User Panel
Posted: 4/23/2024 1:20:04 PM EDT
|
|
I don’t know much about his presidency but I do know that MacArthur called him “the best clerk I ever had” when Eisenhower was given the task the European theater. Which is a pretty creative insult.
|
|
He knew how to handle a staff and set policy, smart enough to keep the US out of Vietnam. Not smart enough to see the national security state bills he signed would grow into the behemoth agencies they are today.
|
|
I was born earlier in the same year he was elected. So for most of his terms, I was just a kid.
My memories of his terms were influenced by people and reading done later. They're positive, especially compared to what followed. On a school trip in '66, we had his Gettysburg farm house pointed out, but I don't think he was in residence then. His warning about the Military Industrial Complex still rings true all of these years later. Unlike several recent presidents, he was a patriot and loved his country. |
|
Bungler of the Normandy Landing.
He fucked up a ton of that, and got a lot of Americans killed. We had such overpowering logistic superiority and the Nazis make some stupid decisions - saved his ass. Big Government Republican. Looked upon favorably largely because of the 1950s - immediate post war, we were untouchable. |
|
A somewhat good President, relied too heavily on the CIA and the State Department/Establishment crowd, particularly in the Middle East. Screwed over the Brits, French and Israelis in the Suez Canal intervention on their advice, and regretted it publicly years later. Maintained unreasonably high tax rates that allowed Kennedy to run as a tax cutter. Let his WW2 experiences drive his foreign policy, often against better judgement. Stephen Ambrose first came to prominence for his “Hidden Hand Presidency” analysis that partially resurrected his reputation in the late 1970’s. All in all, not great but not terrible, although he could have been tougher on the Russians. His lukewarm support of Nixon in 1960 played a factor in Kennedy’s razor thin victory.
|
|
Quoted: Bungler of the Normandy Landing. He fucked up a ton of that, and got a lot of Americans killed. We had such overpowering logistic superiority and the Nazis make some stupid decisions - saved his ass. Big Government Republican. Looked upon favorably largely because of the 1950s - immediate post war, we were untouchable. View Quote How so? |
|
I rate him on the good side for the most part. None are going to do everything perfect, and it's important to look at the context when reviewing his decisions.
|
|
If you look back at Kennedy and everything that's transpired in the last 60 years, I think he was the first person to realize the US government was a beast of it's own that wasn't going to be satisfied with doing the bidding of the American public. It wields and incredible amount of power and wealth and it's just too tempting for the average human being not to twist and turn it for his own benefit.
I used to think most people where good and honest, but when you dim the lights a bit, morals become a secondary consideration. Not say that there aren't good, honest people, but it's probably closer to 30 - 40% now. |
|
View Quote Ike was the man |
|
Quoted: Bungler of the Normandy Landing. He fucked up a ton of that, and got a lot of Americans killed. We had such overpowering logistic superiority and the Nazis make some stupid decisions - saved his ass. Big Government Republican. Looked upon favorably largely because of the 1950s - immediate post war, we were untouchable. View Quote You’ll need to provide some details here, because Normandy was a huge success from where I’m sitting |
|
|
|
I'm currently reading a book about him and the U-2 incident, and so far from the book I only have the most sincere respect for the man, RIP.
|
|
I saw a documentary with his West Point classmates saying that he was unexceptional. Sure proved them wrong.
|
|
Decent president.
Marshal had to coach him during WW2. He then through Marshal under the bus during his campaign to be president. He was VERY timid with the Russians which led to the Korean fiasco. We should have dropped the bridges over the Yalu river. According to Bradley, they did not want to provoke the Russians by doing that. Everything revolved around the Russians during that time. And I mean everything. |
|
Before my time, but I watched a documentary on the Cuban Missile Crisis where Kennedy called Ike to ask for his advice on handling the situation. They played some of the audiotapes from the phone calls. After watching that program I had a much higher opinion on both men. I know back then people in both parties typically had the best interest of the nation in mind at all times and maybe this is something that happens more often below the radar, but it was refreshing to see that in action with no egos or partisanship involved. Kennedy admitted that he was in a bind and Ike admitted it was a helluva problem for anyone to deal with.
|
|
Quoted: I saw a documentary with his West Point classmates saying that he was unexceptional. Sure proved them wrong. View Quote The Class the Stars Fell On, 1915 |
|
|
EISENHOWER SPEECH ON FORMOSA - SOUND |
|
This was what impressed my generation the most: LINK
Here's what it says: "Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to gain a satisfactory foothold and I have withdrawn the troops. My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available. The troops, the air and the Navy did all that Bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt it is mine alone." *He accidentally dated the letter July 5. It should have been June 5. We're sure he had a lot on his mind. View Quote He was also right about the future. |
|
He nominated Earl FUCKING Warren to the Supreme Court. That legacy is STILL screwing us today. He was way too cozy with
a lot of important Segregationalist leaders. He fucked with Senator Joe McCarthy's efforts to shine light on the amount of Commies in the government and military. Other than that, he was a good President. |
|
Eisenhower In Taiwan (1960) |
|
Quoted: He knew how to handle a staff and set policy, smart enough to keep the US out of Vietnam. Not smart enough to see the national security state bills he signed would grow into the behemoth agencies they are today. View Quote It's a bit off of the topic, but I wonder if any of the founding fathers could have foreseen how the issue of slavery might explode into what it did. It's been so long since I read anything on the state of the country, slavery, and the issue in America's earliest years, but from what I remember, it was an issue even in the 1770s, 80s, 90s. |
|
He was giving warnings out to the public about as best as he could do without getting JFK'd.
