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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Ronald Reagan (1911-2004): an obituary
By David North
9 June 2004
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His Grace! impossible! what, dead?
Of old age too, and in his bed! ...
Twas time in conscience he should die!
This world he cumberd long enough;
He burnt his candle to the snuff;
And thats the reason, some folks think,
He left behind so great a stink.
Jonathan Swift, from A Satirical Elegy on the Death
of a Late Famous General
It was inevitable that the death of Ronald Reagan, when it
finally came, would be greeted with an effusion of saccharine
tributes to the 40th President of the United States. But nothing
could have quite prepared the innocent bystander for the eruption
of dishonest, cynical and preposterously stupid propaganda with
which the media and political establishment have responded to
the death of Reagan. Of course, given the unending stream of bad
news pouring out of Iraq and other parts of the real world during
the past year, the Bush administration and its friends in the
media were looking desperately for some way to change the subject
and counter the increasingly depressed and surly mood in the country.
The memorial celebrations of the 60th anniversary of D-Day were
intended originally to create that diversion. But the timely death
of Reagan has provided an even greater opportunity for an explosion
of media-sponsored hero-worshipping, flag-waving and mythmaking.
One is compelled to admit that there is nothing quite so awesome
to behold as the total mobilization of the American media. Since
the announcement of Reagans death on Saturday, the massive
weight of this propaganda machine has been set into motion in
what amounts to a vast exercise in historical falsification. The
modern media version of the air brush is being applied to the
years of the Reagan administration. The social misery in the United
States caused by Reagans policies; the tens of thousands
of lives lost in Central America at the hands of fascist death
squads funded illegally by his government; the rampant criminality
in an administration that was the most corrupt in twentieth century
Americaall this and other similarly smelly details are being
more or less ignored. One reads nothing of his defense of apartheid
in South Africa, his funding of countless right-wing dictatorships,
or even of his tribute to SS soldiers buried in a cemetery in
Bitburg, Germany. The media strives not only to suppress any objective
appraisal of Reagans life and political career, but even
to censor reference to the more unsavory elements of his administrations
policies.
The aim of this unrelenting propaganda is not only to mislead
and confuse, but also to intimidate public opinion, that is, to
foster a sense of political and social isolation among countless
Americans who despised Reagan and everything he represented, to
create in their minds, if not doubt about their own judgment,
then at least a sense of futility about the prospects for dissenting
views in the United States.
But the entire affairthe five days of official mourning,
the endless media coverage, the spectacle of a state funeralleaves
the country cold. On Monday morning, in the schools, in offices
and factories, there was little indication that the citizenry
felt that they had witnessed the passing of a great and significant
man, that they, as individuals and as a people, had suffered a
genuine loss. For those old enough to remember the death of Roosevelt,
let alone that of Kennedy, the contrast could not have been starker.
Yes, those men, too, were bourgeois politicians and defenders
of the existing social order. But Roosevelt and Kennedy had with
genuine eloquence given voice, at different stages of their political
careers, to the democratic aspirations of the working class and
other oppressed strata of American society; and won for themselves
an affection that was deeply felt. Real tears were shed when those
men died.
But for the great mass of ordinary working people, the death
of Ronald Reagan is a non-event. It makes no claim whatever upon
their emotions. This is not only because Reagan had been out of
the public eye for a decade, since the announcement that he was
suffering from Alzheimers Disease. Too many working people
still remember the impact of Reaganomics on their
lives, which was entirely for the worse. Indeed, among broad sections
of the working class he was the most hated president since Herbert
Hoover. Even taking into account the support for Reaganism among
significant sections of the middle class and more affluent layers
of workers, the overwhelming popularity attributed to Reagan was
largely of a synthetic character, a myth concocted by the media
to endow the policies of his administration with an aura of public
approval that they lacked in reality.
