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RIP, George Stanley McGovern (July 19, 1922 – October 21, 2012) (Original Post) Montauk6 Oct 2012 OP
I went to see him speak about two years ago in Milwaukee, and he was still talking about midnight Oct 2012 #1
The U.S. has a difficult time electing sane candidates dynasaw Oct 2012 #2

midnight

(26,624 posts)
1. I went to see him speak about two years ago in Milwaukee, and he was still talking about
Sun Oct 21, 2012, 09:56 AM
Oct 2012

bringing our troops home and ending this unnecessary wars... May this man who wanted peace for all of us rest in peace....

dynasaw

(998 posts)
2. The U.S. has a difficult time electing sane candidates
Sun Oct 21, 2012, 10:06 AM
Oct 2012

"George S. McGovern, an icon of American liberalism who campaigned for the White House with moral fervor against President Richard M. Nixon and the Vietnam War but lost in a thundering landslide."

He was also too intelligent and (god forbid educated) to be president and (unlike many repubs served the country):

"McGovern enrolled at Dakota Wesleyan University and married classmate Eleanor Stegeberg on Oct. 21, 1943. But within months, he left to fly a B-24 in World War II. On his bunk, he read philosophy and history. The books broadened him, and he came home, he said, wanting to know more about "the nature and destiny of man, about the adequacy of our contemporary value system and the capacity of our institutions to nurture those values."

He also returned a hero. On one of 35 missions against Nazi targets in Europe, he took hits that blew out most of the nose of the plane and wounded a gunner. Shrapnel cut the hydraulic brake and electrical lines. He ordered his crew to crank down the landing gear and tie parachutes to girders just inside the rear hatches. He landed and released the parachutes. Not a life was lost. McGovern was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.

After the war he returned to Dakota Wesleyan, then entered Garrett Theological Seminary in Chicago. He liked preaching, but the counseling and ceremonies that were part of ministry held little appeal. So he switched to Northwestern University and history.

He read Hegel, then Walter Rauschenbusch, a noted advocate of what was called the social gospel. To McGovern, it meant applying the idealism of Christianity, and it became his secular belief. He supported the Progressive Party's Henry Wallace for president in 1948. But, according to Robert Sam Anson's "McGovern: a Biography" (1972), McGovern grew disillusioned by fanaticism among Wallace's supporters, so he became a Democrat. He opposed the Korean War and favored recognition of the communist government of Beijing. He earned a doctorate in history and returned to Dakota Wesleyan to teach."

http://www.latimes.com/news/la-me-george-mcgovern-20121021,0,4225248.story?page=1

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