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  • 2008-08-25 (xsd:date)
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  • Harry S. Truman's Plain Speaking (en)
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  • Few figures in American political history have been as reviled as President Harry S. Truman was when he left office in January 1953. After the end of the Great Depression and World War II, public dissatisfaction with 20 years of Democratic rule, the New Deal reforms enacted by Franklin D. Roosevelt, and numerous labor strikes, along with frightening political events such as the Soviet Union's successful test of an atomic bomb, the Communist revolution in China, and the stalemate of the Korean War all combined to send Truman's popularity plummeting to an unprecedented nadir by the end of1952. In the half-century since the end of Truman's presidency, though, his popular image has undergone a remarkable reversal, and he is now held up by both Republicans and Democrats as the plain-speaking, tough-but-fair exemplar of what a president should be. A collection of anecdotes about Harry S. Truman reflects his modern image as the bluntly honest chief executive who refused to use his office as a stepping stone to personal gain: The quote that opens this piece comes from President Truman's Special Message to the Congress on the Internal Security of the United States, delivered on 8 August 1950, in which he spoke out against the implementation of laws curbing expressions of dissent as a means of combating subversion: When Truman left the White House and returned to life as a private citizen in Missouri in January 1953, the U.S. did not provide any form of pension to former presidents. Truman had little or no income beyond his Army pension of $112.56 per month and bore all the costs of maintaining an office and staff himself, and it was largely due to his financial limitations that Congress finally enacted the Former Presidents Act (FPA) in 1958 to provide former presidents with pensions and allowances to cover office and travel expenses. We couldn't find a source for the quote that has Truman declining offers of corporate positions at large salaries with the rebuff that You don't want me. You want the office of the president, and that doesn't belong to me. It belongs to the American people and it's not for sale. However, even if he didn't use those exact words, Truman did express that sentiment regarding the acceptance of corporate positions in his 1960 book, Mr. Citizen: In May 1971, towards the end of Truman's life (he died in December 1972), the House of Representatives was considering awarding the Medal of Honor to the former president. Truman quashed such deliberations by writing a letter, read to the House on 6 May 1971 by Rep. William J. Randall of Missouri, in which he maintained that the Medal of Honor was for combat bravery and that changing the requirements in his case would detract from the merit of the award: (Truman ostensibly might have been awarded a legitimate Medal of Honor due to his service as an artillery captain with the U.S. Army during World War I.) The legend-cum-joke about a respected, successful man who notes in retrospect that — had he enjoyed more advantages early in his life — he might have ended up as a piano player in a brothel is an old one, one which Truman echoed when he observed (as related in the book Plain Speaking) that My choice early in life was either to be a piano player in a whorehouse or a politician. And to tell the truth, there's hardly any difference. However, the follow-up line, I, for one, believe the piano player job to be much more honorable than current politicians, does not appear in that book and is possibly an apocryphal addition rather than Truman's own words. And yes, it is appropriate to render Truman's full name with a period after the 'S'. (en)
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