Posted on 06/17/2004 6:14:07 AM PDT by Pokey78
New Hampshire
I feel a bit like a guy whos been dating a pleasant lady in the office for a couple of years and suddenly bumps into the gal he always adored in high school. As readers will know, Im very supportive of George W. Bush, especially on the foreign policy front. But it was unfortunate that a week of 24/7 Ronald Reagan greatest hits on the cable networks should have had to stop once or twice a day to cross to a blinking, groggy Dubya at some G8 press conference with a duplicitous pseudo-ally going round in circles on Iraq for the umpteenth time. Bush is a great and remarkable president and, between Normandy and G8 and the UN, he actually had a very good week. But gosh, its hard not to miss the Gipper....
At Washingtons National Cathedral, his four eulogists contemplated one of the most well-rounded political personae of modern times and focused on what most appealed to each of them. Mrs Thatcher, by far the best, hailed Reagan as the Great Liberator, the man who killed communism, because thats what matters to her. Her fellow ex-PM Brian Mulroney recalled a twinkly, ingratiating Irish charmer, because thats what matters to him. George Bush Sr remembered the kinder, gentler Reagan. And George Bush Jr spoke of the former presidents faith, the faith of a boy who read the Bible with his mom.
These are all useful attributes in a politician, but in Reagan it was the combination that made the difference. Mrs Thatcher is one of the great figures of the age and a tremendous slayer of dragons abroad, but, unlike Reagan, she never found a language to embrace and define Britains identity, with consequences the country lives with still (i.e., Sundays election results). Mr Mulroney was an ingratiating, gladhanding pol, but, unrooted in any coherent philosophy other than the next deal, the blarney was insufficient: where Reagan strengthened conservatism and the Republican party as a vehicle for it, Mulroney neglected it and sent the Canadian Conservative party into a death spiral; at the election following his retirement, the Tories were reduced to two seats, and a few months back finally gave up the ghost and got swallowed up by a newer, less squishy party. The first President Bush is a decent, kindly old stick, but kindness defined only as accommodation and moderation soon begins to look an awful lot like weakness and a lack of political backbone: Reagan was Mister Genial but he was steel-spined.
Thatcher, Mulroney and Bush Sr are now retired, so their strengths and weaknesses are for the historians. But Bush II hopes to be around for a while yet, and so the faintly reductive nature of his characterisation of the Gipper was a little disquieting. I dont mind all the God stuff, if only because it drives Max Hastings and Harold Pinter and the rest of the gang into paroxysms of rage. And its always useful to be reminded of the decisive difference between America and Europe as the radical secularists of the latter embark on demographic suicide. Also, in fairness to President Bush and the Iron Lady, they did a much more eloquent job of ushering Ronald Reagan into the house of the Lord than that ghastly vulgar me-me-me South African pastor at the graveside in California, who when he briefly ceased talking about himself took the extraordinary step of essaying a vocal impression of Mrs T. He provided without doubt the worst moment of the weeks observances. Im sure he brought great comfort to Mr and Mrs Reagan, but hes a cautionary tale in how a politicians faith tradition (in Al Gores dread phrase) doesnt always translate to the public arena.
What is Bush doing when he talks about God? Well, hes an evangelical Christian and so its natural to him. To try and zip it up in public would be highly unnatural. But presumably he also subscribes to the Reaganite view that there is a purpose behind the blessings the Almighty has showered on America. To Ronald Reagan, the nation was a shining city on a hill a phrase he modified from John Winthrop, aboard the Arbella, bound for Massachusetts Bay in 1630, and anticipating the colony he hoped to help build (a city upon a hill, the eyes of all people are on us). Winthrop, in turn, got it from Matthew and Isaiah. Reagan just neatened it up a little and planted a 350-year-old catchphrase into the language.
Lots of people use it now: its like the grapes of wrath and terrible swift sword of The Battle Hymn of the Republic, or the purple-mountained majesty and fruited plain of America the Beautiful; its part of the language connecting the nation to God, part of what David Gelernter calls mystic nationalism or, if you prefer, a civic religion. It urges the nation to a higher purpose without sounding like youre going to be passing the collection plate at the end of the paragraph. Both Bush and his speechwriters sound a little tapped out these days, but they could learn a lot from looking at what Reagan did with his shining city: if youre making a radical departure from the recent past, invent a traditional saying to cover it.
