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This Day In History January 11,1989 President Ronald Reagan gives his farewell address
various | January 11,1989 | President Ronald Reagan

Posted on 01/10/2006 5:26:58 PM PST by mdittmar

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To: mdittmar
It was and still is a tremendously moving speech! Reagan was a giant of all the Presidents we had in the 20th Century!

I remembered that talk on TV when he said it, and after I read this again, I had tears in my eyes!

Damn, I miss that man!

21 posted on 01/10/2006 6:34:25 PM PST by Sen Jack S. Fogbound (In Memory of James W. Bruhn, November, 1966, Vietnam. May he not die in vain!)
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To: mdittmar
The Great Communicator's legacy will rank right up their with Washington and Jefferson. He was a great American, something the left hated and could never understand.

Thank You, President Reagan for your service to your country. I miss you terribly.


22 posted on 01/10/2006 6:40:04 PM PST by reagan_fanatic (Darwinism is a belief in the meaninglessness of existence - R. Kirk)
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To: mdittmar

I know how you felt, Sgt. I know how you felt.


23 posted on 01/10/2006 6:43:28 PM PST by Christian4Bush (Over THREE THOUSAND PEOPLE lost their 'civil liberties' on September 11, 2001.)
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To: Christian4Bush

The Great Communicator is needed now more than ever
By Christopher Holton

Special to World Tribune.comMonday, June 7, 2004
President Reagan, oh but we need you now

I knew this day was coming. I thought that because my hero. President Ronald Reagan, had been out of the public eye for years due to that terrible disease known as Alzheimer's his passing would somehow be easier.

I was wrong.

I was sitting at a baseball game when I got an email bulletin from Fox News announcing President Reagan's death. It took my breath away. My eyes misted up. I informed my 16 year old son and several people around us overheard.

One, my cousin, who I have rarely heard talk of politics, said something that hit me like a 90mph fastball: “We'd have been better off if they just had made him king and kept him after his term was up.”

Reagan was my idol. I was fortunate enough to have been in the military during his administration. We used to call him Uncle Ron. We loved that man. We knew even then that he was something truly special, not just another president. We'd have marched through hell for Reagan.

When my second daughter was born the middle name we selected for her was Reagan.

Reagan was both ahead of his time and the right man at the right time in the right place. No one will ever be able to convince me he did not bring down the Iron Curtain.

But boy could we use him now. Right now America faces a foe every bit as formidable and perhaps even more evil than communism: Jihadism. This was a foe that Reagan only knew superficially through the prizm of the Cold War. He was certainly not perfect. Reagan let Iranian backed Jihadists kill and kidnap Americans all too often in the 1980s, without appropriate retaliation and that certainly contributed to the emboldened foes we face today. But the larger foe of the era was defeated because Reagan pursued communism with a persistance and clarity we have not seen since.

I feel certain that Reagan would deal similarly with the Jihadists today. While much of the nation today is bewildered largely by the current administration's inability to communicate a consistent vision on this war, my guess is Reagan would never have sanctioned the PC title of “war on terrorism.”

No, Reagan would point us to an enemy we could shoot at--and then he would give us the tools and personnel needed to defeat the foe.

All the while he would constantly remind us of why we were fighting with a moral clarity and sense of conviction that is sadly missing today.

Rest in peace President Reagan, but I sure wish you were here to lead us now


24 posted on 01/10/2006 6:51:51 PM PST by LSUfan
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To: The Right Stuff
An awesome speech. Reagan was the first President I ever voted for. We were in Greece when he died, and in Normandy a year later on the anniversary. A great man - we all owe him a debt of gratitude.

I was on my way to Woodland Hills, CA, when I got the official announcement of President Reagan's passing. At 4:00 PST, I was listening to Tammy Bruce's program. She is someone who went from being strongly against RWR to being a very strong supporter of his, and she was talking about how bad she felt about being so mean to him (though not face to face, but from her association with NOW in Los Angeles).

She was "cowboying up", doing the best she could, and as she went to her first break, she started to read Reagan's 1994 "farewell letter", after he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. She couldn't get to the end of it, before breaking down in tears...had to take a break to compose herself. I'm glad I was pulled over, cause I was crying too, and praying for her that she would have some comfort.

(I've since meant to call or write her, to tell her that it was the best show I've ever heard her do.)

I cried the whole week of the viewings, and took the day off of work to see the funerals live. Everything was so tastefully and wonderfully done (except for "Non" - nee Ron - Reagan's backhanded slap at GWB, at the Library Service).

