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<text>
<title>
(Apr. 02, 1990) "I Could See No Reason To Live"
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 02, 1990 Nixon Memoirs
</history>
<link 07759>
<link 07760>
<link 07761>
<link 07762>
<link 00186><link 00192><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EXCERPT, Page 34
I Could See No Reason to Live
By Richard Nixon
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In an emotional and extraordinarily candid memoir, the former
President describes the agony of his exile and his struggle for
renewal
</p>
<p>[(c) 1990 Richard Nixon. From In the Arena, to be published in
April by Simon & Schuster, Inc.]
</p>
<p> San Clemente, 1974
</p>
<p> As our plane circled the El Toro Marine Air Base on the
afternoon of Aug. 9, I could see hundreds of cars lined up
trying to get into the already overflowing parking area. I had
not thought I could find the energy to make another speech that
day, but I managed to thank them for welcoming us home, and I
vowed to continue to fight for the great causes of peace,
freedom and opportunity that had been my motivating principles
from the time I first ran for Congress in 1946. As we walked
toward the helicopter, I heard someone from the crowd shout
out, "Whittier is still for you, Dick!"
</p>
<p> Thanks to Gavin Herbert and a group of volunteers from
U.S.C., La Casa Pacifica's grounds were beautiful almost beyond
description. I said to Gavin, "It is good to be back in a house
of peace." But it was only a lull before a storm.
</p>
<p> The following day, the blows began to fall again. The
special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, had been delighted when my
chief of staff, Al Haig, informed him of my decision to resign.
He thought it would be in the best interests of the country.
Haig reported to me that based on his conversation, he did not
believe we would continue to suffer harassment by the special
prosecutor. He had not reckoned with the young activists on
Jaworski's staff.
</p>
<p> Far from being satisfied by the resignation, their appetites
for finishing the injured victim were whetted. When my daughter
Tricia's husband Ed Cox urged me not to resign, he warned me
that this might happen. He had known several of Jaworski's
staff at Harvard Law School and had served with some in the
U.S. Attorney's office in New York City. He said, "I know these
people. They are smart and ruthless. They hate you. They will
harass you and hound you in civil and criminal actions across
the country for the rest of your life." He was right. They were
following the dictum of the 19th century Russian revolutionary
Sergei Nechayev: "It is not enough to kill an adversary. He
must first be dishonored."
</p>
<p> One after another, the blows rained down.
</p>
<p> I resigned from the Supreme Court and the California and New
York bars. The Supreme Court and California accepted my
resignation. The New York Bar Association refused to do so and
instituted disbarment proceedings.
</p>
<p> Scores of lawsuits were filed against me by individuals
seeking damages for assorted Government actions. Few involved
presidential decisions. Most were dismissed, but all had to be
defended.
</p>
<p> The cost was staggering. In the 16 years since I resigned
the presidency, I have spent more than $1.8 million in
attorneys' fees to defend myself against such suits and to
protect my rights that were threatened by Government action.
</p>
<p> The Supreme Court ruled against me on my suit to gain
possession of my papers and tapes, including those that were
private.
</p>
<p> A scandal magazine printed letters that I was supposed to
have written to a countess in Spain whom I had never met. They
were obvious forgeries, but the story was never retracted.
</p>
<p> The pounding continued unrelentingly. I was the favorite
butt of jokes on the talk shows. Hundreds of columns attacked
me. A number of anti-Nixon books were published. Those by
critics I understood. Those by friends I found a bit hard to
take.
</p>
<p> The Rose Bowl game in 1975 was interrupted on television by
an announcement of the conviction of John Mitchell and my other
top aides. I could no longer even take refuge in my favorite
avocation, watching sports on television.
</p>
<p> It was not enough for my critics to say that I had made
terrible mistakes. They seemed driven to prove that I
represented the epitome of evil itself.
</p>
<p>My Second Most Painful Decision
</p>
<p> I will never forget the moment that Jack Miller, my attorney
from Washington, came into my office in San Clemente on Sept.
4, 1974, to inform me of President Ford's decision to stop the
hemorrhaging by issuing a presidential pardon. Now I had to
decide whether or not to accept it.
</p>
<p> I told Miller I was worried the pardon would hurt Ford
politically. He said that in the short run, it would. But he
added that if the country continued to be obsessed by
Watergate, Ford and others would suffer even more from being
unable to devote their attention to urgent problems.
