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Whether you are thinking about a sunny vacation retreat to escape the cold or just cozying into the sofa next to the fireplace, the indispensable partner for biding your time is Ken Khachigian’s memoir: “Behind Closed Doors – In the Room with Reagan and Nixon.” For lovers of politics, history, biography and the study of the presidency nothing in your library will match the brilliance of Khachigian’s finely-honed visit with the cold war legends and giants of the 20th century.

Khachigian began his career as a communications aide in Richard Nixon’s White House, and moved up as a protégé of Pat Buchanan to become a critical partner in the political preparations for the landslide of 1972 and subsequently as a scribe in the speechwriting murderers row that included Buchanan, Bill Safire, Ray Price, Aram Bakshian, Noel Koch and Ben Stein. But with his law degree from Columbia University, Ken was put into service as Deputy Special Assistant in Nixon’s Watergate defense when the combined wolfpack of media, Congressional leftists and former RFK prosecutors sought to bring the president down.

As Khachigian writes in his book, he stood tall when all the rats left the sinking ship, and for that he was rewarded a post with Nixon in San Clemente and the former president’s amazing return into public life. Chapter by chapter in this amazing book, Khachigian pulls you into the private days of Nixon’s exile – as he led preparation for the historic interviews with David Frost, working side by side with future media star Diane Sawyer as well as letting readers in on fascinating behind the scenes conversations with Nixon describing the 1970s political landscape as Reagan challenged Gerald Ford for the presidency.

These and dozens more indescribably delicious insights into the brilliant mind of Nixon and his extraordinary political genius are laid out in the early chapters that finally transition into Nixon’s introducing Ken into Reagan’s 1980 campaign fold. From there the book takes off into realms never before reported. While accompanying Reagan as chief campaign speechwriter in the landslide victory that would turn America around, Khachigian began recording into a mini-cassette 35,000 words of diary entries.

In six intriguing chapters lifted from those diaries, Khachigian weaves hitherto undisclosed campaign stories, including the birth of the most famous line in politics Ken wrote for Reagan’s rally in Langhorne, Pennsylvania on October 6, 1980: “Look around you – at the price of food, the price of gasoline, the interest rates you have to pay to buy a house, the amount of taxes taken out of your paycheck. Look around, then ask yourself: are you better off than you were in 1976?”

Among the most captivating revelations in the book is the story of Khachigian’s role as Richard Nixon’s 1980 secret campaign intermediary, passing along private memoranda and advice to Reagan – all of it recorded in detail in the book’s appendices and through the author’s page-turning prose. Ken also records a code-devised meeting on the side streets of a Kansas City campaign stopover with Nixon’s chief of staff –right out of a John le Carre spy novel — for the transmission of an especially confidential Nixon memo.

As one of the few who gained Ronald Reagan’s trust and confidence, Khachigian then moved smoothly into the White House after collaborating with the new president on his First Inaugural Address. From there the book proceeds into Khachigian’s critical role in Reagan setting his historic record for economic recovery and seeking dominance over a hostile and entrenched federal bureaucracy.

The reader will be shaken by Khachigian’s revelation that President Reagan’s domestic agenda was undercut by his own staff. Ken searched new records in the archives, reviewed oral histories and biographies and discovered how those in the president’s inner circle leaked stories to generate opposition to the Reagan Revolution as well as to work alongside Reagan’s adversaries in Congress who opposed the tax and budget cuts that the Gipper had embraced in his years-long crusade for the White House.

I worked more closely with Ken in the 1984 re-election campaign when he headed up the Issues and Research department and served again as chief campaign speechwriter. Along with Stu Spencer, he was only one of two campaign staff people Reagan trusted to travel with him on Air Force One, and chapter by chapter, Ken tells inside stories of the 1984 campaign as well as his key role in helping produce the historic “Morning in America” ads. Amazing insights and colorful anecdotes I never heard on my days with Reagan’s campaign.

Finally, nowhere will you find what it’s like to write speeches for the 20th century’s greatest communicator and to learn how Khachigian help produce Reagan’s greatest lifetime address – along with speeches to joint sessions of Congress, the Republican National Conventions and dozens more. You want to find the secret to working side by side with Reagan like no else has; you will only find it here

If you ever yearned to open the door, slip inside the room, and “eavesdrop” with Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, you have to go right now to Amazon and purchase this book and surf the waves of remarkable history. You won’t be able to put it down. And if you want to browse to see the photos and watch presentations, go to Ken’s web site: www.reaganandnixon.com. I’m not doing this only out of my long friendship with Ken – but as a friend to my readers. You won’t be disappointed.