As the media repackages history to serve the purposes of the
ruling elite, no mention is made of the fact that the 1980s was
the decade that witnessed the most bitter episodes of class struggle
in the United States since the 1940s. The actions taken by the
Reagan administration during its first year in officethe
slashing of federal funding for vital social programs and the
firing of nearly 12,000 air traffic controllers who went out on
strike in August 1981outraged millions of workers. The social
philosophy of the new administration found its most poignant expression
in the redefinition of ketchup as a vegetable in order to justify
the cutting of federal funds for school lunch programs. In September
1981, nearly three-quarters of a million workers demonstrated
in Washington to protest budget cuts and the destruction of PATCO,
the union of the air traffic controllers. An even larger demonstration
took place in Washington in 1983. Virtually every industry was
shaken by bitter and often violent strikes as workers fought back
against the class war policies of the Reagan administration.
But that history has no place in the on-going eulogies to the
dead president. These tributes to Reagan are, in essence, a celebration
of the services he rendered to the rich. The overriding goal of
his administration was the removal of all legal restraints on
the accumulation of personal wealth. The motto of the Reagan administration,
like that of the notoriously corrupt government of King Louis-Philippe
in ninteenth century France, was Enrich yourself.
The slashing of tax rate for the wealthyfrom 70 percent
to 28 percentearned for the president the boundless affection
of the grateful rich. This massive cut in taxes laid the foundations
for the environment of social debauchery and orgiastic celebration
of wealth that characterized the 1980s. It was the decade of Michael
Milken, Ivan Boesky, Donald Trump (who is now making a comeback),
and, of course, the fictional Gordon Gekko, who so famously proclaimed,
Greed is good!
Reagan is eulogized endlessly as the Great Communicator.
This is the moniker bestowed on him by a media controlled by rich
philistines who enjoyed hearing their self-serving platitudes
mouthed by the president. The typical Reagan speech was a mixture
of hokum, bunkum, flapdoodle and balderdash of the type dished
out daily by motivational speakers, along with mashed potatoes
and turgid chicken breasts, at countless business luncheons in
the Marriotts, Hyatts and Hiltons of America. The same sort of
language turned Warren Hardingthe 29th President who most
resembles Reagan, in both physical appearance and intellectual
capacityinto a national laughing stock.
But what sort of man was Reagan himself? Even his most ardent
admirers are hard pressed to identify those elements of his personality
and character that were in any way unusual, let alone outstanding.
His official biographer, Edmond Morris, became so frustrated in
his search for the real Reagan, the essential man
behind the public persona, that he felt compelled to resort to
the devices of fiction writing.
The biographer was confounded by the sheer shallowness of his
subject. Watch, if you have a chance, Reagans movies. The
pedestrian work of the actor revealed not a trace of creative
imagination. The most remarkable feature of his acting was the
utter absence of emotional depth. A more sensitive and empathetic
man would have found in his own early lifethe son of an
alcoholic father, reared in the stultifying environment of small
town Dixon, Illinois, beneath the shadow of impending financial
calamitysufficient material for dramatic insight into the
human predicament. Reagan, however, operated in the realm of the
obvious. His acting repertoire consisted of a tool-kit of predictable
gestures, which he called upon as required by the dramatic situation.
If his character needed to express perturbation, Reagan furrowed
his brow. Anger was conveyed by the stiffening of facial muscles.
He was also able to project a certain amount of boyish charm,
at least into the early 1940s. But then, as he entered middle
age, Reagans career had begun to stagnate.
During his first decade in Hollywood, Reagan was, if we accept
his own description, a hemophiliac liberal and supporter
of Roosevelt. He never offered a credible explanation for the
dramatic change in his political views, but it seems to have developed
as something of a visceral and angry reaction to the decline of
his acting career in the late 1940s. The rightward-shifting winds
of the period gave him an opportunity to strike back at high-brow
Reds among directors and screenwriters who had failed
to provide him with the roles to which he felt entitled. This
was the real emotional background to Reagans involvement
in the anti-communist Hollywood witchhunts of the late 1940s and
early 1950s. Though he publicly denied naming names of suspected
members of the Communist Party, it has since been established
conclusively that he secretly provided information to the FBI.