</p>
<p> Miller also knew my desperate financial situation. He
pointed out that the costs of defending actions against me
would bankrupt me. In view of what happened soon thereafter,
he was remarkably perceptive when he added that he thought that
I had taken as much physically, mentally and emotionally as I
could and that I should accept the pardon for my own well-being
and my family's. His strongest argument was that because of the
publicity over the past year and a half, there was no way I
could get a fair trial in Washington.
</p>
<p> Next to the resignation, accepting the pardon was the most
painful decision of my political career. The statement I issued
at the time accurately describes my feelings then and now:
</p>
<p> "I was wrong in not acting more decisively and more
forthrightly in dealing with Watergate, particularly when it
reached the stage of judicial proceedings and grew from a
political scandal into a national tragedy.
</p>
<p> "No words can describe the depths of my regret and pain at
the anguish my mistakes over Watergate have caused the nation
and the presidency--a nation I so deeply love and an
institution I so greatly respect."
</p>
<p> The pardon was granted on Sept. 8. The predictable occurred.
Ford went down in the polls, and I was subjected to a whole new
round of attacks in the media.
</p>
<p>Nothing Left to Fight For
</p>
<p> I have always believed that there is a direct relationship
between mental and physical health. Events in the aftermath of
the pardon proved it, as far as I am concerned. Twenty years
had passed since I had last suffered from phlebitis, blood
clots that usually occur in the legs. Just before my trip to
the Mideast in June 1974, my left leg began to swell. Hot and
cold compresses reduced the swelling, but it increased
alarmingly again when I had to stand too long at various
ceremonies. It became even more aggravated when I went to the
Soviet Union in July. In Minsk I had to walk for almost a mile
and a half over cobblestone paths, and the pain was
excruciating.
</p>
<p> When I returned to Washington, the pain subsided, and I was
so busy in the weeks before the resignation that I forgot about
it completely. A few days after the pardon, the swelling
recurred. My family doctor, Dr. John Lungren, urged me to go
to the hospital, warning that if a clot should break loose and
go to the lungs, it would be fatal. That got my attention. I
went to the hospital.
</p>
<p> For almost two weeks, I slept very little because the nurse
had to come in every hour to refill the intravenous heparin
medication to dissolve the blood clot. It was a miserable
experience. When I returned home, I told Pat that I would never
go to the hospital again.
</p>
<p> Within three weeks, I was back. Lungren had warned me that
sharp pains in the abdomen would be a danger signal. After X-
rays, the doctors decided that an operation should be performed
immediately. I remember the pinprick of the anesthetist's
needle and being wheeled down to the operating room, but for
six days thereafter I was in and out of consciousness.
</p>
<p> My first recollection was of a nurse slapping my face and
calling me. "Richard, wake up," she said. "Richard, wake up."
I knew it was not Pat or Lungren. In fact, only my mother
called me Richard. When I woke up again, Lungren was taking my
pulse. I told him that I was anxious to go home. He said,
"Listen, Dick, we almost lost you last night. You are not going
to go home for quite a while."
</p>
<p> He told me I had gone into shock after the operation. My
blood pressure had gone down to 60 over 0. Only after four
transfusions over three hours were the doctors able to push it
back to normal. I learned later that Pat, Tricia and Julie had
been standing by me in the room for most of the night. When I
woke up again, I asked Pat to come in. I now knew that I was
in pretty desperate shape. Pat and I have seldom revealed our
physical disabilities to each other. This time, I couldn't help
it. I said that I didn't think I was going to make it.
</p>
<p> She gripped my hand and said almost fiercely, "Don't talk
that way. You have got to make it. You must not give up." As
she spoke, my thoughts went back again to the Fund crisis in
1952. Just before we went onstage for the broadcast, when I was
trying to get all of my thoughts together for the most
important speech of my life, I told her, "I just don't think
I can go through with this one." She grasped me firmly by the
hand and said, "Of course you can." The words were the same,
but now there was a difference. Then I had something larger
than myself to fight for. Now it seemed that I had nothing left
to fight for except my own life.
</p>
<p> Among my first visitors was Jerry Ford, who was in
California campaigning for congressional candidates. I must
have looked like hell, because he blurted out, "Oh, Mr.
President!," despite the fact that since my resignation we had
been on a first-name basis. He did his best to give me a lift,
but I knew that the pardon had hurt him and that the campaign
was not going well.
</p>
<p> Shortly afterward, a nurse wheeled me into another room,
with a window. She pointed to a small plane with a sign
trailing behind: GOD LOVES YOU AND SO DO WE. I learned that the
Rev. Billy Graham's wife Ruth and some of her friends had
arranged it. I am convinced now that but for the support of my
family and the thoughts and prayers of countless people I have
never met and would never have a chance to thank, I would not
have made it.
