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US Presidents
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  UFO (I)  ·  UFO (II)  ·  UFO (III)  ·  UFO UK: Rendlesham Forest  ·  UFO US: Battle of Los Angeles  ·  UFO US: Kecksburg, Pennsylvania  ·  UFO US: Kenneth Arnold, 1947  ·  UFO US: Lonnie Zamora  ·  UFO US: Phoenix Lights  ·  UFO US: Roswell  ·  UFO US: Stephenville, Texas  ·  UFO US: Washington, 1952  ·  UFO: Argentina  ·  UFO: Australia  ·  UFO: Belgium  ·  UFO: Brazil  ·  UFO: Canada  ·  UFO: Chile  ·  UFO: China  ·  UFO: Denmark  ·  UFO: France  ·  UFO: Germany  ·  UFO: Iran  ·  UFO: Israel  ·  UFO: Italy & Sicily  ·  UFO: Japan  ·  UFO: Mexico  ·  UFO: New Zealand  ·  UFO: Norway  ·  UFO: Peru  ·  UFO: Portugal  ·  UFO: Puerto Rico  ·  UFO: Romania  ·  UFO: Russia  ·  UFO: Sweden  ·  UFO: UK  ·  UFO: US  ·  UFO: Zimbabwe  ·  Uganda & Ugandans  ·  UK Foreign Relations  ·  Ukraine & Ukrainians  ·  Unborn  ·  Under the Ground & Underground  ·  Underground Trains  ·  Understanding  ·  Unemployment  ·  Unhappy  ·  Unicorn  ·  Uniform  ·  Unite & Unity  ·  United Arab Emirates  ·  United Kingdom  ·  United Nations  ·  United States of America  ·  United States of America 1900 – Date (I)  ·  United States of America 1900 – Date (II)  ·  United States of America 1900 – Date (III)  ·  United States of America 1900 – Date (IV)  ·  United States of America Early – 1899 (I)  ·  United States of America Early – 1899 (II)  ·  Universe (I)  ·  Universe (II)  ·  Universe (III)  ·  Universe (IV)  ·  University  ·  Uranium & Plutonium  ·  Uranus  ·  Urim & Thummim  ·  Urine  ·  US Civil War  ·  US Empire & Imperialism (I)  ·  US Empire & Imperialism (II)  ·  US Empire & Imperialism (III)  ·  US Empire & Imperialism (IV)  ·  US Foreign Relations (I)  ·  US Foreign Relations (II)  ·  US Presidents  ·  Usury  ·  Utah  ·  Utopia  ·  Uzbekistan  

★ US Presidents

Throughout the history of America countless individuals have campaigned for leader of the free world.  But only a select few have survived the horrors that await anyone brave or foolish enough to take on the challenge.  How to Win the US Presidency, Netflix 2016

 

Things have always been a little bit freaky.  ibid.

 

Money: Its influence has only grown and grown in US election history.  ibid.

 

Rockefellers: The only family member though who made it close to the presidency was Nelson Rockefeller who served as vice-president.  ibid.

 

 

For eight years you’ve been a heartbeat away from the Oval Office. A loyal vice-president.  Biding your time.  Waiting your turn.  You know the path to power.  And you think you know the rules.  But what happens when you discover you don’t even know how to play the game?  Race for the White House s1e1: John F Kennedy & Richard Nixon, CNN 2016

 

1960 America, land of the free, is terrified of the Red Menace.  ibid.    

 

Kennedy does have one advantage being a candidate: his father Joseph, rich, powerful and the former ambassador to Great Britain has always wanted a son as president.  ibid. 

 

Glamour, showbizzness and family – who can compete with that?  ibid. 

 

Kennedy’s illness is never mentioned again.  It’s a victory for JFK’s team if not for truth.  ibid.  

 

Nixon In Hospital: Knee Infection Sidelines Vice President.  ibid.  Newsreel, commentary Peter Roberts

 

Nixon is exhausted, haggard, trailing in the polls, but then there is a ray of hope – the first ever television presidential debate.  ibid.  

 

Nixon has one last card to play – his old boss, ex-general and president Dwight D Eisenhower.  ibid.     

 

 

You know you’ll have to play dirty and devious to become president.  Race for the White House s1e2: Abraham Lincoln v Stephen Douglas

 

Illinois: They’ve come to hear Abraham Lincoln confront Stephen A Douglas on the issue that threatens to tear America apart: slavery.  ibid. 

 

Lincoln has assembled a prize team to take on the favourites.  ibid.

 

 

So, you want to be the most powerful man in the world.  How far are you prepared to go?  Will you turn friends into enemies?  Will you break your own rules?  If you want to be the most powerful man in the world, do the ends ever justify the means? Race for the White House s1e3: George H W Bush v Michael Dukakis  

 

In the fall of 1986 the White House is mired in scandal.  America’s most dangerous enemy Iran.  With the profits diverted illegally to fund a right-wing guerrilla group in Nicaragua, the Contras.  Bad news for Reagan but worse for his loyal deputy George Bush.  Iran/Contra could kill his own presidential plans.  ibid.