According to National Reviews Kate OBeirne, Reagan invoked Americas Founding Fathers more than the previous nine presidents combined. He turned to politics in an era of dry north-eastern country-club Republicanism, but he understood that it wasnt enough in linking tax cuts and small government to the Founders and the first settlers, he made the conservative vision of America a romance rather than a balance sheet. And every great nation, especially a republic, has to be a romance. Today, politicians of both parties routinely name-drop the Founders, and, though often spuriously, that too is part of the Reagan legacy.
For his part, Bushs conservatism is neither a romance nor a balance sheet. Hes adopted a lot of the soft fatuities of the Left Leave no child behind and he doesnt care how expensive they are to implement. On Labor Day last year, Bush said, We have a responsibility that when somebody hurts, government has got to move. With conservatives like that, who needs Sweden?
Reagan knew better: Outside its legitimate function, government does nothing as well or as economically as the private sector. He didnt say that as president or even as governor, but one Sunday night back in the Fifties as the host of General Electrics weekly playlet GE Theater. Theres more conservative philosophy in the average Reagan intro to those old shows with Joan Crawford and Burgess Meredith than were likely to get in Bushs keynote address at this years convention.
It may be that there are good sound arguments for federalising education spending or creating a huge new prescription-drug entitlement, but, if so, Bush never makes them or, to be more precise, he never bothers to place these programmes within any kind of coherent political philosophy. By contrast, the emerging line on Reagan from the johnny-come-lately admirers hes won in the media this last week is that, oh, sure, he may have talked tough but that was just for the crowd. He favoured red-meat rhetoric but pragmatic policies.
Thats a lot of hooey, but, even if it were true, a bit of red-meat rhetoric would still have been welcome a quarter-century ago. When Reagan called the Soviet Union an evil empire and the focus of evil in the modern world, its not just that nobody else in the leadership of the West talked like that; they didnt think like that. Small example: in 1978 Maurice Bishops Communist New Jewel Movement toppled the government of Grenada while the prime minister, Eric Gairy, was out of the country. Sir Eric had unusual priorities he was off giving a talk to the UN on his favourite subject, flying saucers, when Bishop made his move and he was not the most unblemished of Caribbean leaders, as anyone who attracted the attention of his mongoose gangs can testify. But this was the first ever coup in the British West Indies, and at the time Castro saw no reason why communism couldnt be exported to Barbados and Trinidad and St Lucia and all the rest.
But heres where Maurice Bishop showed a droll sense of humour. He tossed out the constitution, suspended elections, banned political parties, etc. But he decided to leave the governor-general, Sir Paul Scoon, in residence at Government House, and Buckingham Palace raised no objections. So Her Majesty the Queen wound up as head of a Marxist one-party state, presiding over Comrade Bishops politburo. And nobody thought this was odd, or shameful, or pathetic.
What was shameful and pathetic back then was Reagan refusing to string along like everyone else. The evil empire speech horrified the New York Timess world affairs grandee, Anthony Lewis. Primitive, he sniffed. That is the only word for it. Bush is also wont to talk about evil, or at any rate the axis thereof, and for his pains also gets damned as primitive.
In these pages, Correlli Barnett has dismissed the entire war on terror as a fraud on the grounds that one cannot wage war against a phenomenon. As it happens, the Royal Navy has quite a track record of waging war against phenomena slavery and piracy. One can certainly make the case that thats what the Bush administration is doing after all, from Colombia to Sri Lanka, various longstanding terrorist campaigns seem to have mysteriously quietened down since 9/11.
But, in the broader sense, Barnett might be right that the very name of the war was its first polite evasion, the product of a culture which has banished the very concept of the enemy. From grade school up were taught that there are no enemies, just friends whose grievances we havent yet accommodated. One sympathises with Bushs difficulties: in the early days, every time he tried to name an enemy, he got undercut. When he denounced the Taleban, Colin Powell said, au contraire, were very interested in reaching out to moderate Taleban. So Bush switched to the more general term evildoers, and crossed his fingers that Powell wouldnt go on Meet the Press and claim the administration was interested in reaching out to moderate evildoers.