</p>
<p> There was still bad news to come. A few days later someone
brought the results of the 1974 off-year elections to my
hospital room. The Republican Party was in even worse shape
than I was. I knew that from that time on, the Democrats who
won would be called Watergate Democrats and the Republicans who
lost would be called Watergate Republicans. After the millions
of miles I had logged and the thousands of speeches I had made
for Republican candidates over the years, I knew that this was
my final legacy to the party. It would be a heavy burden for
the rest of my life.
</p>
<p> When I left the hospital and returned home to La Casa
Pacifica, I thought that now, at least, I might get a little
relief. It was not to be. Judge Sirica wanted me in this
courtroom to testify against John Mitchell and the other
defendants. He ordered three doctors to examine me to see if
the reports on the seriousness of my illness were true. Even
now, so-called biographers and journalists blithely inform
their readers that I cynically arranged my near fatal illness
to quell public opposition to the pardon.
</p>
<p> So Sirica's three doctors came to San Clemente. Each took
turns poking and pinching and pulling. One was obviously a
little embarrassed by the exercise, but the other two seemed
to enjoy their work. They were at least professional enough to
report that I could under no circumstances travel to Washington
and testify.
</p>
<p> I did not get the lift that I should have from the news that
I would not have to go to Washington. I was a physical wreck;
I was emotionally drained; I was mentally burned out. This
time, as compared with the other crises I had endured, I could
see no reason to live, no cause to fight for. Unless a person
has a reason to live for other than himself, he will die--first mentally, then emotionally, then physically.
</p>
<p> At low points in the past, I have been sustained by
recalling a note Clare Boothe Luce handed to me right after
Watergate first broke, when she was sitting next to me at a
meeting of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. It was St.
Barton's Ode. "I am hurt but I am not slain! I will lie me down
and bleed awhile--then I'll rise and fight again." This time
it did not work. I did not have anything to fight for.
</p>
<p> Three lessons stood out from my years in the wilderness
after I lost the 1962 California Governor's race.
</p>
<p>-- Defeat is never fatal unless you give up.
</p>
<p>-- When you go through defeat, you are able to put your
weaknesses in perspective and to develop an immune system to
deal with them in the future.
</p>
<p>-- You never know how strong you are when things go
smoothly. You tap strength you didn't know you had when you
have to cope with adversity.
</p>
<p> My six years in the wilderness in the 1960s helped me
survive the crisis I confronted in 1974. But residing in the
deepest valley is far different from passing through the
wilderness. Historical precedents existed for what I went
through in the 1960s. Others lost major elections, yet came
back to win later. But there was no precedent for what faced me
in the 1970s. No one had ever been so high and fallen so low.
No one before had ever resigned the presidency.
</p>
<p> I was down but not out. My enemies wanted to make sure I did
not rise again in view of my past record of comebacks. They
tried to discredit everything I had done, to blame me for my
Administration's failures and to credit others for its
successes. Newspaper articles invariably referred to me as the
"disgraced former President." I was hated by some, ignored by
others. It became unfashionable for even my friends to say
anything positive about the Nixon era. While in the wilderness,
De Gaulle once sardonically remarked, "Insults would have been
more tolerable than indifference." I didn't have that problem--my enemies berated me, and many of my friends maintained a
discreet distance.
</p>
<p>Getting Back to Par
</p>
<p> My immediate priority was to recover my health. I needed to
do this to have the energy to engage again in creative
activities. To my great surprise, golf became my lifesaver. I
was fortunate to have Colonel Jack Brennan, my top military
aide during my last two years in the White House, as my
administrative assistant in San Clemente. He was an excellent
golfer, but even more important, a patient and understanding
partner.
</p>
<p> Combined with occasional swims in the cold water of the
Pacific and a few laps in a heated pool, the golf routine did
the trick. Within a year, I was shooting a few pars on the golf
course and was back to par physically.
</p>
<p> I also had to recover my financial health. All of my assets
were invested in real estate. My presidential and congressional
pensions took care of ordinary expenses. But I had to find a
way to pay my attorneys' fees. In addition, the Government
allowance for office expenses was inadequate to cover the staff
I needed to answer my huge volume of mail. I needed extra
income. I ruled out one potentially lucrative source, honoraria
for speeches. It was not the right time for me to begin to
speak out. But even more important, I had had a policy of not
accepting honoraria for speeches ever since I had been elected
Vice President in 1952. Presidents Hoover, Truman, Eisenhower
and Johnson all refused honoraria, and I did not want to be
the first former President to start the practice. I therefore
decided to find some other source of income.
