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Happy Birthday Mr. President
Happy Birthday Mr. Reagan Ronnie, We Hardly Knew You
By Steven F. Hayward
As the nation marks Ronald Reagan's 92nd birthday on February
6, it is
worth noting that a subtle revision of Reagan's reputation is taking
place among the nation's intellectual elite. Reagan's deepening
popularity with Americans and his success in office are now too
overwhelming to be denied. One-by-one, the stock criticisms made of
Reagan throughout his career are falling by the wayside.
One sign of the times is the December issue of Esquire
magazine, which
named Reagan "the greatest living American." This is notable because
Esquire published numerous anti-Reagan articles in the 1970s and 1980s,
including one by Richard Reeves in 1979 entitled "Why Reagan Won't Make It."
Today, Reeves is at work on a book explaining why Reagan did
make
it. In 1979 Reeves dismissed Reagan, saying "Reagan seems to be a
nostalgia figure whose time has passed; he looks like the past, he talks
about the past."
But now it is liberals like Reeves who are sputtering about the
past and trying to explain why Reagan's legacy dominates the present, so much
so that the New York Times' Bill Keller recently wrote that the George W. Bush
administration can be said to represent Ronald Reagan's third term.
We'll have to wait some years before we know how Reeves will
handle this embarrassing problem, but a clue comes from a recent article in
the
Washington Monthly that claims Reagan succeeded because he was a
liberal! In "Reagan's Liberal Legacy" Joshua Green lays out the argument
that "many of his actions as president wound up facilitating liberal
objectives." Look: Reagan acceded to tax increases, oversaw a large
increase in the size of the federal government, and made peace with the
Soviet Union.
To be sure, many conservatives at the time angrily criticized
Reagan for
some of these tergiversations from purist conservative policy, though
both the conservative criticism of the time and today's liberal larceny
of the Reagan legacy ignore both the particular details and the general
context of Reagan's actions.
The growth of government under Reagan taught conservatives a
bitter lesson about the momentum of the administrative state, though as a
thought experiment people should ask themselves how much more the government
would have grown had there been a second term for Jimmy Carter. While Reagan
acceded to tax increases, he drew the line against raising marginal income tax
rates—the key tenet of supply side economics and hence the central
battleground of today's tax policy battles.
He did indeed make peace with the Soviet Union, because the
Soviet Union was about to become defunct under Reagan's relentless
pressure—pressure the liberals opposed every step of the way.
More comical is the way liberals now acknowledge Reagan as a
deep
thinker as a back door way of attacking George W. Bush. The Times'
Keller wrote: "Reagan has been enjoying an intellectual rehabilitation.
The publication in 2001 of Reagan's original, handwritten scripts for
radio homilies he delivered caused many skeptics to concede that he was a
better writer and thinker than most had generally imagined." Unlike
you-know-who in the White House now. Keller adds: "Reagan's principles were
developed over decades and fortified by a selective but extensive reading of
history. [Reagan had] studied, lifelong convictions [and] arrived at the Oval
Office pretty much a finished product."
What happened to the charge that Reagan's only reading was
Human Events and Reader's Digest? That he was helpless without his
three-by-five cards, and was a creation of his handlers? It has been a cliche
for almost three decades now that Reagan has exceeded expectations, and his
becoming the oldest living ex-president in our history is another such
occasion.
Shortly after Reagan's landslide election to the presidency in
1980, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company produced a study of the effect of
the presidency on life expectancy, finding that being president shortens a
person's life expectancy nearly as much as cigarette smoking. On average,
being president reduced life expectancy by 3.9 years (or 5.2
years among 20th century presidents).
Reagan, Met Life projected, could expect to live only another
11 years, to 1992. That's another one for the Reagan "underestimation"
archive, which is large enough to be an encyclopedia.
Happy birthday Mr. President.
USS Ronald Reagan CVN 76
On
March 4, 2001, the United States christened the Navy's newest Nimitz-class
aircraft carrier the USS Ronald Reagan.
This 90,000-ton nuclear-powered ship will be the most sophisticated
fighting ship in America's fleet. It honors a man who made America great
again, rebuilt
America's
defenses and won the Cold War.
You can proudly show your support for the USS Ronald Reagan by
getting a Navy ball cap with the ship's unique ID number, CVN-76. Click
here to get yours.

Click
here for the official christening website.