He died in 2003, leaving a legacy of bold, influential ideas, bipartisan service, and an unmistakable style.

Few figures in American public life have earned such widespread bipartisan respect as Daniel Patrick Moynihan: a complex, multifaceted figure who embodied principled liberalism, intellectual rigor, pragmatic statesmanship, an unmistakable dapper presence, sharp-suited, bow-tied flair that projected gravitas and quiet defiance.

Known to friends as Pat, born in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 1927 and raised in the gritty streets of New York City’s Hell’s Kitchen after his family moved when he was six, he rose from deep poverty and family instability following his father’s abandonment.

From age 11, Moynihan contributed to his family’s support by shining shoes in Times Square and taking on other odd jobs amid the hardships of the Great Depression. Later, he worked briefly as a longshoreman on the docks. These formative experiences in poverty and urban labor fostered remarkable resilience and a profound empathy for the struggles of working-class city life. His journey from such humble origins to high office underscores the power of determination, education, intellect, and dedicated public service in overcoming adversity.

His early New York City Democratic politics were unpromising. In the 1950s, he worked on campaigns and held minor staff posts under Governor W. Averell Harriman, immersing himself in urban machine politics.

His ambitions stalled in 1965 when he ran unsuccessfully in the Democratic primary for president of the New York City Council, a powerful role overseeing the city’s legislative body (later evolved into the Public Advocate), on the ticket headed by mayoral candidate Paul Screvane (former sanitation commissioner and City Council President), alongside Orin Lehman for comptroller.

At the time, this ethnically balanced slate (Irish Italian Jewish) was by design to appeal to the NYC party’s diverse base, but the entire ticket lost decisively in the primary to rival slates, including Abraham Beame’s.

Lacking insider connections in a very crowded field, he suffered a crushing defeat, finishing far behind. Critics dismissed him as an academic outsider unsuited for the rough-and-tumble of local politics, more at home with policy papers than grassroots politicking, earning him the derisive label of a “dud” in some media and political circles.

Undeterred, Moynihan shifted straight forward to federal roles, serving as Assistant Secretary of Labor under Kennedy and Johnson, where he penned the controversial 1965 report “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action,” highlighting Black family breakdown amid poverty and discrimination. It sparked backlash but cemented his role as a polarizing yet visionary voice.

Disillusioned with the liberal establishment, he discreetly reached out to Richard Nixon before 1968 and joined the Republican administration as a Democrat and Harvard professor, an unusual, controversial cross-party move driven by Nixon’s admiration for Moynihan’s intellect and his 1967 speech on “The Politics of Stability.”

In January 1969, as Counselor to the President for Urban Affairs, he exerted major influence on domestic policy during his tenure through late 1970, advising Nixon on urban issues, poverty, welfare, civil rights, campus unrest, school busing, revenue sharing, voluntary action programs, and urban redevelopment (such as Pennsylvania Avenue projects). Working closely with aides like John Ehrlichman, Moynihan bridged liberal ideas with Nixon’s practical conservatism, often clashing over budget-conscious approaches but earning mutual respect.

His primary initiative was endorsing the Family Assistance Plan (FAP), Nixon’s groundbreaking proposal for a guaranteed minimum income (via negative income tax) for families including the working poor, incorporating work incentives and requirements.

It passed the House but stalled in the Senate amid opposition from both liberals (who saw it as insufficient) and conservatives (who viewed it as too generous). Moynihan later chronicled its failure in his 1973 book The Politics of a Guaranteed Income, blaming bureaucratic resistance, welfare-professional self-interest, and partisan gridlock.

During his White House years, Moynihan advocated revenue sharing to decentralize federal power. He was also known for candid, often, blunt memos to Nixon.

One of the most infamous was the January 16, 1970 “benign neglect” memo. It acknowledged “extraordinary progress” by Black Americans in the 1960s, with rising education, income, and school attendance despite persistent discrimination.

The memo suggested the racial issue might benefit from a period of “benign neglect.” This meant less constant public spotlight and inflammatory debate, so quiet gains could continue without being drowned out by “hysterics, paranoids, and boodlers on all sides.”

The full key passage reads, “The time may have come when the issue of race could benefit from a period of ‘benign neglect.’ The subject has been too much talked about… We may need a period in which Negro progress continues and racial rhetoric fades.”

Leaked to the New York Times, the phrase sparked outrage as seeming to advocate indifference or retreat from civil rights. Moynihan insisted it was taken wildly out of context. He was not proposing to ignore racism or cut programs.

