On the firing line: the public life of our public figures
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Random House
1989
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Ausgabe: | 1. trade ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXIX, 533 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 0394575687 |
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adam_text | ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
AN INTRODUCTION BY ALISTAIR COOKE xl
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xxix
PREFACE* xxxi
GUESTS: JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
HAROLD MACMILLAN
PAUL WEISS
A look at the historical background of the program and an examination of
the (widely accepted) cliche that yesterday s newspapers are of no interest
today It is arresting how in debate with WFB Professor Galbraith handles,
and WFB mishandles, a particular question having to do with U S fuel
policy And what about Harold MacMillan s reminiscence about Churchill,
one fall day in 1943? Or Professor Weiss s jocular question Did God found
Christianity? These are only in a purely mechanical sense yesterday s
news
•There is participation, throughout the text, by the author, hereafter WFB for typographical
convenience There is also commentary, throughout the text, by WFB
xviii • CONTENTS
1 THE SIXTIES, PART ONE 3
GUESTS: BARRY GOLDWATER
NORMAN THOMAS
THEODORE BIKEL
ENOCH POWELL
AL CAPP
TIMOTHY LEARY
Senator Barry Goldwater doesn t believe (in 1966) that the Vietnam experi-
ence will have a decisive effect on behavior in America Norman Thomas
does, thunderingly Theodore Bikel tries to understand why youth are so
uniquely affected, while Enoch Powell lays down the rules without which
societies simply do not survive Al Capp is at his searing, provocative
worst/best in discussing student misbehavior, which behavior Timothy
Leary undertakes to praise, and imitate
2 TECHNIQUE: MANIFEST EVASIVENESS 21
GUESTS: NORMAN MAILER
MARK HATFIELD
ROBERTO DE LA MADRID
DENIS HEALEY
ROBERT SCHEER
WILLIAM SLOANE COFFIN, JR
CARMINE DE SAPIO
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
Here are examples of how very bright people manage ever so skillfully to
avoid answering direct questions Their techniques are varied and, exam-
ined in the abstract, amusing and provocative
3 THE IMPOSSIBLE GUEST 43
GUEST: DEMETRIO LAKAS
Every now and then—maybe once every ten years—you get a guest who
proves truly impossible To be impossible you can do one of a number of
things The President of Panama is relentlessly pleasant
4 DEBATES 52
GUESTS: GEORGE MCGOVERN
ROBERT SHRUM
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
ELLIOT RICHARDSON
Three or four times a year, Firing Line is set up as a formal debate Here
are two, the first on whether we should ratify SALT I (held at Yale), the
second on whether this house approves the economic policies of Ronald
CONTENTS xix
Reagan (at Harvard) George McGovern is very popular at Yale, J K
Galbraith very popular at Harvard But—well, we didn t ratify SALT I, and
Reagan won forty-nine states a year or so later
5 FINE REASONING 77
GUESTS: DONALD SHAPIRO
ERNEST VAN DEN HAAG
B F SKINNER
DONALD MACKAY
Every now and then you see expert minds go to work on each other with
Socratic skill Van den Haag does it to Donald Shapiro on capital punish-
ment; Donald MacKay to B F Skinner on the presumptions of science
6 THE SIXTIES, PART TWO 93
GUESTS: MUHAMMAD ALI
WILLIAM KUNSTLER
FOX BUTTERFIELD
HDS GREENWAY
DAVID BUTLER
MORRIS ABRAM
NORMAN PODHORETZ
Muhammad Ali tells how he became a special victim of the sixties when
the draft board denied his sincerity in becoming an ordained Islamic
minister in the nick of time to avoid being drafted William Kunstler has
trouble denying he is in favor of criminal behavior, on being confronted
with an article in Playboy Fox Butterfield, HDS Greenway, and David
Butler share reminiscences of journalists work in Saigon Morris Abram,
retreated from the presidency of Brandeis University, confesses his disillu-
sion with some traditional liberal axioms, and Norman Podhoretz tells what
was distinctive about the sixties and why some of those who fell victim to
the Communist-dominated radicalism of the thirties went along with the
sixties fever notwithstanding everything they had learned
7 DEMOCRACY AND THE INTELLECTUALS 117
GUESTS: JE AN-FR AN QOIS REVEL
PAUL HOLLANDER
ERNEST VAN DEN HAAG
ROBERT MOSS
THEODORE WHITE
JAMES MICHENER
ZDISLAW RURARZ
MARGARET THATCHER
XX CONTENTS
M Revel probes the structural weaknesses of democracy while Professor
Hollander attempts to explain, with the help of Professor van den Haag, the
