Because the light is better here
Mar. 8th, 2009 02:27 pmHow did Richard Nixon manage to get elected as President in the timeline we see in Watchmen?
Notice the number of respondents who answer a question James did not ask--"How did Nixon stay in office until 1985?"
The second question is more directly addressed in the comic than the first one is, though an answer can be ferreted out, which is why I titled this post what I did.
(My answer to James's question is this:
The first public demonstration of Dr. Manhattan's abilities in 1960 did put him in a military context (destroying a tank). However, the implication in Dr. Glass's essay (the text piece to issue #4) is that Kennedy and LBJ thought or feared that using Manhattan for small conflicts would be an escalation that the Soviet Union would consider comparable to using nuclear weapons.)
Midway through his first term, Nixon, the "mad bomber", deployed Dr. Manhattan despite that consideration. The gamble paid off, and Nixon won easy re-election in 1972.
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Date: 2009-03-08 07:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-08 07:15 pm (UTC)Additionally, in the film, Hollis Mason jokes about voting for him five times, but I don't remember that from the comic--it's a bit too blatant a bit of incluing for the comic. (Hollis could have voted for him six times if he went for Nixon in 1960.) I don't actually have problems with the film having taken some narrative shortcuts--a three-hour film doesn't have as much information as a 300-page comic as densely told as Watchmen--but it's unfortunate if people are coming away from such blatant incluing without the information.
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Date: 2009-03-08 07:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-08 07:43 pm (UTC)Ah, as I wrote that I remembered that in the opening montage of the film there's a caption "Nixon wins third term." So, some people are missing that that even was nearly a decade before the "present day" of the narrative.
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Date: 2009-03-08 08:46 pm (UTC)Sparrow, We've Already Been Over VVN Night...
Date: 2009-03-09 12:24 pm (UTC)To date, only one Amendment to the Constitution has been repealed (the 18th, which the 21st undid). When the 22nd Amendment was proposed in 1947, it was clearly the act of a back-in-power Republican majority out to insure that there would never be another Franklin Roosevelt (while, as you've noted, shooting themselves in the foot, because until 1996, the only two-term Presidents were Republicans), but the wording of it stressed that it was for future incumbents, not for the current (Democratic) holder of the office. Thus, Harry Truman could have run again in 1952 (and if you believe an early 1950 issue of *Time,* he was planning to)
For that reason -- and because I believe that in this "Watchmen" world that the Congress was Democratic (Moore never does specify whether the Republicans controlled either House) -- I wonder whether it wouldn't be more credible if Nixon finished his second term in 1977, then had to wait until 1980 to run again, much as certain governors can serve an infinite number of terms...but can't succeed themselves. (Or only two in succession, as I believe it currently is in Alabama -- George Wallace saw to that.)
Given the way some people regard the 1977-81 administration, maybe it'd make more sense why (golden olden here!) "Nixon's the One." Or Would Be the One.
It's too early in the morning to go into Gerald Ford as a several term Vice-President, but not to mention that two Vice-Presidents served under two different Presidents,George Clinton under Jefferson and Madison and John Calhoun under Adams and Jackson.
Lady and I look out upon Desolaton Row...
Re: Sparrow, We've Already Been Over VVN Night...
Date: 2009-03-09 04:29 pm (UTC)The easiest explanation is that for some reason the 22nd never passed in this universe.
Re: Sparrow, We've Already Been Over VVN Night...
Date: 2009-03-09 08:02 pm (UTC)If it were repealed, I don't think the framers of the Amendment would want to make it seem like a reward for an incumbent (Four More Years! Eight More Years! Years! Years! Glorious Years!), any more than the original was meant to be a slap at Truman (you may start 1950 wanting to run again, but after McCarthy in February and Korea in June, Independence is going to look mighty good to you). For that reason...
It's probably best to think that it didn't pass, as you say. And to accept that the world of *Watchmen* is what it is and not to poke too closely at it, lest you destroy it all together. (What sort of Iranian hostage crisis would take place when Nixon's favorite leader after de Gaulle's resignation was the Shah?)
All hail the Thermodynamic Miracle!
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Date: 2009-03-10 11:32 pm (UTC)The post itself is interesting, though distracting that the author keeps referring to the title as The Watchmen. http://pandagon.net/index.php/site/comments/non_funny_satires_and_how_we_even_know_how_to_spot_them/
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Date: 2009-03-11 04:12 pm (UTC)To say that Moore he's "deeply conservative" and "homophobic" is batshit insane. Before and during Watchmen, Moore wrote V for Vendetta, which posits that there are really only two political positions, fascism and anarchy, and sides with anarchy; it was written in specific response to the rise of Thatcher and the (then-)growing influence of the National Front, the British fascist movement. The work he published immediately after Watchmen was AARGH (Artists Against Rampant Government Homophobia), a benefit book to protest British laws discriminating against homosexuality.
Moore may have the residual sexist patterning of someone growing up in Northlands England in the 1960s, but he's no conservative by any stretch.
I think the later comment that Zinfab had mistaken Moore for Miller is probably right. Miller is a "law and order" conservative.
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Date: 2009-03-13 04:50 pm (UTC)So, 1985 is one year into Nixon's fifth term, so he's been president for nearly 17 years, correct? This means that he became president in 1968, right? I mean:
Term One: 1968 - 1972
Term Two: 1972 - 1976
Term Three: 1976 - 1980
Term Four: 1980 - 1984
Am I forgetting my real history? I thought the real Nixon was elected in 1968. If this is so, why the question about how he got elected the first time?
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Date: 2009-03-13 10:37 pm (UTC)An answer is what I said: Kennedy and LBJ both saw Manhattan as an escalation of the war by unconventional means and feared a nuclear response from the USSR. I believe this is the answer indicated by the book.
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Date: 2009-03-14 12:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-14 07:40 am (UTC)