Ben Stein
Author & New York Times Columnist
In the late summer and early fall of 1974, President Gerald R. Ford invited me to a small number of cabinet meetings on subjects connected with speeches I was writing. My former boss, Richard M. Nixon, had generally not invited speechwriters to his cabinet meetings, and I was certainly not invited to them, though I became quite close to Mr. Nixon in later years.
The Ford cabinet experience was educational. The men and women in the room, high-ranking White House officials and secretaries of cabinet departments, were pleasant and well briefed. But they struck me as similar to small-town Rotary Club members or Junior Chamber of Commerce officials — polite and cordial, but far from rocket scientists. They were just high-average to B+ status, with the exception of some supersmart types like Henry Kissinger.
I have similar recollections of many of my colleagues in the Nixon White House. Some were just blowhards of no special ability. They did not know the answers to the deep questions in America and the world. They were just people.
This lesson is in my mind as we contemplate the end of eight years of the George W. Bush administration and the beginning of the Barack Obama administration.
People with great résumés got us into this incredibly dicey pickle about credit. But when compared with the scope of the crisis, they were ordinary. The credit issue is complex, and there is plenty of blame to go around. But while some foresighted people had inklings of danger, the exact total magnitude of the liabilities associated with low-grade credit instruments was not known, as far as I am aware, to anyone.
Hence, by the time the size of the iceberg became apparent, the Titanic was hard put to stop.
| Teresa, OH |
January 13th, 2009 9:07 am ET re: “Put not your trust in princes.” It’s a proverb for a good reason — then, now, and always. ” I totally agree. So, if even a simple mind like myself knows not to trust a man, any man, even a man elected to office of the president, why dont other people know it? How do they go around actually thinking and lying to theirselves that Obama ( and his fine educated staff) are going to fix this mess called the US? What is going to fix this mess is simply time. Oh, and that purdy little word called “hope”. : ) |
|
|
Comments have been closed for this article |
||
A behind the scenes look at “Anderson Cooper 360°” and the stories it covers, written by Anderson Cooper, the AC360° staff and a network of contributors. Insight you can’t find anywhere else.
We search the news each day to show you what’s on our radar and what we’re planning for the show each night.
For more details, read our tips on how to win 360° approval for comments.
Send your instant feedback to Anderson Cooper 360°.
- Debbie Rowe’s lawyer: No deal in Jackson case
- Beat 360º 7/14/09
- Euna Lee – Still A Mom In Captivity
- At MLB’s All-Star Game, few presidents have taken the mound
- Billings Family Releases Statement
- Financial dispatch: Madoff arrives at federal prison
- Sotomayor’s legacy on the bench
- Video: Videos show home invasion
- How Sotomayor stacks up with other justices
- Internet is the new street corner drug dealer