</p>
<p> My physical recovery, while important, was not enough. A
healthy vegetable is still a vegetable. As I recovered
physically, I was able to tackle the more important but more
difficult challenge of spiritual recovery. To recover
physically involves regaining the ability to get up in the
morning; to recover spiritually requires restoring the will and
desire to do so.
</p>
<p> No one can recover spiritually from a major loss without the
help of others. While a political figure depends on others in
many ways, he ultimately rises and falls as a result of his own
decisions and actions. A personal defeat therefore is an
isolating experience. Spiritual recovery is hastened by
overcoming the sense of isolation, by recognizing the fact that
your family, friends and supporters still stand with you, and
by putting the defeat in perspective.
</p>
<p> My first line of support was my family. No man has ever had
a stronger family than I have had. In the weeks, months and
years of slow recovery, a day never passed without their
support. Never once did they moan about the disastrous impact
of my shattering defeat on their lives. In many ways, it was
worse for them than for me. When they read or saw the latest
attack, their instinct was to refute the distortions and
falsehoods. But they had to suffer in silence. They could not
fight back.
</p>
<p> I also relied on support from my friends. When you win in
politics, you hear from everyone. When you lose, you hear from
your friends. After Watergate, it was a miracle that I had as
many as I did. Some came to see me, some telephoned, others
wrote encouraging letters. As good friends, they did not dwell
on the tragedy of the past. Thankfully, they did not express
sympathy, for the only thing worse than self-pity is to be the
object of pity from others. And finally, the letters from tens
of thousands of people from all over the world whom I had never
met played an indispensable role in bucking up my spirits. It
was heartwarming to know that while there was no longer a Silent
Majority, at the least the minority that remained was not
silent.
</p>
<p> With the wounds of body and spirit healed, I was now
prepared to deal with my greatest challenge--mental recovery.
This was the decisive factor in my decision to write my
memoirs. When I finished Six Crises after losing in 1960, I
observed that writing the book was my seventh crisis, and I
vowed that I would never write another. But writing my memoirs
now served several purposes. It provided part of the income
that I needed. It was an enormous mental challenge requiring
full use of all my creative abilities. Writing a book is the
most intensive exercise anyone can give his brain. Most
important, it provided the therapy needed for a full spiritual
recovery by enabling me to put Watergate behind me.
</p>
<p>The Myths of Watergate
</p>
<p> Reliving those days in cold print was not easy, but I tried
to close the book on that episode. In the three years I spent
writing my memoirs, I addressed every facet of the crisis my
excellent editorial staff, under the leadership of Frank
Gannon, could uncover. I learned a number of things I had not
known as the events of Watergate unfolded. I was able to put
all the events of that time in perspective--to learn not only
what happened but why, and to provide some guidance so that
others could avoid a repetition of those problems.
</p>
<p> As I wrote, I was able to look back at Watergate and
separate myth from fact. At the core of the scandal was the
fact that individuals associated with my re-election campaign
were caught breaking into and installing telephone wiretaps at
the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the
Watergate Hotel. After their arrest, others in my campaign and
in my Administration attempted to cover up this connection to
minimize the political damage. I failed to take matters firmly
into my own hands and discover the facts and to fire any and
all people involved or implicated in the break-in. I was also
accused of taking part in the cover-up by trying to obstruct
the FBI's criminal investigation.
</p>
<p> Alone, that would probably not have been enough to bring
down my Administration. But the term "Watergate" has come to
include a wide range of other charges that my adversaries used
to try to paint my Administration as, in their words, "the most
corrupt in American history." Together, these accusations
represented the myths of Watergate, the smoke screen of false
charges that ultimately undercut my Administration's ability
to govern effectively.
</p>
<p> The most blatantly false myth was that I ordered the
break-in at the Democratic headquarters. Millions of dollars
were spent by the Executive Branch, the Congress and the office
of the special prosecutor to investigate Watergate. Not one
piece of evidence was discovered indicating that I ordered the
break-in, knew about the plans for the wiretapping or received
any information from it.
</p>
<p> The most politically damaging myth was that I personally
ordered the payment of money to Howard Hunt and the other
original Watergate defendants to keep them silent. I did
discuss this possibility during a meeting with John Dean and
Bob Haldeman on March 21, 1973. In the tape recording of this
meeting, it is clear that I considered paying the money. I
should not have even considered this option, but the key facts
were that I rejected offering clemency to the defendants as
"wrong" and at the end of the conversation ruled out any White
House payment of money to the defendants. Moreover, those who
made this accusation ignored the even more crucial fact that
no payments were made as a result of that conversation.
