ripcord wrote:
Something else to consider is the context of the times Lindbergh lived in. Prejudice and ethnocentrism of various kinds was the norm in American society.
Context is rapidly becoming a lost art in today's instant-everything soundbite driven society. We are too quick to judge the actions and decisions of sixty years ago when measured against our own societal biases and experience... maybe that's just human nature, but it obscures and in some cases corrupts our ability to draw balanced conclusions about the nature of those people and actions from that time. Lindbergh's staunch opposition to the war is one good example; the decision to use the atomic bomb on Japan is another.
I have been an admirer of Lindbergh the man for many, many years, and that admiration only grew after reading Berg's biography and Lindbergh's own writings in his Wartime Journals. He was indeed a complex man, but his core instinct was to do the most good he could, as he saw fit. He tried to keep us out of the war not to save German lives, but to save American ones- and as Bill points out, once we entered the war, he set those reservations aside, and offered to help with the war effort however he could. His work with Dr. Alexis Carrel on his "perfusion pump" became the world's first artificial heart- something very few people realize. He was acutely aware of his fame and was very protective of his name and identity, a trait which only increased over the years following the death of his son in the kidnap attempt, and his public vilification for his association with the America First party.
He was by no means perfect, but he still stands as a towering American icon worthy of our respect and admiration.
Cheers,
Lynn