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  • political intelligence, his political judgment? B: No. That's a harsh, blunt answer to your question, but that's a truth- ful answer. I think Johnson, at this particular time, was very, very pro-military, very hawkish, very distrustful of the United
  • of a national policy revolution, namely, the conversion of the President of the United States--and the conversion of leading thinkers, limen of affairs," opinion makers--to these concepts. That revolution did not take place until the sixties, and nothing that Mr
  • that is inherent in a -country where the financial capitol is separate from the political capitol, you have to work out some improvisations, and in the United States the way we've done it is to use the Federal Reserve Bank in New York as the fiscal agent