I was in middle school for Watergate, but remember it as one of those events that you knew was important in two distinct ways.
One, you knew that having a president potentially impeached / one who lied to cover up law breaking / one who had to resign was big because you were old enough to understand, at a level, this was big stuff.
But you also could see and feel the real tension, the real concern it brought out in the adults. I was born a couple years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, so Watergate was the first event that I remember the adults being really, truly concerned about in a way that made you question if the country you assumed would alway be there would....
I know I'm getting old when I drive my 53 year old car, and not only does it feel perfectly normal, but I prefer it to my 2 year old car.
Today, I assume everything could go away in a flash from bombs, to financial collapse, to social unrest, to..., but at ten years old, I subconsciously just assumed things like societal stability and the US would be there. Watergate - mainly from the reaction of the adults - was (I think) the first event in my life that shook that confidence.
For some reason I remember the Berlin Crisis better.
, Democrat-run congress. .
I grew up in a ferociously anti-Nixon household, so I actually found Watergate pretty entertaining -- I wasn't exactly cynical as a kid, but I had seen too much going on around me not to have a sense that The Adults In Charge Of Things didn't necessarily know what was best, and I always operated under that assumption. The night Nixon resigned, we all gathered in the living room to watch it, and when he finished nobody said anything for a minute. Then my mother snarled at the screen "There! You dirty SOB!"
I believe that it is called the "Democratic Party". When anyone uses "Democrat" to describe anything but an individual party member they, --er--, "identify themselves".
Interestingly enough, the declassified historical records of the war in which you served strongly suggest a very different tale, but then it has always been very difficult for a participant to see the entire conflict, and the General officers who are privy to the overall picture often color their memoirs to fit their times.
The hoary old tale told by Secrertary Laird, which has been revived by partisan hacks from time to time has long since been laid to rest by those who consult actual original source materials. I have always found it amusing to note that fokls of authoritarian leanings always seem to turn to some sort of Dolchstoßlegende to explain military defeats. Some Vetern'd organizations fall for them hook, line, and sinker, as witness the Stahlhelm.
An acquaintance of mine, a respected historian who is the official editor of the Nixon Tapes Archive at the Miller Center at UV, and who has spent his career studying in detail the Vietnam and post-Vietnam era, some years ago published an excellent popular article which once again lays the old canard to rest. It is worthwhile reading, I think.
http://historynewsnetwork.org/article/126150
...when you grew up listening to your dad talking nostalgically about car companies and brands he loved that had disappeared - Studebaker, Hudson, Packard, and so on.
I can now name brands Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Plymouth, Mercury, Saturn, and Hummer. Toyota has just discontinued Scion.
Crazy...
My dad was born in the '20s and, to him, a Packard represented the pinnacle of America car making. He never owned one, but I could tell a Packard was the car he'd lusted after as a kid at that age when most young boys lust after a particular make or model of car. In particular, I think he wanted a '41 Packard Darrin.
My Dad had a '41 Packard convertible that his younger brother traded for a '47 Ford while Dad was serving in Korea. It still angers him.