For anyone who missed the reference, this is to David Halberstam's
book THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST. In it, he chronicles the history of
JFK's meritocrats and how they got the US in an extremely bloody,
criminal, and (in the end) pointless war in Vietnam. Will the current
crop of the "best" avoid this fate?


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_and_the_Brightest

Origins of the title
The title may have come from a line by Percy Bysshe Shelley in his work "To 
Jane: The Invitation" (1822):

Best and brightest, come away! 
Shelley's line may have originated from English bishop and hymn writer Reginald 
Heber in his 1811 work, "Hymns. Epiphany":

Brightest and best of the sons of the morning, 
Dawn on our darkness, and lend us thine aid. 
A still earlier -- and more pertinent -- use of the phrase is in the letter of 
Junius published February 7, 1769 in the Public Advertiser. There Junius uses 
it mockingly and ironically in reference to King George III's ministers, whose 
capacities he had disparaged in his first letter the previous month. In 
response to Sir William Draper's letter defending one of Junius' targets and 
attacking their anonymous critics, Junius wrote:

To have supported your assertion, you should have proved that the present 
ministry are unquestionably the best and brightest characters of the kingdom; 
and that, if the affections of the colonies have been alienated, if Corsica has 
been shamefully abandoned, if commerce languishes, if public credit is 
threatened with a new debt, and your own Manilla ransom most dishonourably 
given up, it has all been owing to the malice of political writers, who will 
not suffer the best and brightest characters (meaning still the present 
ministry) to take a single right step, for the honour or interest of the nation.

In the introduction to the 1992 edition, Halberstam states that he had used the 
title in an article for Harper's magazine, and that Mary McCarthy criticized 
him in a book review for incorrectly referencing the line in the hymn. 
Halberstam claims he had no knowledge of that earlier usage. Halberstam also 
observed regarding the "best and the brightest" phrase, that "...hymn or no, it 
went into the language, although it is often misused, failing to carry the tone 
or irony that the original intended." In a 2001 interview Halberstam claims 
that the title came from a line in an article he had written about the Kennedy 
Administration. The phrase referred to President John F. Kennedy's "whiz kids" 
-- leaders of industry and academia brought into his administration -- whom 
Halberstam characterized as arrogantly insisting on "brilliant policies that 
defied common sense" in Vietnam, often against the advice of career US 
Department of State employees.




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