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Why must we pretend the 40th president was alert and engaged?
Slate ^ | Timothy Noah

Posted on 11/07/2003 6:23:36 AM PST by CC Bonnocco

Thunderous protest has persuaded CBS to cancel The Reagans, its miniseries about America's 40th president and his second wife. (The series will air instead on Showtime, which shares a corporate parent with CBS.) It isn't especially troubling that CBS would bow to angry protesters in canceling The Reagans, given that the miniseries itself, if at all typical of the genre, is likely a piece of hackwork. (Those who live by popular tastes, die by popular tastes.) But it is troubling that the public, or at least a highly influential segment of it, has apparently ruled any criticism of President Reagan out of bounds. When did the Gipper become St. Ronald?

Among the miniseries's themes that drew particular complaint, Jim Rutenberg reported in the Oct. 20 New York Times, was that Reagan "suffered moments of forgetfulness" and took a "laissez-faire" stance in handling the White House staff. Ed Morrow, who organized a boycott to pressure CBS into dropping the miniseries, complained in National Review Online:

[I]t is a portrait of Reagan that is unrecognizable outside of an old, lame Saturday Night Live skit. It is a caricature. Indeed, Brolin's heavily rouged, orange-haired Reagan is a caricature of the standard liberal caricature of Reagan. He is a doddering fool, stumbling around using his acting talents to pass for a statesman.

Reagan was no doddering fool, but his rather extreme mental and emotional detachment were at the time noted not only by his critics but by many of his political allies. Liberals like Chatterbox who struggled to persuade themselves that Reagan had more on the ball than he seemed saw their worst suspicions confirmed in the memoirs of former Reagan aides. Here's former chief of staff Donald Regan in For the Record:

In the four years that I served as Secretary of the Treasury I never saw President Reagan alone and never discussed economic philosophy or fiscal and monetary policy with him one-on-one. From first day to last at Treasury, I was flying by the seat of my pants. The President never told me what he believed or what he wanted to accomplish in the field of economics.

Here's speechwriter Peggy Noonan, describing her first encounter with President Reagan in the White House in What I Saw at the Revolution:

I was surprised how big his hearing aid is, or rather how aware of it you are when you're with him. There was a quizzical look on his face as he listened to what was going on around him, and I thought, He doesn't really hear very much, and his appearance of constant good humor is connected to his deafness. He misses much of what is not said directly to him, but he assumes it is good.

Here's communications director David Gergen, in Eyewitness to Power:

Reagan could be remarkably unaware of (and indifferent to) developments around him. If I were still working for him, I would probably pass it off as being "intellectually selective." But it's hard for anyone to argue that he knew as much as a president should about the state of the world.

His inattention to details and hands-off stance could be dangerous for his leadership. His Republican allies in the Senate believed that because he did not pay close enough heed, he turned down a budget deal in 1985 that they had carefully crafted to cut the deficits. By their account, he didn't seem to understand the terms of the deal. … Majority Leader Bob Dole was furious at the time.

All these former aides went on to say, in one way or another, that in the end things somehow managed to work out for the best. That's a topic for legitimate debate. But none seemed to disagree with the proposition that President Reagan was not all there.

Today, however, etiquette demands that we pretend never to have noticed. Why? Reagan's Alzheimer's, which reportedly has reduced him to a near-vegetative state, is one reason. It's thought in poor taste to speak ill of the very faculty that his disease has wiped out. Another factor is Reagan's symbolic role as the ideological wellspring of today's conservative movement. In the 1980s, he was merely president, but by now Reagan has been so identified with conservatism that any criticism of the man is taken to be an attack on the ideology. And of course, the passage of time usually renders any public figure more admired than he was during his own era.

