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Legacy Loans

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Apologies for the long post; I didn't have time to write a short one. Apologies too, for weighing in too late to contribute to the conversation.

They say liberal is someone who won't even take his own side in an argument, and so it was with me this President's Day. I received an astonishing document in the mail maybe a month ago, from Brian Lamb of C-Span, asking me to rank every president from one to forty-three on ten "Individual Leadership Characteristics." I remember chuckling at the ILC's fine-grained sensitivity. Maybe there are people who can really responsibly rank John Tyler vis-a-vis Ulysses S. Grant as to their "Administrative Skills," Grover Cleveland versus Calvin Coolidge as to their "Morality Authority"--but I am not that man. I sent apologies to Mr. Lamb; I hadn't, I explained, anything near the erudition to carry out the appointed task.

Then, last Monday, I learned that America's "presidential historians" had, without benefit of my vote, named Ronald Reagan the tenth-best president in United States history.

I looked down the columns of participants, and saw the name of Annelise Anderson of the Hoover Institute, who I'm sure is a perfectly decent soul, public servant, and scholar, but whose most recent contribution to the republic of letters has been the editing of hagiographic collections quite explicitly designed to burnish Ronald Reagan in the marketplace of historic reputation.

Here's how Anderson introduced her co-edited Reagan In His Own Hand: The Writings of Ronald Reagan that Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America.

The triumph of free markets and democracy over totalitarianism is the great political story of the 20th century, and Ronald Reagan was one of its most visible authors.

There is no doubt that he was the Great Communicator; and the words with which he so adeptly communicated live on. Not only his spoken words, but his written words, too -- which survive in his own hand, in numerous speeches and letters he drafted on yellow pads.

What a person writes reflects his thinking and his values, and gives us greater insight into his soul than a ghosted speech, a press conference, or even a private conversation. Reagan's writings may, therefore, be his most important gift to us -- because they explain the man behind the accomplishments. They reveal the thinking that drove his policies and strategies as president (and, earlier, as governor of California). And they reveal the knowledge, intelligence, determination, and discipline with which he pursued both public office and the goals he set for himself, once there....

The man who emerges from these writings is different from the public figure we all know. It was often said about Reagan that "what you see is what you get," and in a way this is true -- he was open and honest and believed what he said. He spoke from the heart. But Reagan's amiability, adroit use of humor, unfailing courtesy, decency, and confidence in his own beliefs do not fully explain his extraordinary success. These graces -- and that success -- were sustained by the Great Communicator's greatest asset: a formidable intellect, as a reader, a thinker, a strategist -- and a writer.

Most of the texts in the collection are radio scripts Reagan wrote and read during the years he spent as a syndicated commentator between his tenure as California governor and his 1980 run for the president. When the collection came out its hagiographic intent was rather explicit; indeed it was inscribed in the very subtitle: "...Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America"--this almost was revelation. (The more toned-down original working subtitle was apparently "A Life In Letters, and Reagan's Path to Victory"). The title, meanwhile, was even more heavy-handidly ideological: the notion of newly discovered texts in Reagan's own handwriting was quite histrionically presented as clinching evidence that Reagan was not stupid but smart ("a formidable intellect, as a reader, a thinker, a strategist").

To someone who never thought Reagan was stupid, reviewing all this has been strange. Such unalloyed special pleading is not particularly scholarly. It fits right in, however, with the extraordinarily self-conscious political strategy with which conservatives have pursued the matter of Reagan's historical reputation--as a political campaign.

One of the things I liked most about Will's book restoring the "reality-based Reagan" is that it's not just a model of responsible historical debunking--though it's certainly that: tough-minded in spirit but moderate in tone, responsible in its scholarship but readable in its execution--but that it's also a work of investigative journalism, sniffing out and explaining the story of how this campaign--this literal conspiracy to place right thumbs on the scale of historical judgment--came about.

Even before before reading Tear Down This Myth I had heard, in a vague-ish sort of way, about the Reagan Legacy Project: the campaign of conservatives to get some public building or monument named after Reagan in every county of the United States, to get his face on the dime, even to chisel Old No. 40 on Mount Rushmore. About a year ago, I was fascinated by a presentation by Brad Woodhouse at the 2008 Take Back America conference. Reagan's approval rating at the dénouement of the Iran-Contra scandal in 1987, Woodhouse, pointed out, was forty percent--the lowest of his presidency. A year later it was 57 percent. By the end of his term if was 63 percent. According to Woodhouse, this was not merely the product of a sudden surge in leadership capacity by our 40th president, nor just a sentimental outpouring for an old man after years of public service. It was the result--he claims--of a campaign.

