Why Reagan lives on
Posted by RonC 11 years, 3 months ago to Government
Today marks the ten year anniversary of Ronald Reagan's death. For many the faith, hope, and courage of this Past President lives on.
You type: | You see: |
---|---|
*italics* | italics |
**bold** | bold |
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
A friend of ours farms in his spare time and would LOVE to be a full-time farmer.
He told us that even if he was given a farm he couldn't afford to be a full-time farmer because it is too costly and you can't make enough of a profit to justify the pursuit.
He works for a major fire apparatus manufacturer full-time.
It seems to me what George Bernard Shaw and his followers all want is the productivity of capitalism, without the freedom. That will never work. I submit, this is the core reason, after hundreds of years of working to accomplish OWO, it will never work. The desire for freedom and sovereignty is too deep.
2) We baby-boomers didn't bother having babies.
3) 50 years of supporting a dependent, violent reproductive sub-culture has bred jealousy unheard of in prior times.
4) Bush didn't have to get into conventional wars. We aren't fighting another nation ... we are at war with an idea. Assassination is surgical and relatively inexpensive.
5) With this President we are also engaged in a "civil war of ideas". Our youth has been indoctrinated into thinking that there is something intrinsically wrong with the American Way. If we lose this generation, all will be lost.
6) Currently, there is a popular mindset that "WASP-types" need to be extinct in order for the world to function under the NWO. Since farmers are currently "WASP-types" and they are disappearing at an alarming rate, no food = mass chaos.
I don't see much hope for our future.
This is another example of government not understanding the big picture.
Thanks for this post.
---T
Then again, some forums become so polluted with raging opinions and seminar postings there is no debate there either. I would welcome debate with any. My daughter went to the College of Wooster, in Ohio. She studied "Women's Studies". Through debate and verification of results, and growth on her part and disenchantment with Utopia...she has become as libertarian as I am. It's one thing to parade the poor out in front of the Nation, air out all the misfortune and unfairness the rich have rained upon them, and cook up a scheme to throw billions to trillions of dollars at the poor. (I doubt anyone can accurately measure the money since LBJ's war on poverty.) It is quite another to give a young person the tools and knowledge to make their own life better. 16 years after her graduation, my Daughter understands that difference. She went back to school and became an RN, a position where she can actually, substantially, help someone. I would offer the same debate and idea exchange to Maph or anyone else interested. So far, that's what I like about AS people.
I was recently in Southern California and visited the Reagan Library in Simi Valley. If you are ever in the area I can't recommend it too highly. There are great exhibits about every aspect of his career, and the actual Air Force One that he and six other presidents used. I watched the videotape of his speech concerning the Iran-Contra affair. He made a straightforward admission of what had happened, took full responsibility, said he had made mistakes, pledged to take action against those responsible, and then vowed to move on. What a contrast to our current weasel in chief!
For me, perhaps the most rewarding part of the visit were the countless reminders of Reagan's irrepressible optimism. As the article notes, he took office at a time when the economy was a wreck and the nation was mired in a deep "malaise," (Jimmy Carter's term). Reagan knew that if the government got out of the way and people were allowed to pursue their ambitions and dreams, the economy would take care of itself. He did his best to get the government out of the way (he had to work around a Democratic congress) and lo and behold, the economy took care of itself!
Reagan also knew that communism was a dead end and would collapse of its own weight. He stood up to the Soviets, refused to back away from the Strategic Defense Initiative (and even offered to share it with them), challenged Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall (there was a tape of that speech at the Reagan library--fabulous), and lo and behold, the Soviet Union crumbled!
Reagan made mistakes and I didn't agree with him on everything, but I think he was the 20th Century's best president. The man had not only substance but style, and the many "beautiful people" and intelligensia of the time who ridiculed him as an idiot now stand revealed, in the light of history, as the true idiots. The Reagan library is a fitting tribute to the man.
Of course, he did have his down sides... in more than one issue he was the "face" behind other politician's mechanizations... I remember hearing more than once (from both sides) that he was an actor, playing a part, in essence a Puppet President... but not unlike what Putin did in Russia recently (maybe this is where Vlad got his idea from???) he gave something to his country that had been devastatingly missing for years - national pride. Took us from a nation of self-hating wimps to a national superpower that could - and did - stand up to our enemies,, foreign, and would not have allowed the current horsepucky of enemies, domestic we are so rampantly stuffed with.
I can see... in a nation where, electing Empress Klinton to replace King Obama, a return to the America we despised and detested in the Carter era... a weak willed, soft nation begging our enemies to please break down our gates and pseudo-"forcing" us into islamo-communism. Look at how we've already thrown that gate wide open... and just wait for 8 more years...
God, how I miss that man. When I think of what did him in, not unlike his counterpart in Britain, it makes me sad. Lost a great generation, we did.
that the golden goose will die as a direct result. -- j
But someone with a face for TV, a gentle way with words, maybe sings a cool Al Greene, and his ego demands he be center stage. I think those are the most important factors today. If you didn't need the adoration to complete your psyche, why would you take the punishment of an election cycle? Maybe 1 in a billion would do it for love of country. So what we get is a guy that can't make a timely decision, but has been on TV everyday since the summer of 2008. Worse yet, he's still running for something, that's what he really know how to do.
thanks.
I'm a pistol-loving person, myself. Now that the weather is warming up, I'm going to take some friends to the range and do our every-so-often testing of various calibres against water-filled plastic jugs. Not only is it a good comparison of hydrostatic shock, it's WAY fun on a warm day!
I needed a job. I was fortunate enough to find one. In my paradigm it never occurred to me that I needed a handout. That was 1970, so there were safety nets. If we argue needs, we need to own the definition.
Load more comments...