Reagan’s death was as Orwellian as his presidency, with the corporate media engaged in an orgy of adoration – not of the real Reagan, but of a mythical character they were constructing literally before our eyes. Yes, Reagan did come off as a kind old grandfatherly man. But by all accounts, Adolph Hitler was also kind – to dogs and Aryan children. But Hitler’s ultimate legacy isn’t that of a kind dog-lover. And Reagan’s legacy shouldn’t be that of a kind old man.
A Congressional intelligence report documented that Reagan’s Contra army, who Reagan equated as “the moral equivalent of our founding fathers,” had “raped, tortured and killed unarmed civilians, including children.” The report also documents that “groups of civilians, including women and children, were burned, dismembered, blinded and beheaded” by the Contras, who Reagan also dubbed as “freedom fighters.”
The US Congress, for its part, was so disgusted that it cut off all funding for Reagan’s “freedom fighters.” Undeterred, the Reagan administration covertly raised funds for the Contras by selling weapons to the US’ official enemy, Iran, as well as aiding the Contras in illicit narcotics shipments to US-based drug dealers. This fiasco has historically been termed the “Iran Contra Affair.”
The Contra War ended in 1989, with a fed up Nicaraguan population finally crying “uncle” and voting a US-supported government into office. The war cost Nicaragua over 50,000 lives and left the Nicaraguan economy and infrastructure in shambles – a state it remains in today.
The ultimate payoff for the Iranians was the Iran-Contra arms deal and a general hands-off approach to Iran during Reagan’s presidency. By any definition, this deal was treasonous. Reagan’s team conspired with a hostile enemy of the US, encouraging it to maintain hostility against the US while further endangering the lives of the American hostages, who Iran ultimately released on the first day of Reagan’s presidency.
After conspiring with the Iranians, however, Reagan also double-crossed them, selling weapons to their enemy, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. The Reagan administration continued to sell not only conventional weapons, but biological and chemical weapons components to Iraq even after it was documented that they were using banned chemical weapons against their own Kurdish population and against the Iranians. The Reagan administration also worked to thwart international condemnation of Saddam’s regime. The Iran-Iraq war cost over one million lives, with the Reagan administration supplying weapons to both sides.
Reagan will also be remembered quite well in El Salvador and Guatemala – especially on the Day of the Dead when folks go to cemeteries to remember their deceased ancestors. In El Salvador, Reagan armed and trained a brutal military linked to psychotically violent death squads responsible for killing tens of thousands of Salvadorans. In 1982 Reagan reported to Congress that the Salvadoran government was making strides in improving its human rights record. American newspapers, which during the Reagan era still carried some news critical of US puppet governments, reported during the same week that Salvadoran troops massacred, in one village alone, 700-1,000 people who were mostly women, children and elderly folks who didn’t think they needed to flee. A week later the same newspapers carried reports of institutionalized rape and torture carried out by US armed Salvadoran forces. Then there was the rape of American nuns at the hands of Salvadoran troops trained in Fort Benning, Georgia at the School of the Americas. By the end of the Reagan presidency, approximately 70,000 Salvadorans were killed.
People in El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala entered the 1980s with hope. Reagan killed that hope. That, along with a decade of unspeakable horror, is Reagan’s legacy to the people of Central America, who only knew him as a brutal butcher, never ever seeing him as a kind old man.
Reagan also was a friend to the racist apartheid regime in South Africa, vetoing a bipartisan congressional bill that would have enacted sanctions against that government. He also backed the totalitarian junta in Argentina and attempted to normalize relations with the murderous Pinochet regime in Chile – both governments that have since fallen to popular democratic movements. He also expressed support for the brutal Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines.
This Strangelovian proposition, of course, put the Soviets on edge. Hence, we have since learned, when the comic old Gipper cut loose one of his zany one-liners in front of an open microphone, stating that he just declared the Soviet Union “illegal” and that we would “begin bombing in five minutes,” the USSR went into high alert activating its nuclear arsenal and damn near ending life on earth as we know it. Anti-nuclear activist, Dr. Helen Caldicott called Reagan “the pied piper of Armageddon.” Under his watch we had the largest anti-war demonstration (Nuclear Freeze) in American history, with between 700,000 to 1.2 million people gathering in New York’s Central Park to denounce his policies.
Reagan was equally destructive back home where his tax cuts for the richest Americans set the pace for a draconian upward redistribution of income while gutting government programs for jobs, housing, health and education. He cut the school lunch program, famously declaring that ketchup would suffice as a vegetable in school cafeterias. At protests we chanted “Ketchup is a condiment – Reagan is a vegetable.”
Perhaps the area where he differed most from his predecessor was in regards to the environment. Jimmy Carter actually had an energy policy. He mounted solar collectors on the roof of the White House and began an earnest push toward mandating the use of renewable energy while setting mileage standards for automobiles.
In 1979 Carter made the ultimate mistake – he was honest in the White House. In contrast to the irresponsible consequence-free consumerism that followed in the Reagan-Bush-Clinton-Bush era, Carter warned Americans that the party needed to end – that we would have to live collectively as adults and face the consequences of our actions.
In contrast to our current terminal SUV-laden childish “I’m an American and I can drive anything I damn please” culture, Carter warned, “We can't go on consuming 40 percent more energy than we produce. When we import oil we are also importing inflation plus unemployment.” Carter went even further, questioning the whole economic, environmental and cultural impact of conspicuous consumption itself. In his “Malaise Speech” on July 15 th, 1979, Carter warned, “In a nation that was proud of hard work, strong families, close-knit communities, and our faith in God, too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns. But we've discovered that owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning. We've learned that piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no confidence or purpose.”
With this speech, Carter challenged the very ethos of the upcoming Reagan Revolution – greed, irresponsibility and living for consequence-free immediate gratification, the world be damned. Carter told Americans that we had to live responsibly, and this, along with Reagan’s Iran treason, was his ultimate downfall. Carter proposed capping oil imports at 1977 levels, cutting oil usage 50% by 1990 and engaging in an unprecedented peacetime spending plan to develop alternative fuel sources, with the goal of producing 20% of our energy from solar sources by the year 2000.
Ultimately, the Reagan presidency undermined American culture, legitimizing greed as an acceptable value. He promised to shrink government but instead gave us record deficits driven by tax cuts to the wealthy and corporations coupled with increases in military spending. He allowed Savings and Loan administrators such as Neil Bush to loot their own banks, ultimately costing us almost one trillion dollars. He set back conservation efforts and the fight against global warming by 25 years, all but guaranteeing an environmental calamity. He had no qualms about taking the food out of the mouths of poor children. He poisoned our judiciary with ideologically driven reactionary judges such as Antonin Scalia, ultimately leading to George W. Bush’s appointment to the White House.
He transformed us from being a mature nation responsibly planning for our future into a hedonistic band of overgrown toddlers on a credit card high. He got reelected because it’s more fun to spend than to save, and easier to pillage than to conserve. This culture of selfishness and irresponsibility is Reagan’s true legacy. He not only poisoned our environment. He poisoned our national ethos. Most of our current problems, including the imbecile now in the White House, have their roots in the Reagan presidency.