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copyright
Bill Doctorman Photography
Read more by Jonathan
on his blog:
www.tucsonsammy.com
Previous columns:
A Safe Place to
Murder
Reefer Madness
I Rode
the Bus!
Sacred
Cows
Reverend
Robin Hoover's Plan
Now I
Know My NPZ's
Street
Conflicts in the Old Pueblo
What Magna Carta?
American Show Trials
Who is
Serving Whom?
What's
Mine is Mine
Voting
by Mail, an Invitation to Fraud
Street Protests in the New
Millennium
When TV Actors
Go Bad
A Great Darkness Fell on the
Land
An Open Letter to
Fellow Libertarians and Non-Aligned Voters
Coulter Kerfuffle
ROAD TRIP!
Flying the Incarcerated Skies
Intergenerational Corporate
Welfare
Fraud is the Bottom Line
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WFB, RIP
The subject header said "Breaking News", the body of the email
said, "William F. Buckley Jr. died Wednesday morning at 82…" I
uttered "No!" Not the "No!" of an angry person, or the "no"
said in answer to a question, but the plaintive "No!" of
someone who just suffered a great personal loss.
Buckley had a profound effect on the politics and culture of
our country, but it was people of my generation (now in our
fifties) with whom he connected in an almost personal way.
That was certainly true of me.
My first exposure to Buckley, also known by his signature line
"WFB", was while viewing his PBS television show, Firing Line.
The first thing that struck me was the theme music:
Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F Major, Third Movement (Allegro
assai), by Bach – WFB was a big Bach guy, and this piece was
his favorite. The studio set consisted of two chairs, one for
WFB, and one for his guest, that's it. As I watched I thought,
"Why is this guy slouching so low in his chair that he's about
to fall out, and why can't he smooth out his suit and take his
hand off the side of his face?" Yet, his interviews and
speeches on the show were crack for the intellect.
I had a subscription to National Review, a magazine founded by
WFB in 1955, for years in my early twenties. Most young men
with subscriptions to National Review received them as
unsolicited birthday gifts from Republican grandfathers – I
paid for mine. It was a source of great hope and solace during
troubling times (the Carter years).
Many of today's prominent conservatives have spoken of WFB's
influence on them as youths – from Rush Limbaugh to Michael
Medved. Medved actually began adult life as a liberal
Democrat, but became a conservative later in life; you can
read about his experience in his autobiography, Right Turns.
My experience was of the Medved model. In fact, I usually
don't tell people this, but I voted for George McGovern in
1972. There, I said it!
WFB engaged the world on all fronts including television,
periodicals, a syndicated newspaper column, books – more than
fifty, both fiction and non-fiction, and speaking engagements.
This guy used to speak and debate on college campuses during
the strikes and riots of the late 60's and early 70's, and he
was not telling them what they wanted to hear!
All have acknowledged his wit, and sense of humor. When he ran
for mayor of New York City in 1965, he slipped away in the
middle of the campaign to participate in the annual Newport to
Bermuda Regatta – a race about which he later said he had as
much chance of winning as the mayoral one! When asked what he
would do if he won, he replied, "Demand a recount." In Saving
the Queen, one of his novels, the protagonist is sent to
England to find out who was passing secrets to the Soviets. He
becomes well acquainted with a member of the Royal Family,
and, after hearing his report, his handler reminds him that
his mission was to penetrate the spy ring – not the Queen!
Not everyone was as enamored of WFB as Rush, Michael, and me.
I had a radical feminist friend who, when speaking of Buckley,
would change the first letter of his last name to create an
obscenity. Ah, well.
WFB was brilliant, witty, adventurous, and most of all, he had
class. He was born into wealth, but unlike the nouveau riche
of today, his family was "old money" with all that that
implies.
To me, and many of my kind, WFB will always be a mentor, role
model, leader, example – in short, a great man.
While he did say some rather goofy things in the latter part
of his career, he never quit, never retired, and never stopped
living life. He died working at his desk in his study. His son
Christopher said that he died "with his boots on, after a
lifetime of riding pretty tall in the saddle."
I never met WFB in life, and it will be unlikely that I will
meet him after death, for surely he is in heaven.
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"Buckley had a profound effect on the politics and
culture of our country, but it was people of my generation
(now in our fifties) with whom he connected in an almost
personal way."
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