Posted on 06/02/2002 9:37:09 AM PDT by freeforall
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Rumsfeld has always been sharp. At one time I woas hoping he's become president. To the extent the Bush presidency functions at all, it's because of the influence of Rumsfeld.
Every time I see a clip of that speech on things like A&E Biography, I get goosebumps. The good kind of goosebumps.
REAGAN = LEADERSHIP
At that time I was the Polish Solar Observers Society's only American sunspot observer, and I wrote back & forth to Vaclaw Szymanski in Dabrowa, Grornicza, Poland. There were no stronger allies of America, and her concept of freedom, than many of those who lived behind the Iron Curtain. Much as you find today with Cuban-Americans- those who lived under the boot really had a love of liberty.
Absolutely. And everything he said in those radio addresses is applicable today.
Maybe someday, we'll have another real Conservative at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
In the 1970's I was pretty disgusted with the way things were going for America. We had hyper-inflation under Jimmy Carter. Me and my wife had just got married, and with our minimum wage salaries were barely getting by. Every week the price of bread and milk was going up, along with everything else. Young people complain about prices now, but at least they're stable. Back then, inflation was running in the high teens. Everything Carter and the Democrats did was a disaster. Carter was dismantling our military at a frightening pace, our economy was in shambles, and we were losing world market share at an increasing rate to the Japanese and others. The democrats had no vision.
So you're thinking, what about Reagan, not Carter? Reagan immediately put into place strong fix-it measures that rebuilt our economy, our military, and our pride. Within two years of being in office the inflation was being put into check, our military was getting revived, and we were proud to be Americans again. I particularly remember the first space shuttle launch during Reagan's administration and his strong speeches reminding us that America was back and could stand strong. Others on this thread have mentioned lots of his accomplishments, among them his tearing down the iron curtain - dismantling of the Berlin wall and the fall of the Soviet empire. Another reason why he'll be remembered in a positive light 100 years from now is his quest to get an international space station built. BTW, it would have been done by the year 2000 except for all the cuts by the Clintoon administration.
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