Walter Cronkite is
dead at 92, which seems old, but not quite old enough. Who is to say what's an
appropriate lifespan? How much more life is available to someone at 92? For
someone who reported on a national loss of innocence but represented a hope for the best, one always
wishes more life.
Personally? I was too young to remember him as a newscaster. He represents the loss of something, the so-called greatest generation's orientation to history, that I couldn't experience myself. Cronkite existed in an imaginary realm inaccessible to my generation, but for which he was the avuncular spokesman. He spoke from a world that saw the triumph over global evil in grainy black and white. It would have been nice to hear some dispatches from that place. Anything other than the symptom, the messy ambiguity of the last forty years, from which we can't escape.
Then again, what I would have liked to have heard from him is a direct denunciation of the media's failure to see through the rush to war in Iraq or the evisceration of the Constitution in the name of preventing another terrorist attack. Cronkite's most famous moment was his grave announcement that the Vietnam War was a lost cause, but he never reported that Iraq was one from the beginning. He never stepped forward and said to his fellow reporters, in his sonorous voice, "You know something's wrong. Stand up and say so!" I don't think that was too much to ask from the most trusted man in America.
Wow, another famous person to leave. Walter (referred to as "Uncle Walt") was a great man that knew how to deliver news. I wish these noobs nowadays had such skills. Prayers to Walter's family and friends. In his memory, for his fans I have collected some great sites and articles (more than 200) to know all about Walter Cronkite. If you are interested take a look at the below link
http://markthispage.blogspot.com/2009/07/walter-cronkite-another-famous-person.html
Posted by: Sri | July 18, 2009 at 12:01 PM
Yes, he was a great man. He represented TV news during its peak of influence and credibility. Thanks for the link to the tribute.
Posted by: Richard Prouty | July 18, 2009 at 06:16 PM