Don't get me wrong. I do cherish and respect what President Reagan did for our party and our country. His ideas and his efforts gave America twenty-five years of prosperity. Had Clinton followed his foreign policy example, we may have seen a much more secure America as well.
It's time to move on. It really is.
I am not saying we should forget Ronald Reagan. We never forgot Abraham Lincoln or Dwight Eisenhower. We should do a lot more to remember William McKinley who was a stronger supporter of free markets than the more flamboyant Theodore Roosevelt. However he belongs to history now.
People my age and older will have a hard time with this. We lived through the 1970s and remember the misery. Ronald Reagan raised us from all of that and restored our country's position in the world. But we must remember that millions of voters were not even alive when he was president. To them, he is as unreachable as Lincoln, a picture in a history book instead of a living example. If we continue to venerate Reagan, we risk looking like the old Franklin Roosevelt stalwarts of the not too distant past. Who in West Virginia even in the 80s and 90s did not know at least one person who voted the straight Democratic ticket because of FDR?
The Republican Party must start searching for the next Reagan because America will need some renewing in 2012. Obama has deconstructed much of our economic and diplomatic position in a shockingly short amount of time. Who will be the Republican to inspire this generation? Where will the ideas that wil shape the 21st Century come from? Hopefully we see one emerge soon.
Do not forget the past, but do not let the past blind us to the present or the future.
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Remember when we said on this blog that Ford Motor Company will not only be fine, but end up in a strong position when this economy shakes out?
Ford just leapt over Toyota to once again seize second place in US auto sales last month. Ford's new midsized Fusion is a hit with consumers and recreates the success enjoyed by that company in the 1990s with the unspectacular, but dependable Taurus.
General (soon to be renamed "Government?") Motors is still the nation's best selling company, but they and Toyota both lost market share to the aggressive and still completely private sector Ford Motor Company.
To be honest I still think GM should be split into two if not three parts. Chevrolet and Cadillac would probably prosper alone.
Kudos to Ford!
While your post is right, I do feel we must NOT abandon the principals Reagan had. To many are saying we should become more moderate and move away from Reagan's principals. That I feel would be a mistake.
ReplyDeleteGOD BLESS
BUDDY
I don't so much advocate abandoning Reagn style principles as I say we should seek the future champion of them.
ReplyDeleteProfessor Smoot,
ReplyDeleteHere is an interesting take on Reagan's legacy:
http://www.amconmag.com/print.html?Id=AmConservative-2009may04-00006