Reply Mon 7 Feb, 2011 11:41 am
On the 100th anniversay of Ron Reagan's birth, we are hearing from the right endless praise for this failed president. Let's look at the real Ron Reagan.


The Real Ronald Reagan

Yesterday marked the 100th birthday of America's 40th president, Ronald Wilson Reagan. All over the country, prominent conservatives and Republican figures are celebrating the anniversary of Reagan's birthday, claiming that the former president was "guided by strong conservative principles" and that he truly made America a "shining city on a hill" -- "stronger and freer" thanks to his leadership. Yet what conservatives casually omit is that many of his policies sharply deviated from what is considered conservative orthodoxy today -- like his strong record of trade protectionism and granting residency to millions of undocumented immigrants -- and that other policies he pursued decimated the middle class, ignored pressing social crises, and stood by as tyranny fermented abroad. It was these facts that journalist Mike Stark presented to right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh that left the conservative icon speechless. Today, the Progress Report will serve to debunk the myths about one of America's most famous presidents and introduce you to the real Ronald Reagan.

THE REAL REAGONOMICS : Conservatives often praise Reagan for his "sweeping economic reforms," which included tax cuts, deregulation, and liberalized trade policies. Yet the truth is that, in the classical sense, Reagan wasn't an economic conservative at all, often radically expanding the size of government and the federal budget deficit -- just doing so in ways that did not benefit most Americans, especially the poor. In fact, many of Reagan's economic policies would be considered heretical today by the modern conservative movement for the way they deviated from what is considered right-wing orthodoxy. As President, Reagan "raised taxes 11 times in his administration." This is a stark departure from today's conservative ideology; hundreds of elected Republicans in Congress have even signed oaths pledging to never raise taxes under any circumstances. And while modern conservatives boast of their commitment to rein in the budget deficit, reduce the size of government, and pursue free trade, Reagan seriously deviated from those policies. He nearly tripled the size of the federal budget deficit and federal spending "ballooned" during his tenure. And he notably used tariffs and trade controls to protect domestic industry, at one point imposing a 100 percent tariff on some Japanese electronic products, enacting major quotas on sugar imports, and establishing the largest steel tariff in American history. And while the right may boast of Reagan's economic policies, the truth is that they helped hollow out the middle class and decimate America's social safety net. Reagan cut federal funds to cities and slashed the federal housing program which more than doubled the country's homeless population. He deregulated the savings & loan industry, which led to enormous taxpayer-funded bailouts and widespread financial industry failures, as even the Cato Institute admits was a failure. Per capita income for the bottom 90 percent of the population fell .3 percent during Reagan's presidency while the incomes of the top 1 percent increased by 55 percent. Even his famed tax cuts did little to alleviate strains on the middle class, with the bottom 40 percent of households paying "out more of their income in federal taxes in 1988 than they had in 1980." Rather than transforming America into a "shining city on a hill," Reagan turned America into a "tale of two cities," as former New York Governor Mario Cuomo (D) said, with the rich wildly prospering and everyone else fighting over table scraps.

THE REAL REAGAN FOREIGN POLICY: Today's modern conservative movement champions Reagan as a man who freely brandished America's military might and sought to "stand up for freedom" all over the world. Yet one has to wonder if today's right-wing hawks would endorse Reagan's "dream" of a "world free of nuclear weapons," as he wrote in his diary -- or if they would approve of him withdrawing the U.S. military from Lebanon following rebel attacks on Marines stationed there. And while Reagan did champion the cause of pro-democracy activists agitating against a geopolitical rival, the Soviet Union, he often sided with some of the world's worst tyrants and terrorists -- breaking with the modest human rights policies enacted by President Jimmy Carter. He called Apartheid South Africa in 1981 a country that "strategically, is essential to the free world in its production of minerals," and bitterly fought congressional efforts to place sanctions on the Apartheid government, eventually even vetoing Congress's anti-Apartheid act (which was later overridden thanks to a revolt of Senate Republicans). Meanwhile, his administration sold arms to Iran in order to fund a right-wing militant movement known as the Contras in Nicaragua; these Contras went on to massacre tens of thousands of people, many of them nonviolent labor unionists or Christian theology activists. Reagan funded right-wing terrorists and dictators across Central America; in El Salvador, the Reagan-funded right-wing regime even assassinated Archbishop Oscar Romero, a priest working to organize workers and feed the poor. Additionally, Reagan funded and trained the right-wing Guatemalan military, which a United Nations commission later found was a "key factor" in the military committing "acts of genocide" that led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of members of the indigenous Mayan community and many other nonviolent left-wing activists. These U.S.-subsidized human rights violations became so extreme that Congress had to eventually move to rebuke Reagan and cut off funding to countries like Nicaragua that he had allied himself with. Writing about Reagan's policies in Central America, Thomas Carothers, who was tasked with "democracy promotion" in the Reagan State Department, wrote that Reagan policies favored only "limited, top-down forms of democratic change that did not risk upsetting the traditional structures of power with which the United States has long been allied." It was under Reagan that the United States armed and backed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, bolstering his aggressive war against Iran, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people and embittering both countries against the United States. And his administration helped lay the groundwork for Al Qaeda by financing and training an Islamist militant movement in Afghanistan and Pakistan aimed around fighting the Soviet Union.