</p>
<p> The most serious myth--the one that ultimately forced me
to resign--was that, on my specific orders, the CIA
obstructed the FBI from pursuing its criminal investigation of
the Watergate break-in. I discussed this possible course of
action with Bob Haldeman in the famous "smoking gun" tape of
June 23, 1972. At that time, I thought that since some former
CIA operatives had participated in the break-in, the CIA would
be concerned that their exposure would reveal other, legitimate
operations and operatives and that the agency would therefore
welcome a chance to avoid that outcome. I thought that would
also prevent the FBI from going into areas that would be
politically embarrassing to us.
</p>
<p> In my talk with Haldeman, I made the inexcusable error of
following the recommendation from some members of my staff--some of whom, I later learned, had a personal stake in covering
up the facts--and requesting that the CIA intervene. But that
mistake was mitigated by two facts. First, the director of
Central Intelligence, Richard Helms, and his deputy, Vernon
Walters, ignored the White House request and refused to
intervene with the FBI, despite the pressure from members of
my staff. Second, when FBI director Pat Gray complained to me
in a telephone call three weeks later, on July 12, about
attempts to suppress his investigation, I told him emphatically
to go forward with it, and I instructed Haldeman and John
Ehrlichman to make sure the campaign and the Administration
cooperated with the investigation "all the way down the line."
No obstruction of justice took place as a result of the June
23 conversation.
</p>
<p> The most widely believed myth was that I ordered massive
illegal wiretapping and surveillance of political opponents,
members of the House and Senate, and news media reporters. All
of these charges were false, and no evidence was presented to
substantiate them.
</p>
<p> The most ridiculous myth was that I was the first President
to tape some of my conversations. F.D.R. was the first to do
so. Scores of tapes are kept in the Eisenhower Library. Several
thousand hours of tapes are stored in the Johnson Library, none
of which will be available until the year 2023. Of the several
hundred hours of tapes in the Kennedy Library, only 12% have
so far been made public. The rest, according to the Kennedy
Library officials, will be kept secret indefinitely.
</p>
<p> What, then, was Watergate? When the break-in first hit the
news, my press secretary, Ron Ziegler, aptly called it a
third-rate burglary. To compare Watergate with Teapot Dome, the
Truman five-percenter scandals and the Grant whiskey scandals
misses the point totally. No one in the Nixon Administration
profited from Watergate. No one ripped off the Government, as
in previous scandals. Wrongdoing took place, but not for
personal gain. All Administrations have sought to protect
themselves from the political fallout of scandals. In
retrospect, I would say that Watergate was one part wrongdoing,
one part blundering and one part political vendetta by my
enemies.
</p>
<p> The Watergate break-in and cover-up greatly damaged the
American political process. While not unusual in political
campaigns, these actions were clearly illegal. Over the years,
I had been the victim of dirty tricks and other kinds of
vicious tactics in the cut and thrust of political warfare.
What happened in Watergate--the facts, not the myths--was
wrong. In retrospect, while I was not involved in the decision
to conduct the break-in, I should have set a higher standard
for the conduct of the people who participated in my campaign
and Administration. I should have established a moral tone
that would have made such actions unthinkable. I did not. I
played by the rules of politics as I found them. Not taking a
higher road than my predecessors and my adversaries was my
central mistake. For that reason, I long ago accepted overall
responsibility for the Watergate affair. What's more, I have
paid, and am still paying, the price for it.
</p>
<p> Apart from its illegality, Watergate was a tragedy of
errors. Whoever ordered the break-in evidently knew little
about politics. If the purpose was to gather political
intelligence, the Democratic National Committee was a pathetic
target. Strategy and tactics are set by the candidate and his
staff, not the party bureaucracy. I also contributed to the
errors. As a student of history, I should have known that
leaders who do big things well must be on guard against
stumbling on the little things. To paraphrase Talleyrand,
Watergate was worse than a crime--it was a blunder.
</p>
<p> When first informed about the break-in, I did not give it
sufficient attention, partly because I was preoccupied with my
China and Soviet initiatives and with my efforts to end the war
in Vietnam and partly because I feared that some of my
colleagues might be somehow involved. Some have said that my
major mistake was to protect my subordinates. They may be
partly right. In any organization, loyalty must run down, as
well as up. I knew those who were involved acted not for
personal gain but out of their deep belief in our cause. That
knowledge may have contributed to my hesitation in tackling the
question. I should have focused on the issue immediately, dug
out the truth, fired everyone involved and taken the political
heat.
