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Friday, June 05, 2009
Dr. Paul  Kengor :: Townhall.com Columnist
What I Saw at the Rotunda
by Dr. Paul Kengor
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I was at the Rotunda at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, June 3, for the dedication of the statue to President Ronald Reagan. I was there because Bill Clark was there. Judge Clark, as readers of my material know, was Reagan’s closest and most important adviser.

Clark is 77 years old. His wife, Joan, died a few weeks ago. He was invited to the ceremony by the good folks at the Reagan Presidential Foundation. He made a rare trip to Washington, flying from San Francisco late the previous night, in a wheelchair.

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Clark sat in the front row, where he was a magnet for current political luminaries and old Reaganites. They all came over to shake his hand: Peggy Noonan, Bob Michel, Denny Hastert, Michael Steele, John McCain, Chas Fagan—the sculptor of the statue. McCain made a beeline for Clark, with cameras clicking upon the two.

The ceremony began with a wonderful invocation by Rev. Barry Black, Senate chaplain, who hit the prayerful themes Reagan himself fondly invoked when waxing eloquent about America—about that Shining City on a Hill. Among those providing remarks, Congressman John Boehner and Senator Mitch McConnell—the Republican leaders in Congress—were excellent. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, aside from a foolish statement on “stem cell research,” was gracious in her “respect, esteem, and admiration” of President Reagan.

It was a moving event, especially with Nancy Reagan’s presence. Frail, small in size but large in stature, she was no longer the walking dartboard that “journalists” once joyously harpooned. They now treated her like an elder stateswoman, a kind of political royalty—America’s preeminent former first lady. The loudest applause was directed at Nancy.

For me, however, the crowning touch came before Nancy spoke, and before the statue unveiling. It was the sole musical selection for the program: the U.S. Army Chorus singing, a cappella, “America, the Beautiful.”

This love-song for the nation captivated the room. It was beautiful. I caught a camerawoman struggling to hold up her long-lens as she wiped tears flowing down her face.

But what struck me was the perfect choice of that patriotic hymn, unwittingly tying together not only the thoughts of Rev. Black and others, but the origins, ends, and legacy that was Ronald Reagan’s career. Indeed, lost to the innumerable books, articles, documentaries and recollections of Reagan is the significance of this particular anthem.

Specifically, it was way back in the summer of 1952 that Ronald Reagan, an actor transitioning from Democrat to Republican, effectively launched his crusade with a commencement speech at a tiny women’s college in the Midwest. The place was William Woods College, in Fulton, Missouri—the same town where Winston Churchill had warned that a Soviet “iron curtain” was closing across Europe.

It was June 2, 1952. Reagan eagerly arrived with a vibrant, pregnant Nancy. The ceremony opened with a rendition of “America, the Beautiful.”

At 10:00 AM, the movie star addressed the 100 soon-to-be graduates. He told them that America is “less of a place than an idea.” It is an idea, he said, that resided deep in the souls of men. Reagan cast this idea against the darkness of the atheistic, murderous communist menace that resided in Moscow, which, sadly, was really nothing new. Said Reagan:

[The idea of America] is nothing but the inherent love of freedom in each one of us, and the great ideological struggle that we find ourselves engaged in today is not a new struggle. It’s the same old battle. We met it under the name of Hitlerism; we met it under the name of Kaiserism; and we have met it back through the ages in the name of every conqueror that has ever set upon a course of establishing his rule over mankind. It is simply the idea, the basis of this country and of our religion, the idea of the dignity of man, the idea that deep within the heart of each one of us is something so God-like and precious that no individual or group has a right to impose his or its will upon the people. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Paul Kengor, author of spiritual biographies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, has just published God and Hillary Clinton and The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand. He is a professor of political science and executive director of the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

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Rightmindedmom
You are exactly correct that the old-guard Republicans despised Reagan and wanted to keep their blueblooded country-clubbers running the party even though it meant they would never have power.

George HW Bush was exactly who these people were. He ran against Reagan in the primary and, fortunately, was beaten. It's too bad Reagan chose him as his running mate. Between George 1 and George 2 they have destroyed our party. It was George 1 that coined the term describing Reagan's Supply Side economics as "Voodoo Economics." He never believed in this which is why he promptly voted for, at the time, the largest tax increase in American history after his infamous "Read My Lips" statement. He basically tried to undo all the great things Reagan had brought into being. And then his son followed that up with the Coup de grace, Compassionate Conservatism which turned the Republicans into another party of Big Government. This is what has brought us to where we are now with the Trojan Horse hopey-changy working to complete the job of finishing our great republic off.

Astroboy is Spaced-Out
Reagan never committed that old libtard canard about the October Surprise with the Iranian hostages. What a bunch of donkey stew.

Actually, the deal with the trading of arms with Iran was to engage their behind the scenes support to work with Lebanonese terrorists who were holding many of our Foreign Service workers and military attaches hostage in Lebanon. They used their influence to help free many of these hostages. In exchange, they received weapons from us, most of which had been obsoleted by our own military. We also used the money they paid to fight Communists in Nicaragua.

Leftists are very confused and hate-filled people. Reagan brought about a Conservative revolution in this country and that is why people like SpaceBoy hate him so much.
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