0:00:06.965,0:00:09.307 The presidency of[br]the United States of America 0:00:09.307,0:00:13.902 is often said to be one of[br]the most powerful positions in the world. 0:00:13.902,0:00:17.656 But of all the U.S. presidents accused[br]of misusing that power, 0:00:17.656,0:00:21.144 only one has left office as a result. 0:00:21.144,0:00:23.223 Does Richard Nixon deserve[br]to be remembered 0:00:23.223,0:00:26.790 for more than the scandal[br]that ended his presidency? 0:00:26.790,0:00:31.862 Find out as we put this disgraced[br]president's legacy on trial 0:00:31.862,0:00:35.201 in History vs. Richard Nixon. 0:00:35.201,0:00:36.486 "Order, order. 0:00:36.486,0:00:39.345 Now, who's the defendant today,[br]some kind of crook?" 0:00:39.345,0:00:42.108 "Cough. No, your Honor. 0:00:42.108,0:00:46.347 This is Richard Milhous Nixon,[br]the 37th president of the United States, 0:00:46.347,0:00:50.653 who served from 1969 to 1974." 0:00:50.653,0:00:53.352 "Hold on. 0:00:53.352,0:00:56.501 That's a weird number of years[br]for a president to serve." 0:00:56.501,0:01:00.298 "Well, you see, President Nixon[br]resigned for the good of the nation 0:01:00.298,0:01:04.027 and was pardoned by President Ford,[br]who took over after him." 0:01:04.027,0:01:06.434 "He resigned because he was about[br]to be impeached, 0:01:06.434,0:01:10.483 and he didn't want the full extent[br]of his crimes exposed." 0:01:10.483,0:01:12.766 "And what were these crimes?" 0:01:12.766,0:01:16.431 "Your Honor, the Watergate scandal[br]was one of the grossest abuses 0:01:16.431,0:01:19.738 of presidential power in history. 0:01:19.738,0:01:23.913 Nixon's men broke into the Democratic[br]National Committee headquarters 0:01:23.913,0:01:27.994 to wiretap the offices[br]and dig up dirt on opponents 0:01:27.994,0:01:30.208 for the reelection campaign." 0:01:30.208,0:01:31.300 "Cough 0:01:31.300,0:01:35.225 It was established that the President[br]did not order this burglary." 0:01:35.225,0:01:38.921 "But as soon as he learned of it,[br]he did everything to cover it up, 0:01:38.921,0:01:41.499 while lying about it for months." 0:01:41.499,0:01:44.901 "Uh, yes, but it was for the good[br]of the country. 0:01:44.901,0:01:48.732 He did so much during his time in office[br]and could have done so much more 0:01:48.732,0:01:53.304 without a scandal jeopardizing[br]his accomplishments." 0:01:53.304,0:01:54.986 "Uh, accomplishments?" 0:01:54.986,0:01:56.554 "Yes, your Honor. 0:01:56.554,0:01:58.301 Did you know it was President Nixon 0:01:58.301,0:02:02.510 who proposed the creation[br]of the Environmental Protection Agency, 0:02:02.510,0:02:06.590 and signed the National Environmental[br]Policy Act into law? 0:02:06.590,0:02:08.876 Not to mention the Endangered Species Act, 0:02:08.876,0:02:10.925 Marine Mammal Protection Act, 0:02:10.925,0:02:13.275 expansion of the Clean Air Act." 0:02:13.275,0:02:15.262 "Sounds pretty progressive of him." 0:02:15.262,0:02:17.092 "Progressive? Hardly. 0:02:17.092,0:02:19.666 Nixon's presidential campaign courted[br]Southern voters 0:02:19.666,0:02:23.427 through fear and resentment[br]of the civil rights movement." 0:02:23.427,0:02:25.446 "Speaking of civil rights, 0:02:25.446,0:02:29.920 the prosecution may be surprised to learn[br]that he signed the Title IX amendment, 0:02:29.920,0:02:33.639 banning gender-based discrimination[br]in education, 0:02:33.639,0:02:38.132 and ensured that desegregation of schools[br]occurred peacefully, 0:02:38.132,0:02:42.294 and he lowered the voting age to 18,[br]so that students could vote." 0:02:42.294,0:02:44.210 "He didn't have much concern[br]for students 0:02:44.210,0:02:49.026 after four were shot[br]by the National Guard at Kent State. 