From Good Morning America:
“Dwight Eisenhower's
leadership in spotlight after new memorial unveiled in DC”
After years of controversy and
delay, Dwight D. Eisenhower this week officially joins six other former
American presidents with a major monument near the National Mall in Washington.
The $150 million tribute to the country's 34th president, Republican icon and
supreme Allied commander during World War II will be completed and dedicated on
Thursday, nearly 60 years after Eisenhower left office. "He joins the
greats: Washington, Jefferson, in terms of founding our country; Lincoln; the
two Roosevelts; the Kennedy Center is actually a presidential memorial,"
said Victoria Tigwell, deputy executive director of the Dwight D. Eisenhower
Memorial Commission. "His legacy is cemented in American history through
this memorial," she said. The memorial is also inviting comparisons in
leadership style and accomplishments with the current Republican president,
Donald Trump.
Members of the Eisenhower family
and the memorial commission said the unveiling -- in the midst of a pandemic,
recession and divisive political campaign -- is an opportunity for the nation
to reflect on a half century of American progress and what's needed now to
shape a better future. "It's possible that there are people like
(Eisenhower) living with us that can rise to the occasion, given the
opportunities," said architect Frank Gehry of the message he hopes his
design conveys. "It can come from anywhere, from any race or culture. And
it's special when it happens suddenly." The memorial charts Eisenhower's
rise from Abilene, Kansas, to a five-star wartime general and, later, two-term
U.S. president. A steel mesh tapestry depicts the coast of Normandy, France,
where Allied forces under Eisenhower's command stormed the beaches on D-Day in
1944. ABC News Live got an early look at the memorial, situated along
Independence Avenue in southeast Washington within view of the U.S. Capitol and
flanked by offices of the Federal Aviation Administration and Departments of
Education and Health and Human Services, each created during the Eisenhower
presidency. "It's not bombastic. It's quiet," Gehry said of the
structure. First authorized by Congress in 1999, the memorial was completed
under budget this month -- a fitting tribute to a president for whom fiscal and
personal responsibility were hallmarks, Tigwell said. "If you look after
the pennies, everything else falls in line," she said.
Eisenhower, who was popularly
known as "Ike," won the White House in a landslide in 1952. He
presided over eight years of prosperity and peace in America. While some of his
critics saw him as a "do-nothing" president, Eisenhower is widely
credited with dramatically shaping public life. He appointed five justices to
the U.S. Supreme Court; greatly expanded the Interstate Highway System; and
created NASA and the FAA. "He was in a society where we would find people
who could make a difference at the right time, and he happened to be
there," said grandson David Eisenhower, director of the Institute for
Public Service at the Annenberg School for Communication. Eisenhower oversaw
desegregation of the U.S. military and public schools, sending troops into
Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957 to enforce integration. He also signed into law
early protections for voting rights. But critics say his push for equality
could have been stronger. Eisenhower favored an incremental approach to racial
justice that was later overtaken by an eruption of racial unrest after he left
office. And toward gay and lesbian Americans, Eisenhower officially authorized
discrimination, in 1953 signing an executive order to ban them from the U.S.
government. "I know he was disappointed that he could not bring the Cold
War to an end by the end of his eight years," granddaughter Susan
Eisenhower said when asked of the late president's shortcomings. "In terms
of his personal flaws, he certainly, I guess would say he had a temper which he
learned to bring under control over the years." The memorial focuses
squarely on Eisenhower's leadership and accomplishments, inviting fresh
contrasts between a bygone Republican president and the current one. Dwight
Eisenhower even recently appeared in a 2020 presidential campaign TV ad
produced by The Lincoln Project, an independent Republican group, that
suggested Trump doesn't measure up to Ike. "I'm not sure how useful comparisons
are, but I do think that comparisons are inevitable because people are looking
to the past to show some guideposts and to understand how we got to this
position," Susan Eisenhower said. "I do think, however, that the
Eisenhower leadership style was much more effective for this country," she
added. The Eisenhower style put a premium on unity. In that spirit, the family
and memorial commission invited Trump and the four other living former
presidents to come together for the memorial dedication. None were able to
attend, organizers said. "The dedication of it was originally scheduled
for May 8, 2020, which would be the 75th anniversary of VE [Victory in Europe]
Day. So we would have been celebrating a past achievement," said David
Eisenhower. "But the circumstances that we're in now really require us to look
for something deeper." Tigwell said she hopes young visitors to the
open-air memorial will be prompted to reflect on their future and personal
potential. "I hope for a child who comes here, they'll see that statue of
young Ike and maybe they'll wonder how did this kid who came from Abilene,
Kansas, with, you know, no advantage socially or economically ... figure out
how to make his life into what it was," Tigwell said. "Because that
is what we all hope the American story is: that freedom gives you
opportunity," she added. "And with opportunity, you can paint your
own canvas."
^ The US should have done this –
a National Memorial – to President Eisenhower decades ago. Not only did he lead
the US and Allied Militaries to victory during World War 2, but he made some
long-lasting programs for the US as President. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/gma/dwight-eisenhowers-leadership-spotlight-memorial-080253494.html
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