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Archive for the tag “Doug Wead”

History Of October Surprises

The October Surprise has become a strongly entrenched and anticipated slice of American presidential campaign politics, although with varied impact, according to historians Craig Shirley and Doug Wead.

The phrase apparently first entered our lexicon during the Jimmy Carter-Ronald Reagan campaign cycle in October 1980, which was dominated by the Iran Hostage Crisis that gripped the country’s psyche. The fear for Republicans was that Carter would gain freedom for the hostages in the 11th hour, improving his chances for a second term. It was former CIA director and then Reagan campaign manager William Casey, who coined the phrase October Surprise and the Republicans began using the expression prominently in the media to play into the cynicism that had grown in previous years about Carter playing politics.

Shirley and Wead join Newsmax anchor Greg Kelly for more October Surprise history, including President George W. Bush’s DUI incident and President Trump’s Access Hollywood tape.

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Korean Summit a Success

The Korean Summit was a huge success, leaving critics of President Donald Trump sounding more stupid and vile as they try to deliver a negative spin around the events. They are going insane as they stretch further and further to deny reality. Trump won four concessions and gained a nice photo op. Styxhexenhammer666 explains.

On Fox Business News, Lou Dobbs interviews Presidential historian Doug Wead on why China must be very nervous about the North Korean summit.

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“The media, particularly the American cable channels, have turned North Korea into a demonized pariah state and they’ve turned Kim Jong-un into a person they think is crazy. That’s rather unfortunate, but I come across it all the time.” — Bruce Cumings, the Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service Professor in History, and former chair of the history department at the University of Chicago.

A renowned expert on Korea, he is also a frequent contributor to the London Review of Books, the Nation, Current History, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, and Le Monde Diplomatique. His most recent book, released in 2010, is entitled The Korean War: A History. Lionel Nation offers his take on the Singapore summit and says history was made.

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