THE REAL REAGAN SOCIAL POLICY : While leading conservative commentators have praised Reagan as having "classical virtues," defending what they believe to be a starkly traditionalist set of American conservative social principles, there are many elements of his agenda which they'd be hesitant to endorse. And of the great stains on Reagan's social policy legacy -- the way he ignored the AIDS crisis -- has all been written out of the conservative movement's history of their icon. He completely ignored the AIDS crisis, not even addressing it until his second term when he was directly asked about it. At that point, between 20,000-30,000 Americans had already died from the disease. His administration silenced its own surgeon general, who wanted to proactively tackle the issue, and battled against comprehensive sex education. When the surgeon general was asked about Reagan's thinking on the issue, he said that because AIDS was a disease primarily affecting homosexuals, Reagan's closest advisers took the view that "they are only getting what they justly deserve." And disturbingly, Reagan opposed the 1965 Voting Rights Act, saying that it was "humiliating to the South. He even gave one of his major speeches on "states' rights" while running for president in Philadelphia, Mississippi, a town where three civil rights workers were murdered, an ominous "dog whistle" in support of racist elements. Yet not every item of Reagan's social agenda was so harmful. As president, he engaged in a raucous immigration debate that ended when he signed into law legislation that helped three million undocumented immigrants gain residency and millions of more family members.

THE REAL REAGAN ADMINISTRATION : One fact left unmentioned in conservative tributes to the former president is the widespread corruption and scandals within the Reagan administration due to the elevation of individuals to lead agencies who did not fundamentally believe in the public sector. More than a dozen administration officials had to resign following the revelation of the Iran-Contra scandal. Reagan's own HUD Secretary used the agency to give Republican donors favorable housing grants. Over 20 high-level EPA officials were forced to resign following revelations that they had allowed themselves to be influenced by polluters; and as CAP's Joe Romm points out, Reagan "gutted" all of the Carter administration's clean energy efforts. Another scandal involved Department of Justice officials both engaging in piracy and then being tasked to investigate those same acts of piracy. More "than fifty officials at the Defense Department and private contractors" were "convicted for rigging bids and falsifying results of quality-control tests," again the result of collusion between the administration and corporate power. As the New York Times's Gary Willis wrote about the HUD scandals, "for [HUD] administrator Deborah Gore Dean," running HUD for "the benefits of family, friends and fellow ideologues" would serve the ultimate cause of driving the agency "into disrepute or desuetude." In other words, Reagan's "conservatism" that believed that government is "the problem" spawned a network of government officials who freely used the government they viewed as illegitimate for their own benefit.

--americanprogressaction.org

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Type: Discussion • Score: 4 • Views: 2,468 • Replies: 14

 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Feb, 2011 03:01 pm
@Advocate,
but he had great orange hair
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Feb, 2011 03:10 pm
Thank goodness he did not serve a third term.
0 Replies
 
raprap
 
  3  
Reply Mon 7 Feb, 2011 03:13 pm
He was a better POTUS than Bush the lesser. Equal to Nixon and bettered by Eisenhower. However in today's Tea Party dominated GOP, he'd be considered a RINO.
JTT
 
  0  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 01:31 am
@raprap,
Quote:
He was a better POTUS than Bush the lesser. Equal to Nixon and bettered by Eisenhower.


No wonder Limbaugh was speechless. Those Repubs sure have elected a lot of major losers.
0 Replies
 
JTT
 
  0  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 01:33 am
@Advocate,
Quote:
It was these facts that journalist Mike Stark presented to right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh that left the conservative icon speechless.


I would have loved to have seen that.
0 Replies
 
H2O MAN
 
  0  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 06:34 am
1. He was a bad actor.

