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Text Graphic: 'American Dreams - Ketchup Is a Vegetable'

by H. Scott Prosterman

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A waving American Flag. SAN RAFAEL, CA, USA - Since his death, Ronald Reagan has been lionized and canonized by the American media. So let's examine the Reagan Presidency and his legacy.

Perhaps the greatest myth, and one of the greatest spin jobs in history, is the notion that Reagan's foreign policy brought the collapse of the Soviet Union. Communism was a flawed political-economic theory whose weaknesses caused it to collapse upon itself. Communism was an ideology built on lies, corruption and the abuse of the very workers it espoused to protect. By accelerating the arms race, and draining American resources for greater needs, Reagan is falsely given credit for bankrupting the Soviet economy. The Soviet political economy had been bankrupt for 70 years. Sure, Reagan outspent them. But at what cost to us?

Now the most disingenuous spin machine of all, the one run by the Karl Rove In-House White House Ad Agency intends to play the nostalgia card to help Bush Jr. win re-election. Excuse me? Reagan hasn't even begun his bi-coastal posthumous tour, yet Rove and the obedient media have already made Reagan a Dead Man Walking -- or rather a Dead Man Stumping on the campaign trail.

As a former President, Reagan is entitled to the full honors of a state funeral. But I'm left wondering that if Bush Jr. weren't up for re-election, if the Reagan Klan would be content with a state funeral in California, without the cross-country production of public viewing in California, followed by hauling his coffin across the country to the Capitol Rotunda, followed by a return trip to Sacramento for state viewing and ceremony and then BACK to Simi Valley for burial. That's a lot of miles for a dead man. And for what? To stir the pot of neoconservative nostalgia for Bush Jr's re-election campaign. I don't recall Truman, Eisenhower or Johnson logging that many miles after they died. But they weren't posthumously involved in any legacy's campaign.

Wasn't it Reagan's people who used to say that the American media was hopelessly, shamelessly and transparently liberal? In the past few days, even "liberal" columnists have stepped up to offer nostalgic references with a positive spin. Why make the pretension of being a good sport, while conservatives compare Bush Jr. to Reagan and say the young boy doesn't measure up?

The Gipper, The Great Communicator and the Father of the Conservative movement has been lionized as "the sunny guy who brought us 'Morning In America.'" He is fondly remembered as a genial man and effective governor and president. Effective at what?

What am I not remembering here? What are THEY not remembering here?

Reagan and his cadre never were good sports. I remember The Great Communicator as being the master of double-speak, namely of accusing the opposition of his own sins. Reagan and his boys paved the way for all the excesses of both Bush administrations; "excesses" is a euphemism for a lot of bad things:

The Israeli-Palestinian situation begs for evenhandedness. Any historical summary reveals that this has been lacking since the British made two separate agreements on the same piece of real estate during World War I. Foreign Secretary Henry McMahon cut a deal with the Arabs, and the Balfour Declaration, stating the Crown's favor of seeing a Jewish State in Palestine, was soon to follow. Arabs and Israelis have behaved criminally toward each other. The Palestinian leadership has been shown to be corrupt and has missed many opportunities for peace. The Israeli leadership has carried out an arrogant and brutal occupation, enabled by American financial and military support.

American Middle East policy was notably uneven under Reagan, supporting Sharon's illegal settlement campaign and saying nothing when the Israeli Army committed atrocities against Palestinian civilians. Israel has a right to defend itself and must do so. But expanding the settlements into Palestinian territory, pirating water and agricultural resources and collective punishment do not serve Israel's interests. Reagan supported these counter-productive policies more than any other American administration.



One lasting memory shall always be seeing Reagan running for a helicopter with his hand cupped to his ear, pretending to strain to hear a reporter's question. He would then shake his head dismissively; flash a big smile and exit to the parade wave. He might as well have been saying, "I'd like to help you, son, but you're too young to vote."

For various reasons, I took Reagan's agenda very personally. My completing a Master's degree at the University of Michigan coincided with Reagan's taking office in 1981. In those first 3 months:

  • The job I had been offered through the (CETA) Comprehensive Employment and Training Act was eliminated because Reagan ended the program as "wasteful, liberal spending."

  • My access to legal counsel to fight an unscrupulous landlord was suddenly ended when Reagan cut the budget for the Legal Aid Corporation by 90%.

  • My access to medical care ended because the clinic I had gone to in Ann Arbor closed due to a cut in Federal funding.

  • My access to government assistance with staggering utility bills was eliminated.
I was punished by Reagan for having just finished grad school without a trust fund or job to fall back on. I actually had secured a job, but t hat was eliminated a week before I was scheduled to start.

In the meantime, billions were spent on weapons programs that were obsolete before any actual hardware was produced.

Before Reagan, there really WAS a compassionate brand of conservatism. There was also a Ripon Party, a "liberal" wing of the Republican Party that advocated a balanced budget and fiscal responsibility. They got kicked out of the Republican "big tent" under Reagan to make room for Falwell and the Moral Majority.

I don't deny the oft-repeated excuse offered this week that, "Reagan was a good man at heart, really believed in what he was doing and maybe made some mistakes." Maybe? Maybe yes!

Generally, I respect the custom of decency of allowing the funeral to occur and a period of mourning to pass before trashing a dead man. But since, Rove and the In-House White House Agency are already making nostalgic political hay out of Reagan's death, then it's only fair and not too early to point out how Ronald Reagan destroyed much of the fabric and spirit of this country. Indeed, children died from widespread malnutrition engendered by Reagan's policies. People froze to death because they could no longer get help to pay huge bills that had suddenly spiked. People were wrongfully evicted from their homes because they couldn't find the legal resources to fight bad landlords. Morning in America?

Oh my gosh! I almost forgot to mention the Savings & Loan scandal and Reagan's de-regulation of the banking and securities industries. Oh yes, those little gifts to the geriatric millionaires in Tiburon and Malibu who served as Reagan's "informal circle of advisers." What did they wrought? This opened the door for merger upon merger upon mega-merger.

Reagan's deregulation stripped away the barriers of both vertical and horizontal integration, enabling companies to buy companies they know nothing about, only to break them up, sell off the parts and wreck thousands of careers, lives and dreams. It has allowed companies to buy up entire sectors of a production, distribution and marketing process. Anti-trust laws used to prevent such things, but Reagan decided it was good.

Merger upon merger limits consumer choices and gives corporations undue power to control the marketplace. Don't like the increasingly limited programming choices in the radio market? Thank Reagan. Don't like the dwindling number of mom and pop businesses that were run out by Starbucks, Barnes & Noble and the like? Thank Reagan.

Reagan introduced the notion that the corporation knows what's best for the rest of the world, and that what's good for them is good for everybody. That's how we got here.

Most notably, Reagan paved the way for the mendacity, secrecy, wrongful claims of executive privilege and mean spirit of both Bush Administrations. Now Karl Rove wants us to remember the good old days of Reagan, and promote Bush Jr. as the ongoing legacy. Let us remember the Reagan legacy more clearly than they want us to. Let us remember that the current presidency is a twisted evolution of ideas that began by throwing bones to the religious right, and evolved to letting the dogs run the pound.



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