special seductiveness of totalitarian societies for the intellectual Robert
Moss gives concrete examples of intellectual political confusion Theodore
White applauds U S foreign policy up until the ambiguous sixties, and
James Michener, at work on his novel on Poland, speaks of East European
disillusion Mr Rurarz, who defected in Tokyo from Poland while serving
there as ambassador, tells what it was that briefly gave hope to Poles waiting
for liberation Margaret Thatcher says that it is democratic mannerisms,
rather than substantive democracy, that make for national weakness
8 DEMOCRACY AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE 131
GUESTS: PHILIP CRANE
HARRIET PILPEL
ENOCH POWELL
JEREMY RIFKIN
GEORGE MCGOVERN
JIMMY CARTER
MICHAEL DUKAKIS
JOEL GARREAU
ED KOCH
Congressman Crane and Mr Powell believe that the fairness of the market-
place is a communicable truth Mrs Pilpel and Jeremy Rifkin disagree, in
part because they see nothing fair about the marketplace to begin with
George McGovern wrestles with the problem of pragmatic data versus
ideological dogma, as in the Soviet position on privately produced grains
Jimmy Carter (in 1971) insists that state-federal relations, preeminently the
recently exercised right of impoundment by President Nixon, threaten eco-
nomic injustice Michael Dukakis itches strongly for federal aid to states in
temporary distress, and Mayor Koch makes the same point, remarking the
asymmetry of states debts to one other
9 OUR POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS 149
Certain Things Are Wrong: Analysis
GUESTS: GERALD FORD
OTIS PIKE
ROBERT DORNAN
Where Are the Political Parties Going?
The GOP?
GUESTS: RICHARD NIXON
CLARE BOOTHE LUCE
CONTENTS xxi
BARRY GOLDWATER
CHARLES MATHIAS
The Democrats?
GUESTS: GEORGE WALLACE
ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI
EDWARD KOCH
Some Appealing Reforms
GUESTS: JEFF GREENFIELD
MARK GREEN
CHARLES PETERS
MICHAEL KINSLEY
Vice President Gerald Ford is asked: Why doesn t President Nixon suggest
that the House unanimously recommend impeachment? That way only one
of the two congressional chambers will be tied up Isn t the impeachment
procedure crude? Congressman Pike says that attempts to reform congres-
sional misbehavior have been misbegotten As it stands—and Dornan
agrees—a congressman needs desperately to hang on to his seat; and an
overwhelming majority of the incumbents do so Richard Nixon, in
1967, on the air and off the air, divulges his strategy for becoming President
Clare Boothe Luce doubts, after the defeat of Goldwater, that the GOP will
succeed in resuming a distinctive profile Barry Goldwater predicts that the
GOP will get nowhere unless it understands itself to be the conservative
party and acts as such But Congressman Charles Mathias, without saying
it in so many words, says: How do you account for such anomalies as
myself? A thoroughbred liberal who wins every time? George Wallace
pronounces himself aggressively as a populist, and declares that if his host
is a conservative, then conservatives are all washed up and damned well
ought to be Brzezinski, on the other hand, warns his fellow Democrats that
to ignore national defense and imperial responsibility in the Soviet age will
kill the Democratic Party s chances for effective leadership Mayor Koch
agrees, denouncing the hold radicals have on the Democrats, especially
during the primaries Four prominent journalists mix it up: savoring
this reform, rejecting that one, laughing at the third, eyeing the fourth
suspiciously, but inquisitively
10 RONALD REAGAN ANTICIPATES
HIS PRESIDENCY 178
GUEST: RONALD REAGAN
An ideal situation It is January 1980 Candidate Reagan is seated down and
told: You have been elected President! Now: Tell us how you would react
to the following six crises
xxii • CONTENTS
11 CIVIL LIBERTIES 195
GUESTS: FLOYD ABRAMS
WILLIAM RUSHER
MAURICE STANS
OTTO PREMINGER
HARRY REEMS
ALAN DERSHOWITZ
ABNER MIKVA
ROBERT KUKLA
RAOUL BERGER
ARIEH NEYER
MICHAEL HARRINGTON
Floyd Abrams, as ever, defends the press and its right to refuse to give
information at court, with Rusher emphatically disagreeing Maurice Stans
asks how to justify a press that can ruin a reputation and do nothing about
its victims subsequent vindication Otto Preminger says he thoroughly
agrees with the implicit ban on Hollywood sexual exhibitionism But that
was before the days of Harry Reems, the star of Deep Throat (the porn film,
not the Watergate informer), defended by Professor Dershowitz, who how-
ever refuses to see the movie, as a matter of principle Abner Mikva debates
