The Real Life Taxi Driver: A Biography of Arthur Herman Bremer (The Real Inspiration of Travis Bickle)
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About this ebook
You know the movie, but do you know the real story?
Robert De Niro has played many different people, but he is perhaps most remembered for his performance in Taxi Driver. What's crazier than the person De Nero portrayed is the fact that it was actually based on a real person: Arthur Bremer.
What turned an innocent kid from Milwaukee into a crazed lunatic who attempted to assassinate presidential candidate, George Wallace? Find out in this fascinating profile.
Read more from Tim Huddleston
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The Real Life Taxi Driver - Tim Huddleston
About Us
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Absolute Crime publishes only the best true crime literature. Our focus is on the crimes that you've probably never heard of, but you are fascinated to read more about. With each engaging and gripping story, we try to let readers relive moments in history that some people have tried to forget.
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Prologue: A Penny for Your Thoughts
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May 15th, 1972
A penny for your thoughts.
Those were the words twenty-one-year-old Arthur Bremer was going to shout out when he assassinated governor of Alabama and presidential candidate George Wallace. And as he stood in the crowd outside the shopping center, applauding enthusiastically as Wallace delivered a campaign speech to the good people of Laurel, Maryland, he felt with greater and greater certainty that he would get his chance to say those words very soon. The old, familiar phrase would serve as both his battle cry and his declaration of triumph.
A penny for your thoughts.
Okay, so maybe it wasn’t exactly as weighty as John Wilkes Booth’s "Sic semper tyrannis," but then, Wallace wasn’t exactly Lincoln, either. He was nothing but a racist hatemonger and Bremer would be doing the country a favor by ending his life.
Not that that was why he was doing it. He didn’t care about Wallace’s views one way or the other. The main thing that had put him in Bremer’s sites in the first place was the simple fact that Richard Nixon was too hard to reach...not that he really gave a shit about Nixon or his policies, either. Truth be told, Arthur Bremer had never really had much of an interest in politics. That’s not what this was about.
A penny for your thoughts.
For years, people would debate what the words meant, but even if he survived this day—and he didn’t expect to—he would never tell. Their meaning wasn’t important, anyway. What was important was that they were words he would be remembered by. From that day forward, no one would ever be able to say or even think that old idiom again without Arthur Bremer coming to mind. It would be associated with him for generations to come. It was going to make him immortal.
A penny for your thoughts.
He had set out to do the deed that morning at a rally in Wheaton, Maryland, but that had been a rough crowd. Wallace was a controversial candidate, and you never knew if the people who showed up to his appearances were going to be friend or foe. The Wheaton audience had been comprised mostly of the latter, and they heckled Wallace and his rhetoric relentlessly, and even threw tomatoes at him. There was no way the Secret Service would have allowed him anywhere near that bunch, and that’s what Bremer needed to get the job done. It wasn’t too much to ask for, was it? He just needed the governor to do what politicians do and come into the crowd to shake some hands and kiss some babies. That was all it would take to give him his moment, but he didn’t get it in Wheaton.
Here in Laurel, though, the vibe was different. It was a much friendlier, much more supportive group and Wallace would feel safe walking among them. And when