Lea Lane

Lea Lane
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Florida, USA
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August 26
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freelance writer/editor
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I've been around the block (more like around the world). I've played and loved and lived an unconventional life in conventional trappings. I've been a corporate VP, worked with foster kids, acted in an Indie ("Nurse 1"), was on Jeopardy!. I'll write just about anything, from speeches to comedy sketches to feature articles. I've been managing editor of a travel publication, authored six books, including Solo Traveler:Tales and Tips for Great Trips (Fodor's), blog regularly on major sites, and have contributed (mostly anonymously) to everything from encyclopedias to guidebooks. I was divorced late, widowed early -- and dated lots -- and I survived a scary illness. After being happily, peacefully solo for many years, I just started a live-in relationship. I founded and still edit www.sololady.com, a lfestyle Website for single women. I'm truly grateful for each precious day, each well-earned wrinkle, my family, my cat. Truth, laughter, friendship. And now this blog -- on this wonderful site!

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JANUARY 20, 2009 2:21PM

Parallels (and Not) of JFK’s and BHO's Inaugurations

Rate: 14 Flag

Sitting in front of my 50-inch flat screen tearfully watching this handsome, young Barack Obama break the racial barrier and take the oath as the 44th President of the United States, I thought back to January 20, 1961.

Forty eight years before Barack Obama’s inauguration I was a teenager, sitting in front of a 12- inch Motorola console in faux cherry wood. The black and white screen flickering with snow was caused by the antenna’s poor transmission, not the day, which was sunny and even colder in Washington than it was today. History was being made then, as well: the youngest man and the first elected Catholic, 43-year-old John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts was inaugurated as our 35th President.

Much was made that Kennedy reluctantly wore a top hat. Kennedy hated hats. He put his on that day for a while and then removed it. And on a day when the words of his inaugural address condensed into the freezing air, he stood, like Barack Obama would, without a topcoat, a symbol of youth and change.

Unemployment in America in 1961 was at 7 percent and the country had gone into recession early in 1960. Today, unemployment is headed  into double-digits and we are in a deep recession. But one thing was very different: A day before the 1961 inauguration, black students (called then “colored,” or “negro”) had begun a sit-in at segregated lunch counters in Richmond, the old capital of the Confederacy, 100 miles south of the Capitol. Today, an African-American is President of the United States.

At their inaugurals, both men spoke of change.

Kennedy: “Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans …”

Obama: “Our challenges may be new. The instruments with which we meet them may be new. But those values upon which our success depends - hard work and honesty, courage and fair play, tolerance and curiosity, loyalty and patriotism - these things are old. These things are true. They have been the quiet force of progress throughout our history. What is demanded then is a return to these truths.”

Both spoke of rights.

Kennedy: America is “unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed and to which we are committed to at home and around the world.”

Obama: “The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free, and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness.”

Both spoke of responsibility.

Kennedy: “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and success of liberty.”

Obama: “And so to all other peoples and governments who are watching today, from the grandest capitals to the small village where my father was born: know that America is a friend of each nation and every man, woman, and child who seeks a future of peace and dignity, and that we are ready to lead once more.”

Kennedy set his sights on the moon, and created a Peace Corps to serve. Obama wants us to renew the earth, and serve our country in any ways we can. Both men’s inaugurals caught the imagination of the world.

President Kennedy’s most memorable line: “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”

President Obama’s?  Time will tell.

 

 

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Comments

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Already he is well on his way, with a speech that inspires and brings hope, rather than feasting on fear and war-mongering. Your post is a gem!! The Kennedy comparisons are apt!
what line spoke most to you, Lea?
Lea - a wonderful look at two very special men; who called upon us to help make this country the nation our Founding Fathers dream of and wanted.

Thank you
Kennedy...Obama. It's been a long time comin'....
Yes, dcv and George, JFK and BHO are both figures of youth and change and the parallels will probably be noted often.

I haven't thought about a favorite line, Brian. I liked the whole tone of the speech, and the way he wove in allusions to Washington and Lincoln, all the while keeping it his own tone.
Beautiful comparison. I was struck by the last one you note myself. I was a little younger than you, but I remember Kennedy's inaugural clearly. It snowed that day, no school.

Mrs. Kennedy made fashion news herself that day. She declined to wear a fur coat---which is what every First Lady in that era had done before her.
So, so much hope...again. Thanks for tying this together. It is a good day, isn’t it?
Zuma, yes it seems this inaguaration itself is a long-time comin'. Lots of delays, but I'm sure his administration will be better run than the parade. Everything has been so well done, we get surprised by any glitches.

m.a.h., yes JFK's was the first inauguration that I saw televised. I don't remember anything earlier, but I remember that one so well. Both Jackie and Michelle are so stunning and young. Both couples so wonderful to observe. You don't forget images like that.
Excellent use of that 50" screen Lea! T.V. actually can be used to do good homework. Who knew?