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What July Fourth Means to Me
By Ronald Reagan
Editor's note: When he was president, Ronald Reagan wrote the following
piece for Independence Day in 1981. Aide Michael Deaver later wrote:
"This 4th of July message is the President's own words and written
initially in his own hand." Contrary to media fiction, many of
Reagan's speeches, commentaries, and other papers were written by Ronald
Reagan alone in his own hand.
**************************************************
For one who was born and grew up in the small towns of the Midwest,
there is a special kind of nostalgia about the Fourth of July.
I remember it as a day almost as long anticipated as Christmas. This was
helped along by the appearance in store windows of all kinds of
fireworks and colorful posters advertising them with vivid pictures.
No later than the third of July - sometimes earlier - Dad would bring
home what he felt he could afford to see go up in smoke and flame. We'd
count and recount the number of firecrackers, display pieces and other
things and go to bed determined to be up with the sun so as to offer the
first, thunderous notice of the Fourth of July.
I'm afraid we didn't give too much thought to the meaning of the day.
And, yes, there were tragic accidents to mar it, resulting from careless
handling of the fireworks. I'm sure we're better off today with
fireworks largely handled by professionals. Yet there was a thrill never
to be forgotten in seeing a tin can blown 30 feet in the air by a giant
"cracker" - giant meaning it was about 4 inches long.
But enough of nostalgia. Somewhere in our growing up we began to be
aware of the meaning of days and with that awareness came the birth of
patriotism. July Fourth is the birthday of our nation. I believed as a
boy, and believe even more today, that it is the birthday of the
greatest nation on earth.
There is a legend about the day of our nation's birth in the little hall
in Philadelphia, a day on which debate had raged for hours. The men
gathered there were honorable men hard-pressed by a king who had flouted
the very laws they were willing to obey. Even so, to sign the
Declaration of Independence was such an irretrievable act that the walls
resounded with the words "treason, the gallows, the headsman's
axe," and the issue remained in doubt.
The legend says that at that point a man rose and spoke. He is described
as not a young man, but one who had to summon all his energy for an
impassioned plea. He cited the grievances that had brought them to this
moment and finally, his voice falling, he said, "They may turn
every tree into a gallows, every hole into a grave, and yet the words of
that parchment can never die. To the mechanic in the workshop, they will
speak hope; to the slave in the mines, freedom. Sign that parchment.
Sign if the next moment the noose is around your neck, for that
parchment will be the textbook of freedom, the Bible of the rights of
man forever."
He fell back exhausted. The 56 delegates, swept up by his eloquence,
rushed forward and signed that document destined to be as immortal as a
work of man can be. When they turned to thank him for his timely
oratory, he was not to be found, nor could any be found who knew who he
was or how he had come in or gone out through the locked and guarded
doors.
Well, that is the legend. But we do know for certain that 56 men, a
little band so unique we have never seen their like since, had pledged
their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor. Some gave their
lives in the war that followed, most gave their fortunes, and all
preserved their sacred honor.
What manner of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists, 11
were merchants and tradesmen, and nine were farmers. They were
soft-spoken men of means and education; they were not an unwashed
rabble. They had achieved security but valued freedom more. Their
stories have not been told nearly enough.
John Hart was driven from the side of his desperately ill wife. For more
than a year he lived in the forest and in caves before he returned to
find his wife dead, his children vanished, his property destroyed. He
died of exhaustion and a broken heart.
Carter Braxton of Virginia lost all his ships, sold his home to pay his
debts, and died in rags. And so it was with Ellery, Clymer, Hall,
Walton, Gwinnett, Rutledge, Morris, Livingston and Middleton.
Nelson personally urged Washington to fire on his home and destroy it
when it became the headquarters for General Cornwallis. Nelson died
bankrupt.
But they sired a nation that grew from sea to shining sea. Five million
farms, quiet villages, cities that never sleep, 3 million square miles
of forest, field, mountain and desert, 227 million people with a
pedigree that includes the bloodlines of all the world.
In recent years, however, I've come to think of that day as more than
just the birthday of a nation.
It also commemorates the only true philosophical revolution in all
history.
Oh, there have been revolutions before and since ours. But those
revolutions simply exchanged one set of rules for another. Ours was a
revolution that changed the very concept of government.
Let the Fourth of July always be a reminder that here in this land, for
the first time, it was decided that man is born with certain God-given
rights; that government is only a convenience created and managed by the
people, with no powers of its own except those voluntarily granted to it
by the people.
We sometimes forget that great truth, and we never should.
Happy Fourth of July,
Ronald Reagan
President of the United States |
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