CBS, ‘The Reagans,’ and the Political Classes
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
As
anyone who has a modem and email address knows, CBS is planning
to show a mini-series called "The Reagans" some time this
month. Furthermore, the series, which Republicans have labeled a
"hit job," surely will be known more for its controversy
than its entertainment or artistic value. The whole affair also
tells us something about the nature of the political classes that
dominate our society.
Before
going further, let me say that I have no plans of watching this
show, whether or not it is accurate (and it is doubtful that Hollywood
could reproduce any historical event with accuracy). We don’t
have outside television reception in our house, and I sure don’t
plan to call the cable company or install a satellite dish just
so I can view this bit of tripe. Thus, I am commenting only on what
I have read on the Internet.
Being
that the lead character in this series is James Brolin, husband
of actress and Democratic Party activist (and self-confessed Ronald
and Nancy-hater) Barbara Streisand – who was a constant fixture
on the set – my guess is that the mini-series will try to portray
Reagan and the former First Lady in the worst possible light. Hey,
that’s show biz, and since Hollywood is the home of the most vocal
– and wealthiest – Democratic supporters, one would expect Hollywood
to produce something that paints Republicans as villains.
There
seems to be some justification for Republican angst. Reagan, who
was a fairly affable character before tragically being struck with
Alzheimer’s Disease and a friend to many homosexuals, is going to
be portrayed as something on the other side of Jerry Falwell when
it comes to opinions on homosexuality. (One of the lines in what
CBS calls a "meticulously researched" script has Ronald
saying to Nancy about AIDS and homosexuals, "Those who live
in sin will die in sin." The producers admit Reagan never said
anything like that, but since the government apparently did not
come up with a "cure" for AIDS during Reagan’s term, it
is OK to take dramatic license here.)
Never
mind that Bill Clinton, hero to Babs Streisand and friends, didn’t
cure AIDS, either, but Bill was a Friend of Hollywood, so it does
not matter what he did. Actually, it was the Reagan Administration
that first pushed the HIV-AIDS theory in 1984, which has been a
real boon to drug companies that were able to bring back the failed
cancer drug AZT and receive billions of "free" research
dollars to develop so-called AIDS drugs. (Whether or not HIV causes
AIDS has been well-debated in other forums, including this page,
and since I am writing on the mini-series, not AIDS, I do not push
this area of discussion any further.)
Elsewhere,
they have Reagan really losing it upon the discovery of the Iran-Contra
affair, which actually did occur, although the scene that CBS uses
to portray this situation is fictitious and rather silly. But, then
again, Hollywood generally is a rather silly place, so it should
not surprise us that Babs and company are going to give us silly,
slipshod work. It wouldn’t be Hollywood, otherwise.
Apparently,
the movie does deal with one rather unsavory aspect of Reagan’s
presidency, that being Nancy Reagan’s dependence upon astrology
to help determine her husband’s work schedule. Whether or not the
producers actually tell us what happened (the movie supposedly has
the Reagans working together on astrology, but who knows what really
occurred), I would find it surprising that the Hollywood set believes
dependence upon the stars is a bad thing. That is because if there
is any one group in this country that consults the "stars,"
it is the "stars" of Hollywood themselves. (Maybe Babs
has thrown in this astrology affair as a way to praise Ronnie and
Nancy. Who knows?)
Republicans
are screaming to high heavens about this whole affair, since to
them, Reagan was a White Knight on Horseback, saving us from the
Jimmy Carter malaise. (I remember Reagan’s 1984 re-election slogan,
"America is Back!" as well as the "Morning in America"
theme. Indeed, as I will point out later, America was "back"
during the Reagan years – back to sending troops into one disastrous
situation after another, just as had been done during the Vietnam
War.)