I saw President Obama speak at a fundraiser in 2006. This was before he declared, of course, and the crowd was spellbound. "You dont get fooled again". Indeed.
David, yes, a great day.

Bill, I knew I got that damned flat screen for more than movies and The US Open.
Isn't it GREAT to see everyone so HAPPY??!!!
Like you, today I kept flashing on JFK's inauguration. We know Ted Kennedy was among the VIPs at both. (And the latest news is he should be released from the hospital tomorrow). Do you know if anyone else who was sitting behind the Obamas today was also sitting behind the Kennedys on that long-ago day of a hope we didn't see again until today?
Yes, Michael. And we have all those balls to come, until 3 am!

Hawley, great point about Ted Kennedy being the bridge. So young at JFK's and now, facing grave health problems. Thanks for adding that.
One question and one comment.

Question: did people place the same level of trust in Kennedy to transform the nation as they have Obama? I'm not old enough to remember.

Comment: I envy you your 50" of televisual goodness.
libertarius, well we were coming out of a less troubling administation. Eisenhower was not reviled. There was a Cold War going on, not two hot ones. And Kennedy squeaked in over Nixon. So, from what I can tell, no, there wasn't quite the same feeling of trust. It was more like excitement at having someone so young and dashing to change things.

My tv was purchased to lure my sons to visit me more during big sports events, etc. It didn't work. But I enjoy it for movies and now see most at home, a few months late. Figure I'm getting back the cost of the tv a couple of dollars at a time.
Thanks for an excellent post, Lea. If I may answer libertarius, JFK did not receive as much support as Obama. He was mistrusted by Democrats in Southern States who would soon bolt the party for Wallace and Nixon. They were still Democrats at the time, however, so JFK had to tread lightly with them, though the open discrimination in the South personally disgusted him.
Thanks, jimmymac. Yes, we weren't sure of what was going to happen. Different times. No internet. Different family situation. But parallels remain.
Both challenged their most fervent supporters; both chose their words carefully, thus giving them greater power than, say, Clinton; both were pretty damned handsome. The list goes on.
Lea, I was too young at the time (5 years old) to remember JFK's inauguration, even though we lived outside DC then. My parents had tickets for the inauguration (my father worked in the gov't) but decided not to go because it was so cold. They always regretted that. thanks for the look back!
Lea: I was finishing up a master's degree at Colorado U at the time. I remember in vivid detail the JFK speech. It was mesmerizing and transmitted a sense of hope to a nation in deep need of that hope.

President Obama's speech was more somber, more in line with the deeper economic crisis than even the one JFK faced.

The common link for me was the ability of both to insist that the requirement of all Americans is to get involved. It is not enough for the people to sit back and watch. We have work to do, starting tomorrow.

Monte
I only pray to the God I pray to that their Presidencies will not end the same way...

(rated)
Greg
silkstone, would have been something else to have been at both!

Monte, yes he wants to hit the ground running. After tonight I don't see how he's going to do that till later in the week, but oh, I forgot. We have a real president now.

Greg, yes, the elephant (donkey?) in the room. A parallel too awful to mention but something everybody worries about. (Both Kennedy and King-- oh my.)
I started to comment, realized I was writing a post, think I'll try to do that instead. A companion piece to this one, from a different perspective.

This, btw, is so totally excellent, you have me talking like a Valley Girl...
Like, thanks, Sally, fer sure. Look forward to your post, and love the way you interact on this site. Role model!
While I was a little surprised at first at how brief the speech was, it was, in the end, just about right. His rhetoric was on target as well, eloquent without being too flowery, optimistic without being saccharine.

Let's hope the memory of the speech and the delirious crowds isn't blotted out by a further crash of the stock market. Yesterday's drop in bank stocks, the largest one-day decline ever, suggests his honeymoon may be short indeed. While the masses on the mall were inspirational, they were also a sign of desperate hope. Only FDR's burden can compare to the one Obama now shoulders. As my daddy used to say, "I wouldn't wish that on a three-legged dog."

Here's hoping this mess doesn't take 12 years and another world war to fix....
Thank you so much for putting together the words of Obama and Kennedy. You don't look old enough to remember that time. I was only 10....I remember, but not well. My parents were.....Republican...and I hadn't gotten over that yet.