I'm not saying the only reason Reagan ended his term in the good graces of two-thirds of Americans was that ideologues got to work in 1988 squeezing extra points of public approval for a discredited president like the last drops of juice from a dried out lemon. But I suspect it may have been a contributing factor.

And yet you don't even have to agree that his final approval rating had anything to do with the self-concious promotional efforts of conservatives to be offended by their activist manhandling of historical memory. As Will Bunch ably demonstrates, at various points in his career, Reagan often rehabilitated his falling popularity by tacking to the left. He did things like increasing spending. He did things like cutting and running from America's hopeless engagement in a religious civil war in the Middle East (that would be Lebanon, after the bombing of the Marine barracks." He negotiated disarmament with Gorbachev--the most proximate explanation for the popularity with which he left office.

But every last time he did something like that he was excoriated by at least some conservatives for selling out conservatism.

But if he hadn't, he wouldn't have been popular.

But the fact that he was, fortuitously enough, popular in the last months of his presidency, when his connection to conservative purity was most tenuous--and here's where the hustle comes in--"http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brad-woodhouse/another-presidential-lega_b_153154.html" "[allowed] his conservative disciples to redefine his conservative disciples to redefine his presidency as an example of successful conservative governance." And that part worked--objectively so. Newt Gingrich drafted off the public's vague perception that being called a "Reaganite" was a desirable thing, and synonymous not with a flexible ideological pragmatism but with conservative principle, all the way to a conservative takeover of Congress.

Will Bunch's niftiest intervention is correlating the second, more formal wave of right-wing Reagan legacy-building--Grover Norquist's literal "Reagan Legacy Project," with its dimes and Mount Rushmore and more--with conservatives' strategic efforts to discredit the Clinton presidency in the late 1990s, culminating in his politicized impeachment. By then, Bunch argues, they had successfully cast the dye. Bush reassured distrustful conservatives in 2000 by labeling himself, not George H.W. Bush's heir, but Reagan's heir.

The book I reference above, Reagan In His Own Hand, came out in 2004. It's a valuable volume. I've used it in my research on Reagan in the 1970s, and will use it much more before I am through. But I cannot yet however arrive at a judgment over whether, as Annelise Anderson claims in her introduction, whether her chosen texts in fact fairly and satisfactorily establish Reagan's "knowledge, intelligence, determination, and discipline with which he pursued...public office" or his ever-present "humor, unfailing courtesy, decency, and confidence in his own beliefs." Martin and her co-editors, after all, could only put a fraction of Reagan's radio scripts between two covers. It will take a trip or two to the Reagan Library in Simi Valley for me to discover whether their selections were reasonably representative, and whether or not other, excluded, texts better evidence, among other traits, whether Reagan on the radio in the 1970s--is it possible?--ever proved himself indisciplined, unknowledgeable, uncourteous, or indecent. I can't judge these things because the product Reagan In His Own Hand itself is so obviously a part of the broader, and quite explicitly political, public relations project on the part of the conservative movement. It's part of a successful campaign.

How successful? By 2008 Republicans held presidential primary debates at the Reagan Library, in front of Air Force one, figuring "conservatism" as a synonym for "Reaganism" and "conservatism" transitively as a synonym for "virtue."

I hope I don't betray any ideological stripes if I claim that Reagan's legacy is actually more complicated than that, while movement conservatives have an ideological interest in keeping it simple. And that is what Will Bunch quite responsibly shows. One of the most important things about the book is that it will make liberals think better of Reagan. It is, quite literally, fair and balanced--to Reagan. But it is fair in its judgment of the conservative movement as well, I believe. It will make many feel worse about it, because it so plainly lays forth their politicized distortions of the complexity of Reagan's legacy. "There is no doubt that he was the Great Communicator," Annelise Andereson writes. No doubt? No historian should ever say there's "no" doubt about anything.