Well, yes and no. Most of the movies he made as a Warner Bros. contract player are unwatchable by persons of sound mind. When he was president, it was easy to laugh at them. The spectacle of the leader of the free world, a.k.a. Secret Service agent Brass Bancroft, deploying an enormous ray gun against an airborne armada was especially hilarious in 1983, the year he announced the Strategic Defense Initiative, that vaporizer of foreign nuclear missiles. "All right, Hayden - focus that inertia projector on 'em and let 'em have it!"

Even when Reagan believed he was acting well, as in "Kings Row," he betrayed infallible signs of thespian mediocrity: an unwillingness to listen to other performers and an inability to communicate thoughts. Now that he is dead, however, one feels an odd tenderness for the effort he put into every role - particularly in early movies, when he struggled to control a tendency of his lips to writhe around his too-rapid speech.

Ironically, he was transformed into a superb actor when he took on the roles of governor of California, presidential candidate and president of the United States. Then, as never in his movies, he became authoritative, authentic, irresistible to eye and ear. His two greatest performances, in my opinion, were at the Republican National Convention in 1976, when he effortlessly stole Gerald Ford's thunder as nominee and made the delegates regret their choice, and at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1985, when he delivered the supreme speech of his presidency.
I asked him once if he had any nostalgia for the years he was nuzzling up to Ann Sheridan and Doris Day on camera. He gestured around the Oval Office. "Why should I? I have the biggest stage in the world, right here!"

2. He was but a movie-set soldier in World War II.

It's true that Reagan spent virtually all the war years flying a desk at the First Motion Picture Unit, USAAF, in Culver City. But that hardly means he did not passionately want to fight for his country overseas. Army doctors found his vision to be so defective, at "7/200 bilateral," that a tank could advance within seven feet of him before he could identify it as Japanese. His Warner Bros. colleague Eddie Albert, a veteran of the Pacific War, later told me about presenting Reagan with a souvenir from the bloodbath of Tarawa. "I've never forgotten the way he looked. Like I'd humiliated him."

In the spring of 1945, Capt. Reagan, as the FMPU's intelligence officer, spent weeks processing raw color footage from the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps. The images so burned into his brain that later in life - quite understandably - he imagined he had been there at Ohrdruf and Buchenwald. He kept one of those Army reels to show to each of his children in early adolescence, so that they could learn about man's inhumanity to man. Ask Patti. Ask Ron.

3. He was warm-hearted.

No. But Reagan wasn't cold - except in his detestation of totalitarianism - so much as cool, in the way a large, calm lake is cool. Like many another natural leader (George Marshall and Charles de Gaulle come to mind), he viewed those who clustered around him abstractedly. He registered audiences rather than individuals. Reagan intimates have confessed to me that they were never sure he knew who the hell they were.

His three younger children have publicly stated that there were times (decades before any rumors of dementia) when he treated them as complete strangers. As for his marriage to Nancy, I'll note only that she was the fourth short, tough, street-smart woman he dreamily depended on to organize his everyday life, the others being his mother, Nelle Reagan; his first fiancee, Margaret Cleaver; and his first wife, Jane Wyman. He had no close friends. And until young Ron reminded him, it didn't occur to him to put a headstone on either of his parents' graves.

4. He was only a campaign Christian.


On the contrary, Reagan was a "practical Christian," that being the name of a mainly Midwestern, social-work-oriented movement when he was growing up. At 11, young Dutch had an epiphany, prompted by the sight of his alcoholic father lying dead drunk on the front porch of the family house in Dixon, Ill. In a moving passage of autobiography, Reagan wrote: "Seeing his arms spread out as if he were crucified - as indeed he was - his hair soaked with melting snow, snoring as he breathed, I could feel no resentment against him." It was the season of Lent, and his mother, a devotee of the Disciples of Christ, put a comforting novel in his hand: "That Printer of Udell's" by Harold Bell Wright. Dutch read it and told her, "I want to declare my faith and be baptized." He was, by total immersion, on June 21, 1922.

I read a speckled copy of that book in the Library of Congress. Almost creepily, it tells the story of a handsome Midwestern boy who makes good for the sins of his father by becoming a practical Christian and a spellbinding orator. He develops a penchant for brown suits and welfare reform, marries a wide-eyed girl (who listens adoringly to his speeches) and wins election to public office in Washington.

Shy about his faith as an adult, Reagan was capable of conventional pieties like all American politicians. He attended few church services as president. But on occasion, before critical meetings, you would see him draw aside and mumble prayers.