0:02:49.026,0:02:53.245 Instead, he called them bums[br]for protesting the Vietnam War, 0:02:53.245,0:02:56.006 a war he had campaigned on ending." 0:02:56.006,0:02:57.515 "But he did end it." 0:02:57.515,0:03:01.397 "He ended it two years[br]after taking office. 0:03:01.397,0:03:06.412 Meanwhile, his campaign had sabotaged[br]the previous president's peace talks, 0:03:06.412,0:03:11.490 urging the South Vietnamese government[br]to hold out for supposedly better terms, 0:03:11.490,0:03:14.548 which, I might add, didn't materialize. 0:03:14.548,0:03:17.401 So, he protracted the war for four years, 0:03:17.401,0:03:22.847 in which 20,000 more U.S. troops,[br]and over a million more Vietnamese, 0:03:22.847,0:03:25.347 died for nothing." 0:03:25.347,0:03:29.045 "Hmm, a presidential candidate interfering[br]in foreign negotiations -- 0:03:29.045,0:03:31.006 isn't that treason?" 0:03:31.006,0:03:36.529 "It is, your Honor, a clear violation[br]of the Logan Act of 1799." 0:03:36.529,0:03:40.385 "Uh, I think we're forgetting[br]President Nixon's many 0:03:40.385,0:03:42.724 foreign policy achievements. 0:03:42.724,0:03:49.045 It was he who normalized ties with China,[br]forging economic ties that continue today." 0:03:49.045,0:03:51.303 "Are we so sure that's a good thing? 0:03:51.303,0:03:54.066 And don't forget his support[br]of the coup in Chile 0:03:54.066,0:03:57.346 that replaced the democratically-elected[br]President Allende 0:03:57.346,0:04:00.683 with a brutal military dictator." 0:04:00.683,0:04:03.223 "It was part of the fight[br]against communism." 0:04:03.223,0:04:07.463 "Weren't tyranny and violence the reasons[br]we opposed communism to begin with? 0:04:07.463,0:04:12.087 Or was it just fear of the lower class[br]rising up against the rich?" 0:04:12.087,0:04:16.240 "President Nixon couldn't have predicted[br]the violence of Pinochet's regime, 0:04:16.240,0:04:19.608 and being anti-communist didn't mean[br]neglecting the poor. 0:04:19.608,0:04:23.362 He proposed a guaranteed basic income[br]for all American families, 0:04:23.362,0:04:26.235 still a radical concept today. 0:04:26.235,0:04:29.282 And he even pushed for comprehensive[br]healthcare reform, 0:04:29.282,0:04:32.584 just the kind that passed 40 years later." 0:04:32.584,0:04:35.002 "I'm still confused about[br]this burglary business. 0:04:35.002,0:04:37.123 Was he a crook or not?" 0:04:37.123,0:04:41.139 "Your Honor, President Nixon[br]may have violated a law or two, 0:04:41.139,0:04:46.784 but what was the real harm compared[br]to all he accomplished while in office?" 0:04:46.784,0:04:50.132 "The harm was to democracy itself. 0:04:50.132,0:04:53.470 The whole point of the ideals[br]Nixon claimed to promote abroad 0:04:53.470,0:04:56.463 is that leaders are accountable[br]to the people, 0:04:56.463,0:04:59.642 and when they hold themselves[br]above the law for whatever reason, 0:04:59.642,0:05:02.207 those ideals are undermined." 0:05:02.207,0:05:07.180 "And if you don't hold people accountable[br]to the law, I'll be out of a job." 0:05:07.180,0:05:11.621 Many politicians have compromised[br]some principles to achieve results, 0:05:11.621,0:05:17.305 but law-breaking and cover-ups threaten[br]the very fabric the nation is built on. 0:05:17.305,0:05:21.133 Those who do so may find[br]their entire legacy tainted 0:05:21.133,0:05:24.242 when history is put on trial.