I'm not claiming to write from some pristine, disinterested position of ideological purity. Especially considering the reason for the necessity of my two time-starve apologies at the top of this post the same. I'm just saying that when Annelise Anderson opened her mail and received C-Span's survey, she didn't worry so much about her lack of qualifications in judging the Cleveland v. Coolidge Morality Authority question to throw the thing away. I suspect instead that if nothing else she voted strategically by putting Reagan on top of all the categories.

I reproach myself for not voting strategically in return by putting RR at forty-third place across the board--strategy in the spirit of doubt. Even though I don't actually think Reagan is rock-bottom in any of the categories this would have been the principled vote nonetheless. The writers who make a living at saying Ronald Reagan is the Greatest American Who Ever Lived do so not (or only partially) as an act of scholarship. They do so (at least partially) as part of a well-financed, decades-long propaganda campaign. I should have sent in the survey with Reagan the only one ranked, 43rd in every category, as a pragmatic gesture in the interests of the highest principles of historical inquiry. I don't think Reagan is the 43rd best president; nor do I think he's the tenth best president. But one historian ranking him 43 across the board as a matter of rote, to cancel out the one who most likely put him at Number One as a matter of rote, at least resets the scale back at zero.


24 Comments

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Reagan wasn't a great man or a great President, but he was the right man for the moment, and that is all it takes. (Just ask Mr. Obama).

He relied heavily on the people around him, and his policies became, to some extent, their policies. Reagan wasn't an economist or even an educated layperson on the subject, so he was subject to the ideas that surrounded him. Some of them were good (Stockman, Volcker, Greenspan later). Some of them were not (Kemp, Laffer, et cetera).

But on the central question of his day, he was right, and he deserves our thanks as the last great antiCommunist we'll ever have.

And the last one we ever needed.

Would I rate him in the top ten? No. Of course, Lincoln wouldn't make the list either (and Bill Clinton and Dwight Eisenhower both would). But he wasn't a bad man or a bad President (as Presidents go). And that's not nuthin'.

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Reagan wasn't an economist or even an educated layperson on the subject, so he was subject to the ideas that surrounded him. Some of them were good (Stockman, Volcker, Greenspan later).

David Stockman? Seriously? You mean this guy:

Yet he was conceding what the liberal Keynesian critics had argued from the outset—the supply-side theory was not a new economic theory at all but only new language and argument to conceal a hoary old Republican doctrine: give the tax cuts to the top brackets, the wealthiest individuals and largest enterprises, and let the good effects "trickle down" through the economy to reach everyone else. Yes, Stockman conceded, when one stripped away the new rhetoric emphasizing across-the-board cuts, the supply-side theory was really new clothes for the unpopular doctrine of the old Republican orthodoxy. "It's kind of hard to sell 'trickle down,'" he explained, "so the supply-side formula was the only way to get a tax policy that was really 'trickle down.' Supply-side is 'trickle-down' theory."
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/198112/david-stockman/5

And Greenspan? The acolyte of Ayn Rand who now says "It may be necessary to temporarily nationalise some banks in order to facilitate a swift and orderly restructuring”? Who had no idea that basing an economic policy on unfettered greed might not be such a good idea after all?

We are in the horrible mess we're in right now because of the "good ideas" of these gentlemen.

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"The triumph of free markets and democracy over totalitarianism is the great political story of the 20th century, and Ronald Reagan was one of its most visible authors."

I count multiple bloopers in this sentence. You can't be serious.

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Whoops. That was Anderson, not RP. Need quotation marks or indents or something.

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Perfesser:

Isn't a pronouncement on presidential leadership from a hack employed by a propaganda mill named after arguably the worst President in US history just slightly oxymoronic?


On the other hand, maybe I went too far with that assessment.

Maybe its just moronic.

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Well, it's been established that the truth was malleable in Reagan's speech, so it goes to follow that the same would hold true for his writings as well. Anderson's book, perhaps suprisingly, does reference his 1961 recording for the AMA, "Ronald Reagan speaks against socialized medicine" (aka Medicare). In his letters, Reagan defends his seemingly out of the blue advocacy for the AMA by saying he liked to help those who need help--while omitting the salient fact that his father-in-law was a member of the AMA. Not coincidentally, his claim to opposing Medicare was his belief in, ta da! states' rights. Many of the seemingly principled stands that Reagan has been canonized for can usually be uncovered for what they really were: an acute sense of opportunity, and how to cloak self-serving actions with a genial veneer of righteousness.