I particularly remember Speaker Hastert's quoting of Abraham Lincoln as RWR lay in State at the Rotunda, saying that "it is altogether fitting and proper that we do this". (man, two years later and i still lose it, thinking about that) I also remember President Bush 41 with his poignant memories of Reagan at the Washington service, and the President current (who has seen more than a "fair share of grief" in his five years in office), who said "We just lost President Reagan the other day, but we have missed him for a long time."

Me, too, Mr. President. Me, too.

25 posted on 01/10/2006 6:58:38 PM PST by Christian4Bush (Over THREE THOUSAND PEOPLE lost their 'civil liberties' on September 11, 2001.)
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To: mdittmar

I cannot put in words how proud I am of my votes for this great man. I voted for him every time. By my vote, I feel in a very small way I contributed to the fall of Communism.

Never was I prouder of the man who sat in the oval office. Never was I more ashamed than the next democrat who sat in the office. Never was the contrast sharper.

While I rate G. Bush highly, RR has been the greatest, at least in my years on earth.

This country has always seemed in times of need to produce the right man. RR was certainly that man.


26 posted on 01/10/2006 6:59:13 PM PST by sasportas
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To: sasportas

I didn't see him coming. Wonder if there is another one like him we just haven't seen yet ?


27 posted on 01/10/2006 7:07:05 PM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (Don't buy Bose. Their warranty is no good.)
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To: LSUfan
Thanks for the reminder of that article. I remember reading it. Here is a great article I read last year, called Reagan's Silver Glow (it was a thread here on FR). It underscores what you were saying, about Carter leaving the office, and none too soon.)

Reagans Silver Glow (Things started to change on November 4, 1980. ) 11/4/2005 | Paul Beston

Posted on 11/03/2005 9:10:15 PM PST by nickcarraway

Even back in November 1980, a time that seems so far removed from our technological age, political campaigns knew things long before the voters did. Both Ronald Reagan's and Jimmy Carter's insiders understood a day or so before the election that the President was done for. Weekend polling told Patrick Caddell what he needed to know, and he passed the word along to Carter. Reagan was going to become the next president.

For all the American people knew, the race was still essentially a toss-up, though it had seemed to be moving slightly in Reagan's direction. The week before, the two candidates faced off in their only debate. History remembers that night for two Reagan lines that have become part of our political vocabulary, for good or ill: "There you go again," which must be the most overhyped political one-liner of all time; and "Are you better off than you were four years ago?" which largely deserves the stature it attained, as one of the great framing devices any politician has used.

But Reagan was much more than one-liners. The reason those sound bites resonated so much in the 1980 debate was that they came in the context of his all-around strong performance, outclassing Carter not just in quips but in content, command, and presence. The lines were just ribbons on a box.

For voters, the debate performance seemed to put to rest the fear the media and the opposition had been drumming up about Reagan as a reckless cowboy who would "push the button." That was always founded in politics, not reality. Even as a mere 14-year-old at the time, I'd sensed immediately that Reagan was not dangerous, but that he was tough.

I'd first heard him speak in July, 1980, when I sat on the floor of my family's living room in Illinois, watching him accept the Republican presidential nomination in Detroit. My father sat behind me in his reading chair, holding the newspaper up as he was wont to do, but mostly peering over it at the TV, the way he did on those rare occasions when what was being broadcast was better than what he was reading.

The man on the screen was sublime. I'd never heard anyone talk that way before, not at my youthful age, in the waning months of the worst presidency of the American century. It didn't seem, in Jimmy Carter's America, that politicians could say things like:

The major issue of this campaign is the direct political, personal and moral responsibility of Democratic Party leadership....They say that the United States has had its day in the sun; that our nation has passed its zenith. They expect you to tell your children that the American people no longer have the will to cope with their problems; that the future will be one of sacrifice and few opportunities.

My fellow citizens, I utterly reject that view. The American people, the most generous on earth, who created the highest standard of living, are not going to accept the notion that we can only make a better world for others by moving backwards ourselves. Those who believe we can have no business leading the nation.

I will not stand by and watch this great country destroy itself under mediocre leadership that drifts from one crisis to the next, eroding our national will and purpose...

Reagan was inspiring that night, but he was also, at points, just short of angry and irritable. That phrase -- "I utterly reject that view!" -- was delivered with a pursed lip expression he rarely wore in public. He must have been some kind of magician, though, because he seemed to be talking directly to both me and Jimmy Carter. He didn't sound like a madman. If anything, he sounded like my father, the most sensible man I knew.

On election night, the newscasts had barely gotten started when they were announcing that Carter was going to concede, a gesture grounded in empirical logic -- the election was lost -- but also in Carter's customarily disastrous political judgment. Getting on television and conceding the election before the polls had closed on the West Coast was a perfect expression of the wreckage that he had brought to his country and his party. Even today, Democrats fume about it, and with good reason. For myself, I was grateful to President Peanut for conceding before my bedtime. I could never watch the second half of Monday Night Football, but at least I knew who our next president was.