Ironically, conservatives like Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie, who called on CBS to cancel The Reagans, were probably acting against their own interest. Airing a miniseries about Ronald Reagan on network TV would likely have enhanced the aura of glamour that already surrounds him. According to Rutenberg in the Times, the miniseries "does give Mr. Reagan most of the credit for ending the cold war and paints him as an exceptionally gifted politician and a moral man who stuck to his beliefs, often against his advisers' urgings." So what if it fails to credit President Reagan with creating a lengthy economic expansion (though not as lengthy as the one overseen by Bill Clinton) or with "delivering the nation from the malaise of the Jimmy Carter years" (achieved mainly by a drop in oil prices)? Even its clearly false notes could easily burnish rather than harm Reagan's image. For instance, its apparent picture of Reagan as a homophobe ("They that live in sin shall die in sin," he says by way of justifying inaction on AIDS) is much more flattering than the truth, which is that Reagan was (in Hendrik Hertzberg's exquisite formulation) a "closet tolerant" who back-burnered the AIDS issue out of political expediency. Biographies and TV dramas about the Kennedys have grown steadily more critical and salacious over the years, but they don't seem to have diminished the nation's Camelot obsession. By rendering criticism of Ronald Reagan taboo, conservatives act against their long-term interest in maintaining his status as a culture hero. It's very difficult to sustain passion, over time, for a plaster saint.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antireagan; barfalert; boycottviacom; cbs; cbsnews; dusrupter; kittenchow; lyingliars; propaganda; ratherbiased; reaganbashing; revisionists; seebs; showtime; strikeupthebanned; thisaccountisbanned; zot
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To: CC Bonnocco
Oh, well, I'm convinced.
41 posted on 11/07/2003 6:39:01 AM PST by Petronski (Living life in a minor key.)
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To: CC Bonnocco
You're not long for this world, newbie.
42 posted on 11/07/2003 6:39:05 AM PST by Sloth ("I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!" -- Jacobim Mugatu, 'Zoolander')
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To: GreatOne
The most striking example being the time when you could see/hear Nancy telling Ron how to answer questions thrown at him by reporters.

How long were they married, when that instance occurred? My husband does that, too... we think alike, and can finish each other's thoughts. Answering questions comes naturally. A wild phenomenon, comes when two people become one.

43 posted on 11/07/2003 6:39:07 AM PST by Pan_Yans Wife (You may forget the one with whom you have laughed, but never the one with whom you have wept.)
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To: CC Bonnocco
Slate is electronic toiletpaper.
44 posted on 11/07/2003 6:39:28 AM PST by right way right (Go ahead insult Free Republic now)
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To: Owl_Eagle
Of course you are correct. Libs don't get this because they usually aren't managers, directors, executives. They are workers. Even the highly intelligent libs tend towards professions where they are hands on task oriented people, like lawyers. They don't understand or appreciate management and leadership. They don't get it. That's why they were impressed by Clinton, who in reality was an incessant micromanager and a bore. And a boor.
45 posted on 11/07/2003 6:40:40 AM PST by Huck
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To: CC Bonnocco
The Reagan expansion was not caused by a fall in oil prices. Supply side economics works. Even Brookings economists grudgingly admit that much. Nobody else had the guts to try it. Certaintly not X42. Sadly, W doesn't either. Most of what we've seen lately has been the same old Keynesian demand side stuff.

I wonder if Slick was "alert and engaged" while getting serviced by an employee half his age in the Oval Office on company time? If I tried something like that with one of my co-eds, I'd be gone in a heartbeat, and rightfully so.

Reagan, even with Alzheimers, would be a better president than Bill Clinton. Rest assured he wouldn't sell us out to China, let Osama get away, or invade churches.

Are you siding with the sickos at Slate, who want to try to make the short man taller by cutting the tall man's legs off?
46 posted on 11/07/2003 6:40:55 AM PST by mywholebodyisaweapon
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To: CC Bonnocco
Just the same old spin, lie, spin, doctrine from the looney left.....The liberals have to put down anyone and anything that is moral and right in order to live with themselves and their immoral ways.
47 posted on 11/07/2003 6:41:10 AM PST by maeng
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To: GreatOne
The most striking example being the time when you could see/hear Nancy telling Ron how to answer questions thrown at him by reporters.

It is much more likely that, due to his hearing loss, she was repeating the question.

48 posted on 11/07/2003 6:41:55 AM PST by Corin Stormhands (www.wardsmythe.com)
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To: right way right; CC Bonnocco
I wouldn't wipe my electronic a$$ with it, who knows what I'd catch.


Hey CC! Its tough when Moonves even admits it was biased. What did he say? If it was even 50-50 they would have run it?