with Robert Kukla of the National Rifle Association the whole question of
civil liberties and the right to bear arms Professor Berger of Harvard says
the Constitution simply does not endorse current understandings of the
Fourteenth Amendment, never mind the disagreement of the American
Civil Liberties Union s Arieh Neyer And Michael Harrington attempts to
bail out the labor union s position—that it has the right to collective bar-
gaining even in dealing with members who are engaged primarily in ven-
tilating their political views
12 CRIME AND PUNISHMENT 228
GUESTS: ARIEH NEYER
ALAN DERSHOWITZ
STEVE ALLEN
TRUMAN CAPOTE
JIMMY HOFFA
GORDON LIDDY
CHARLES COLSON
Always, the haunting question of capital punishment, but talk also of
prisons, and prison life Neyer defends the findings of the Warren Court
Dershowitz admits that the great majority of those who are brought to trial
are in fact guilty Allen argues against capital punishment and Capote
suggests that there should be two types of prisons for two types of offenders
Jimmy Hoffa relates his experiences in prison and makes his suggestions for
reforms, as does Gordon Liddy, while Charles Colson maintains that half
CONTENTS xxiii
of the people who are sent to prison should be sent instead into community
service
13 ON THE CULTURAL FRONT 252
GUESTS: BENJAMIN STEIN
ROSALYN TURECK
TIM PAGE
SCHUYLER CHAPIN
LOUIS AUCHINCLOSS
HELEN MACINNES
TOM WOLFE
JORGE LUIS BORGES
Screenwriter, novelist, critic Ben Stein says he has never met a conservative
in Hollywood, or seen a movie with a decent general or businessman
Rosalyn Tureck, Tim Page, and Schuyler Chapin discuss the merits of
recordings vs public performances, giving illustrations of the best in both
areas Louis Auchincloss and Helen Maclnnes jointly deplore novels far
gone in inscrutability Tom Wolfe talks of the tyranny of ideology over
architectural art And Jorge Luis Borges extemporizes a tone poem on
language
14 TECHNIQUE: STYLE AND CIVILITY 278
GUESTS: ABBA EBAN
EDWARD HEATH
NJEROGE MUNGAI
How important is timing in public discussion? How does it bear on
civility? How does Abba Eban behave when, seconds before going on the
air, he is told that Nasser has died? Or Edward Heath, who announces
seconds before going on the air that of course he must not be asked about
any British politician? Or Kenya s Foreign Minister, Dr Mungai, seconds
before not going on the air—how to respond to his saying that he will not
consent to discuss any other African leaders if they are going to be criti-
cized?
15 THE ECONOMIC QUESTION 286
GUESTS: HAROLD WILSON
MICHAEL FOOT
JAMES SCHLESINGER
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
GEORGE GILDER
RONALD REAGAN
JACK KEMP
xxiv CONTENTS
Harold Wilson is relaxed, looking back on the militant socialism that lingers
in the party he once dominated Michael Foot flatly says it, that no man s
economic liberties can get in the way of his duties to his country James
Schlesinger attempts, as Secretary of Energy, to effect a reconciliation be-
tween his mandate and the free market John Kenneth Galbraith con-
fesses—or, better, proclaims—that he loves taxation precisely because he
believes in leveling, never mind the economic consequences George Gilder
makes his provocative point, that the risk element of capitalism is precisely
what makes it a philanthropic social arrangement Ronald Reagan makes
perhaps his first appearance as an endorser of tax cuts across the board, and
intuits the Laffer curve Jack Kemp, coauthor of the first major tax-cut bill,
predicts the consequences of a bill a lesser form of which was enacted in
the first year of Reagan s presidency
16 POVERTY 305
GUESTS: MICHAEL HARRINGTON
CHARLES MURRAY
JESSE JACKSON
JAMES FARMER
THOMAS SOWELL
Michael Harrington wrestles with his very soul, contending against Charles
Murray s position that, in fact, $200 billion of welfare money has worsened
rather than improved the plight of America s poor Jesse Jackson insists
that the best way to increase the share of the black minority in the economy
is to insist on proportional representation at the levels of ownership and
management James Farmer contends that the plight of the American black
is a historical affliction and that it is impossible to estimate the damage done
by discrimination Not so, says Thomas Sowell, who challenges what he
considers to be a litany of cliches about the causes of black backwardness
17 ABROAD 326
CHINA
GUESTS: YEHUDI MENUHIN
FOX BUTTERFIELD
CHIANG CHING-KUO
AFRICA
GUESTS: ELSPETH HUXLEY
ANTHONY LEWIS
ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE
ALAN PATON
ERNEST URBAN TREVOR HUDDLESTON
