Weekend open thread: Reagan's 100th birthday edition

Sunday, February 6 would have been Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday, and the occasion will be marked by a graveside ceremony in California and a tribute video to be aired during the Superbowl. I try not to speak ill of the dead, but I honestly struggle to think of anything Reagan did that benefited the country, besides signing the arms control treaty with the USSR. Not only was he nowhere near one of the great presidents, his main legacy was massive income inequality. He cut programs aimed at helping the poor and demonized welfare recipients successfully, paving the way for the welfare reforms of the 1990s. I disliked Reagan’s politics so much that Barack Obama’s rhetorical similarity to the Gipper was a big reason I never could warm up to Obama’s “inspiring” speeches.

The Reagan-worship in today’s Republican Party is comical. If Reagan were a candidate today, he’d be assailed as a “RINO” for his tax-raising, big-spending policies. Yes, Reagan raised many taxes as governor and as president, not that many Republicans would admit that today. At Think Progress, Alex Seitz-Wald published “10 Things Conservatives Don’t Want You To Know About Ronald Reagan,” and one of them was news to me, even though I remember the 1980s well: “Reagan signed into law a bill that made any immigrant who had entered the country before 1982 eligible for amnesty. […] The bill helped 3 million people and millions more family members gain American residency.”

This is an open thread. What’s on your mind this weekend, Bleeding Heartland readers?

UPDATE: I like Robert Borosage’s post on “The Reagan Ruins.”

SECOND UPDATE: Daily Kos user Clarknt67 on Reagan’s years-long non-response to the AIDS epidemic.

About the Author(s)

desmoinesdem

  • Dead ex-refrigerator salesman

    I know a man who (I believe) coined that and delights in using it regularly. I love it as a counter to the semi-religious fervor some feel about rr.

    I know of not one good thing to say about him.

    He redistributed our wealth in the eighties.

    He made it fashionable to bash Labor.

  • Saw this today...

    Posted on a very young anarcho-punk friends site today.

    “Punk’s not dead, but Reagan is.”

    Sums it up quite nicely, methinks.

  • We saw him as a joke

    To the outside world (my perspective in the 80’s), Reagan presidency was a joke and proof that things were not going well in this country. Of course, I must admit that much of the snickering was based on the superficial fact that he had been a B-list movie star.  

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