 

Dukakis v Biden 1988: Biden finds himself under the microscope like a pinned bug ... It’s not a sex tape: it’s worse than that … ‘Here is Joe Biden giving a speech: it’s almost word for word what British Labour party leader Neil Kinnock had said … More and more plagiarism.’  ibid.  journalist         

 

Whilst Dukakis is dismantling his team, Bush is assembling a gang of political hard men.  ibid.  

 

Iowa: Bush is hammered into third place behind television preacher Pat Robertson and senate majority leader Bob Dole.  ibid.  

 

George Bush takes New Hampshire with close to a ten point lead: Dole just got [Lee] Atwatered.  ibid.  

 

Also taking New Hampshire is the new Democratic front-runner Governor Michael Dukakis.  Ten points ahead, Michael Dukakis seems untouchable.  ibid. 

 

To show he’s a real man, Dukakis is going to sit in a tank: what could possibly go wrong?  ibid.

 

By late September Dukakis’s lead is like mist in the sun.  Can things get any worse for him?  Of course they can.  ibid.

 

‘The ‘revolving door’ ad accomplished what Lee Atwater said was his goal – which was to make Willie Horton into Dukakis’s running mate.’  ibid.  Susan Estrich, Dukakis’ campaign manager

 

George H W Bush thunders home with almost 80% of the electoral college votes.  ibid. 

 

 

You’re the president nobody wanted.  In office by default.  Now you’re the candidate nobody believes in.  In a race you’re expected to lose.  Do you have the guts?  The political cunning?  The sheer determination to prove your enemies wrong?  Race for the White House s1e4: Harry Truman v Thomas Dewey

 

Truman may be America’s post-war president but there’s no peace for him.  American veterans are coming home to a land not fit for heroes.  A tidal-wave of strikes overwhelms the country.  ibid.  

 

Galvanised, the Republicans now target the White House.  Their candidate is tough, slick and camera savvy.  ibid.    

 

Truman’s and Dewey’s trains criss-crossed the country eating up the miles in search of votes.  ibid.

 

Dewey is set for the White House.  ibid.

 

Truman has achieved the unthinkable.  ibid.

    

 

If you think the presidency has been stolen from you and democracy is dead, do you retreat or do you fight?  What will sustain you through the battles ahead?  Truth?  Justice?  Or vengeance?  Race for the White House s1e5: Andrew Jackson v John Quincy Adams

 

It’s only been fifty years since the Revolution and America is about to select its sixth president.  There’s a new contender in the race: he comes all the way to Washington from Tennessee.  He may be an outsider but he has the people’s vote.  His name: General Andrew Jackson.  General Jackson is a national hero.  Jackson’s rival has a perfect presidential resume.  His name: John Quincy Adams.  ibid.

 

The votes are counted and the man from Tennessee surprises everyone.  But not enough to win an absolute majority.  Instead, Congress will choose America’s next president.  ibid.

 

John Quincy Adams becomes the sixth president of the United States.  ibid.

 

Once more Jackson will face Adams for the presidency but this time [Martin] van Buren is on board.  ibid.

 

Four years after his first bitter loss, Andrew Jackson is now elected as America’s seventh president.  ibid.

 

 

You’re under attack labelled a draft dodger, a womaniser.  Your presidential campaign is collapsing.  Dreams of the White House recede.  Who can you trust?  Friends?  Family?  Strategists?  When you’re on the edge of the political abyss, how do you fight back?  Race for the White House s1e6: Bill Clinton v George H W Bush               

 

Bush Betrayed Our Trust: He Raised Our Taxes.  ibid.  television advert

 

Bush drags behind Clinton by more than twenty points.  The Republican convention is his chance to scramble back.  ibid.

 

 

Joe Biden is going to be travelling right across the United States as a cloud of ash pumped out of a crematorium chimney.  Frankie Boyle’s New World Order e3, BBC 2019

 

 

Where does the president of the United States buy his clothes?  Fargo s3e1: The Law of Vacant Places, Maurice, FX 2017

 

 

December 1941: The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor plunged the United States head-first into World War II.  Fought not just against Japan but against Hitler’s Nazi Germany.  Over the course of the War sixteen million Americans would serve in active duty in the armed forces.  Eight of them would become US presidents.  Presidents at War: A Call to Valor I, History 2019

 

December 1942, RAF Hurn, England: Eleven months after Pearl Harbor, the man who would one day be 34th president of the United States, Dwight D Eisenhower, flies from England to Gibraltar.  He’d been ordered to command a joint Allied military operation against Nazi Germany.  This would be Eisenhower’s first time in combat.  ibid.    

 

JFK’s older brother Joe junior had received his wings as a naval aviator.  ibid.    

 

The eagerness to serve even hit young boys.  In Massachusetts a high school prep student decided to enlist: George H W Bush.  ibid.    

 

‘He doesn’t just enlist in the war, he signs up for the most dangerous job in the war.’  ibid.  historian re Bush    

 

From a more humble background but just as eager to serve was a brilliant young student Jimmy Carter.  ibid.        

 

JFK: He was commanding a PT boat in the Solomon Islands.  ibid.        

 

‘He [Reagan] became the face of the fight man, even though he never picked up a gun and had never fought.’  ibid.  son       

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