JFK skipped the subtle part and paid for it. JFK | Secret Societies Speech | Long Version |
|
Eisenhower Farewell Address (Best Quality) - 'Military Industrial Complex' WARNING |
|
He ordered the assassination of the first democratically elected president of Zaire and installed a dictator in his place.
|
|
He acquiesced to the OSS killing Patton. Spent 20+ years building up the MIC then gave a half harted warning on his way out.
He acquiesced to the CIAs Bay of Pigs invasion then stalled it long enough to drop it in JFKs lap. He got us involved with Vietnam. He condemned Israel, UK and France in the Suez cannal war. In short, Deep State POS with a good PR machine. |
|
Farewell Address, 1961,
... IV A vital element in keeping the peace is our military establishment. Our arms must be mighty, ready for instant action, so that no potential aggressor may be tempted to risk his own destruction. Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peace time, or indeed by the fighting men of World War II or Korea. Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense;; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United State corporations. This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence economic, political, even spiritual is felt in every city, every state house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved;; so is the very structure of our society. In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together. ... |
|
|
Quoted: He was giving warnings out to the public about as best as he could do without getting JFK'd. JFK skipped the subtle part and paid for it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfzJaLXujTE View Quote Imagine any of that being said by current pols, or thought by current news people. It comes from a different time, in a different world. And it's only just over 60 years ago. His party has gone off the rails, and have forgotten they're Americans. I was 11 when he was killed. I remember the adults crying in public, just about everywhere. Not just his party, either. |
|
View Quote This was his crowning achievement. He a better administrative General than he was tepid President, but he lifted part of the curtain to let us understand the nature of the MIC. |
|
Quoted: He acquiesced to the OSS killing Patton. Spent 20+ years building up the MIC then gave a half harted warning on his way out. He acquiesced to the CIAs Bay of Pigs invasion then stalled it long enough to drop it in JFKs lap. He got us involved with Vietnam. He condemned Israel, UK and France in the Suez cannal war. In short, Deep State POS with a good PR machine. View Quote |
|
Quoted: He acquiesced to the OSS killing Patton. Spent 20+ years building up the MIC then gave a half harted warning on his way out. He acquiesced to the CIAs Bay of Pigs invasion then stalled it long enough to drop it in JFKs lap. He got us involved with Vietnam. He condemned Israel, UK and France in the Suez cannal war. In short, Deep State POS with a good PR machine. View Quote Ike told Kennedy that he must pacify Laos to have any hope of saving S Vietnam. This was due to Ike knowing that N Vietnam would supply men and material through Laos ( what would later become known as the Ho Chi Minh trail). Once installed as President, Kennedy asked his military advisers how many men it would take to pacify Laos. He was told at least 10k. Kennedy felt that was not politically viable. If true, I would say Kennedy lost the war at that moment. |
|
View Quote West Point should give out awards for dudes that graduate mid-pack. Those guys might be President one day. |
|
Quoted: Decent president. Marshal had to coach him during WW2. He then through Marshal under the bus during his campaign to be president. He was VERY timid with the Russians which led to the Korean fiasco. We should have dropped the bridges over the Yalu river. According to Bradley, they did not want to provoke the Russians by doing that. Everything revolved around the Russians during that time. And I mean everything. View Quote Ike gives Patton a reprimand |
|
Quoted: Because he helped create it. While he wasn’t looking, the alphabet agencies and DOD, became the governing body. View Quote They got that ball rolling in WWII while he was busy fighting the Nazis. I don't think he understood what he was dealing with until very late in his presidency. It's not like they were open about doing shit like running guns to the Haganah in direct violation of Truman's EO's on the matter. |
|
Quoted: Before my time, but I watched a documentary on the Cuban Missile Crisis where Kennedy called Ike to ask for his advice on handling the situation. They played some of the audiotapes from the phone calls. After watching that program I had a much higher opinion on both men. I know back then people in both parties typically had the best interest of the nation in mind at all times and maybe this is something that happens more often below the radar, but it was refreshing to see that in action with no egos or partisanship involved. Kennedy admitted that he was in a bind and Ike admitted it was a helluva problem for anyone to deal with. View Quote Kennedy was being urged to go with a preemptive strike. He regarded that as utter madness...hence reaching out to Ike when his advisors were urging him to do catastrophically stupid shit. |
|
Quoted: Give me Patton, the men and the gas and I could have won ww2! View Quote Now imagine you are the average draftee who after years of sacrifice and death being told to attack the folks that helped you win the war. Soldiers were tired, the nation was tired and broke. No way were we in any shape to launch another invasion, especially in Russia. Now imagine the world watching the US drop nukes on the people that helped win the war. And just know we would have done this alone, nobody was coming to fight by our side after backstabbing Russia, no matter that it really needed to be done. Patton kicked ass, yet he should have realized the above. Eisenhower was smart, he knew there was zero support back home to see their children sent back to die months after they won WW2. |
|
Quoted: Always wonder if this how it actually went down with Patton. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SZZjQ3bbvE View Quote Patton was a freaking Legend. And right about the Commies. No wonder the Deep State had to silence him. Very flattering to have 6'4" Tom Selleck play such a masculine Eisenhower. The real Ike was milquetoast and much shorter and slighter in build than Alpha Male Patton, who was a real fighting General, not an administrator. In a well functioning government, we need a balance of personalities, but as President, passive Ike allowed the great decline to begin.... |
|
My grandmother was a deligate from Indiana to the Republican National Convention when Ike was nominated.
When a reporter asked what she thought about it my grandmother said it was the first time the Republicans had ever nominated a Democrat. |
|
Reading a MacArthur biography, not particularly flattering to Mac but he does criticize Ike for the ETO and claims the landings at Normandy wasted lives needlessly.
Would have been interesting to see how MacArthur would have approached it.. |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.