Chapter 300 Provocation from William Barkley Jr.(2/2)
Speaking of which, she is one of the important consultants in this case and has also gone to court several times.
What a good target for a liberal female lawyer who is famous all over the world.
It was not ordinary people who came out, but the famous William Barkley Jr.
This man entered Yale in the late 1940s and was considered the college director of Ruth Berger and Edward.
During his time at school, he joined the Skeleton and Bones Club, and also actively participated in the Yale Political Alliance, and served as the campus newspaper Yale Daily News (president.
Apparently he became a sensational figure. In Yale's last semester, William Barkley was invited to serve as the student spokesperson at the Alumni Day Fund Raising Conference. This is the school's lofty honor to students. According to the practice of reciprocity, this speech was full of formalism, filled with flattery and slutty. Then Mr. Barkley made a false act. He scolded Yale for being a failed education leader and attacked left-wing professors.
After reading the speech, the school administrator asked him to change his wording to a gentler point, but he refused harshly, and he lost the opportunity to speak.
However, this made Barkley even more unhappy. He wrote his experience at Yale into a book "I At Yale: Superstition of Academic Freedom". This book later became a bestseller, but it attracted severe condemnation from Yale alumni and liberals.
In 1951, when "I'm at Yale" was published, William Barkley began to consider joining the CIA... Barkley, as a spy of the CIA, collected information from the communists in the student group in Mexico City.
While working in Mexico, William Barkley's book caused a fierce debate in the United States, and some right-wing publications invited him to be an editor. Barkley felt it was necessary to participate in the debate. In less than a year, he quit his job at the CIA and returned to the United States, launching "the boldest political and intelligent adventure in his life."
This adventure was founded in 1955. The editor-in-chief of the magazine was William Barkley, 29. He has been the editor-in-chief until now. This magazine has become an important ideological site for conservatives.1
In the 1950s, he supported McCarthyism and co-authored "Mccarthy and His Enemies" with L. �
In 1960, Barkley participated in the founding of the conservative youth political group "Americans for Freedom" (young freedom, referred to as yaf).
In 1962, he began to write a political commentary column "on right", one article every two weeks. By the early 1970s, more than 320 newspapers in the United States had jointly published it. His articles were cited in style, with profound words and wit.
In the 1964 US presidential election, Barkley strongly supported Senator Barry Goldwater.
In 1965, Lindesey, a New York mayoral candidate, ran on behalf of the New York Conservative Party. In fact, his hopes of winning were slim, and even Barkley himself did not take the campaign seriously. During this period, a reporter interviewed him and asked, "If you are elected as mayor of New York City, what is the first measure you want to take?" Barkley replied, "I will first click on the votes to see if you have made any mistakes." Finally, the mayor was Lindesey.
He saw that Gottward's successor was weak and began to look for new supporters and allies. In the end, he chose one of the two, California Governor Regan, and began to fully manipulate Regan's ideological basics to prepare for his future presidential campaign...
Chapter completed!