For all its hagiography, I think the Presidential Library does allow some insight into each president. Reagan's writings do provide insight into his depth of thought, while Bush's library will do the same in the opposite fashion, by restricting access to most of Dubya's work-related communications, in favor of endless videos of Barney the Dog.

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wonder if Reagan tells of his deep thoughts about the mass murder he committed around the world

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wonder if Reagan tells of his deep thoughts about the mass murder he committed around the world

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The writers who make a living at saying Ronald Reagan is the Greatest American Who Ever Lived do so not (or only partially) as an act of scholarship. They do so (at least partially) as part of a well-financed, decades-long propaganda campaign.

Te key word being propaganda.


All that Ronald Reagan stood for was being against anything liberal or progressive. Conservatives by nature try to keep things from changing...and Reagan was no exception. He wanted to undo all societal changes that had occurred since the time of the Gilded Age, the Robber Barons and child workers in sweatshops.

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Funny, isn't it how if you're a Conservative

What a person writes reflects his thinking and his values, and gives us greater insight into his soul than a ghosted speech, a press conference, or even a private conversation. Reagan's writings may, therefore, be his most important gift to us -- because they explain the man behind the accomplishments. They reveal the thinking that drove his policies and strategies as president (and, earlier, as governor of California). And they reveal the knowledge, intelligence, determination, and discipline with which he pursued both public office and the goals he set for himself, once there....

is true for Reagan but not when it comes to Obama.

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Come on, Dave, everyone knows that Obama's books were ghost written by Bill Ayers.

http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=OTlkMTdmNDRkMTM1ODZkNGNkZmRiNDFjMDE4YzRjMjg=

If the National Review says so, then it must be true.

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Even magic Negroes don't write like that. Case closed.

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You do have to appreciate the Occam's-Razor-defying knots Conservative truth-deniers twist themselves into. For example, Obama's mom/grandparents, supposedly planning when he was born that he might one day run for President, somehow faked his birth record in 1961 to make it look like he was born in Hawaii. Remarkably prescient of them considering that when Obama was born there were states where his parents would have been arrested merely for being married, and that in many states Obama wouldn't have been able to sit at the front of a bus, eat at better restaurants, or even drink from most public water fountains.

My all-time favorite though is Saddam Hussein supposedly spending billions to develop WMD's but then hiding them in neighboring countries (instead of, you know, using them to keep US forces at bay) just do he could make George W. Bush look foolish once his country was overrrun. Because after all, if you're a Middle-Eastern Dictator, holding on to the power you've amassed throughout your lifetime isn't nearly as important as making American right-wingers look like total freaking idiots.

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I think my deceased dog can make American right wingers look like total freaking idiots. Piece of cake.

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This column is very fair and balanced, Rick. A little too fair and balanced. You didn't mention the Iran-Contra scandal, in which the senile movie star sold Hawk missiles and Tow missiles to Iran. (How is that not treason?) You didn't mention the fact that he gave the first major speech of his presidential campaign at Philadelphia, MS, as a shout-out to the white supremacists. He also mainstreamed racist expressions such as "welfare queens".

He was a racist and a traitor.

WORST. PRESIDENT. EVER.

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Actually, Rick did mention the Iran-Contra scandal. Search for the phrase.

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OK, he mentioned Iran-Contra in passing, in a reference to his popularity ratings. I think it deserved more than an honorable mention. It was huge.

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This column is very fair and balanced, Rick. A little too fair and balanced. You didn't mention the Iran-Contra scandal, in which the senile movie star sold Hawk missiles and Tow missiles to Iran. (How is that not treason?) You didn't mention the fact that he gave the first major speech of his presidential campaign at Philadelphia, MS, as a shout-out to the white supremacists. He also mainstreamed racist expressions such as "welfare queens".

He was a racist and a traitor.

Every thing you say is true (although I'm not sure if Reagan himself was a racist, but he certainly ran on it, and maybe that's even worse) and I still say Reagan wasn't the worst President ever.