Three years on, I think one can make the argument that this fuzziness about the precise nature of the enemy is one reason so many Americans have checked out of the war. The President is getting his way, in Iraq and at the UN. But at home he doesnt seem able to package it all into a great cause the way Reagan did. I mentioned two years ago that ambitious presidents take advantage of extreme circumstances the way FDR did in the Depression. Bush had an opportunity to shift the broader cultural landscape in 2001 to take on the enervated, self-loathing, multiculti self-absorption that in the days after 9/11 looked momentarily vulnerable. But he chose not to do so. Unlike Roosevelt, he declined to seize the moment.
But even FDR couldnt have done it without the help of Wall Street and bread lines. What makes Reagan the most impressive president of the century is that he shifted the landscape without any external assistance no Depression, no 9/11, no nothing: like the Queen and Comrade Bishop, everyone was in Cant we all just get along? mode vis-à-vis the Soviet Union as it gobbled up more and more real estate. Reagan got a notion to win the Cold War at a time nobody else had. And he made it happen.
Bush has set himself a similar challenge to remake the Middle East. I think he can do it. Hes played a shrewd hand with both fractious Iraqi politicians and devious UN diplomats and hes seen off Chirac, but at home theres undeniably a rhetorical shortfall, as there was in his Reagan eulogy. He could use some Reaganesque clarity and toughness, plus a little more lyricism in the patriotic uplift. But one of the problems with the Bush Administration is that they think theyre so good at walking the walk they dont have to bother talking the talk. Wrong. Last week conservatives were reminded of everything theyve missed these last ten years. Never glad confident Morning In America again? Your call, Dubya.
LMFAO! Steyn nails it, as per usual. If Bush's press flacks were half as aggressive as Clintoon's - even if just to dispel the b.s. accusations thrown Bush's way every day - his poll numbers would be off the charts. Release the hounds, Mr. President.
Eep. Don't SAY that. Sauron's the Lord of the Rings and he's evil!
Thanks, Pokey78.
Mark One Mark!
Thanks for the ping, Pokes!
Thanks Pokey! Excellent analysis by Steyn!
Can't argue at all. Where I work we had a weepy little ceremony a couple of days after the event which was long on the sad and short on the angry. I was angry as hell and I knew who our enemies were and I kept waiting for a leader to sweep away the "enervated, self-loathing, multiculti self-absorption" that could still defeat us. I'm afraid it may be too late to do so now.
A bit unfair regarding foreign policy there by Steyn, but I think Bush I gets a lot of unfair criticism; he wussed on the tax increase, but I think people really don't remember the 6 months prior to Gulf War I well at all; it wasn't a debate between liberating Kuwait or going to Baghdad; it was a debate between doing anything militarily at all, and sitting around for years with thumbs up butts waiting for "sanctions to bite." Sentiment in Congress, and much of his own government, and overwhelmingly in the press was in favor of "waiting for sanctions to bite." Imagine the disaster if that course had been followed.
It was an immense act of courage to put enough forces for an offensive in Saudi Arabia and attack.
President Reagan was a great American and a great President but he was not flawless.
He had to trade off profligate spending for tax cuts and a buildup of our military might back to acceptable levels.
His administration, Carters administration and all subsequent administrations failed to understand the threat of jihadism and allowed numerous assaults and deaths of Americans without payback times ten.
Because of that Dubya is left spending every piece of political capital he has to wage a WOT. Now Dubya is nto perfect either but he is excellent on killing jihadists, excellent on the sanctity of life (better than President Reagan by the way), has taken a strong stand on cultural issues and set a strong tax cutting policy that has set the mood for a nice long expansion.
All in all, I am perfectly happy with President Bush and President Reagan can enjoy heaven in the knowledge that this nation is in good and just hands.
Lando
Thanks so much for the Mark Steyn pings.....!
I'm basically agreeing -- up to this point.
The worst moment of the official doings would have to be Ron Reagan Jr. spitting on his father's character, convictions, and values, by his gratuitous, self-serving swipes.
Dan
bump
Good call.
Steyn is just amazing. How he is so prolific with quality material simply mystifies me.
He's right. Where's the requisite direct, clearly laid out rationale and rhetoric?
Right on my brother
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