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Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 09:50 AM
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Rating Reagan: A Bogus Legacy
Consortiumnews.com
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2004/060704.html

Rating Reagan: A Bogus Legacy

By Robert Parry
June 7, 2004

The U.S. news media’s reaction to Ronald Reagan’s death is putting on display what has happened to American public debate in the years since Reagan’s political rise in the late 1970s: a near-total collapse of serious analytical thinking at the national level.

Across the U.S. television dial and in major American newspapers, the commentary is fawning almost in a Pravda-like way, far beyond the normal reticence against speaking ill of the dead. Left-of-center commentators compete with conservatives to hail Reagan’s supposedly genial style and his alleged role in “winning the Cold War.” The Washington Post’s front-page headline – “Ronald Reagan Dies” – was in giant type more fitting the Moon Landing.

Yet absent from the media commentary was the one fundamental debate that must be held before any reasonable assessment can be made of Ronald Reagan and his Presidency: How, why and when was the Cold War “won”? If, for instance, the United States was already on the verge of victory over a foundering Soviet Union in the early-to-mid-1970s, as some analysts believe, then Reagan’s true historic role may not have been “winning” the Cold War, but helping to extend it. If the Soviet Union was already in rapid decline, rather than in the ascendancy that Reagan believed, then the massive U.S. military build-up in the 1980s was not decisive; it was excessive. The terrible bloodshed in Central America and Africa, including death squad activities by U.S. clients, was not some necessary evil; it was a war crime aided and abetted by the Reagan administration.

That debate, however, has never been engaged, except by Reagan acolytes who chose to glorify Reagan’s role in “winning the Cold War” rather than examining the assumptions that guided his policies in the 1970s and 1980s. Although it’s largely forgotten now, Reagan’s rise within the Republican Party was as a challenge to the “détente” strategies pursued by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger – before the Watergate scandal forced Nixon from office – and later by Gerald Ford. Détente was, in effect, an effort to ease the Cold War to an end, much as finally occurred in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Cold Warriors Nixon and Kissinger – along with much of the U.S. intelligence community – had recognized the systemic weaknesses of the Soviet system, which was falling desperately behind the West in technology and in the ability to produce consumer goods desired by the peoples of Eastern Europe. One only needed to look at night-time satellite photos to see the disparity between the glittering city lights of North America, Western Europe and parts of Asia compared to the darkness across the Soviet bloc..."

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Deja Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 09:53 AM
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1. Click on my green sig link... Reagan's "legacy" is an insult to us all.
Edited on Sun Jun-13-04 09:53 AM by HypnoToad
A big slap in our faces. Nothing more. Reagan was the root of the end of this country.

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Name removed Donating Member (0 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 09:56 AM
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amber dog democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 10:25 AM
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7. I never understood his popularity
Unless it is an indication of the stupidity of the American voters who supported him.
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Oddman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 10:00 AM
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3. And the Repugs are going to force him on us everyday
by putting him on the 10 dollar bill . . .

God - I hope we do becaome a cashless society just so I don't have to view his mug everyday . . . Won't this offend at least half of America????

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laura888 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 10:00 AM
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4. that first paragraph says it all
"a near-total collapse of serious analytical thinking at the national level."

AMEN, brother, AMEN!
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lovedems Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 10:12 AM
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5. The republicans have near success with marginalizing those who
think differently then they do. When you succeed in marginalizing opinions, you don't have to listen to those opinions anymore because you can shrug them off as "political hacks" or "uniformed".

My right wing brother has marginalized me as "over the top politically" because I disagree with this administration and their policies and feels that he no longer has to listen to what I say because "I am an extremist and I don't know what I am talking about". He listens to Hannity (not Rush).

There isn't honest debate with people like him because he thinks he knows everything and I know nothing. Becasue he has marginalized my political opinions, he is so effing smug and condescending.

Fortunately, my family are solid democrats and they come to my defense when I am not there personally to defend myself.
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amber dog democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-13-04 10:23 AM
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6. It all serves to uphold the Reagan Myth
The same Reagan was an FBI informent, supporter of death squads and Apartheid.
His vison of America was largely ficticious. I don't see him as a great anything, only an abberation, a false image, a superficial actor who worked for whomever paid him well.

The amazing thing is the extent that he believed his in own illusions.
The emperor NEVER had any clothes.
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