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raysr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-07-04 07:12 PM
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Death of a Salesman
Edited on Mon Jun-07-04 07:21 PM by raysr
"He should have died alone—a long, long time ago. But oh, no, not him: outliving his century by four years, his presidency by 16, and his own mind by a decade, Hollywood legend Ronald Reagan was 93 when he went to rejoin his makers—Thomas Jefferson, Louis B. Mayer, Lew Wasserman, and Barry Goldwater, in that order—on Saturday. A noted fantasist, Reagan is perhaps best remembered for the eight years he spent believing he ruled an entirely fictional United States. To the old trouper's delight, this was a delusion shared by most of his compatriots, which is why his imaginary nation still subsumes ours to this day".--more--

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0423/carson.php
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Zinfandel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-07-04 07:33 PM
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1. "The Evil Empire" (from 'Star Wars") "John Wayne as Sec. of State, Clint
Eastwood as Sec. of Defense, Win one for the Gipper" (from an old movie of his), etc...This guy was living in a Hollywood fantasy world and the idiotic television junkies ate it up...Just like now.
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KamaAina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-08-04 03:01 PM
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2. Some more juicy little morsels
But it was Reagan, whose most profound Freudian slip was the immortal "Facts are stupid things," who beguiled us into living in the theme park full-time, and so much for the Declaration of Independence's prattle about "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind"—actually the only time we ever expressed much concern for those. Since his 1980 opponent, Jimmy Carter, was about the sorriest embodiment of the reality principle imaginable—Three's Company's Mr. Roper on the world-historical stage—facts didn't have a prayer....

Instead, in one of the great through-the-looking-glass paradoxes of Reaganism, "progressives" have become, in practical terms, reactionaries—cluckingly trying to protect this or that milestone (equal opportunity, Roe v. Wade), against a right wing that's singing "If I Had a Hammer—Oh, Wait: I Do." Meanwhile, so-called conservatives have been on a quarter-century radical spree, zestily pursuing their own version of "If it feels good, do it." From inside-trader Michael Milken to Oliver "What Constitution?" North, the worst disgrace to a Marine Corps uniform since Lee Harvey Oswald hung his up, to describe the Reagan era as any sort of rebuke to permissiveness is pure folly....

At the core of the Reagan legend is the mantra that his presidency made America feel good about itself again—an interesting claim for Republicans to make, since it sounds like just the sort of self-esteem therapy they snort at when say, first-graders are the beneficiaries. Not entirely inappropriately, the picture it conjures up is of a commander in chief playing Julie Andrews as the governess in The Sound of Music: "You've brought music back into the house, Ron."


Yowza! Rock on, Tom!
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