2026年3月3日 星期二

談哈瑞·S·杜魯門(Harry S. Truman,1884-1972)總統相關的書多本:杜魯門(上下) 作者: David McCullough著 出版社:麥田 等ㄉㄥ;Peter Drucker 等人認為杜魯門總統是優秀的,雖不為世人所樂道。:倡導設立聯合國U.N.、北約 N.A.T.O. ChungChih Li 談調整對蘇聯與國府的幻想,他是冷戰的真正締造者,韓戰的決策也是正確




杜魯門(上)




ChungChih Li

Benjamin Chen 我不知您是指卡特不行,還是杜魯門不行,我認為兩個都應該享有更高的地位,尤其杜魯門,他調整對蘇聯與國府的幻想,他是冷戰的真正締造者,韓戰的決策也是正確,強力換下麥帥不容易,這顯然會斷了他的連任之路,但免去一場浩劫,他也堅持不讓國府合法取得台灣,讓台灣地位未定。


杜魯門倡導設立聯合國U.N.及北約 N.A.T.O. 等組織,或許功勞大。
然而,它們現在備受考驗。
Peter Drucker 等人認為杜魯門總統是優秀的,雖不為世人所樂道。



哈瑞·S·杜魯門
Harry S. Truman
TRUMAN 58-766-06 (cropped).jpg
1947年,時任美國總統的杜魯門。


哈瑞·S·杜魯門(英語:Harry S. Truman,1884年5月8日-1972年12月26日),美國政治家,為民主黨籍,是第34任美國副總統(1945年)及第33任美國總統(1945年-1953年)。

杜魯門出生於密蘇里州,早年在一戰期間曾參軍並赴法國參與戰鬥。回國後,自營過服裝行業。1922年,在家鄉密蘇里州擔任縣法官,進入政界;1935年,成為該州聯邦參議員。二戰初期,杜魯門曾在參議院領導一個調查軍方紀律的委員會。1945年初,出任美國副總統;當年4月,時任總統羅斯福於任上逝世,杜魯門隨即補位,成為第33任美國總統。杜魯門總統任內特別是初期發生了不少世界大事,首先是盟軍戰勝納粹德國、美國在廣島長崎投放原子彈、日本投降和第二次世界大戰的正式結束;接著是聯合國的成立、以重建歐洲為旨的「馬歇爾計劃」的落實、杜魯門主義對抗共產主義、冷戰的開始、中國國共內戰北約的成立以及韓戰的爆發。在美國方面,戰爭使44,000名美軍陣亡和失蹤,並對杜魯門繼續連任的計劃造成巨大打擊,促使其放棄競選連任。最終,共和黨的德懷特·艾森豪在1952年大選中戰勝民主黨候選人阿德萊·史蒂文森,於次年出任總統,結束了民主黨長達20年執政。

面對美國國內事務,杜魯門總統正好遇上新一輪混亂的經濟衰退週期,當時物資短缺、有無數罷工事件和有關否決《塔夫脫-哈特利法》的爭議,都是當代的寫照。杜魯門雖於1948年成功連任總統,但卻未能成功掌握國會多數,以致於他的「良政」計劃幾乎全部流產。然而他曾率先以行政命令在美軍內部施行廢除種族隔離,並因應形勢主持第二次「紅色恐慌」,從政府部門辭退了數以千計可能影響國政的共產黨同情者。不過,由於受到一連串財政醜聞打擊,有達數百位由他任命的官員必須辭職。

杜魯門是位素以友善和謙遜聞名的總統,他的不少名言,如「推卸責任止於此」(The buck stops here!)和「怕熱就別進廚房」(If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.)[2][3] 等等,都成為家喻戶曉的名言。相比前任總統,杜魯門支持度不算高,但他謹慎果斷的性格令他在面對險峻的國際情勢時,可以完成許多艱巨挑戰。






Harry S. Truman - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Harry_S._Truman




