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Regarding the passing of Ford, I offer a thought inspired by Reagan.

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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 07:21 PM
Original message
Regarding the passing of Ford, I offer a thought inspired by Reagan.
Anyone who thinks this place has gone screwy in the aftermath of President Ford's death should dig into the archives and enjoy the double-barreled bloodbaths that unfolded after the passing of the last Pope, and after the passing of Reagan.

Hoo doggy. That was interesting.

I keenly recall my own behavior during those days. The Pope thing got me fired up because there were, at minimum and at all times, no less than 25 active Pope threads on the GD page. I think I sprained my thumb hitting the 'Hide Thread' button so many times, and complained so rudely to the mods after a while that one of the Admins PMed me a swat upside the head.

After Reagan, I have to admit that my behavior was not stellar. Hunter S. Thompson had Nixon as his white whale. Reagan was mine. He exemplified so much of what I despise in American politics, and further, his policies and the people he supported (including Hussein in Iraq and the Mujeheddin in Afghanistan) pretty much built the foundations of all the crap we endure today.

But I was, unfortunately, one of those who howled at the moon and danced around the fire when Reagan died. A number of non-DU factors - exhaustion thanks to the primary madness being chief among them - contributed to what I was saying here at the time, but it boiled down to a fair example of what I've been seeing here: good, thank God, I wish he could die again, he sucked and the planet is lighter without him.

It felt good to say that, true, but it was also ugly, and whenever I remember it, I am ashamed of myself. Not because I think you have to cuddle with the memory of a bastard just because he's dead, because that's a copout, a shortcut to thinking and a disservice to history. But there are ways to do it without becoming what which you despise. I didn't do it then, and have tried to do better since.

It's funny. Richard Nixon, in a spasm of eloquence during that last deranged speech to his staff before he fled the White House, may have said it best. "Always remember," he said, "others may hate you, but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself."

In considering Ford's legacy, I thought of the obituary I finally wound up writing for Reagan. I tried to find the balance between giving the truth its due without tipping over into venomous, undignified spite. This is what I came up with. Maybe, with Ford, we can reach for the same kind of balance.

Anyway, food for thought:

===

http://www.truthout.org/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/50/4757

Planet Reagan
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Monday 07 June 2004

Buffalo Bill's
defunct
who used to
ride a watersmooth-silver
stallion
and break onetwothreefourfive pigeonsjustlikethat
Jesus
he was a handsome man
and what i want to know is
how do you like your blueeyed boy
Mister Death

- e.e. cummings, "Buffalo Bill's Defunct"


Ronald Reagan is dead now, and everyone is being nice to him. In every aspect, this is appropriate. He was a husband and a father, a beloved member of a family, and he will be missed by those he was close to. His death was long, slow and agonizing because of the Alzheimer's Disease which ruined him, one drop of lucidity at a time. My grandmother died ten years ago almost to the day because of this disease, and this disease took ten years to do its dirty, filthy, wretched work on her.

The dignity and candor of Reagan's farewell letter to the American people was as magnificent a departure from public life as any that has been seen in our history, but the ugly truth of his illness was that he lived on, and on, and on. His family and friends watched as he faded from the world of the real, as the simple dignity afforded to all life collapsed like loose sand behind his ever more vacant eyes. Only those who have seen Alzheimer's Disease invade a mind can know the truth of this. It is a cursed way to die.

In this mourning space, however, there must be room made for the truth. Writer Edward Abbey once said, "The sneakiest form of literary subtlety, in a corrupt society, is to speak the plain truth. The critics will not understand you; the public will not believe you; your fellow writers will shake their heads."

The truth is straightforward: Virtually every significant problem facing the American people today can be traced back to the policies and people that came from the Reagan administration. It is a laundry list of ills, woes and disasters that has all of us, once again, staring apocalypse in the eye.

