The Gipper and the Stripper
by
Christopher Westley
by Christopher Westley
According
to a
recent poll by the Associated Press, 83 percent of Americans
have a favorable view of Ronald Reagan, while fully 53 percent have
an unfavorable view of Bill Clinton. As a result, Clinton’s recent
campaign to sell his autobiography, My Life, is about more
than earning royalties. It is about repairing a broken image.
One
can hear Rush and Sean and O’Reilly clucking in approval at the
poll results. Ronald the Great compares well with Bill the Pill!
They knew it all along.
But
there seems to be something amiss with this poll. What, after all,
was the purpose of conducting it on June 18-20, so soon following
that highly-rated Reagan Funeral miniseries on the Nostalgia Channel?
Could it be that suspect timing created desired results?
Of
course it could. The fact that the results are being trumpeted at
all tells us much about the public relations concerns of the federal
government during a time when its wealth-transferring and debt-creating
activity is at an all-time high and when undeclared and unconstitutional
pre-emptive wars are the order
of the day.
To
those in power, Reagan will always be deemed as a more important
historical figure than the pathetic Clinton. Reagan will be remembered
for his smile, grandfatherly countenance, and Cold War rhetoric
that coincided with the Soviets’ inevitable collapse a collapse
that had long been predicted by thinkers as disparate at Ludwig
von Mises and Winston Churchill.
Clinton,
on the other hand, will be remembered as the arch-nihilist who wondered
what the meaning if the word "is" is. He will be seen
as the accidental president who presided during an era sandwiched
between the Cold War and the War on Terrorism. His administration
will be judged as one robbed of moral authority that can only be
achieved during times of international crisis.
While
both men were equal masters of televised media, Reagan’s persona
was that of a man you would like to have as a neighbor. Clinton’s
was that of the charming huckster who is always after your wallet
(or your sister). According
to syndicated columnist Debra Saunders, his "genius has
been in getting the public to root for him even when everyone knew
he probably was lying." By his second term, many who were on
to his shtick were beginning to wonder if perhaps all successful
presidents were simply effective liars.
This
explains much of this year’s dose of Reagan worship, planned soon
after the former president’s fall into the depths of Alzheimer’s.
Reagan’s memory is something the federal government of today craves
because it offers a gloss that masks the growth of the transfer
state. To veil domestic
policies that could have been written by Aldous Huxley or the
Democratic National Committee, it is a gloss that George W. Bush
sorely needs.
Despite
his best efforts, Clinton’s memory lacks that gloss, and as a result,
he left a much needed and unintended legacy. Clinton brought back
an element of distrust toward the presidency that is essential to
a free society where individuals, families, and communities operate
autonomously to would-be overseers in Washington, D.C.
Ironically,
to those concerned about the state of liberty and its relationship
to a growing federal government, the seedy Lewinsky scandal was
a critical affair. It effectively sidelined any designs that Clinton
may have had in expanding the State. The government became even
more blessedly divided and restrained.
It
is no coincidence that this resulted in a growing economy, because
a restrained government makes for more secure capital and greater
return on labor. We can thank Clinton’s girlfriend and her bizarre
amorous appeal (noticed only by Clinton) for thwarting policies
that would have squelched much of that economic growth. Good things
sometimes come in blue dresses.
Of
course, from today’s vantage point, all of that seems dated. Today,
the G.O.P. controls both houses of Congress and the White House,
and the government is growing at a pace not approached since the
1960s. The fruit of divided government is long gone, while a yawn
of a presidential contest between two near-indistinguishable partisans
of big government is underway. A backlash, until now restrained
by the war in Iraq, is long overdue.
The
memory of Reagan provides something of an antidote to that backlash.
After all, his 1980 election provided a similar antidote to a backlash
that fomented throughout the 1970s. This is the great irony of Reagan.
His memory keeps those who would otherwise agitate against overweening
government at bay, and it therefore plays an important role in the
growth of a Republican welfare state.
In
contrast, Clinton’s memory reminds us of the federal government’s
proper irrelevance, and in so doing, it serves a greater libertarian
purpose. Until 9/11, George W. Bush upheld this legacy well, but
after that time, it has been hiding in a bunker. Part of the popularity
of Clinton’s new book (which has the number one sales ranking at
Amazon.com at the time of this writing) suggests that many feel
nostalgic for that 1990s-era irrelevance and resent the return of
the imperial presidency.
To
those who benefit from its return, well-timed presidential polls
serve important purposes. In the battle of the Gipper vs. the Stripper,
these polls indicate that the Gipper is winning. It appears, however,
that he is winning for the wrong reasons.
June
25, 2004
Chris
Westley
[send him mail] teaches
economics at Jacksonville State University, Alabama.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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