[Mb-civic] Fathers,
Sons and Questions - Jim Hoagland - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Aug 11 04:43:17 PDT 2005
Fathers, Sons and Questions
By Jim Hoagland
Thursday, August 11, 2005; Page A23
Texas and Saudi Arabia have much in common. Oil. Vast tracts of
scrubland. And political dynasties. No wonder King Abdullah is the only
foreign leader to have two bilateral meetings with George Bush at the
president's sun-baked Crawford ranch.
If conversation about OPEC or Middle East peace lags, they can always
turn to what it is like to follow Dad's footsteps to the top. They
belong to what historian Wolfgang Schivelbusch labels the "postheroic
generation" of victors' sons -- leaders who are called on to "preserve
their fathers' achievements" and to "produce great deeds of their own."
Actually, I would be amazed if they did talk about that; sons of famous
fathers usually hate the subject. But they should talk about it. More to
the point, their citizens need to talk about and weigh the pluses and
minuses that political nepotism creates.
Americans turned to a father-son combination for two of their past three
presidents, and now flirt with moving the Clinton family back into the
White House. Somehow, American presidential politics is all in the
family at the moment. That has happened before, with the Adamses, the
Kennedys and others. But the willingness to go with brand names is more
pronounced today, and it occurs in more challenging times.
Abdullah's ascension to the throne two weeks ago also raises fresh
questions about the durability of Saudi Arabia's unusual succession
system, which keeps power in the family but away from the next generation.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/10/AR2005081001799.html
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