To Reagans anger over the failure of his acting career was
added resentment over claims made by the Internal Revenue Service
on his personal income. These emotions were genuine and deeply
felt, and this enabled Reagan to articulate, with a sincerity
lacking in all his screen roles, the frustrations and resentments
of broader sections of the middle class in the California of the
early 1960s.
Notwithstanding his election as governor of California in 1966,
his pursuit of the Republican presidential nomination ended in
failure twice prior to his success in 1980. But even then, his
election to the presidency would have been inconceivable but for
the political bankruptcy of American liberalism and the Democratic
Party. While the Vietnam War left liberalism and the Democratic
Party morally discredited, the worsening economic conditions of
the 1970s, eroded the foundations which had sustained the limited
social reformism of the Roosevelt administration and his Democratic
successors.
During the four years of the Carter administration, the Democratic
Party had destroyed whatever was left of its reputation as the
party of social progress and reform. While broad layers of the
middle class were alienated by inflation, which intensified their
resentment of taxes and social welfare programs, the Carter administration
adopted an openly hostile attitude toward the working class, exemplified
by its invocation of the Taft-Hartley Act in 1978 in an attempt
to break the powerful coal miners strike of 1977-78.
The prostration of the Democratic Party cleared the way for
Reagans election in 1980. But the future successes of this
administration would not have been possible without the role played
by the AFL-CIO, United Auto Workers, and other trade union organizations
in sabotaging the efforts of the working class to resist the assault
on their living standards, social interests and democratic rights
that followed the inauguration of Reagan in January 1981.
The critical test of the Reagan administrationand, more
significantly, the turning point in class relations in the United
Statescame with the strike of nearly 12,000 members of the
Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) in August
1981. Ironically, PATCO had endorsed the election of Reagan the
previous year, after being told privately that a Republican administration
would respond favorably to the unions demands for improved
wages and working conditions. However, in accordance with plans
that had actually been drawn up during the Carter administration,
Reagan announced that he would fire all controllers who did not
return to work within 48 hours. There is ample reason to believe
that the Reagan administration received assurances from the AFL-CIO
that the labor federation would take no action in support of PATCO.
There was widespread sentiment among rank-and-file trade unionists
for solidarity action to prevent the destruction of PATCO. Had
the AFL-CIO ordered industrial action in support of the air traffic
controllers, the Reagan administration would have been forced
to retreat, thereby suffering a devastating defeat early in its
first term.
But demands for solidarity action were rejected by the AFL-CIO.
Four leaders of PATCO went to jail, nearly 12,000 air traffic
controllers lost their jobs, and the union was destroyed.
This set the pattern that was followed again and again throughout
the 1980s. Bitter strikes were fought by coal miners, steel workers,
bus drivers, airline workers, copper miners, auto workers and
meatpacking workers. In each and every case, the striking workers
were isolated by the national trade union organizations, denied
any meaningful support, and consigned, deliberately, to defeat.
In the meantime, employers throughout the country pursued their
strike-breaking tactics with full confidence that they enjoyed
the support of the Reagan administration.
By the time Reagan left office in 1989, the American trade
union movement, thanks to the betrayals of the AFL-CIO, had ceased
to exist as a social movement.
If the success of Reagans domestic program was largely
the product of the betrayals of the trade union bureaucracy, what
is hailed by the media as the crowning achievement of his international
anti-communist programthe precipitous collapse of the USSRhad
little to do with the policies of his administration. The dissolution
of the Soviet Union in December 1991, three years after Reagan
left office, was the tragic culmination of decades of political
betrayal by the Stalinist bureaucracies that ruled in the USSR
and its client states in Eastern Europe.