How can this be? The television says Ronald Reagan was one of the most beloved Presidents of the 20th century. He won two national elections, the second by a margin so overwhelming that all future landslides will be judged by the high-water mark he achieved against Walter Mondale. How can a man so universally respected have played a hand in the evils which corrupt our days?

The answer lies in the reality of the corrupt society Abbey spoke of. Our corruption is the absolute triumph of image over reality, of flash over substance, of the pervasive need within most Americans to believe in a happy-face version of the nation they call home, and to spurn the reality of our estate as unpatriotic. Ronald Reagan was, and will always be, the undisputed heavyweight champion of salesmen in this regard.

Reagan was able, by virtue of his towering talents in this arena, to sell to the American people a flood of poisonous policies. He made Americans feel good about acting against their own best interests. He sold the American people a lemon, and they drive it to this day as if it was a Cadillac. It isn't the lies that kill us, but the myths, and Ronald Reagan was the greatest myth-maker we are ever likely to see.

Mainstream media journalism today is a shameful joke because of Reagan's deregulation policies. Once upon a time, the Fairness Doctrine ensured that the information we receive - information vital to the ability of the people to govern in the manner intended - came from a wide variety of sources and perspectives. Reagan's policies annihilated the Fairness Doctrine, opening the door for a few mega-corporations to gather journalism unto themselves. Today, Reagan's old bosses at General Electric own three of the most-watched news channels. This company profits from every war we fight, but somehow is trusted to tell the truths of war. Thus, the myths are sold to us.

The deregulation policies of Ronald Reagan did not just deliver journalism to these massive corporations, but handed virtually every facet of our lives into the hands of this privileged few. The air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat are all tainted because Reagan battered down every environmental regulation he came across so corporations could improve their bottom line. Our leaders are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the corporations that were made all-powerful by Reagan's deregulation craze. The Savings and Loan scandal of Reagan's time, which cost the American people hundreds of billions of dollars, is but one example of Reagan's decision that the foxes would be fine guards in the henhouse.

Ronald Reagan believed in small government, despite the fact that he grew government massively during his time. Social programs which protected the weakest of our citizens were gutted by Reagan's policies, delivering millions into despair. Reagan was able to do this by caricaturing the "welfare queen," who punched out babies by the barnload, who drove the flashy car bought with your tax dollars, who refused to work because she didn't have to. This was a vicious, racist lie, one result of which was the decimation of a generation by crack cocaine. The urban poor were left to rot because Ronald Reagan believed in 'self-sufficiency.'

Because Ronald Reagan could not be bothered to fund research into 'gay cancer,' the AIDS virus was allowed to carve out a comfortable home in America. The aftershocks from this callous disregard for people whose homosexuality was deemed evil by religious conservatives cannot be overstated. Beyond the graves of those who died from a disease which was allowed to burn unchecked, there are generations of Americans today living with the subconscious idea that sex equals death.

The veneer of honor and respect painted across the legacy of Ronald Reagan is itself a myth of biblical proportions. The coverage proffered today of the Reagan legacy seldom mentions impropriety until the Iran/Contra scandal appears on the administration timeline. This sin of omission is vast. By the end of his term in office, some 138 Reagan administration officials had been convicted, indicted or investigated for misconduct and/or criminal activities.

Some of the names on this disgraceful roll-call: Oliver North, John Poindexter, Richard Secord, Casper Weinberger, Elliott Abrams, Robert C. McFarlane, Michael Deaver, E. Bob Wallach, James Watt, Alan D. Fiers, Clair George, Duane R. Clarridge, Anne Gorscuh Burford, Rita Lavelle, Richard Allen, Richard Beggs, Guy Flake, Louis Glutfrida, Edwin Gray, Max Hugel, Carlos Campbell, John Fedders, Arthur Hayes, J. Lynn Helms, Marjory Mecklenburg, Robert Nimmo, J. William Petro, Thomas C. Reed, Emanuel Savas, Charles Wick. Many of these names are lost to history, but more than a few of them are still with us today, 'rehabilitated' by the administration of George W. Bush.