動態消息貼文

昨天貼出有關中美關係的小文,被人指責為「不智慧」,是「歷史虛無主義」。可跟着我就看到阿富汗塔里班政府頒布法令,明文規定剝奪女姓受教育、參政等人權,還得忍受丈夫毆打,除非重傷不得提告。這邊廂,美國卻有第一夫人梅拉妮婭因丈夫忙於狠揍另一極權國家伊朗、代夫主持國會的新聞。所以在極權制度和民主制度之間,我要不智到底,堅定地選邊站在民主制度一邊。讓一切極權制度去死吧。民主制度雖有種種弊病,卻是目前人類社會最完善的社會制度,民主黨也好,共和黨也好,至少讓人民有選擇執政黨的權利。這裡我再次貼出幾年前的兩篇讀書隨筆,為民主制度鼓與呼。
杜魯門
——讀《光榮與夢想》散記之一
美國大選一直是美國作家們鐘愛的題材。《中國的驚雷》作者白修德的總統競選系列令他完成從名記者到通俗歷史學家的華麗轉身,從此變成《紐約時報》暢銷書榜的常客。就連小說家們也常把大選作為自己小說的大背景。更不必說威廉·曼徹斯特(William Bernstein)的《光榮與夢想》了。這本四部頭的巨著,從各個方面講述了1932-1972的美國,以四十年中的歷次總統選戰作貫穿全書的主線,詳盡描述了從小羅斯福到尼克松大選的層層驚濤駭浪。
沒書可讀時,我便把這書拿來再翻翻,總能在其中找到流連忘返的精彩章節。
比如說前日翻到的是1948年的杜魯門大選。這位在在任總統瘁死的情況下被推上總統位置的總統,是我記事以來知道的第一位美國總統。那時候北京女孩們跳橡皮筋時都唱着這樣的兒歌:「一二三四五,上山打老虎,老虎不吃人,專吃杜魯門。」
這一壞蛋形象是如此的根深蒂固,以至於九十年代我在香港看到電影《杜魯門》時,大吃一驚:印象中的世界公敵竟是這樣一位循規蹈矩的住家男人。
後來讀了伊恩·托爾(Ian Toll)的長篇歷史紀實《太平洋之戰》,書裏描寫的杜魯門更讓我吃驚,在他的筆下,這位匆匆被推上台的小個子男人「看上去簡直就是個平凡老百姓,你可以在公共汽車上碰到他,在雜貨店冷飲櫃枱遇到他坐在你旁邊。」
記者們私底下議論他說:「富蘭克林·羅斯福是為了人民。哈里·杜魯門自己就是人民。」當他匆促被推上總統位置的最初幾星期,對自己擔任的新角色顯然有些尷尬。在白宮,當下屬們跟他打招呼時,他不知道該以甚麼禮儀回應。敬禮?立正手放兩邊?和對方握手?事實上,第一次碰到這種情況時,他三種動作都用上了。
第一次在總統辦公室聽取兩位高級軍事顧問向他作當日戰事簡報,對着兩位立正站在那裏的將軍,他打斷他們的話說:「看在上帝的份上,坐下來!你們這樣子讓我很緊張。」
《光榮與夢想》中的杜魯門還要來得生動可愛。1948年,當他展開他那場毫無勝算的火車巡回競選,他直截了當就對選民呼吁:
「投民主黨一票吧,這樣我就能在白宮多待四年。」
「作正確的事,讓我不會在1949年1月20號沒有房子住。」
1月20號是他這任總統卸任的日子,這話意思是他離開白宮就流離失所。只要知道杜魯門的確是個一直住在岳母房子裏的上門女婿,就明白他這話有多麼直率坦誠了。而大概就是這種機智的坦誠,讓他爆了大冷門,贏得了那場選戰。後來的調查數字顯示,投了他一票的選民,14%的人是在聽了他那番競選演說之後兩星期才作決定的。
而這話在四年後他卸任總統時,也真的變成了現實,離開白宮,他只好又住回岳母的房子。事實上,他窘迫的經濟狀況甚至讓下屆政府通過了一項〈卸任總統法案〉,向卸任總統發放25000美元年金。
不過我最為感慨的是,杜魯門卸任時,民意調查的支持率是史上最低的:22%。但這比率逐年回昇。當歷史的迷霧漸漸消退,人們開始用比較冷靜公平的目光打量他,才發現他也許不是個偉人,但肯定是一位永不放棄的鬥士。在那風雲詭譎的險惡年代,他頂着罵名作出了好幾項事關人類前途的難難決定,從批準在日本投放原子彈到開啟與社會主義陣營對抗的冷戰模式。如今,他的支持率在歷屆美國總統中排名第六,排在他前面的依次是林肯、華盛頓、小羅斯福、老羅斯福和傑斐遜。
他的不少名言,例如「推卸責任止於此」(The buck stops here!)和「怕熱就別進廚房」(If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.)等,都成為家喻戶曉的名言。看當今川普總統的行事狀況,肯定也曾唸叨過這兩句名言吧。



The Glory and the Dream eBook : Manchester, William


The Glory and the Dream
First edition (publ. Little, Brown)
AuthorWilliam Manchester
LanguageEnglish
SubjectU.S. history
GenreNonfiction
Published1974
PublisherLittle, Brown
Publication placeUnited States

The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America, 1932–1972 is a 1,400-page social history by William Manchester, first published in 1974. Sometimes sold as two volumes, it describes the history of the United States between 1932 and 1972.