As subsequent analyses of CIA intelligence reports have convincingly
demonstrated, the Reagan administration had no inkling whatever
of the depth of the political crisis in the Soviet Union. The
infamous Evil Empire speech delivered by Reagan in
1983 was based on a grotesque exaggeration of Soviet strength,
not to mention a malicious and ridiculous misrepresentation of
its global ambitions.
In its absurd trumpeting of Reagans visionary leadership
of Americas victory over the Soviet Union in the Cold War,
the media has ignored the really crucial question that arises
from an examination of United States foreign policy in the 1980s.
And that is, what accounted for the decision by the United States
to dramatically and provocatively increase tensions with the USSR?
Since the conclusion of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962,
the United States had sought to avoid confrontation with the USSR.
This policy was expanded by Nixon and Kissinger in the early 1970s
with the official adoption of détente as the
basis of US-Soviet relations.
As historians now know, the decision to reverse course and
adopt a more confrontational approach to the USSR began in the
waning days of the Carter administration, with the decision in
the summer of 1979 to provide funding and military support for
anti-Soviet guerrillas in Afghanistan in the hope of provoking
a military response by the USSR. The Reagan administration continued
and escalated this bellicose policy.
The change in course had far less to do with ideology than
with the deepening structural problems of world capitalism, which
had been manifested in the recurring economic shocks of the 1970s.
The bellicosity of the Reagan administration arose, in the final
analysis, as a response to the deteriorating world-economic position
of American capitalism.
Regardless of ones political attitude toward the policies
of the Reagan administration, it is fairly obvious, on the basis
of any objective analysis, that its efforts to resolve this crisis
had proved manifestly unsuccessful by the mid-1980s. The increasingly
frantic and illegal methods employed by the Reagan administration
to suppress popular insurgencies in Central Americaall in
the name of the global struggle against communismculminated
in the eruption of the Iran-Contra scandal in late 1986. The exposure
of criminal operations organized by rogue operatives inside the
White House, carried out in defiance of laws passed by Congress,
left the Reagan administration shaken and bewildered. Reagans
sole defense against criminal charges was that he did not know
what was going on in his own administration. In this instance,
the claim of ignorance was entirely believable.
The Democratic Partys response was typically listless.
While there was vague talk of impeachment, the Democrats did little
more than hold a few half-hearted hearings, in which Oliver North
was permitted to taunt and insult them.
But the Reagan administration had all but run out of steam,
and its troubles were compounded by the financial consequences
of tax cuts and massive increases in military spending. In the
face of unprecedented deficits, which had transformed the United
States into a debtor nation for the first time since 1914, the
Reagan administration was compelled to raise taxes and return
to a more accommodating line with the USSR.
The subsequent collapse of the USSR, which Reagan had certainly
not foreseen, was only tangentially related to the policies pursued
by the Great Communicator in the early 1980s. It is
true that the dramatic rise in US military spending contributed
to the economic problems confronting the USSR. But there is little
evidence that Reagans policies were of any particular significance
in determining the ultimate fate of the USSR. Rather, the liquidation
of the Soviet state was carried out by the bureaucratic elite
after it had concluded that this was the only means by which it
could defend its material interests in the face of an increasingly
restive and hostile working class.
Having made these points, it is not our intention to suggest
that Reagan achieved nothing as president, that he left no legacy.
That is not at all the case. Though Reagan has departed this
world, the accomplishments of his administration live on and are
observable everywhere: in the staggering growth of social inequality
in the United States, in the grotesque concentration of wealth
in the hands of a small segment of American society, in the shocking
decline of literacy and the general level of culture, in the utter
putrefaction of the institutions of American democracy, and, finally,
in the murderous eruption of American militarism.
That is the legacy of Reaganism.
See Also:
Bush's prime-time speech highlights
deepening crisis over Iraq
[27 May 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections: Bill Van Auken for president Jim
Lawrence for vice president
[28 April 2004]
The struggle against war and
the 2004 US elections
[27 April 2004]
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