</p>
<p> But what we remember as the Watergate period was also a
concerted political vendetta by my opponents. Anyone who knows
the workings of hardball politics knows that the smoke screen
of false accusations--the myths of Watergate--was not at
all accidental. In this respect, Watergate was not a morality
play but rather a political struggle. The baseless and highly
sensationalistic charges, the blatant double standards, the
party-line votes in congressional investigating committees and
the unwillingness of my adversaries and the media to look into
parallel wrongdoing within Democratic campaigns, all should
tip off even the casual observer that the opposition was
pursuing not only justice but also political advantage.
</p>
<p>The Final Comeback?
</p>
<p> On Nov. 30, 1978, as I walked into the hall where I was to
address the Oxford Union, the crowd greeted me with a standing
ovation. I had received a very different reception outside.
Several hundred demonstrators, many of them American students
attending Oxford, surrounded my car as we entered the grounds.
It was an ugly crowd. We could hear them chanting "Nixon go
home!" as the president of the Union introduced me. I could see
he was somewhat embarrassed, but I put him at ease when I
opened my remarks by observing that the demonstrators made me
feel very much at home.
</p>
<p> The students particularly liked the question-and-answer
session. They were respectful, but they pulled no punches. The
most intriguing question was what my plans were for a role in
politics or foreign affairs. I responded that my political
career was over but that while I had retired from politics, I
had not retired from life. "So long as I have a breath in my
body," I said, "I am going to talk about the great issues that
affect the world. I am not going to keep my mouth shut. I am
going to speak out for peace and freedom." The question was
unexpected, but the off-the-cuff answer set forth exactly the
guidelines I was to follow in the years ahead through meetings
with leaders around the world, writing books and articles, and
giving speeches and off-the-record backgrounders for
journalists.
</p>
<p> What positive effect, if any, all this activity has had I
do not know. I do know that it had one negative fallout. My
critics saw what they considered to be a sinister purpose--that I was "orchestrating yet another comeback." If this is so,
my "orchestra" is really a one-man band, because I do not have
any control over what anyone else thinks, says or writes.
</p>
<p> Besides, as I said on Meet the Press in 1988, if I am trying
to make a comeback, "what am I going to come back to? We
already have a very good mayor in Saddle River, and we have a
very good Governor in the state of New Jersey. It isn't a
comeback. It isn't to be well thought of. The purpose is to get
a message across, and then let history judge." When John
Chancellor asked me how history would remember me, I predicted,
"History will treat me fairly. Historians probably won't,
because most historians are on the left."
</p>
<p> I shall continue to speak up for the policies that will lead
to peace and freedom as long as I live. If people are
interested in what I have to say, they can tune in. If they
aren't, they do not have to. I intend to continue to speak out
on the important issues for those who do want to hear my views.
</p>
<p>Searching for Recreation
</p>
<p> People sometimes ask what a 77-year-old former President
does for exercise and recreation. Unfortunately, I do not set
a very good example. I have never gone hunting, and fishing
just isn't my bag. I tried deep-sea fishing once as a teenager
and gave it up because I used to get seasick. In 1952
Eisenhower tried to teach me how to cast for trout. It was a
disaster. After hooking a limb the first three times, I caught
his shirt on my fourth try. The lesson ended abruptly.
</p>
<p> I don't ski or play tennis. People often ask me whether I
play chess. I don't, but my grandson Christopher, 11, plays
well enough already to give his father a run for his money. The
only time I played gin rummy was in 1944, on a twelve-hour
flight from Guadalcanal to Hawaii in the belly of a C-54
transport. The learning process was so expensive that I decided
to stick to poker, which I still play once a year with
Ambassador Walter Annenberg and other members of the Benevolent
Marching and Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.
</p>
<p> I go to an occasional baseball, football or basketball game.
My most vivid memory of a sports event was seeing my first
major league baseball game on July 4, 1936. The Yankees crushed
the Senators in a doubleheader. A rookie outfielder for New
York, Joe DiMaggio, hit a home run into the sun bleachers at
Griffith Stadium where I was sitting. The next time I saw the
Yankees play on the Fourth of July was on a blisteringly hot
Monday afternoon in New York 47 years later. Dave Righetti threw
a no-hitter against the Boston Red Sox--his first, and mine
as well. I shall never forget when he struck out Wade Boggs,
the best hitter in baseball, with a high inside fastball for
the final out.