Instead, he wanted to tone down divisive noise and focus on steady, evidence-based advancement. This approach was fully in line with his principled liberalism and antipoverty commitment. Nixon later called the backlash ironic, noting Moynihan was one of the administration’s strongest civil rights advocates.

Moynihan cultivated a distinctive sartorial style that set him apart throughout his career, but it was especially striking during his Nixon-era White House and diplomatic roles, giving him the look of a smart, old-fashioned 19th-century statesman living in the 20th century—learned, classic, and distinctive.

He was almost never seen without his trademark bow tie, favoring patterns like polka dots (often blue-and-white), stripes, or solids that became a lifelong hallmark of his style. He once demonstrated the art of tying one in old videos and interviews, explaining it as a simple, instinctive process akin to tying shoelaces. He used the accessory to project intellectual gravitas while deliberately rejecting the conventional necktie.

His suits were timeless and top-tier, featuring Savile Row-inspired pinstripes (navy blue or patterned, reminiscent of Winston Churchill’s iconic look), double-breasted seersucker for warmer climates, hearty tweeds, corduroys, button-down collars, and the occasional well-loved cardigan with leather elbow patches, blending Ivy League polish with old-world eccentricity.

Daniel Patrick Moynihan was often seen peering owlishly through thick horn-rimmed or tortoiseshell-framed eyeglasses, which complemented his professorial demeanor, bow ties, and intellectual style, reinforcing the scholarly look that defined his public image as a senator and thinker. In later years, he favored large, roundish tortoiseshell or brown-framed glasses that accentuated his thoughtful expressions, as seen in numerous portraits and interviews.

He notably sported small lapel pins, including American flags during campaigns, possibly shamrock-inspired ones for Irish pride, or academic insignia, that added subtle scholarly and patriotic touches. These subtle, yet, deliberate, consistent, choices projected intellectual refinement, a slight defiance of norms, and thoughtful somberness, making him an unmistakable figure in diplomatic circles, from New Delhi to the UN and beyond.

As Ambassador to India (1973–1975), he navigated New Delhi’s formal settings in his signature pinstripes and bow ties, standing out with quiet authority against the subcontinent’s vibrant backdrop. Later at the United Nations (1975–1976), the same ensemble, often paired with his favored tweeds, seersucker, or corduroys, commanded attention amid global debates.

He later served as U.S. Ambassador to India under Nixon and Ford (1973–1975) and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations under Ford (1975–1976). When returning to New York politics in the mid-1970s, he faced suspicion over his Nixon years.

In the 1976 U.S. Senate primary for the seat vacated by James Buckley, Moynihan essentially buried his baggage to narrowly defeat ultra-liberal Congresswoman Bella Abzug, a fiery feminist and Vietnam critic, in a five-way race by about 10,000 votes.

To win, he emphasized his academic credentials, tough UN ambassadorship (confronting anti-American and anti-Israel rhetoric), pragmatic moderation, and working-class roots, positioning himself as a sensible alternative to extremism. He then handily defeated Republican James Buckley in the general election and held the seat until 2001.

Throughout his Senate career, Moynihan remained recognizable in pinstripe suits, bright bow ties, and Irish rumpled tweed hats, a visual signature matching his intellectual independence. The Village Hat Shop glossary and millinery resources explicitly list a “character hat” as the “late 1970s rumpled tweed hat worn by New York Senator Pat Moynihan,” confirming it as part of his public image.

He remarkably chaired the Finance Committee and Environment and Public Works Committee, while also holding academic posts as professor at Harvard and director of the Joint Center for Urban Studies. This extraordinary array of high-level positions across party lines, the only person in U.S. history to hold senior executive roles under four consecutive administrations (Kennedy through Ford).

He died in 2003, leaving a legacy of bold, influential ideas, bipartisan service, and an unmistakable style. Moynihan was known for his sharp wit, intellectual depth, and ability to bridge ideological divides. Once branded by the media as a “dud,” after his 1965 electoral flop, after dismissing him as a scholarly misfit unfit for the gritty arena of real politics. Yet, he emerged full throttle, serving presidents of both parties with distinction, earning genuine respect across ideological divides for his unflinching honesty and policy depth; rising to become one of the Senate’s most influential voices.

In the end, Daniel Patrick Moynihan stands out as tangible proof that a boy abandoned by his father, raised in poverty amid the chaos of Hell’s Kitchen, forced to shine shoes and work the docks from age 11, can rise phoenix-like through sheer intellect, unyielding grit, and selfless service to the nation—becoming a model of American upward mobility and the transformative power of ideas over adversity.

As a Democrat facing significant backlash from liberals who viewed Nixon as politically toxic, Moynihan nonetheless crossed party lines to join the administration, prioritizing service to the presidency over personal or partisan loyalty. In an era of extreme partisanship, this kind of cross-aisle service is increasingly scarce.

