The
Real Jimmy Carter
by Steven Hayward
Regnery
Publishing, Inc.; ISBN:
0895260905
Hardcover - 256 pages (May
2004)
Jimmy Carter:
America’s best ex-president?
Only if you’re not bothered
by the resurgence of Islamic
fundamentalist terrorism
(which started on his
watch), the shamefaced
foreign policy of Bill
Clinton and John Kerry
(ditto), and think that
ex-presidents should travel
the world coddling dictators
and bad-mouthing America à
la Jesse Jackson.
Jimmy Carter has been given
a free ride from the liberal
media, liberal historians,
and even the American
people, who excuse his
political delinquencies and
disasters on the grounds
that he is a “good” man. But
as bank robber Willie Sutton
said of Carter: “I’ve never
seen a bigger confidence man
in my life, and I’ve been
around some of the best in
the business.”
It’s time to set the record
straight. Finally, an honest
historian—Steven F. Hayward,
author of The Age of
Reagan—demolishes the
myth of “Saint” Jimmy and
exposes how he created
today’s leftist Democratic
party of John Kerry and
Hillary Clinton.
Jimmy Carter’s laundry list
of failures aren’t just
accidents of history:
They’re rooted in Carter’s
deeply flawed character and
ideology—a smugly pious
arrogance matched with a
profound distrust of
America.
The Real Jimmy Carter
reveals:
-
Carter as meddling
ex-president: Why a
Time magazine
columnist wrote that
some of Carter’s “Lone
Ranger work has taken
him dangerously close to
the neighborhood of what
we used to call treason”
-
How Carter befriended
North Korea during the
Clinton administration,
appeasing the communist
regime and giving it
cover for its nuclear
weapons program
-
How Carter made direct
contacts with Soviet
officials to try to
subvert President
Reagan’s anti-communist
policies
-
The shocking extent of
Carter’s clandestine
efforts to sabotage the
first Gulf War in 1990
and how he used Gulf War
II to publicly question
the Christian faith of
America’s commander in
chief
-
How Carter befriended
Yasir Arafat—making
himself an enemy of
Israel
-
Carter as politician: a
vicious campaigner—and
even race-baiter
-
The Carter White House
during the disasters of
the Sandinista takeover
of Nicaragua, the energy
crisis and stagflation,
the Iranian revolution
and hostage crisis, and
the invasion of
Afghanistan
-
How Carter, the failed
president, remade
himself as Carter the
humanitarian and
freelance foreign policy
critic of America
-
How a Nobel official
inadvertently revealed
that Carter’s Nobel
Prize was actually meant
as a slap at America
The Real Jimmy Carter
is a shocker, showing why
the peanut president should
never have left his farm.
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