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Forget Newt...Even Reagan was no Ronald Reagan!

The leader of the 1994 Republican Revolution, Newt Gingrich, has endorsed a very liberal Republican candidate who is running for a vacated seat in New York’s 23rd Congressional District. The candidate, Dede Scozzafava is a strong supporter of abortion as well as gay rights.

Gingrich recently released the following statement: “The special election for the 23rd Congressional District is an important test leading up to the mid-term 2010 elections. Our best chance to put responsible and principled leaders in Washington starts here, with Dede Scozzafava.”

Gingrich has decided to throw his support behind the liberal Republican, despite the fact that there is a viable conservative in the race, running as a third party candidate. Doug Hoffman is actually billing himself as “the real Republican” in the three-way race.

While many conservatives are outraged by Gingrich’s support of the RINO candidate, their anger stems from the fact that most conservatives still seem to be operating under the notion that the Republican Party is historically conservative.

Though besides Ron Paul, the Republican Party had no conservatives running for the 2008 Presidential nomination, all of them tried to convince us otherwise. Some of them did this by drawing comparisons between themselves and Ronald Reagan. While Mitt Romney, John McCain, and Rudy Giuliani are political lightweights compared to Reagan, upon closer examination the man often referred to as the ‘father of modern conservatism’ was not the hard-line conservative he is so often credited as being.

For nearly three decades conservatives have pointed to Ronald Reagan as the very embodiment of their heartfelt ideals. As much as it pains me to say this...Reagan was not nearly as conservative as we would like to remember.

Three key issues for conservatives are combating Islamic terrorism, illegal immigration, and government spending. An honest look at how Reagan actually dealt with these issues would be a fair assessment of whether or not 'the Gipper' was a true conservative.

In 1982, President Reagan sent U.S. Marines as a peace-keeping force to Beirut after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. The Marines were tasked with being policemen during the Lebanese Civil War. In April of 1983, a bomb-laden truck was driven into the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, killing 17 Americans. In the early morning hours of October 23, 1983 the Marine barracks in Beirut was also attacked by a truck bomb, killing 231 Marines. The Iranian-backed Hezbollah was found to be behind both bombings

Reagan vowed to meet all Islamic terrorism with "swift and effective retribution" and promised to stay on in Lebanon. A plan was drawn up to attack the Sheik Abdullah Hezbollah terrorist camp in Baalbek, Lebanon. The site housed Iranian Revolutionary Guards who were responsible for training Hezbollah terrorists. The plan was set to go, but Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger called it off at the last minute somehow to personal doubts over Iran's involvement. Reagan was reportedly furious but never followed through with his plan to hit the terrorist camp and Weinberger kept his job.

Hezbollah threatened more attacks against American forces, unless the Marines left Lebanon by January 1, 1984. Though Reagan initially balked at the threat, he ordered the Marines removed to ships offshore and in February he formally ordered their withdrawal from Lebanon.

In 1984, CIA Beirut Station Chief Bill Buckley was kidnapped by Hezbollah. This was the incident which prompted Reagan to enter into the infamous Iran-Contra affair. Reagan attempted to gain the release of Buckley as well as other Americans being held hostage by the Islamic terrorist group by offering weapons to Iran. Missiles were sent to Iran, but Buckley was never returned. On October 4, 1985 Hezbollah announced that Buckley had been executed. It is believed that after a year of torture and malnourishment, the highly decorated Army officer and CIA operative died of pneumonia.

This weakness in the face of terrorism undoubtedly emboldened Hezbollah which has grown more powerful since the early 1980's and has contributed to the rise of Muslim terrorists throughout the world. Though the bumbling efforts of President Carter may have first hinted to the Islamic world that the U.S. was a paper tiger, President Reagan solidified that notion and gave the green light for Islamic murderers to continue attacking Americans to this day.

In 1986, President Reagan signed into law the Immigration Reform and Control Act. That document granted amnesty to 4 million illegal aliens. According to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 55 percent of those illegal aliens were Mexican nationals.

The millions of Mexican invaders to whom Reagan granted amnesty stayed in this country, and their presence only served to encourage more Mexicans and Central Americans to enter this nation illegally. Reagan's decision to reward criminals by granting them amnesty was arguably the most disappointing action of his presidency.

In 2007, the American people came together and rejected amnesty for illegal aliens and rightfully characterized the architects of the legislation as traitors. However, it would be unfair to criticize criminal enablers such as John McCain and Ted Kennedy without recognizing the damage that Reagan caused to our nation of laws.