People can endure hardship and a people can endure adversity, but a people will not endure deliberate betrayal forever.

Inflation does not descend upon a nation like a thunderstorm. It is not an act of God. It is not a cosmic misfortune. Inflation is engineered, it is designed and it is imposed. Under President Biden it has become a deliberate instrument of economic subjugation aimed squarely at the American middle class.

For generations the middle class formed the ballast of the Republic. It stabilized the ship of state. It funded the schools. It filled the churches. It bought homes. It saved for retirement. It believed that diligence would be rewarded and thrift would be honored. Today, that belief is being methodically pulverized.

Every trip to the grocery store is a reminder. Every visit to the gas pump is a rebuke. Every utility bill is a reprimand. Wages limp forward while prices sprint. The American family runs a marathon with a sack of bricks strapped to its back, while Washington elites sip champagne and lecture the public about patience. This did not happen by accident.

When a government floods the economy with newly conjured money, purchasing power is diluted. When energy production is throttled by ideological environmental zealotry costs cascade through every sector. When regulation metastasizes, compliance expenses are passed to consumers. When government spending becomes orgiastic debt becomes destiny.

The architects of this calamity sit comfortably in climate controlled offices and gated communities. They include the mandarins of the Federal Reserve who pretend that inflation is a mysterious phenomenon rather than the predictable consequence of monetary recklessness. They include the technocrats of the World Economic Forum who openly fantasize about a future in which ordinary people own nothing and rent everything. They include figures such as Klaus Schwab who speaks with chilling candor about reshaping humanity itself while dismissing national sovereignty as an antiquated inconvenience.

Biden’s inflation operates like an invisible tax. It is levied not by congressional vote but by bureaucratic fiat. It strikes hardest at those who can least afford it. The wealthy hedge against inflation with assets. The political class insulates itself with power. The middle class is left to absorb the blow with shrinking savings and mounting anxiety.

Consider the atrocious inversion; the same politicians who created the crisis now posture as saviors. They propose more spending to fix the damage caused by spending. They prescribe more regulation to cure the harm inflicted by regulation. It is the economic equivalent of pouring gasoline on a house fire and then blaming the homeowner for owning matches.

Inflation corrodes more than wallets. It corrodes character. It erodes hope. It transforms long term planning into a fool’s errand. Why save when money decays? Why invest when rules shift arbitrarily? Why strive when the finish line keeps moving?

The result is not merely economic distress. It is social destabilization. A population trapped in perpetual financial distress becomes easier to control. Dependency grows. Self reliance withers. The citizen gradually morphs into a supplicant. This is not compassion. This is not equity. This is not progress. It is economic feudalism.

Biden’s apologists insist that inflation is global. They neglect to mention that America’s policies magnify it. They ignore the obvious truth that energy independence restrains prices, while energy scarcity inflates them. They evade the fact that open borders depress wages, while endless foreign entanglements siphon resources from domestic prosperity.

What does it say about a government that can locate trillions for foreign wars but cannot stabilize grocery prices for its own citizens?

What does it say about a ruling class that lectures working families about sacrifice while enjoying record stock portfolios?

What does it say about a president who claims to champion the middle class while presiding over its systematic impoverishment.

Inflation is the canary in the coal mine. It signals a deeper rot. A political class untethered from reality. A bureaucracy insulated from consequences. A governing ideology that views ordinary Americans not as stakeholders but as obstacles.

History teaches that nations rarely collapse from invasion. They collapse from internal decay. Currency debasement has toppled empires. From ancient Rome to modern Venezuela, the pattern repeats with monotonous regularity. When money becomes meaningless, trust evaporates. When trust evaporates, legitimacy disintegrates.

The American middle class does not need lectures. It does not need slogans. It does not need performative empathy. It needs an economic policy rooted in production, not plunder. In abundance, not artificial scarcity. In sovereignty, not globalist submission.

Biden’s inflation is not merely a policy failure. It is a moral failure. It represents a conscious choice to prioritize ideology over livelihood, internationalist fantasies over national well being, and bureaucratic power over human dignity.

The middle class built this country. It fought its wars. It paid its taxes. It raised its children to love the Republic. It deserves better than to be slowly bled dry by an economic regime that treats suffering as collateral damage.

The question is not whether Biden’s inflation is hurting the middle class. The question is how much longer the middle class will tolerate being sacrificed on the altar of globalist ambition. Because a people can endure hardship and a people can endure adversity, but a people will not endure deliberate betrayal forever.

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WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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