</p>
<p> I quit golf ten years ago, though I enjoyed the game. There
were two reasons. One day in late 1978, I broke 80. It was on
a relatively easy course in San Clemente, but for me it was
like climbing Mount Everest. I knew I could never get better,
and so the competitive challenge was gone. Breaking 80 was an
even greater thrill than getting a hole in one. I did get a
hole in one once, but I don't remember much about it, except
that it was on the third hole at Bel Air on Labor Day 1961, I
used a MacGregor six-iron and a Spalding Dot ball, and my
partner Randolph Scott birdied the hole.
</p>
<p> The other reason I quit golf was the decisive one. I had to
meet a deadline for my third book, The Real War. I simply could
not do it and also find four hours a day to play golf. This
time, however, I found a substitute. In 1969 I asked President
de Gaulle what he did for exercise. He told me that he believed
that walking was the best thing a leader could do for his
mental, physical and emotional health. I now follow his advice
and walk four miles a day. While I miss the competition and
fellowship, I get three times as much exercise as I would
playing a round of golf and riding between holes in a cart.
</p>
<p>The Press and Privacy
</p>
<p> Although I had always had a lively interest in public
affairs, I was not aware until after his death that Franklin
D. Roosevelt was crippled by polio. I vividly recall seeing
newsreels that showed him in Washington and abroad. They never
showed a wheelchair or crutches, nor did newspaper accounts
mention his disability. The media actively kept the secret for
him. Some may disagree, but I believe the press deserve great
credit for not disclosing his condition. Today they could not
do so because of the television cameras that follow a President
everywhere.
</p>
<p> More to the point, they would not want to do so. You don't
have to point to the Gary Hart expose to find examples where
investigative reporters have made public figures, and their
families and friends, fair game for disclosure of every detail
of their private lives. Highly qualified people are becoming
increasingly reluctant to take Government positions in
Washington because they don't want to expose their families to
this merciless scrutiny. We can't go back to the pre-television
standards of the F.D.R. days, but the media, in the interest
of fairness and responsibility, might well consider reappraising
some of their practices and eliminating some of the abuses.
</p>
<p> Based on 44 years of dealing with members of the media on
the national level, I can say they are above average in
intelligence. Most are liberal politically. Virtually all are
ambitious, not so much for money as for status. A Pulitzer
Prize means far more to them than a six-figure salary. They are
proud of their profession and sometimes find it difficult to
hide their contempt for the less well-educated politicians and
businessmen they cover. Many, in my view justifiably, believe
they are underpaid compared with the lobbyists and p.r. flacks
who rip off their employers so shamefully. Finally, most are
interesting people. An off-the-record session with a group of
top-notch reporters can be far more stimulating and informative
than a meeting with a group of Senators or Congressmen.
</p>
<p> I have some other observations that will probably be more
controversial.
</p>
<p> Reporters from the print press, generally, although not
always, are more intelligent and thoughtful than TV reporters.
Photographers tend to be more sympathetic to conservatives than
reporters, possibly because there appears to be an adversarial
relationship between these two groups of journalists. A
politician will get a better shake from reporters outside of
Washington than in Washington. Publishers have become virtual
political eunuchs: they still sign the checks, but the day is
long gone when they had much control over reporters. Often a
candidate is endorsed on the editorial page and cut up in the
news stories, which gives many newspapers a schizophrenic
quality. Even the paper I read most regularly, the Wall Street
Journal, suffers from that syndrome. This is not necessarily
bad, but those who deal with the press should know what they
are up against.
</p>
<p> Another observation, which I admit may result only from my
own experience, is that members of the press hate to be proved
wrong. I was warned about this after the Alger Hiss case. Most
reporters covering the case had thought Whittaker Chambers was
lying and Hiss was telling the truth, and they did not
appreciate being shown that they had been wrong. There was an
understandable tendency among some in the months and years
afterward to try to justify their original position, at my
expense.
</p>
<p> Superficial observers are wrong when they attribute all of
my problems with the media to Watergate. They overlook the
seminal issue of Vietnam. The war changed Lyndon Johnson's
press from highly positive to overwhelmingly negative, and
poisoned my own relations with the press throughout my
presidency. I respected the right of press people as well as
politicians to disagree with me about the morality of our cause
in Vietnam, our conduct of the war and my efforts to win an
honorable peace. But again, the events that followed our
withdrawal from Vietnam, including the plight of the boat
people and the more than 1 million slaughtered by the new
communist rulers of Cambodia, showed that media critics who
said we were on the wrong side were mistaken.
