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To: DMaA who wrote (478743)3/26/2012 7:59:29 PM
From: Tom Clarke2 Recommendations  Respond to of 793883
 
He's always been an opportunist - he changed parties when Reagan won in a landslide. He was a Democrat before that.



To: DMaA who wrote (478743)3/26/2012 8:27:20 PM
From: Tom Clarke1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793883
 
waddaya know...I typed 'bill bennett m.e. bradford imbroglio' into google and two old SI posts were at the top. Good to read Neocon again. :) The Bennett/Bradford fracas is the reason Bennett has never been too popular among conservatives.
siliconinvestor.com

M.E. Bradford was in line to chair the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1980, but his nomination was derailed by beltway neoconservatives. Bradford was an old school conservative who didn't care much for Lincoln, they couldn't stand for that. They propped up Bennett as the preferred candidate. Too bad, Bradford was a genuine scholar.
en.wikipedia.org

Bennett's resume was a little thin

>>Mr. Bennett started off his academic life with a doctoral dissertation in philosophy at the University of Texas; the dissertation was all of a whopping 129 pages long, with only 10 pages of footnotes and a mere 13 items in the bibliography.

In the humanities, at the graduate level, that's unacceptable—indeed it's barely acceptable for undergraduates. Most dissertations run to 200 or more pages, and if they don't, they're rejected.

How he got away with it isn't clear, but, as one scholar who's read it tells me, "It may be the only thing Mr. Bennett ever wrote on his own." In 1980 he published a book on affirmative action that apparently was really written by "co-author" Terry Eastland. That set the future philosopher on his course to stardom.
vdare.com



To: DMaA who wrote (478743)3/26/2012 9:16:06 PM
From: Joe Btfsplk2 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793883
 
I gave both his Book of Virtues to my kids for them and theirs. Good move.

That said Bennett has come to represent what I detest in the Republican Party. Busybodies who want to dictate rather than lead from moral suasion.