04 February 2009

Tear down this myth...

The following is an excerpt from the book: http://www.amazon.com/Tear-Down-This-Myth-Distorted/dp/141659762X/


It was Ronald Reagan himself who, as the spotlight faded on his presidency in 1988, tried to highlight his eight-year record by reviving a quote from John Adams, that "facts are stubborn things." The moment became quite famous because the then-77-year-old president had botched it, and said that "facts are stupid things." The tragedy of American politics was that just two decades later, facts were neither stubborn nor even stupid – but largely irrelevant.

Any information about Iran-Contra or how the 1979-81 hostages were released (Rudy Giuliani had falsely claimed during the 2008 race they were freed when "the Gipper" looked Iranian leaders in the eye) that didn’t fit the new official story line was being metaphorically clipped out of the newspaper and tossed down "memory hole" – the fate of any information that would have undercut Reagan’s image as an all-benevolent Big Brother still guiding the conservative movement from above.

A more factual synopsis of the Reagan presidency might read like this: That Reagan was a transformative figure in American history, but his real revolution was one of public-relations-meets-politics and not one of policy. He combined his small-town heartland upbringing with a skill for story-telling that was honed on the back lots of Hollywood into a personal narrative that resonated with a majority of voters, but only after it tapped into something darker, which was white middle class resentment of 1960s unrest.

His story arc did become more optimistic and peaked at just the right moment, when Americans were tired of the "malaise" of the Jimmy Carter years and wanted someone who promised to make the nation feel good about itself again. But his positive legacy as president today hangs on events that most historians say were to some great measure out of his control: An economic recovery that was inevitable, especially when world oil prices returned to normal levels, and an end to the Cold War that was more driven by internal events in the Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe than Americans want to acknowledge.

His 1981 tax cut was followed quickly by tax hikes that you rarely hear about, and Reagan’s real lasting achievement on that front was slashing marginal rates for the wealthy – even as rising payroll taxes socked the working class. His promise to shrink government was uttered so many time that many acolytes believe it really happened, but in fact Reagan expanded the federal payroll, added a new cabinet post, and created a huge debt that ultimately tripped up his handpicked successor, George H.W. Bush. What he did shrink was government regulation and oversight -- linked to a series of unfortunate events from the savings-and-loan crisis of the late 1980s to the sub-prime mortgage crisis of the late 2000s.

The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 papered over some less noble moments in foreign policy, from trading arms for Middle East hostages to an embarrassing retreat from his muddled engagement in Lebanon to unpopular adventurism in Central America. The Iran-contra scandal that stemmed from those policies not only weakened Reagan’s presidency when it happened, but it arguably undermined the respect of future presidents for the Constitution -- because he essentially got away with it. Over the course of eight years, the president that some want to enshrine on Mount Rushmore rated just barely above average for modern presidents in public popularity. He left on a high note – but only after two years of shifting his policy back to the center, seeking peace with the Soviets than confrontation, reaching a balanced new tax deal with Democrats and naming a moderate justice to the Supreme Court. It was not the Reaganism invoked by today’s conservatives.

There has always been a place for mythology in American democracy – the hulking granite edifices of the Capitol Mall in Washington are a powerful testament to that – but this nation has arguably never seen the kind of bold, crudely calculated and ideologically driven legend-manufacturing as has taken place with Ronald Reagan. It is a myth machine that has been spectacularly successful, launched in the mid-1990s when the conservative brand was at low ebb.The docudrama version of the Gipper’s life story, successfully sold to the American public, helped to keep united and refuel a right-wing movement that consolidated power while citing Reaganism – as separate and apart from the flesh-and-blood Reagan – for misguided policies from lowering taxes in the time of war in Iraq to maintaining that unpopular conflict in a time of increasing bloodshed and questionable gains.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Ronald Reagan, and his more intelligent side-kick Margaret Thatcher, were spokespeople for a highly-disciplined, motivated, and ultimately successful coterie of ideologues intent on re-making the world from scratch. They introduced economic terror both at home and abroad in order to shock people into accepting a totally privatized laissez-faire economic system unbound by regulations and consequences.

Their reach encomassed almost all of South and Central America, South Africa, Eastern Europe (especially Poland), and Russia, which they devastated. The subsequent Bushes continued to fuel the fire of this strategy, extending its reach to the Middle East, South Asia, and more of Africa.

First would come the CIA-designed military coup or some form of engineered economic collapse (e.g., when the multinationals pulled out of a local economy in search of more economically favorable pastures). Then would enter the IMF, loaded with cash, with its mandatory programs of privatization, deregulation, slashed education and welfare programs, and tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy few. Locked into huge IMF debt, these countries found themselves making a handful of people very rich and a vast number of citizens facing poverty, declining life-spans, and torturous repression. The neo-cons, with the enthusiastic Regan/Bush encouragement of an inept Boris Yeltsin, took control of Russia and ruined it thanks to a horrendous currency debacle and a totally incompetent and corrupt program of privatization.

Domestically, Thatcher's brutal repression of the unions and Reagan's destruction of basic social programs, combined in both countries with massive tax cuts and deregulation, have led to the fiasco in which we are now drowning... our culture of greed.

Reagan may get undeserved credit for the fall of Russian Communism, but he and his allies deserve full credit for the rapacity with which they exploited, encouraged, and initiated upheaval around the world.