Ahhh, help me, the bullies in the vast right wing conspiracy are getting us. Bwaaa-ha-ha-a-ha-ha.

Be seeing ya around. Or not.
49 posted on 11/07/2003 6:42:28 AM PST by eyespysomething (As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another. (Proverbs 27:17))
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To: CC Bonnocco
Please tell me you don't agree with this article from Slate. What is it about Ronald Reagan you disagree with...tax cuts?...the end of the evil empire?...Honor?

I suggest some de-caf for you next time.
50 posted on 11/07/2003 6:43:08 AM PST by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
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To: CC Bonnocco
Considering PresidentReagan didn't tell his Sec of Tres what he wanted in economics, it simply astonishing that President Reagan's economic policies reversed the stagflation of the Carter era and produced the longest sustained period of economic expansion in our nation's history.

All of this sounds to me like a matter of management style. He did not choose to immerse himself in the nitty-gritty detail of policy, but rather set broad policy objectives and left it to his cabinate to fill in the blanks. This approach is probably what made him effective and in my humble opinion the greatest President of the 20th century. Unfortunately, that approach also lead to some instances of failure during his administration.
51 posted on 11/07/2003 6:45:45 AM PST by Busywhiskers (Non entia multiplicandia sunt prater necessetatum. William Occam)
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To: Zavien Doombringer
Where you been lately? Cat got your tongue or something?
52 posted on 11/07/2003 6:47:59 AM PST by PetroniDE (Kitty Is My Master - I Do What She Says)
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To: GreatOne
But there's no shame in admitting this, and I fail to see why it's such a huge deal - it's not like he was smoking crack or engaging in extra-marital affairs.

Do you not get the idea the left is trying to sell the idea conservatives are so stupid they approved of incompetent leadership? THAT'S why they want to push the Alzheimer in office canard. It's not about Reagan; Reagan is just the representative. It's about conservatism in general.

53 posted on 11/07/2003 6:49:24 AM PST by Woahhs
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To: mywholebodyisaweapon; JohnHuang2
Reagan, even with Alzheimers, would be a better president than Bill Clinton. Rest assured he wouldn't sell us out to China, let Osama get away, or invade churches.

Are you siding with the sickos at Slate, who want to try to make the short man taller by cutting the tall man's legs off?

Post of the Day nominee, I'm thinkin'!

54 posted on 11/07/2003 6:49:56 AM PST by JennysCool
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To: CC Bonnocco
ZOTBUMP
55 posted on 11/07/2003 6:50:33 AM PST by right way right
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To: The South Texan
Timothy Noah: 'Can Bush be both ignorant and a liar? Yes'
Posted on Tuesday, June 24 @ 10:04:54 EDT

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

There's no reason for Bush-bashers to choose between the two.

By Timothy Noah, Slate


56 posted on 11/07/2003 6:50:57 AM PST by kcvl
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To: DeuceTraveler
We have a USS Carter?

Still being built. It's an SSN21 class submarine, not an aircraft carrier.

57 posted on 11/07/2003 6:52:31 AM PST by j_tull
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To: DeuceTraveler
We do, unfortunately. It's a Seawolf class, fast attack sub.
58 posted on 11/07/2003 6:53:32 AM PST by Tree of Liberty (I had an AWESOME time!!!)
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To: mywholebodyisaweapon
The Reagan expansion was not caused by a fall in oil prices. Supply side economics works.

Disagree slightly. It was pure supply-side economics that rid us if the inflationary spiral we were in in the late 70's and early 80's. It also set off a deflationary recession. Tax cuts and finally gaining control of the money supply (i.e. meeting demand for money with supply) stabilized prices...including oil which fuels our economic engine. Couple that with the explosion of the PC into the workplace which revolutionized productivity and you have the 80's expansion.

59 posted on 11/07/2003 6:54:38 AM PST by Wyatt's Torch
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To: CC Bonnocco
ALPHA FOXTROT LIMA FOUR TWO
YOU ARE CLEARED FOR MISSION ZOT!
GOOD LUCK!
ALPHA BASE CLEAR



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CC Bonnocco

60 posted on 11/07/2003 6:56:29 AM PST by Johnny Gage (God Bless President Bush, God Bless our Troops, and GOD BLESS AMERICA)
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