![]() ![]() Now, breaking her silence after 30 years, Amy says this about her time in the White House: "There was a house full of people. "I did, you know, I really, it's hard for me to remember that," Amy replied. "You got a lot of it, Amy," Stahl acknowledged. "But we had Amy to take all the scrutiny. "The worst thing was a little bit of intrusion by the press," Chip joked. ![]() Stahl asked her and her brothers Chip and Jeff about life at the White House. When he turns to focus on himself, he admits his critics "had a valid point" when they accused him of "micromanaging" and that he went too far with his no-frills, anti-imperial approach - as when he carried his own bags and wore cardigan sweaters in the White House. But he decided that he was going to replace me as a Democratic president," Carter replied. "But you know, I felt like he went after me. "Well, you went at each other," Stahl pointed out. I tried to put down exactly how I felt," Carter replied. "You know, you could've left that out of the book." He was kicked out of college,'" Stahl read. "You write, angrily, 'He's my age, but unsuccessful. Back then, he poured his resentments into his diary, in frustrated, snarky outbursts - the hard-working, born-again peanut farmer up against privileged Kennedy royalty. ![]() It still smarts that Kennedy ran against him in 1980. "He did not want to see me have a major success in that realm of American life." ![]()
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