PAUL JOHNSON
CONTENTS
LATIN AMERICA
GUESTS: CARLOS LACERDA
LAWRENCE BIRNS
NENA OSSA
THE PACIFIC RIM
GUESTS: FERDINAND MARCOS
LEE KWAN YEW
A view around the world Yehudi Menuhin has just come back from China,
and has found the cultural Esperanto he was looking for Fox Butterfield
speculates on whether China can bury fully the awful memory of its Cul-
tural Revolution And President Chiang Ching-kuo of Taiwan explains how
under no circumstances could Taiwan make a deal with the Soviet Union,
never mind the threat from mainland China Elspeth Huxley speaks of
the political problems of the continent she grew up in Anthony Lewis
inveighs against any cooperation with South Africa of any kind, even for
the sake of ejecting the Cuban mercenaries from Angola Why, de Borch-
grave asks, should the United States, simply to fight apartheid, surrender
its strategic interests in Africa? Alan Paton somewhat reluctantly grants
that progress between the races in South Africa will be the result of ener-
getic economic activity, though he distrusts capitalism And Bishop Hud-
dleston and Paul Johnson fight for fifteen bloody rounds, the bishop urging
a total boycott of South Africa, Johnson urging interracial progress through
economic activity and the gradual breakdown of apartheid as anachronistic
Carlos Lacerda of Brazil gives it as his opinion that talk about democ-
racy in Latin America tends to be too facile, sometimes neglecting such
matters as food, shelter, and work Lawrence Birns of the State Department
quarrels with Nena Ossa of Chile on the effect of Colonel Pinochet, and on
the thrust of Allende s government It is agreed that democracy in Latin
America is, well, unstable And President Ferdinand Marcos explains
that the Americans didn t stay around long enough in the Philippines to
implant American-style democracy, which is why he had to seize power
Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yew of Singapore explains why the totalitarians
are going to beat you if you give them the liberties you would like to give
democratically minded opponents
18 A DEBATE ON THE PANAMA CANAL 363
GUESTS: SAM ERVIN
RONALD REAGAN
ELLSWORTH BUNKER
ELMO ZUMWALT
PATRICK BUCHANAN
JAMES BURNHAM
xxvi CONTENTS
JOHNMCCAIN
ROGERFONTAINE
GEORGE WILL
A historic encounter in two senses—revealing a division, but among think-
alikes All the participants are equally opposed to softening U S hemi-
spheric defenses Yet here is a roster of well-known conservatives divided
on the question: Should we ratify the Panama Canal treaties? Reagan leads
the Negative team, WFB the Affirmative One surmise: If Reagan had taken
the opposite position, he would not have been nominated for the presidency
(the conservatives would have blocked him) But if the treaties had been
defeated, Reagan would not have been elected (developments in Central
America would have discredited him)
19 THE STRUGGLE FOR THE WORLD 386
GUESTS: PAUL JOHNSON
VLADIMIR BUKOVSKY
LEE KUAN YEW
HENRY KISSINGER
JEANE KIRKPATRICK
JAMES MICHENER
Paul Johnson insists that the nature of twentieth-century totalitarianism,
particularly at the hands of the Soviet Union, is genuinely unique, and
that therefore conventional historical precedents don t tell you very much
about how to cope with Soviet aggressiveness Bukovsky, a famous dissi-
dent, describes the means by which a potential opposition is suppressed in
the Soviet Union Prime Minister Lee describes what are the differences
between your losing and their losing Henry Kissinger describes the star-
tling ignorance of the younger generation of geopolitical realities and the
dangers implicit in unequal strength between the Soviet Union and the
United States Mrs Kirkpatrick, freshly returned from Nicaragua, says
that she sees for the first time the possibility of the disestablishment of a
Soviet satellite state But such a hope would evaporate if we desert the
Contras And James Michener tells of the dreadful lot of the Poles, who
went, without surcease, from domination by Hitler to domination by Sta-
lin
20 THE ROLE OF INTELLIGENCE 399
GUESTS: NADIA ULANOVSKAYA
CLAIRE STERLING
ROY COHN
VERNON WALTERS
ALLEN DULLES
REBECCA WEST
PAUL JOHNSON
CONSTANTINE FITZGIBBON
CONTENTS xxvii
Nadia Ulanovskaya was a Soviet spy in Washington in the early thirties and
worked alongside Whittaker Chambers Claire Sterling is a close student of
terrorism and its interface with intelligence and espionage operations Roy
Cohn angrily defends the FBI against assaults on it and its behavior, stress-
ing the necessary job the Bureau has done to guard the national security
Ambassador Walters regrets the ambivalence so many Americans have