Ronald Reagan actively supported the regimes of the worst people ever to walk the earth. Names like Marcos, Duarte, Rios Mont and Duvalier reek of blood and corruption, yet were embraced by the Reagan administration with passionate intensity. The ground of many nations is salted with the bones of those murdered by brutal rulers who called Reagan a friend. Who can forget his support of those in South Africa who believed apartheid was the proper way to run a civilized society?

One dictator in particular looms large across our landscape. Saddam Hussein was a creation of Ronald Reagan. The Reagan administration supported the Hussein regime despite his incredible record of atrocity. The Reagan administration gave Hussein intelligence information which helped the Iraqi military use their chemical weapons on the battlefield against Iran to great effect. The deadly bacterial agents sent to Iraq during the Reagan administration are a laundry list of horrors.

The Reagan administration sent an emissary named Donald Rumsfeld to Iraq to shake Saddam Hussein's hand and assure him that, despite public American condemnation of the use of those chemical weapons, the Reagan administration still considered him a welcome friend and ally. This happened while the Reagan administration was selling weapons to Iran, a nation notorious for its support of international terrorism, in secret and in violation of scores of laws.

Another name on Ronald Reagan's roll call is that of Osama bin Laden. The Reagan administration believed it a bully idea to organize an army of Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet Union. bin Laden became the spiritual leader of this action. Throughout the entirety of Reagan's term, bin Laden and his people were armed, funded and trained by the United States. Reagan helped teach Osama bin Laden the lesson he lives by today, that it is possible to bring a superpower to its knees. bin Laden believes this because he has done it once before, thanks to the dedicated help of Ronald Reagan.

In 1998, two American embassies in Africa were blasted into rubble by Osama bin Laden, who used the Semtex sent to Afghanistan by the Reagan administration to do the job. In 2001, Osama bin Laden thrust a dagger into the heart of the United States, using men who became skilled at the art of terrorism with the help of Ronald Reagan. Today, there are 827 American soldiers and over 10,000 civilians who have died in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, a war that came to be because Reagan helped manufacture both Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.

How much of this can be truthfully laid at the feet of Ronald Reagan? It depends on who you ask. Those who worship Reagan see him as the man in charge, the man who defeated Soviet communism, the man whose vision and charisma made Americans feel good about themselves after Vietnam and the malaise of the 1970s. Those who despise Reagan see him as nothing more than a pitch-man for corporate raiders, the man who allowed greed to become a virtue, the man who smiled vapidly while allowing his officials to run the government for him.

In the final analysis, however, the legacy of Ronald Reagan - whether he had an active hand in its formulation, or was merely along for the ride - is beyond dispute. His famous question, "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?" is easy to answer. We are not better off than we were four years ago, or eight years ago, or twelve, or twenty. We are a badly damaged state, ruled today by a man who subsists off Reagan's most corrosive final gift to us all: It is the image that matters, and be damned to the truth.

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SacredCow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 07:29 PM
Response to Original message
1. I remember those events....
but I, upon general principle, don't celebrate the death of other humans- no matter how much I couldn't stand them. There comes a time to acknowledge that no matter how foul someone was, chances are that somebody loved them dearly and that can't be callously trod upon.
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WI_DEM Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 07:44 PM
Response to Original message
2. Yes, those days were just as bad or worse. I think...
Edited on Thu Dec-28-06 07:46 PM by WI_DEM
Gerald Ford, despite his pardon of Richard Nixon, was probably the last real republican president who wasn't controlled by the extreme right wing/Christian fundamentalists. He was a traditional "Ike" republican. He favored less spending and tax cuts only if they were paid for. He favored both the ERA and abortion rights which both the right wing/fundamentalists didn't support. He favored the Panama Canal Treaties. It was because he didn't support the far right agenda that Ronnie Reagan challenged him in 1976--and almost beat him for the GOP nomination. I thought he was an average president--mediocre. But he came across as a nice guy and had a very cool wife--who the right wing also disliked.
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stevedeshazer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 08:12 PM
Response to Original message
3. Well, I've been bludgeoned nearly to death because my Ford thread
I know that numb feeling, like when you smash your typing fingers with a hammer on a zero-degree morning.

