Harry Truman

by purplesofa 10 Replies latest jw friends

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    I know we live in a different time but I found this interesting and wanted to share.

    purps

    Harry Truman

    Harry Truman was a different kind of President. He probably made as many important decisions regarding our nation's history as any of the other 42 Presidents.

    However, a measure of his greatness may rest on what he did after he left the White House. The only asset he had when he died was the house he lived in, which was in Independence Missouri.

    His wife had inherited the house from her mother and other than their years in the White House, they lived their entire lives there. When he retired from office in 1952, his income was a U.S. Army pension reported to have been $13,507.72 a year.

    Congress, noting that he was paying for his stamps and personally licking them, granted him an "allowance" and, later, a retroactive pension of $25,000 per year.

    After President Eisenhower was inaugurated, Harry and Bess drove home to Missouri by themselves. There were no Secret Service following them.

    When offered corporate positions at large salaries, he declined, stating, "You don't want me. You want the office of the President, and that doesn't belong to me. It belongs to the American people and it's not for sale."

    Even later, on May 6, 1971, when Congress was preparing to award him the Medal of Honor on his 87th birthday, he refused to accept it, writing, "I don't consider that I have done anything which should be the reason for any award, Congressional or otherwise."

    As president he paid for all of his own travel expenses and food. Modern politicians have found a new level of success in cashing in on the Presidency, resulting in untold wealth.

    Today, many in Congress also have found a way to become quite wealthy while enjoying the fruits of their offices. Political offices are now for sale.

    Good old Harry Truman was correct when he observed, "My choices in life were either to be a piano player in a whore house or a politician. And to tell the truth, there's hardly any difference!

    edited to add: from the Washinton Post

    The thought of an ex-president jumping into a car with just his wife, no Secret Service, packing his own bags, pumping his own gas, drinking Cokes with grease monkeys is . . . well, it ain't gonna happen, and we're the poorer nation for that. Perhaps this is why our current president's spontaneous evening strolls with his wife and their romantic dinners in Prague are so charming: They recall us to a time when we were sort of -- gosh -- normal. The annual pension of an ex-president today is about $190,000, plus expenses that can bring the tab as high as $2.5 million. Gerald Ford, bless his Republican heart, turned the ex-presidency into a branding opportunity, and, together, the Clintons earned $109 million from eight years of speeches and corporate appearances. All of which proves, one might say, that it is still a great country, but very different from the days of Harry and Bess and their 1953 Chrysler.

  • Big Tex
    Big Tex

    Truman is one of the more underrated Presidents. Interestingly, he was extremely unpopular while he was President.

  • XJW4EVR
    XJW4EVR

    I heard an old Democrat (he passed away in 2008) often call Harry Truman, "the last great Democrat President". The more I read about him, the more I have to agree with him.

  • BizzyBee
    BizzyBee

    Harry also washed his own skivvies.

  • Gregor
    Gregor

    If Harry were running things I'd be a Democrat. Funny thing was, his political career rose from a corrupt Democrat machine like Chicagos but he turned out to be one of the most honest and "transparent" pres. in history.

    David McCullough book, 'Truman' should be a must read for students of history and politics.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    I've got his military history of 1776. Fantastic.

    BT

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    A couple of items. As of a couple of years ago, the President still pays for his own food (meals served in the residence portion of the White House) its deducted from his paycheck. Not that it makes a lot of difference, as far as I know it all goes into his blind trust. Official dinners and such are still paid for by the govt.

    Great (but probably not true) story about Truman. Not long after assuming office a reporter asked him how he spent Sunday afternoon. "Spreading manure on the rose garden." Elanor Roosevelt read the story and called Bess Truman, she said "the President can't talk like that, tell him he as to say 'fertilizer.'" To which Bess said "It's taken me thirty years to get him to call it manure."

  • jaguarbass
    jaguarbass

    He had integrity. Something you dont get or see today.

  • oompa
    oompa

    wow purps.....i had no idea and that is just amazing.............thanks!.............oompa

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    ...Harry Truman left office in 1953 a very unpopular man. Almost no one at the time gave him credit for overseeing a period of rapid recovery that was much broader and more impressive than anything that happened under Roosevelt's tenure -- and this at a time when most economists predicted a deep postwar recession. He did this while shrinking the government and dismantling wartime regulation at a rate Ronald Reagan could only have dreamed of. He smoothly pulled us back from a regime of wage and price controls that could have easily been allowed to linger...Thanks to Truman we were once again moving in the direction of a competitive, open-access market economy...Yet Truman's stellar reputation today owes nothing to his economic achievements, which most of those who today praise his foreign policy acumen know nothing about.

    http://www.the-american-interest.com/article.cfm?piece=645

    Interesting, if true.

    BTS

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