While
Carter presided over what seems to have been a disastrous presidency,
there were a number of positive
developments that occurred during his term, something that if
they had any sense, Democrats would be celebrating, not trying to
hide. But, more important, Carter did not send U.S. troops abroad,
as did his successors, and the U.S. Government was not responsible
for literally thousands of civilian deaths abroad, which has not
been the case for Reagan, George Bush I, George Bush II, and Bill
Clinton. If anything, Reagan’s adventurism undid the solid foreign
policy contributions of the Carter Administration and led us into
many of the same murderous predicaments abroad that had characterized
the administrations of LBJ and Richard Nixon.
Even
Reagan’s alleged economic contributions – other than lowering the
top tax rates from 70 percent (something that Keynesian anti-economist
Paul Krugman still laments) to about where they are today – were
due mostly to the economic deregulation begun during the Carter
years, as well as Carter’s Federal Reserve Chairman, Paul Volker.
In other words, Reagan is not the villain portrayed by Babs and
her husband, but neither is he the Savior of America, as so many
Republican conservatives want to believe.
Once
upon a time, before the United States became a thoroughly-politicized
society, Hollywood concentrated upon making movies that had real
plots and were not attempts to politically propagandize people.
(Granted, I am leaving out the Hollywood of World War II, which
produced political propaganda that would have made Goebbels and
Stalin proud.) Those days are gone forever. Today, we have Democrats
trying to portray a president whom they hated (and still hate) while
trying to tell us that they are trying to be "accurate."
On the other hand, we have Republicans trying to deify someone who
was a flawed president, like anyone else.
Now,
had the Democrats wanted to present a bad side of the Reagan presidency,
they could have called upon me. I would have told them that Reagan’s
CIA was involved in car bombings in Lebanon that killed innocent
civilians, and led to the untimely deaths of hundreds of U.S. soldiers;
I would have pointed out that Reagan gave us the disastrous "war
on drugs" and vastly increased the police powers of the state
to arrest Americans and seize the property of innocent people (on
the mere pretense that there "might have been" alleged
drug activity) because a small number of Americans did not to listen
to Nancy Reagan and decided, instead, to "just say yes"
to drug use.
I
would have pointed out how Reagan’s Comprehensive Crime Control
Act of 1984 basically permitted to federal government to criminalize
just about everything, and how the Reagan presidency ultimately
led to an explosion of the U.S. prison population, which consists
mostly of non-violent drug offenders. Moreover, I would have told
them that despite the fact that environmentalists thoroughly hated
Reagan, it was his administration that began to apply criminal sanctions
to alleged violations of environmental regulations, which meant
that people went to prison because some federal bureaucrats did
not like them putting sand or clean fill dirt on their own property.
It was Reagan’s Environmental Protection Agency that vastly expanded
its powers during the 12-years of Reagan-Bush I, and it was the
Reagan Administration that permitted William Bennett and other Neoconservatives
to have a platform from which they could nationalize education policies.
Just as Bill Clinton’s Department of Justice under Janet Reno actually
wrote most of the rightly-vilified Patriot Act that Reno’s successor
trotted off again after the 9/11 attacks, Reagan expanded the powers
of the central government in a way totally inconsistent with his
"freedom and free enterprise" rhetoric.
Indeed,
had Babs and company really done some "meticulous research,"
they would have found that thanks to Reagan’s presidency, Bill Clinton
was able to exercise powers to do those things which the CBS executives
really liked. To put it another way, without Reagan, there would
have been no Clinton, or at least a Clinton who acted like Bill
Clinton.
For
all of the talk about "restoring America," the ultimate
legacy of Ronald Reagan was to further entrench the vast – and unconstitutional
– powers of the federal government. Had the people from CBS been
willing to portray this fact as the end result of Reagan’s two terms
(instead of its bogus AIDS quotations), I might have been willing
to call my cable company. As it is, I think instead I will just
read the latest book by James
Bovard. Now, any one of his books would create the potential
for a movie blockbuster. Instead, the political classes and their
Hollywood allies give us lies, tripe, and mediocrity.
November 3, 2003
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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