas among the city’s clergy. The following year, in a landmark
letter to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, RI, Washington wrote, “May the
children of the stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land continue to merit and
enjoy the good will of the other inhabitants……. While every one shall sit in
safety under his own vine and fig tree and there shall be none to make him
afraid” (4th chapter of the Book of Micah).
President Truman, of more recent vintage, gave his first speech to Congress
shortly after President Roosevelt’s death. “At this moment I have in my heart a
prayer. I humbly pray Almighty God in the words of King Solomon, ‘Give therefore
thy servant an understanding heart to judge the people that I may discern
between good and bad: for who is able to judge this thy so great a people?’”
Truman’s choice of scripture, it was believed, referred to Solomon, God’s
beloved son of David, and the fact that many Americans felt- as many Israelites
may have when the great King died – uncertain, worried, and somewhat skeptical
of the man who had assumed the throne. *
Today, religion and religious groups have also become big business and are
seemingly political stepping stones. Not surprising when Presidential
aspirations hinge on a new Bible and chapter and ver$e is found in the bankbook.
*Meecham,Jon, American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers and the making of a
Nation.
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