Content

The book details both social history and political machinations in the period with a focus on how the New Deal, the Second World War and the Cold War influenced American culture.[1] Special attention is paid to Roosevelt's New Deal and the lasting effect it had on the U.S. government. Manchester simplifies the complex political maneuvers and opaque terminology that pervaded Cold War politics to more accessible language.[2]

The book's title is taken from William Wordsworth's poem "Ode: Intimations of Immortality": "Whither is fled the visionary gleam? / Where is it now, the glory and the dream?"[3]

Release and reception

The Glory and the Dream was listed as a New York Times bestseller in 1975.[4] In The Scotsman, Michael Aitken called it "a collossal piece of nostalgia that brings to mind G.K. Chesterton's insight that the real American is all right: it is the ideal American who is all wrong."[5]






杜魯門總統任內錄》(The Truman Presidency By CABELL PHILLIPS,1966),李宜培譯,香港:今日世界,1970。此書錯字不少,不過參考信息難能可貴。
*****
  1. Truman Lauds Palace Guard . - Google News

    news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1817&dat=19520322&id...
    WASHINGTON Tho men who pack tho— most weight with President Truman arc his aides and secretaries the palace guard — —supposed to do the routine ...本書71頁起,它其實包括些部長等,每周開會一次,無紀錄。


*****

The Truman Presidency, by Cabell Phillips; The Truman Administration: A Documentary History. Edited by Barton J. Bernstein and A

The Man from Missouri
The Truman Presidency.
by Cabell Phillips.
Macmillan. 463 pp. $7.95.
The Truman Administration: A Documentary History.
by Barton J. Bernstein and Allen J. Matusow.
Harper & Row. 518 pp. $10.00.
Cabell Phillips is an honest researcher. He reports wryly that he journeyed out to the Harry S. Truman Memorial Library in Independence with high hopes of finding Truman’s working papers on major White House decisions and policies, only to discover that these were considered to be the former President’s personal papers and were still restricted. (Now Mr. Phillips is down on all Presidential libraries and wants the records centered in Washington.) The author is equally candid about his use of the immense amount of books, articles, and official documents on the Truman administration. “In most cases I found the supply overwhelming, so I chose a manageable few and trusted to luck that I had made the right selections.”
Happily, Mr. Phillips has relied mainly on his journalistic skills, Washington memories and contacts, and his long experience in the New York Times Washington Bureau to produce a warm and evocative account of Truman’s Presidential years. With some of the freshness and nostalgia of Only Yesterday and similar books he helps us relive the sad, jarring days after Roosevelt’s death, the sordid efforts to decontrol prices, the fierce postwar strikes, the seesaw struggle in Korea, and of course the 1948 election campaign, the Hiss case, and the struggle with McCarthy.
But Mr. Phillips wanted to do more than report these events; like the rest of us, he is curious as to how Harry Truman, who had failed in so many ventures in life and entered office with so little promise of greatness, could rate so high today in the historians’ pantheon. Although he does not develop Truman’s mediocre achievements of earlier years in the same graphic detail as Alfred Steinberg in The Man From Missouri, Mr. Phillips does raise the issue as to how, in his words, “so ordinary a man [could] adapt so well to the most exacting political office in the world.” But he never really answers this key question—a question so vital in a day when Presidential quality and character are so crucial to the nation and the world. Rather, he contents himself with citing at the end an arresting but nebulous column by Eric Sevareid on Truman’s character—his simplicity, honesty, and self-discipline.
So Mr. Phillips leaves it up to the reader to solve the mystery of Harry Truman. Unhappily, although the interplay between Presidential personality and Presidential office has long fascinated American historians and political scientists, we have come up with little hard theory or solid generalization as to the nature of the relation—especially the effect of the office on the man. Hence, there is a tendency to retreat to simplistic ideas—even to a kind of Gabriel-over-the-White-House theory that crisis produces greatness, that strong Presidents are forged in the crucible of high-pressure decision-making. (The trouble is that pressure can disintegrate character as well as harden it.)
My own hunch—without having worked in the Truman documents—is that Truman benefited more than he or his historians have recognized from the organization and power and tradition of the Presidential system he inherited. Under the pressure of war, Roosevelt had created a truly executive office that attracted talent and knew what to do with it. It may even be possible that Truman’s chairmanship of the wartime investigating committee brought him close enough to the problems and perspectives of the Presidency, even while he was probing some of the administration’s failures, to make the war years a kind of Presidential apprenticeship for him.
_____________