about intelligence when it is of supreme importance to know what the
enemy s intentions are Allen Dulles handles with aplomb the matter of
President Eisenhower s lying about the activities of our U-2 spy plane
Rebecca West says that the relative indulgence shown Kim Philby, British
traitor, by her countrymen is in part the result of his historical association
with Arabism Constantine Fitzgibbon defends strenuous intelligence work
on the grounds that we could not survive a nuclear Pearl Harbor
21 TWO REGULAR GUESTS 422
ALLARD LOWENSTEIN,RIP
CLARE BOOTHELUCE,RIP
Two guests who appeared frequently on Firing Line (a half-dozen times
each), one a liberal, the other a conservative, died, so to speak, with their
boots on Mrs Luce was not, from her deathbed, voluble during those final
weeks And Al Lowenstein was shot in his office Two portraits of two
great figures and polemicists, together with eulogies delivered at their funer-
als
22 FAITH AND THE FUTURE 446
GUESTS: CLARE BOOTHE LUCE
HAROLD MACMILLAN
PAUL JOHNSON
MORTIMER ADLER
MALCOLM MUGGERIDGE
The concluding section, wherein four figures examine the reasons for faith,
the causes for faith, the metaphysics of religion, and the serenity of belief
AN ALPHABETICAL LIST OF GUESTS
ON FIRING LINE 1966-1988 469
INDEX 509
|
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era | Geschichte gnd |
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geographic | USA |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV002481683 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T15:45:44Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0394575687 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-001601710 |
oclc_num | 18779463 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | XXXIX, 533 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 1989 |
publishDateSearch | 1989 |
publishDateSort | 1989 |
publisher | Random House |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Buckley, William F. 1925-2008 Verfasser (DE-588)119187523 aut On the firing line the public life of our public figures 1. trade ed. New York Random House 1989 XXXIX, 533 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Buckley, William F <1925-2008> (William Frank) Interviews Firing line (Television program) Firing line (DE-588)4236547-8 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Celebrities United States Interviews Interviewing on television Journalists United States Interviews Berühmte Persönlichkeit (DE-588)4191412-0 gnd rswk-swf Interview (DE-588)4027503-6 gnd rswk-swf USA Berühmte Persönlichkeit (DE-588)4191412-0 s Interview (DE-588)4027503-6 s Firing line (DE-588)4236547-8 u Geschichte z DE-604 HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001601710&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Buckley, William F. 1925-2008 On the firing line the public life of our public figures Buckley, William F <1925-2008> (William Frank) Interviews Firing line (Television program) Firing line (DE-588)4236547-8 gnd Celebrities United States Interviews Interviewing on television Journalists United States Interviews Berühmte Persönlichkeit (DE-588)4191412-0 gnd Interview (DE-588)4027503-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4236547-8 (DE-588)4191412-0 (DE-588)4027503-6 |
title | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_auth | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_exact_search | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_full | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_fullStr | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_full_unstemmed | On the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_short | On the firing line |
title_sort | on the firing line the public life of our public figures |
title_sub | the public life of our public figures |
topic | Buckley, William F <1925-2008> (William Frank) Interviews Firing line (Television program) Firing line (DE-588)4236547-8 gnd Celebrities United States Interviews Interviewing on television Journalists United States Interviews Berühmte Persönlichkeit (DE-588)4191412-0 gnd Interview (DE-588)4027503-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Buckley, William F <1925-2008> (William Frank) Interviews Firing line (Television program) Firing line Celebrities United States Interviews Interviewing on television Journalists United States Interviews Berühmte Persönlichkeit Interview USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=001601710&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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