Was it really fair for Line editor Matt Gurney to compare Mark Carney to FDR? -- Eh, Carney's doing fine (The Line)
You know, I always thought it was Napoleon — the whole “hundred days” thing.
Unsatisfied with involuntary Mediterranean retirement, in the spring of 1815 the Little Corporal took a stroll through France.
He started his tour in the scenic French Riviera, announced to the several thousand armed men sent to arrest him at the foot of the Alps that they could shoot their emperor if they dared, strutted into Paris, overthrew the government, reinstated himself as supreme ruler of all he beheld, installed a new constitution, quadrupled the size of the national army, and fought the Battle of Waterloo, all in a blistering hundred days (give or take a few in the name of poetic licence).
Ever since, the phrase “hundred days” has carried a mystique associated with vigorous leadership. In one of his lethally effective “fireside chat” radio speeches a few months after taking office, Franklin Delano Roosevelt characterized his initial efforts using the phrase “hundred days,” and I assumed he was indirectly invoking Napoleon’s ferociously-paced generalship ...
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