Some support for such a thesis can be found in Phillips’s book. He brings out convincingly the contrast between Truman’s creativity, firmness, and sophistication in foreign policy-making, and his wobblings and relative ineffectiveness in domestic. Not that his general domestic program was faulty; Truman was, after all, continuing strongly in the New Deal tradition. But he seemed to lose control not only of Congress but of his own administration. We remember the Marshall Plan and the other great ventures. But the same President fumbled again and again in dealing with domestic matters to which, as a New Deal senator and Midwestern politician, he should have brought a practiced hand and even finesse.
Two examples of this lack of skill: in 1946, James Patton, head of the Farmers Union, wrote the President demanding that he fire Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson for undermining price controls. Here is Truman’s answer: “I read your letter . . . with a great deal of interest and I regret very much that you are at odds with my able Secretary of Agriculture. You know, as far as Cabinet positions are concerned, they belong to the President and, as long as Secretary Anderson is satisfactory to me, I’ll keep him. I think you are entirely misinformed on his attitude. I think he is as able a Secretary of Agriculture as the country has ever had and I intend to keep him.” This is an honest answer, quite probably written by Truman himself, and one that breathes his courage and independence. But it was not one that would persuade Truman’s critics; it was not convincing on policy. A second and far more serious instance: during the railroad strike of 1946, an angry and frustrated President went before Congress to demand that he be authorized to “draft into the Armed Forces of the United States workers who are on strike against their Government.” He had brushed aside questions and warnings from his staff and Cabinet. He even wrote a speech in which he planned to call on veterans “to come with me and eliminate the Lewises, Whitneys, and the Johnstons; the Communist Bridges and the Russian Senators and Representatives and really make this a government of, by, and for the people.” More cautious White House hands got him to tone down the speech, but Truman’s final public position was still both dangerous and feeble as policy.
How explain the strange convolutions in domestic policy in the earlier years? In large part, I think, by the difference between Truman’s advisers in foreign and domestic policy. Within a few weeks of his accession, he jettisoned almost all of Roosevelt’s domestic brain trust and top officials. But in foreign policy—where the President doubtless felt less knowledgeable and more dependent on the White House inheritance—he kept on men of the stamp of Stimson, Harriman, Marshall, Acheson, Kennan, and Bohlen.
_____________

Support for such a view is found in Bernstein’s and Matusow’s documentary history of the Truman administration. Not only have the editors produced a model for this kind of collection, with its penetrating editorial prefaces, imaginative selections, handsome format, and remarkable range of materials (to mention a few: opposition speeches in Congress, excerpts from congressional hearings, the Hiss-Chambers confrontation, Congressman John F. Kennedy’s anti-Truman statement on China policy). Even more important, because of its emphasis on decision and policy, the book enables us to make judgments about Truman and his administration. And one cannot help being struck by the contrast in the early Presidential years between the prudence, continuity, and creativity that marked foreign policy, and the hasty judgments, improvisation, and fumbling in domestic policy.
After the 1948 election, Truman built up a corps of able men in domestic policy too. As we look back on the period we can conclude, I think, that Truman’s greatness or near-greatness was an amalgam of his own sturdy self-assertiveness, his awareness from reading American history of the indispensability of a strong Presidency, his role as both leader and agent of the New Deal coalition, and—perhaps most important of all—the quality of the men continuing in the historic office around him. The exact relation of these forces may continue to elude us; but surely it is out of such materials as these, in varying combinations, that Presidential greatness is fashioned.

****
It was President Harry Truman, just after the second world war, who first signed laws allowing women to become permanent members of the armed forces. By 2025, estimates say, one in every four military personnel will be female. America’s move comes alongside a shift towards integrating armed forces across the worldhttp://econ.st/1QMNz47
SPOTTING the woman amid recruits preparing to hurl themselves from a plane at Fort Benning can be difficult. She has cropped hair, a baggy uniform and looks...
ECON.ST



A Day-by-Day Re-Creation of Truman’s Decision to Use Nuclear Weapons

Chris Wallace’s “Countdown 1945” recounts in gripping detail the rush to develop the atomic bomb and the debate over whether to use it.
By Jay Winik





杜魯門(上)



Based on the provided search results, there is no book titled "Four Presidents" authored by William J. Bernstein.
The search results indicate that William J. Bernstein is a prominent financial author, neurologist, and historian. His most famous works are in the realms of finance and history.
The book likely being referenced is his classic investment guide:
"The Four Pillars of Investing: Lessons for Building a Winning Portfolio" (First published 2002, with a second edition released later).
About "The Four Pillars of Investing"
  • Core Message: Outlines four essential topics for investors: the theory of investing, the history of the market, the psychology of the investor, and the business of investing.
  • Key Focus: Recommends a disciplined approach based on asset allocation and low-cost, passive index funds.
  • Goal: To help investors build long-term wealth without the need for financial advisors.
Other notable books by William J. Bernstein:
  • The Intelligent Asset Allocator
  • The Investor's Manifesto
  • The Birth of Plenty (History)
  • A Splendid Exchange (History)
  • Masters of the Word (History)
  • The Delusions of Crowds (History)

Harry S. Truman (May 8, 1884 – December 26, 1972) was the 33rd president of the United States, serving from 1945 to 1953. A lifetime member of the ...
Presidency · ‎Category:Harry S. Truman · ‎Harry S. Truman National... · ‎Bess Truman

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