5. He was an "amiable dunce."


Yeah, right, Clark Clifford. Ronald Reagan only performed successfully in six different careers: radio sportscaster, movie actor, trade union president, corporate spokesman, two-term governor and two-term president of the United States. Lucky for him he wasn't hampered by Jimmy Carter's intelligence!

RABEL222
 
  0  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 01:00 pm
The voters elected this idiot twice! I despair that the average U. S. american citizen will ever learn enough about the candidates to vote for their own best interests. We are doing it to ourselves!
0 Replies
 
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 01:32 pm
@H2O MAN,
I knew that there was no way in hell that you wrote this, h2oman. You can't string two sentences together.

It's customary and honest, the latter you wouldn't know anything about, to describe where you got your material.

Reagan was the walking talking dictionary entry for dunce.


Quote:

Not Even a Hedgehog
The stupidity of Ronald Reagan.
By Christopher Hitchens
Posted Monday, June 7, 2004, at 1:03 PM ET

Not long ago, I was invited to be the specter at the feast during "Ronald Reagan Appreciation Week" at Wabash College in Indiana. One of my opponents was Dinesh D'Souza: He wasn't the only one who maintained that Reagan had been historically vindicated by the wreckage of the Soviet Union. Some of us on the left had also been very glad indeed to see the end of the Russian empire and the Cold War. But nothing could make me forget what the Reagan years had actually been like.

Ronald Reagan claimed that the Russian language had no word for "freedom." (The word is "svoboda"; it's quite well attested in Russian literature.) Ronald Reagan said that intercontinental ballistic missiles (not that there are any non-ballistic missiles—a corruption of language that isn't his fault) could be recalled once launched. Ronald Reagan said that he sought a "Star Wars" defense only in order to share the technology with the tyrants of the U.S.S.R.

Ronald Reagan professed to be annoyed when people called it "Star Wars," even though he had ended his speech on the subject with the lame quip, "May the force be with you." Ronald Reagan used to alarm his Soviet counterparts by saying that surely they'd both unite against an invasion from Mars. Ronald Reagan used to alarm other constituencies by speaking freely about the "End Times" foreshadowed in the Bible.

In the Oval Office, Ronald Reagan told Yitzhak Shamir and Simon Wiesenthal, on two separate occasions, that he himself had assisted personally at the liberation of the Nazi death camps.

There was more to Ronald Reagan than that. Reagan announced that apartheid South Africa had "stood beside us in every war we've ever fought," when the South African leadership had been on the other side in the most recent world war. Reagan allowed Alexander Haig to greenlight the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, fired him when that went too far and led to mayhem in Beirut, then ran away from Lebanon altogether when the Marine barracks were bombed, and then unbelievably accused Tip O'Neill and the Democrats of "scuttling."

Reagan sold heavy weapons to the Iranian mullahs and lied about it, saying that all the weapons he hadn't sold them (and hadn't traded for hostages in any case) would, all the same, have fit on a small truck. Reagan then diverted the profits of this criminal trade to an illegal war in Nicaragua and lied unceasingly about that, too.

Reagan then modestly let his underlings maintain that he was too dense to understand the connection between the two impeachable crimes. He then switched without any apparent strain to a policy of backing Saddam Hussein against Iran. (If Margaret Thatcher's intelligence services had not bugged Oliver North in London and become infuriated because all European nations were boycotting Iran at Reagan's request, we might still not know about this.)

http://www.slate.com/id/2101842/

failures art
 
  1  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 02:35 pm
http://i.imgur.com/rgOmL.jpg

A
R
T
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Tue 8 Feb, 2011 09:20 pm
@failures art,
Been there, done that, a number of times, Art, but for this there's never too many times.
0 Replies
 
H2O MAN
 
  -2  
Reply Fri 11 Feb, 2011 06:27 am
@JTT,
Don't be an ass JT.
JTT
 
  2  
Reply Fri 11 Feb, 2011 08:14 pm
@H2O MAN,
h2oman, avoiding reality every chance he gets.
0 Replies
 
Advocate
 
  0  
Reply Sun 13 Feb, 2011 11:43 am
@failures art,
failures art wrote:

http://i.imgur.com/rgOmL.jpg

A
R
T


This says it all. Thanks!
0 Replies
 
H2O MAN
 
  0  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2011 05:35 am


THE "GIPPER?" COME ON, YOU'RE JOKING, RIGHT?
0 Replies
 
 

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