</p>
<p> The press and the politicians they cover are frequently at
odds, but they have one thing in common: a very low rating in
the public opinion polls. Most people believe that the press
is biased toward liberal causes, and I would agree. But charges
that the press is generally inaccurate in its reporting are
frequently unfair. Generally, I have been impressed by how
accurately reporters who reach the national level cover their
stories. The contention that reporters have bad manners is also
usually a bad rap. While reporters are always persistent, they
are usually courteous. The antics of a few oddballs who stamp
their feet and holler like children to get attention should
not be held against the entire group.
</p>
<p> Here are my rules for dealing with the press:
</p>
<p>-- Don't play favorites. Doing so gives a short-term
advantage but does more harm than good in the long run. I often
asked Henry Kissinger to give interviews not just to the select
elite in the Washington press corps but to some of the fine
reporters from the less well-known papers around the country.
If for some reason you are deserted by your tiny circle of
Beltway bigwigs, you might wish you had cultivated some friends
in the hinterlands.
</p>
<p>-- Don't cancel a subscription, but don't be afraid to
cancel an unfriendly reporter's ticket on some plum
presidential trip. There is no law that says if a reporter has
a habit of giving you the shaft, you have to continue to give
him privileged treatment.
</p>
<p>-- Wining and dining the press should generally be avoided
except on an arm's-length basis. The best reporters resent
being wooed in such a superficial way, and no reporter will sit
on a negative story because you gave him brunch last week.
</p>
<p>-- One tactic that should be used only sparingly is for a
public official who has been attacked by the press to
counterattack. He may win in the short run. But in the long run
the press has the last word, and they will never forgive him
for taking them on. This does not mean that he should take
their barbs lying down or that he should go crawling after them
to try to win their support. It does mean that he should give
as good as he receives, but in a manner that will not expose
him to the charge that he is taking on the press to divert
attention from his own vulnerabilities.
</p>
<p>-- A President's ultimate weapon is to go over the heads of
the press to the country, as I did in the so-called "Checkers
Speech" in 1952 and the "Silent Majority" address in 1969 to
mobilize public opinion. But you cannot go to the well too
often. Only on a major issue of universal concern should a
President try to reach the people directly to avoid having his
views filtered through the press.
</p>
<p>Into the Twilight
</p>
<p> As I look back to the time I made the decision to enter
politics more than 40 years ago, three goals motivated me:
peace abroad, a better life for people at home and the victory
of freedom over tyranny throughout the world. I have taken some
great risks and have fought many battles in attempting to serve
those goals. By exposing Alger Hiss, I earned the undying
enmity of many powerful people who might otherwise have at
worst taken a neutral view of me. I do not regret losing these
people's support. But by going to China, I lost the support of
many fellow conservatives who believed we should not have
normal relations with any communist power, even if it was
unfriendly toward the Soviet Union. By refusing to accept any
but the most honorable and equitable peace in Vietnam, I lost
the support of many liberals, conservatives and moderates who
felt that supporting me was just too risky politically. These
are examples of the perils of purpose.
</p>
<p> While it has been a rough game, it has been worth it. I
might not want to do it again, but I would not have missed it.
I know I have lived for a purpose, and I have at least in part
achieved it. You must live your life for something more
important than your life alone. One who has never lost himself
in a cause bigger than himself has missed one of life's
mountaintop experiences. Only by losing yourself in this way
can you really find yourself.
</p>
<p> My most vivid memory of the dark days after my resignation
is a conversation with Walter Annenberg shortly after I
returned to San Clemente. He knew I was discouraged. He tried
to buck up my spirits. He said, "Whether you have been knocked
down or are on the ropes, always remember that life is 99
rounds." Today, the battle I started to wage in 1946 when I
first ran for Congress is not over. I still have a few rounds
to go.
</p>
<p> Two thousand years ago, Sophocles wrote, "One must wait
until the evening to see how splendid the day has been." There
is still some time before the sun goes down, but even now, I
can look back and say that the day has indeed been splendid.
In view of the ordeals I have endured, this may strike some as
an incredible conclusion. I believe, however, that the richness
of life is measured by its breadth, its height and its depth.
It has been my good fortune to have lived a very long and a
very full life, one in which I have been at the heights but
also at the depths.
</p>
<p> I shall always remember my first visit to the Grand Canyon
65 years ago. I did not believe any view could be more
spectacular than the one from the heights of the South Rim
until I hiked seven miles down to the river below and looked
back up. Only then did I fully appreciate the true majesty of
one of nature's seven wonders of the world. Only when you have
been in the depths can you truly appreciate the heights.
</p>
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