Letters from an American - January 9, 2025
Episode Date: January 10, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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January 9th, 2025. Family members, friends, and political leaders gathered today at the
Washington National Cathedral to honor the life of former President Jimmy Carter, who
died on December 29th at age 100. All five living presidents and most of their wives attended. George
W. Bush and Laura Bush were there, along with Bill Clinton and former Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Melania Trump, and Joe
Biden and Dr. Jill Biden. Trump's former Vice President Mike Pence and his wife
Karen were also there, meeting Trump for the first time since January
6, 2021, when Trump tweeted to the rioters attacking the U.S. Capitol that Pence didn't
have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our Constitution,
redoubling the crowd's fury and sparking chants of, hang Mike Pence.
Pence shook Trump's hand. His wife stayed seated
looking straight ahead. While Obama, sitting next to Trump, spoke to him, former
President Bush refused to acknowledge Trump, instead walking past him and
giving a familiar greeting to Obama. By virtue of living to age 100, Carter
survived many of his contemporaries and some left behind
eulogies for him. Carter's vice president, Walter Mondale, died in 2021 but recorded his
memories of working with Carter in the White House from 1977 to 1981. His son, Ted Mondale,
read the eulogy at today's service. Mondale recalled how he and Carter had
redefined the role of the Vice President of the United States, which had fallen
into eclipse when President George Washington shut his own Vice President
John Adams out of his central circle of advisors and never recovered. Mondale
recalled that Carter had honored his wish to change that pattern by becoming
a full partner in the administration.
Carter conferred with him regularly, put him in charge of certain central issues, and the
two men became close friends.
Mondale also remembered that Carter was far-sighted, ignoring short-term political interests to
protect the next generations from harm.
He tried to put the nation on a path that would find alternatives to fossil fuels
and did his best to advance women's rights.
He pushed for a law to extend the time for states
to approve the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution
to make women's equality part of the nation's
fundamental law and he appointed women to positions
in his administration and the federal judiciary.
Mondale noted that Carter appointed five times as many women to the federal bench as all
of his predecessors combined.
Mondale recalled Carter's extraordinary years of principled and decent leadership and his
courageous commitment to civil rights and human rights.
He recalled the toward the end of their time in the White House, in the years immediately after
the tumultuous years of President Richard Nixon,
with his covert bombing of Cambodia
and cover-up of the Watergate break-in,
the two men were summing up their administration.
The sentence they came up with was,
we told the truth, we obeyed the law, and we kept the peace.
President Gerald Ford also left behind a eulogy for Carter, who had defeated Ford's reelection attempt in 1976.
Despite their political differences, the two men had become friends in 1981
when they traveled to and from the funeral of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat,
who, along with Israel's Menachem Begin,
had signed the 1978 Camp David Accords negotiated by Carter's administration that established
a framework for a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt.
Over time, Ford and Carter became close friends and agreed to deliver eulogies for each other. Carter fulfilled his promise in 2006,
and today Ford's son Steve fulfilled his father's.
Ford spoke to Carter's deep faith in God
when he noted that the former president
pursued brotherhood across boundaries of nationhood,
across boundaries of tradition, across boundaries of caste.
In America's urban
neighborhoods and in rural villages around the world, he reminded us that
Christ had been a carpenter. I'm looking forward to our reunion, Ford concluded.
We have much to catch up on. Thank you, Mr. President. Welcome home, old friend.
Carter's grandson, Jason Carter, chair of the Carter
Center's Board of Trustees and a former Georgia state senator, emphasized Carter's
integrity. His grandfather's political convictions reflected his private
beliefs. As governor of Georgia half a century ago, he preached an end to racial
discrimination and an end to mass
incarceration. As president in the 1970s, he protected more land than any other
president in history. He was a climate warrior who pushed for a world where we
conserved energy, limited emissions, and traded our reliance on fossil fuels for
expanded renewable resources. By the way, he cut the deficit,
wanted to decriminalize marijuana,
deregulated so many industries
that he gave us cheap flights and craft beer.
Basically, all of those years ago,
he was the first millennial
and he could make great playlists.
Jason Carter called his grandfather's life a love story about love for his fellow humans and about living out the commandment to love your neighbor as yourself.
He highlighted his grandfather's work to bring cases of guinea worm disease from 3.5 million cases in humans every year to 14. Carter noted that this disease is not eliminated with medicine. It is
eliminated by neighbors talking to neighbors about how to collect water in
the poorest and most marginalized villages in the world. And those
neighbors truly were my grandfather's partners for the past 40 years and have
demonstrated their own power to change the world.
When Jimmy Carter saw a tiny 600 person village
that everybody else thinks of as poor, he recognized it.
That's where he was from.
That's who he was.
He saw it as a place to find partnership and power,
and a place to carry out that commandment
to love your neighbor as yourself.
Essentially, he eradicated the disease with love and respect.
He waged peace with love and respect.
He led this nation with love and respect.
President Joe Biden, who was the first senator
to endorse Carter's run for president in 1976,
also gave a eulogy
today.
In what appeared to be a reflection on the incoming president in the audience, who for
years has mocked Carter as the worst president in history, Biden focused on what he called
Carter's enduring attribute, character, character, character. And Biden said, quoting the famous saying
from ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus,
character is destiny, both in our lives
and in the life of the nation.
Carter taught him, Biden said,
that strength of character is more than title
or the power we hold.
It's the strength to understand
that everyone should be treated with dignity,
respect, that everyone, and I mean everyone, deserves an even shot. Not a guarantee, but
just a shot. We have an obligation to give hate no safe harbor, and to stand up to what
my dad used to say is the greatest sin of all, the abuse of power.
Character, Biden said, is not about being perfect, for none of us are perfect.
It's about asking ourselves,
are we striving to do the right things?
What are the values that animate our spirit
to operate from fear or hope, ego or generosity?
Do we show grace? Do we keep the faith when it's most tested?
Biden noted that Carter lived a faith that commanded its adherents to love their neighbors.
He also noted that such a commandment is hard to follow and that it requires action. It is,
he said, the essence of the gospel and many other faith traditions,
and it is also found in the very idea of America, because the very journey of our
nation is a walk of sheer faith. To do the work, to be the country we say we are,
to be the country we say we want to be, a nation where all are created in the image
of God and deserve to be treated equally throughout our lives.
We've never fully lived up to that idea of America, Biden said.
But thanks to patriots like Jimmy Carter, we've never walked away from it, either.
Carter was a white Southern Baptist who led on civil rights,
a decorated Navy veteran who brokered peace, a brilliant nuclear engineer who led on nuclear
nonproliferation, a hard-working farmer who championed conservation and clean energy.
He also established a model post presidency
by making a powerful difference
as a private citizen in America, Biden said,
showing us how character and faith start with ourselves
and then flow to others.
At our best, Biden said,
we share the better parts of ourselves,
joy, solidarity, love, commitment. Not for reward,
but in reverence for the incredible gift of life we've all been granted, to make every minute of
our time here on earth count. That's the definition of a good life, Biden said. It was the life Jimmy Carter lived for a hundred years.
A good life of purpose and meaning.
Of character driven by destiny and filled with thecape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.