When Ronald Reagan took office in January 1981, the budget deficit was $74 billion and the national debt was $930 billion. By 1988, the budget deficit was $208 billion and the national debt had swelled to an incredible $2.6 trillion. In review of the relatively paltry Carter budget, Reagan declared it to be "out of control." However, he made no such claim of his record peacetime deficits.

Reagan's spending grew the size of government and set the stage for runaway government spending which has now taken our national debt to $12 trillion and has seen the U.S. shift from the largest creditor nation to the largest debtor nation. It could be fairly said that Reagan's legacy was leading this nation down the path to bankruptcy (to which we have now arrived).

So there you have it. As much as I hate to point out these facts about the man who no doubt restored the nation’s confidence after Watergate and the Carter years, these are the facts. While Reagan was probably the best politician of our lifetime, he was not really a conservative and cannot fairly be given the title as the father of modern conservatism. No, that title should go to Gov. George Wallace. However, Wallace will always be branded a racist by the mainstream media as well as by dishonest politicians.

Anyone who has studied Wallace and his policies knows that it was he who ushered in the conservative movement which took hold in the early 1980's. In fact, on occasion Reagan admitted to having been influenced by Wallace and his presidential campaigns.

The fact is that the Republican Party has never been truly conservative. Since the late 1970's they have tried to placate the Christian conservatives by merely giving them lip service, and it now appears that even that is coming to an end.

Though Reagan was no conservative, we as conservatives can take up his call for "rugged individualism" and strike out on our own, leaving behind the RINO Party. Conservatives do not need another Ronald Reagan...We need another George Wallace!

 

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By

Virginia Beach Conservative Examiner

Dave Gibson has worked on several state and local campaigns, and as a legislative aide for a Virginia state senator. Dave's politics have been...

Comments

  • SteveV. 2 years ago
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    Well, let's put this in context.

    Reagan cut taxes and properly increased defense spending throughout the first half of the 1980s. Yes, he increased the debt no doubt pressured by Tip O'Neil and the like -- but to say he "set the stage for runaway government spending" which led to our current 12 trillion debt is a bit of a stretch.

    Obama, in his first 9 MONTHS of office, has done much more damage in terms of runaway spending that Reagan did in 8 YEARS.

    Regarding the 1986 IRCA amnesty that Reagan signed, in hindsight this was a huge mistake. He should not have listened to then Representative Schumer. But to his credit, Reagan called this what it was -- amnesty -- and agreed to what was supposed to be a one-time amnesty for what was believed to be a relatively small number of illegals in exchange for strict employer sanctions that would finally resolve this problem.

    Of course, we all know what happened which is why we are not fooled with Sen. Schumer's mass amnesty push now.

  • Jimi 2 years ago
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    Newt and the rest of the tired old republican war horses need to be put out to pasture. They and those nutty Democrats are responsible for the mess we are in.

    Why would any sane person look to them for advice? Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.

  • levotb 2 years ago
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    Excellent piece, Dave! I have often stated the same thing re: Reagan stupidly signing Simpson-Mazzoli which was a green light to Mexican nationals and other foreign nationals to break into the Land of Milk and Honey, creating barrios wherever they settled in. If he were alive and clear-headed today, he'd tell America that was his biggest mistake. I blame Nancy Reagan for much of Reagan's liberal acts. She and her astrologer, I mean! She and her liberalism had a profound effect on Reagan. Whether she goaded him into signing Simpson-Mazzoli, I don't know.

    There was one moment in the Reagan Presidency where he sounded like a true conservative--that famous moment when he called those sitting on their butts and living off other taxpayers "Welfare queens". I remember the picture of him walking thru the ruins of Harlem, destroyed buildings everywhere. He was forced to recant that remark. The left tried to make it appear as a "racist" statement. That was another mistake he made.

  • Larry Breazeale,Msgt.(ret.)USAF 2 years ago
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    What do you expect coming from another "neocon", CFR (Council on Foreign Relations) member like NEWT ?? He is a "phoney conservative" just like all the other GOP leaders..Juan McAmnesty McCain, Huckleberry 'Huckabee', and Romney.
    Let the GOP die a natural death. The GOP (& the democratic party) are NOT sacred institutions. The ONLY thing really sacred is: the Constitution, that document that BOTH corrupt, monopoly political parties ignore day in and day out. The answer?
    REGISTER & VOTE CONSTITUTION PARTY... www.constitutionparty.com
    Courtesy of : NATIONAL VETERANS COALITION www.nvets.org
    "veterans outreach of the C.P." VETERANS PUTTING AMERICA FIRST AT THE BALLOT BOX. -Larry Breazeale,Msgt.(ret.)USAF,Deputy Sheriff retired,Nat.Chrm. NVC/CP

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