February 11th, 2009
Damir Marusic
My friend Alex Massie’s penned a good little article for us over at Doublethink Online. Part of it reads as so:
20 years after he left the Oval Office for the final time and nearly five years since the old boy died, two things seem clear: Reagan’s achievements were greater than seemed possible at the time of his scandal-filled presidency; and those achievements have been willfully misinterpreted by a Republican Party that often seems blind to the changes that have swept America since the Reagan years. Perhaps it will be Morning in America again, but not in the way it was in 1980.
Alex is a born contrarian, something I strive at myself. Give him an inflated target, such as Reagan’s legacy with conservatives, and watch him go. You should also watch him go daily at his new digs at the Spectator.
Tags: Alex Massie, Doublethink, Ronald Reagan
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February 6th, 2009
Damir Marusic
For those of you who don’t have today’s date memorized and/or set as a repeating event in your Google Calendar, today is Ronald Reagan’s birthday. Over on the main page, we have the first of three articles evaluating the Gipper’s legacy in the dawning Age of Obama. First up, former Doublethink blogger and refugee from the Culture11 tragedy, James Poulos:
Jimmy Carter, under the influence of the brilliant sociologist Christopher Lasch, threw a national malaise; everybody came, but no one wanted to be there, and the Democratic party became the Worst. Party. Ever. Reagan rode to triumph. There is one thing that critics of optimism’s excesses might miss: Though we’re shy about it, Americans really do want to be ennobled. Representative Reagan was no blueblood, but his stand against the reality of communism was elevating in its greatness. And Obama, to the extent that he may not have much of a choice, has a chance to inspire millions of Americans to heroically trust that the best of our attitude can survive a return to reality.
Very perceptive insights into the similarities of the moment.
Hie! Read it!
Tags: James Poulos, Ronald Reagan
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