In a 1980 presidential debate against Jimmy Carter, the late Ronald
Reagan will forever be remembered for having asked, “Are you better off
today than you were four years ago?” If African-Americans were to ask
themselves if they are better off today than they were before eight
years of Ronald Reagan in the White House, the answer would be an
emphatic no. Ronald Reagan was an amiable figurehead who made
racism respectable. Efforts to re-write history, even by newspapers
with so-called liberal editorial pages, cannot change that fact. I
didn’t say he was a racist – I said had he made racism respectable. And
he did so by launching an all-out attack on civil rights, all while
smiling, tilting his head to the side, and doing a better acting job in
the White House than he ever did in Hollywood. Reagan made his
White House mission clear by kicking off his 1980 general election
campaign in Philadelphia, Miss., where three civil rights workers had
been murdered in 1964. Reagan appointed William Bradford Reynolds
as assistant attorney general for civil rights. Not only did Reynolds
make it clear that the administration would no longer use goals and
timetables to help eradicate racial discrimination, he went so far as
to seek the invalidation of voluntary affirmative action programs
around the country. Reynolds wasn’t Reagan’s only bad
appointment. He selected William H. Rehnquist, then the most
conservative member of the Supreme Court, to become chief justice.
Reagan appointed Antonin Scalia, who was even more conservative than
Rehnquist, to a seat on the court. He also picked Sandra Day O’Conner,
a conservative who slightly moderated some of her views after being
elevated to the High Court, and Anthony Kennedy, who remained a true
conservative. At the executive level, Clarence Pendleton, a
divisive Black conservative, was appointed chair of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights. His selection ended what had been a history of
bi-partisan cooperation on the commission, which had been created under
Dwight D. Eisenhower, a Republican. Initially, Reagan had sought to
disband the commission, but Congress overruled him. Clarence
Thomas, was first appointed to a post in the Department of Education
before being named to head the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC). Reagan’s lone Black cabinet member, Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development Sam Pierce was so ineffectual that he was called
“Silent Sam.” He was such a non-entity that Reagan didn’t even
recognize him at a reception for mayors, greeting him as “Mr. Mayor.” When
I was covering the White House for the Chicago Tribune during the
Reagan years, aides would concede off the record that Reagan’s I.Q. was
lower than room temperature. It has always amused me to see people struggle to say the same thing in a more sophisticated manner. Fred
I. Greenstein, a political scientist, refers to Reagan’s “hands-off”
quality. Reagan biographer Lou Cannon observed: “Often, he held the
reins of power so lightly that he did not appear to hold them at all.
He kept busy, without taxing himself. And he was a happy president –
pleased with script, his cue cards and his supporting cast.” Clark Clifford, an adviser to a long line of Democratic presidents, was more direct, describing Reagan as “an amiable dunce.” The
lavish praise being heaped upon Reagan this week ignores his fiscal
legacy. As head of a party that had come to symbolize fiscal
responsibility – in words, if not deeds – Reagan entered office with a
federal deficit of less than $1 trillion. But because of Reaganomics,
when he left office, the deficit was three times larger. He pledged to
reduce the size of government, but increased it by 200,000 employees. Reagan
presided over the worst recession since the Great Depression. He pushed
through a cut in federal taxes but balanced those cuts on the backs of
the poor, slicing nearly $50 billion from the budget the first year. Reagan’s
determination to overthrow the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua marked
one of his greatest failures. In what was called the Iran-Contra
affair, Reagan authorized the secret sale of arms to Iran in exchange
for the release of kidnapped Americans held in Beirut. Top
administration officials lied to Congress about the scheme that played
a part in the GOP losing control of the Senate in 1986. As you
are deluded with Reagan platitudes this week, don’t be duped about the
real Ronald Reagan. When they ask if Blacks are better after eight
years of Reagan, adopt Nancy Reagan’s anti-drug slogan: “Just say no.”
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Bill Cosby Wasn’t Totally Wrong
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