Telling the truth about someone upon the occasion of his death is something I'll think twice about next time.

Ouchie.
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tnlefty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 08:34 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Not by me.
I read your thread and appreciated it. Tellin' the truth is one thing, makin' stuff up and spreadin' rumors about those who have died is quite another thing.

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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 08:31 PM
Response to Original message
4. Feeling Deeply...and trying to cope with all of this is almost impossible...
whatever you wrote...and whtever you think about it now..is ..what it is.

I don't know what else to say..but trying to parse what you say.....

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Trajan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 08:47 PM
Response to Original message
6. Yeah .... Grannie farted when she cooked ...
And made GAWDAWFUL cheesecakes ... but it's not what you would usually mention at her eulogy ....

Some of those I consider friends here were figuratively grabbing his corpse, and tying it to the old Dodge for a hot and dusty ride along the cobblestones ...

I dont have the hatred ... I dont waste my time placing my mind 'there' ....

Hell : I dont even hate the party in power : THEY dont feel whatever hatred anyone feels: Why the fuck should I feel it ? .... It is a useless waste of my precious human soul to hate .... I will not be part of the mob milling around a carcass, kicking and spitting at it ....

I learned about hatred when I knew my dad was dying .... All the time I 'hated' him for his violence and drunkeness .... In the end: I hated the behaviour, but not him ...

My dislike of someone or something motivates me to change it ... hatred doesnt get me there ...
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catnhatnh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 08:49 PM
Response to Original message
7. The three consecutive words I least ever expected to see...
...in a post by Will Pitt- "inspired by Reagan"....
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bridgit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 10:12 PM
Response to Original message
8. i miss the other pope...
he was nice :cry:
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EstimatedProphet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 10:17 PM
Response to Original message
9. Just a passing comment...
Edited on Thu Dec-28-06 10:18 PM by EstimatedProphet
That ee cummings poem was quoted in one of the better Grateful Dead shows.

Anyway, good writing, as always.
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 10:31 PM
Response to Reply #9
11. Bill Graham's funeral
during the Dark Star, read by Ken Kesey.

Excellent show. :)
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EstimatedProphet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-29-06 07:35 AM
Response to Reply #11
12. Bingo. That's the one
Awesome show
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bridgit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-28-06 10:19 PM
Response to Original message
10. oh & by the by...
"...there were, at minimum and at all times, no less than 25 active Pope threads on the GD page. I think I sprained my thumb hitting the 'Hide Thread' button so many times, and complained so rudely to the mods after a while that one of the Admins PMed me a swat upside the head..."

that's that shared/hyper-hysterical-megalo-myopic bouncy rubber and/or ping pong balls on a gymnasium floor full of spring loaded mousetraps & fly paper syndrome i keep referring to :thumbsup:

:rofl:
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-29-06 08:04 AM
Response to Original message
13. with Reagan they asked for it
I've got a fucking airport with his fucking name on it for fuck sakes. I imagine I'd be living in the U.S. of Reagan if we didn't provide a counter to the hype.

For every mean-spirited summation of Ford's life there'll be an opposite, slobbering canonizing from the right. They asked for it. If they come into our house they'll get every bit of our anger over how many lives and livelihoods their party leaders have sacrificed for their greed and hunger for power. I never heard Ford renounce his party membership. The truth hurts, perhaps, but, I'll bet that the truth won't rise far above the reinvention of Ford's republican-enabling career in government, no matter how amiable or 'moderate' he may have been on some issues. One less republican enabler will not be missed by those of us who fight their pernicious nonsense everyday.
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