Male-dominated religions oppress women, Jimmy Carter says

by AndersonsInfo 24 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • 4thgen
    4thgen

    just got the new book today. interesting stuff.

  • Vidiot
    Vidiot

    "Male-dominated religions oppress women..."

    In other news...

    ...water is wet.

  • NewYork44M
    NewYork44M

    I have gained to respect Carter post presidency, but he did some wacky things during his presidency. I read Edward Kennedy's biography, True Compass. He has some very enlightening things to say (none complimentary) about the Carter Whitehouse years. From Kennedy’s perspective, Carter was one strange cookie.

    I was not that old, but I still remember his speech about the moral fiber of the United States. He just opened the door wide for Reagan to walk in with his morning in America theme.

  • Band on the Run
    Band on the Run

    Carter refused to play politics b/c he could not do politics. I love listening to tapes of LBJ working the phones for social legislation. Pres. Carter may have been too decent to play politics. The presidency is a politcal position. I don't recall the composition of Congress.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    I always liked Jimmy Carter. I don't see that he was a bad president. I saw his interview with Letterman. He's a man after my own heart. In my eyes, Jimmy Carter is the Mr. Rogers of politics. We don't have enough kind, big hearted, thinking, brilliant men in this world.

    10 Good Things President Carter Did

    ***note from me, FlyingHighNow: He did many more than 10 good things. This is not an exhaustive list.

    David Macaray

    Playwright, labor columnist and author

    Call it historical perspective, call it acquired wisdom, call it simple nostalgia, but most things tend to look better in the rear view mirror. Take the hapless Jimmy Carter administration for example. Arguably, among the (many) negative things Carter will be remembered for are runaway inflation, the Iran hostage debacle, and questionable deregulation of the transportation, communication, and financial industries.

    Vilified by the Republicans and mocked by the Democrats, Carter reached the point where he was regarded by his own party as such a political liability that they (in the person of Ted Kennedy) tried to torpedo him in the 1980 primary. Not something you do to a successful incumbent.

    But despite the bad memories, Carter accomplished some fairly important things during his single term in office -- things that, given the near-paralytic gridlock that defines today's politics, seem all the more impressive in hindsight. Here are ten of them.

    1. Created the Department of Energy. The DOE provided the administration with the bureaucratic chops to formulate and implement what could have been a comprehensive, long-term national energy strategy. Had Carter's aggressive gas mileage standards continued to be pursued by subsequent administrations, we would today -- 30-odd years later -- be dramatically less dependent on Saudi oil.

    2. Created the Department of Education. Despite howls from anti-government groups who opposed yet another federal agency, the decision to carve out Education from the already over-burdened Department. of Health, Education and Welfare (now the Department of Health and Human Services) was a bold and necessary one.

    3. Supported SALT II (Strategic Arms Limitations Talks). It sounds trivial today, but in the 1970s a nuclear non-proliferation pact, even a flawed one, was seen as an important step in forging a lasting peace with the USSR. A generation ago, people were genuinely frightened of a nuclear holocaust. Although Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the agreement, the U.S. Congress, in the wake of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, refused to ratify it.

    4. Brokered the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty. By initiating the Camp David Accords between Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat (which led directly to the landmark treaty), Carter laid the groundwork for improved Israeli-Arab relations. That good relations in the region never materialized wasn't Carter's fault.

    5. Installed solar panels in the White House. This was not only a practical gesture, but a symbolic one as well, demonstrating to the world that America was serious about conserving energy, and that conservation does, indeed, begin at home. Alas, Ronald Reagan believed solar panels made the United States look pathetic and needy, and had them removed.

    6. Boycotted the 1980 Olympics. In response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Carter boycotted the Moscow games, a decision that earned him ridicule and scorn, even though Japan, West Germany, China, Canada, et al, supported his decision. Boycotts are unpredictable. Some work, most don't. Still, who knows what would have happened if the world had boycotted the 2004 Olympics to protest of the U.S. invasion of Iraq? It might have made a difference.

    7. Granted amnesty to Vietnam draft-dodgers. Even though Carter issued these unconditional pardons on January 21, 1977 (his first day in office), the political fallout was severe enough to cost him votes in the 1980 election. Controversial as it was, this gutsy call helped move the country forward, providing closure to one of the most divisive issues in American history.

    8. Established diplomatic relations with China. Officially transferring U.S. diplomatic recognition from Taiwan to mainland China seems like a no-brainer today, but in the year 1979 it was a singularly progressive move.

    9. Pushed for comprehensive health care reform. Carter's plan was bigger, better, cheaper and -- right out of the blocks -- had a greater chance of passing in its original form than either Clinton's or Obama's plan, but inertia, timidity, and old-fashioned politics (both Democratic and Republican) ultimately killed it.

    10. Returned the Panama Canal to Panama. Another gutsy move that surely cost him votes. By ceding the canal to tiny Panama, the mighty U.S. looked confident and magnanimous.... instead of paranoid and petty. Although Carter was able to secure bipartisan support, of the 20 senators who voted in favor of the treaty, and were up for re-election, only 7 were re-elected.

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