![]() |
|
March 28, 2006
In recognition of the death of Caspar Weinberger today, NRO's Corner has pointed readers to Jay Nordlinger's review of Weinberger's autobiography In the Arena. Jay beautifully summarizes Weinberger's life and accomplishments, and notes some of the personal attributes evidenced in the text: He expresses great love: for his parents, for his brother, for his wife, for his children - and that's not to mention other objects of love, such as California and country (and cooking — Weinberger is always critiquing the food, from the Army to the Bohemian Grove). The author, throughout, is modest, self-deprecating, amusing, candid, earnest, and naturally patriotic. There is in these pages an overarching sense of decency. Weinberger is a throwback (high compliment). He is a Frank Capra American, though never naive. He reminds one a lot of Reagan: a more detail-oriented Reagan, without the Hollywood past.I love Nordlinger's conclusion: It is impossible — at least I found it so — not to read this book in the light of September 11. It is also impossible — at least I found it so - not to conclude that this is exactly the kind of man we could use right now, many times over. But then, he is the kind of man this country can always use.Also at the Corner, Iain Murray digs out Oliver Kamm's comments on Weinberger's autobiography: I have no doubt...of the highlight of the book. Weinberger recounts a debate he took part in at the Oxford Union in 1984 with the Marxist historian E.P.Thompson, then a leading figure in the British and European anti-nuclear movement. Weinberger gives a nice vignette of the debate - in which Thompson proposed the motion that there was no moral difference between the foreign policies of the United States and the Soviet Union - and quotes his own speech at length on the fundamental difference between an open society and a totalitarian one. Weinberger remarks accurately and with incontrovertible logic, "[Y]ou can't have a moral foreign policy if the people cannot control it."RIP. Posted by at 5:18 PM
|