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basskisser wrote:
I know, I know, all of you conservatives are too blinded to even KNOW when you are duped by president who wasn't really that great. You just couldn't be more wrong. I don't like a lot of what Reagan did, and I consider his political career to have ended in failure - Iran-Contra - despite the very high approval ratings he had from the public at the end of his term. The greatness of a political leader is NOT determined by whether or not you like the things he did. Greatness is determined by measurable and lasting impact he makes. Reagan was simply a giant. This small statement in an analysis piece last Sunday by Ronald Brownstein, the lead political writer for the L.A. Times, explains why: During the New Deal period ushered in by Roosevelt, "the burden of proof was on those who tried to argue that government should not act," said veteran Democratic strategist Bill Galston. "But in the era of Reagan, which I think we are still in, the burden of proof is on those who think the government should act. And if you bear the burden of proof, you have the problem." http://tinyurl.com/23vdq I regard Reagan's achievement in shifting the burden of proof as great for two reasons. First of all, it really did happen, and he was almost singlehandedly responsible for it. His statement in his first inaugural address, "Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem", galvanized the supply-siders and other intellectuals, and absolutely reversed, at the national level anyway, a 50 year monopoly on opinion-making held by the statist/collectivist heirs of FDR. It was a rout. Secondly, I LIKE that result. I think it is great in a *normative* sense, in addition to the factual sense. You may disagree with me on the second; there is no rational disputing of the first. Let's look at a few of the specific things you don't like about the Reagan legacy, as opposed to the sea-change in attitude I've elaborated above. "Runaway" deficits: Your guy writes, But runaway deficits do have consequences. They can lead to higher interest rates, exacerbate high debt-servicing costs and cause funding to dry up for important social programs, such as education and health care. Let's focus particularly on "cause funding to dry up for important social programs, such as education and health care." THAT WAS THE WHOLE POINT!!! That is PRECISELY why they did it. I support that. I don't think the government should BE in the business of providing health care or education. Verdict: great achievement. Homelessness: Reagan did not cause this. Your guy's statement that mentally ill people had been released from state hospitals "as a cost-cutting move" is a lie. The shift in treatment mental defectives from state hospitals to outpatient community centers began in the 1950s, and became official federal policy in the adminstration of "Saint" John Kennedy. AIDS: No defense required. People have AIDS as a direct and easily avoidable result of deeply irresponsible *choices* they make. Nothing similar can be said about most forms of cancer, kidney failure, multiple slerosis, muscular dystrophy, and most other ailments on which federally funded research is done. I'm not suggesting homosexuals and drug-abusers "deserved" AIDS, but neither did the public "deserve" to get saddled with billions of additional dollars of taxes in order to research a disease that is EASILY avoided. Or, are you and your guy suggesting that money should have been shifted from research on breast cancer, prostate cancer, MS, MD, Alzheimer's and other diseases that DON'T result from personal choices, and been spent on AIDS instead? We all know the real reason your guy is upset: homosexuals are one of the "darling" groups of liberals. Economists make a distinction between "positive" and "normative" economics. Positive refers to things that are posited, while normative refers to what is believed "ought" to be done according to norms of value. In this positive sense, Reagan was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century. I personally believe there were five objective greats: both Roosevelts, Wilson, Johnson and Reagan. I would rank Reagan #2, behind FDR. Normatively, I don't like much that FDR did at all, but there is no disputing that he did it, and changed the political landscape in fundamental, enduring ways. |
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