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In the end, he was stricken with a heart attack in a restaurant while dining with his family. For a man who could wax poetic about good food as easily as he could enthrall an audience with insider stories of the Kennedy White House, it is fitting indeed that he was taken while engaging in one of life's pleasures he so boisterously enjoyed while nestled in the bosom of his family
Schlesinger may have been a liberal's liberal. But that didn't stop him from challenging political correctness nor the dominant New Left ideas regarding foreign policy and America's role in the world. Not only a staunch anti-Communist, Schlesinger was an internationalist in the traditional sense. He saw America's mission as bringing freedom to the world wherever possible while working with international institutions like the United Nations to solve conflicts. While his faith in the UN may have been misplaced, he never lost sight of American interests and the need to defend them.
Where he parted company with the new left was in some of their wackier ideas regarding social policy. He was a vociferous critic of multiculturalism, specifically "Afro-centrism" that he at one time compared to the Klan