I'll see your Iran-Contra Scandal and your MS speech, and raise you the worst attack on American soil ever, the Katrina disaster, the wholesale politicization and selloff of the Executive Branch, the attack on American Civil liberties, and an economic collapse. I'm sure I'm forgetting as few things too.

In your face, Riesz Fischer!

Sorry, but George W. Bush was the
WORST. PRESIDENT. EVER.

-Thanks for playing.-

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You bring up some good points. But the senile movie star did start the downward slide. He's the one who started selling off the middle class, and he is the first president in modern times who used racist rhetoric openly while he was in office. I was just thinking that Bush was just the one who was in there when the senile movie star's policies came to fruition.

But when you list all those points together I have to admit, Dumbya was really bad. Maybe I should just say that the senile movie star was the stupidest president ever, if not the worst. I mean, he was a senile movie star.

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My thesis is that since Nixon, each succeeding Republican Administration has built on the deceit, malfeasance and criminality of it's Republican predecessor. Iran/Contra, because it was a violation of the will of Congress, was IMO worse than Watergate. Bush 43 went way beyond anything Reagan/Bush41 did.

This is why we must prosecute lawbreakers from the Bush 43 Administration. Every time these people come to power they get worse. Without justice this time, the next Republican who comes to power may take the phrase "Permanent Republican Majority" as a centerpiece policy goal.

As far as racism goes, Nixon had his "Southern Strategy", and Bush 41 had Willie Horton. They can't get any more overt than they are already, and its a losing proposition for them.

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One of the good things Reagan did, in the Tax Reform Act of 1986, was to raise the tax on capital gains (from 20% to 28%) and to equalize taxes on income from wealth (capital gains, dividends) and income from wages. This tax reform, which liberals had sought for decades, lasted until it was undone by Clinton in 1997; it was later further undone by Bush. The tax on long-term capital gains is now 15%, little more than half of what it was after Reagan's 1986 Tax Reform Act. Obama has talked about raising it to 20%, which would still be 8% lower than it was under Reagan. There's simply no good reason, period, for taxing capital gains at a lower rate than wages.

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I believe that Reagan's foreign policy was mixed but his domestic policy was disasterous. In the foreign policy area, Reagan's hardline stance against the Soviets in the early eighties, his support of the Contras, and the Iran-Contra scandal were definite negaives. On the positive side there was the meetings with Gorbachev in the late eighties and not militarily trying to fight terrorism. However Reagan will probably be remembered by future historians for enacting his economic agenda upon the rest of the country that eventually led to the economic disistater that we now face in the first decades of the twenty-first century. According to Willian Kleinknecht, in his book "The Man who sold the World," Reagan began process of deregulation that eventually resulted in the overturing of the Glass-Steagall act in 1999. These deregulationary measures have led to banks overspeculating which has resulted in the savings and loan crisis of the late eighties and now the housing bubble burst of the latter half of this decade. Because of these deeply flawed economic decisions, Reagan will likely be in the bottom third of presidents in the next 25-30 years.

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I link the campaign to manufacture Reagan as a "Great Man in History" with the parallel campaign being run from the mid to late 60's on to diminish the reputation of Franklin Roosevelt as one in the same. Thankfully FDR still survives in this poll in the number three position, and given the historical distance, that is probably a fair and mature rank, which will be enhanced as we now go back through the process of rebuilding the financial regulatory infrastructure yet one time more, the destruction of which was the cause for the campaign to destroy the reputation of the one responsible for it, and to put in his place, Ronald Reagan.

Anderson says as introduction:

"The triumph of free markets and democracy over totalitarianism is the great political story of the 20th century, and Ronald Reagan was one of its most visible authors."

The problem is right there -- the association of democracy and free markets as linked and equivalent. You have to get folk to worship at the feet of the unregulated free market somehow, and for that you need a great revelation, a prophet, and yes probably the fear that if any element of the free market is missing (due to regulation) one will fall into totalitarianism.

For such ends, you most remove FDR from the dime, and replace with Reagan.

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It may be a single-issue measure, but one of the most telling is to look at how the Federal Debt performed under various administrations.

Subtract end-of-Administration GDP from the starting level, and do the same for debt. Divide one by the other.

Results? Republican'ts are very bad for your wealth, according to this statistic and valid all the way back to WWII.


(Don't worry about who controlled congress during each period; it doesn't change the results.)

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