Jeff Greenfield is a political correspondent and commentator for CBS News. He previously worked for ABC, contributing to \u201cNightline\u201d when it was a serious program. For a while, he was also part of what CNN modestly calls, \u201cthe best political reporting team in television.\u201d<\/p>\n
He knows a great deal about politics, having worked for Robert Kennedy when RFK was a senator and then presidential candidate in 1968. Greenfield has seen the good, bad, and ugly of politics from the inside and outside.<\/p>\n
Because United States history is tarnished with four presidential assassinations and even a greater number of attempted ones, we have come to expect the unexpected. This leads inevitably to \u201cwhat if\u201d ruminations about what might have been had we not experienced unforeseen detours.<\/p>\n
Greenfield, who has previously written a variety of non-fiction and fiction books, has taken a series of accurate historical facts and mixed them with three hypothetical \u201cwhat ifs\u201d to create scenarios of what-might-have-been in his novel, Then Everything Changed<\/em>. It is a fascinating read that generates more \u201cwhat ifs\u201d on the part of the reader. He enlightens and entertains by ensuring that the alternative scenarios have Sarah Palin, Monica Lewinsky, and George W. Bush moments, only with different people in different settings.<\/p>\n The first of the three \u201ceverything changed\u201d moments was in 1960. It occurred after John F. Kennedy had been elected, but not really. In this scenario, something happens before the esteemed Electoral College codifies the popular election of John F. Kennedy. The event that changed everything is an alteration of a documented event that did not occur because of good fortune.<\/p>\n The second event falls in the category of \u201cwishful thinking\u201d for people who were alive, conscious, and semi-progressive in 1968. When Sirhan Sirhan attempts to assassinate Robert Kennedy, someone literally intervenes and Robert Kennedy leaves the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles alive and well. Greenfield was actually present that evening. Undoubtedly during those fleeting moments between when it became clear the Kennedy had won the California primary and when he was slain by Sirhan Sirhan, Greenfield did what so many other Kennedy aides did. He was gaming certain strategies so that RFK\u2019s popularity among the Democratic electorate could be transferred into a majority of delegates at the August convention in Chicago. To his credit, Greenfield doesn\u2019t even try to make the happenings in Chicago any more bizarre than they actually were.<\/p>\n The third \u201ceverything changed\u201d moment involved President Gerald Ford. If you\u2019re thinking that Greenfield altered history by having either Lynette \u201cSqueaky\u201d Fromme or Sarah Jane Moore successfully assassinate Ford in their separate attempts in California in September, 1975, you\u2019re wrong. You have to fast-forward to October 6, 1976, when Ford and Democratic challenger Jimmy Carter were in a televised debate from The Palace of Fine Arts Theater in San Francisco. In a moment that might be attributed to fatigue, Ford said the following, thirteen years prior to the end of the Cold War:<\/p>\n