I remember Carter coming into the hall of his election headquarters to make his concession speech, wearing that hapless, hangdog look on his face, an expression that is etched into my memories of growing up. I did pity him. The poor man, I thought, he tried his best. And I thought then that he was a good man, though 25 years later I'm not so sure.

So Carter would go. And with him would go the "crisis of confidence," which he had both inflicted and reflected; the willful refusal to distinguish friends from enemies; the "shock" at the presence of evil in the world; the hectoring self-righteousness and spiritual emptiness; the paralysis in taking action, like a father unwilling to defend his sons in a fight. God help this country if another man like him comes along anytime soon. A great country's Carters should be spaced out by at least a century.

I remember less about Reagan's victory speech. Having won, he had less need of oration beyond expressing his thanks and his confidence in the future, a note he would never stop sounding. The important thing was that we would be seeing much more of Reagan and much less of Carter. Eventually, Carter would develop a shadow ex-presidency every bit as sanctimonious and wrong-headed as his real one, but that is another story. Reagan would serve two terms, change history, and leave Washington with the gratitude of his countrymen ringing in his ears. He had no need for shadows, and the monuments are going up. "Thank God," my father said to someone on the telephone that night. Our phone kept ringing.

"And so," one of the newscasters intoned as Reagan departed the victory stage, "it is over." It was. And then something else began.

28 posted on 01/10/2006 7:09:45 PM PST by Christian4Bush (Over THREE THOUSAND PEOPLE lost their 'civil liberties' on September 11, 2001.)
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To: reagan_fanatic
Darwinism is a belief in the meaninglessness of existence - R. Kirk

Great quote! Russell Kirk was a great man!

29 posted on 01/10/2006 7:26:53 PM PST by Pyro7480 (Sancte Joseph, terror daemonum, ora pro nobis!)
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To: mdittmar; potlatch; devolve; PhilDragoo; bitt

Thank you for posting this. Can it have been 17 years ago? Rest in peace, Freedom Man.


30 posted on 01/10/2006 8:20:12 PM PST by ntnychik
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To: mdittmar
I still have this speech on tape.

By the way January 10th is the 24 year anniversary of the Bengals beating the San Diego Chargers 27-7 in the AFC Championship game that was played in a wind chill of 59 degrees below zero. BRRR!!!!

31 posted on 01/10/2006 8:33:51 PM PST by buckeyesrule
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To: ntnychik

That picture of Sgt. Ethan Rocke is touching!


32 posted on 01/10/2006 8:34:57 PM PST by potlatch (Does a clean house indicate that there is a broken computer in it?)
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To: mdittmar

Reagan got the economy moving again. Clinton took credit for it. Reagan built up the military. Clinton did his best to take it apart. Reagan stirred us up... got us to STAND up. I hope we all keep standing up. The liberals are trying to ruin the nation. We can't let that happen.


33 posted on 01/10/2006 9:57:23 PM PST by Just Lori (The road to hell is paved by liberals.)
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To: All; LongsforReagan
One freeper's name has always said it best for me...

LongsForReagan

34 posted on 01/11/2006 3:18:48 AM PST by AmericaUnited
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To: oceanview

We have only had mediocrity in the WH since.

I am glad to have seen and remember his presidency. Who knows what kids today learn about him in their textbooks?

I miss him.


35 posted on 01/11/2006 3:34:54 AM PST by LongsforReagan (Dick Cheney is the best elected official in this country. Period.)
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To: Christian4Bush

Great post.


36 posted on 01/11/2006 3:38:07 AM PST by LongsforReagan (Dick Cheney is the best elected official in this country. Period.)
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To: LongsforReagan

Notice how Reagan says the American people created the jobs, not his administration. Bubba could have benefitted from Reagan's humbleness.


37 posted on 01/11/2006 3:46:34 AM PST by Democratshavenobrains
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To: mdittmar

bump


38 posted on 01/11/2006 10:56:09 AM PST by VOA
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To: Mia T
Please read the posts on this thread.
These are Americans, like you and I, who not only speak of a man they so admired, but of one they hope will emerge once again to lead this great nation.
There isn't a President since Washington who evoked this kind of sincere gratitude and thanks from our citizens.
39 posted on 01/12/2006 9:38:56 PM PST by jla
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To: mdittmar

re-bump


40 posted on 01/28/2011 6:38:49 AM PST by Christian4Bush (Happy New Year. Less than 675 days until we vote out the jackass(es).)
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