Part 1 of a Series

Pass to Republican National Convention 1972
My political past surprises most people. I believe it is the extent of activity pre-1974 that contains the cultural hiccup in most minds.
I grew up as the final child in a series of three. Birth order determines perception of the world. Don’t kid yourself, it truly does. My parents differed greatly from my sister’s. Hers was a childhood begun ten years before mine. Momma birthed this first baby girl in an Army hospital staffed by physicians home from the front who needed some R&R from trauma surgery. Her days were filled with grandparents and cousins whose lives centered around a war to end all wars. I had post-war 1954 baby boomer parents who were now in their 40s, established and settled, and who reveled in a new world filled with economic promise and optimism.
My parents originated in Cincinnati, Ohio, moved to Norfolk, VA during WWII, and then Illinois for a decade after the war, ending up, eventually, in Fort Smith, Arkansas thanks to a head hunter in 1961. Both of my parents graduated from the University of Cincinnati in the 1930s. Momma started college when she was 15 and graduated in 1937 with a degree in Engineering. Daddy studied business and received degree in same. He’d been offered a full scholarship to medical school at Columbia University but due to the Great Depression, his parents could not afford his living expenses so he, like my mother, attended a Streetcar College.
In the post-war Eisenhower — Goldwater Republican Era, when someone was said to be “an Ohio Republican”, the moniker carried a distinct definition along with it. My father read Ayn Rand, William F. Buckley, John D. MacDonald, Ian Flemming, American Heritage and National Geographic — and more. His political philosophy could be considered a classical pluralist (I suppose) but more likely a conservative who reflected the meaning of the word during the post-war era, certainly not this one. He spent decades as a labor negotiator, an arbitrator who was well liked by both unions and management.
Daddy taught me to consider all sides of an issue.
*Parents take note: if there is one singular lesson to teach your children, it is to appreciate how everyone comes to the table wearing different clothes and some people have no shoes.
The Political Essay continues tomorrow. I’ve begun to consider the past and couch my perception of it in a sort of echo or contrast to today’s fragmented political ideologies. From Nixon to Now.
I attended the 1972 Republican National Convention in Miami. I was 17 years old. It is a “Born on the Fourth of July” remembrance and it’ll take a few days to get it all straight.