In the late 1940’s, as president of the Screen Actors’ Guild union, Ronald Reagan testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee on so-called "subversive activity" in Hollywood, reporting on actors, directors, and screenwriters deemed Communist sympathizers.
And in the 1960’s and 70’s, as Governor of the State of California, Reagan fought the efforts of migrant farm workers to win union contracts, vetoing the Agricultural Labor Relations Act, a bill granting farm workers collective bargaining rights. In one well-publicized episode, then-Governor Reagan appeared on television eating grapes in defiance of a union-sponsored boycott against miserable working conditions in California’s vineyards.
In August of 1981, thirteen thousand members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, or PATCO, ignored federal laws prohibiting strikes and walked off the job in protest of long shifts and mandatory overtime...
Two days later, Reagan made good on his promise, firing more than eleven thousand air traffic controllers, jailing strike leaders and ultimately abolishing the union. It was the first time in U.S. history that permanent replacement workers had been used on such a wide scale to break a strike...
An Argentine court has convicted two of the nation’s former right-wing dictators, Jorge Rafael Videla and Reynaldo Bignone, in a scheme to murder leftist mothers and give their infants to military personnel often complicit in the killings, a shocking process known to the Reagan administration even as it worked closely with the bloody regime.
Testimony at the trial included a videoconference from Washington with Elliott Abrams, then-Secretary of State for Latin American Affairs, who said he urged Bignone to reveal the babies’ identities as Argentina began a transition to democracy in 1983.
Abrams said the Reagan administration “knew that it wasn’t just one or two children,” indicating that U.S. officials believed there was a high-level “plan because there were many people who were being murdered or jailed.” Estimates of the Argentines murdered in the so-called Dirty War range from 13,000 to about 30,000, with many victims “disappeared,” buried in mass graves or dumped from planes over the Atlantic.
A human rights group, Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, says as many as 500 babies were stolen by the military during the repression from 1976 to 1983. Some of the pregnant mothers were kept alive long enough to give birth and then were chained together with other prisoners and pushed out of the planes into the ocean to drown.
Despite U.S. government awareness of the grisly actions of the Argentine junta, which had drawn public condemnation from the Carter administration in the 1970s, these Argentine neo-Nazis were warmly supported by Ronald Reagan, both as a political commentator in the late 1970s and as President once he took office in 1981.
When President Jimmy Carter’s human rights coordinator, Patricia Derian, berated the Argentine junta for its brutality, Reagan used his newspaper column to chide her, suggesting that Derian should “walk a mile in the moccasins” of the Argentine generals before criticizing them...
Here is one thing we know about Mitt Romney: He loves Ronald Reagan (or at least he does now). Here is another: He also loves the Cayman Islands. It's something he kind of shares with the Gipper: creativity in sheltering his fortune from the prying eyes of tax collectors. But here's something he does not share with Ronald Reagan at all: skill at waving his hands and making the story go away. Not many people remember this now, but when Reagan was governor of California in the early 1970s, it came out that he'd paid no state income taxes — none — one year, despite being a wealthy man. And yet, he went on to run — twice — for the highest office in the land, without the revelation making any sort of dent at all. Learn from the master, Mitt...
Mitt Romney is a lot more sticky. Lacking the Reagnite gumption to hold fast in a hustle for more than a few weeks, his attempts at fending off scrutiny only attracted more questions — and by the way, in the four years he had between presidential campaigns, Romney apparently never thought to restructure his financials in any sort of deceptively benign way. Reagan, on the other hand, held off the dogs for almost ten years with a masterful repertoire of moves — wounded indignation, question-begging, subject-changing, and above all, brazen repetition. And he figured out how to rejigger his financial arrangements sufficiently so that he ended up owing a regular-guy tax rate when it came time to do a reveal that proved grandiose enough to close off any interest in further inquiry.
Governor Romney, I know Ronald Reagan. You're no Ronald Reagan.
Location: hotel in Las Vegas Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 11:00am
mzpro5 wrote:
As much as I dislike Bush I have to agree that it is a good thing to own your own home or business. And "ownership" of your retirement fund or medical plan should lead to more active participation and monitoring. That video is certainly not the best to show Bush in a negative light. Plus no Saudi prince. :)
The irony of the home foreclosures to come makes that video a genuine self-incriminating exposé... but you are free to see it however you wish...
mzpro5
A cat can have kittens in the oven but that doesn't make them biscuits
Location: Budda'spet, Hungry Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 10:50am
romeotuma wrote:
This is much better...
As much as I dislike Bush I have to agree that it is a good thing to own your own home or business. And "ownership" of your retirement fund or medical plan should lead to more active participation and monitoring. That video is certainly not the best to show Bush in a negative light.
Location: hotel in Las Vegas Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 10:26am
hippiechick wrote:
Ha! So mean, so true!
Yeah, Pierce pierces... the funny thing is that he skewered the Democrats about fracking the day before he wrote this... see my post in The Environment forum...
Proclivities
There are always a few such people who demand the utmost of life and yet cannot come to terms with its stupidity and crudeness.
Location: Paris of the Piedmont Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 7:44am
mzpro5 wrote:
Oh I don't have a problem with whatever Obama is doing, HC asked for pics and I was only obliging.
Technically, she didn't ask for any pictures; she speculated about them being posted.
Location: Gaäd only knows Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 7:29am
buzz wrote:
so...Reagan's still dead...right?
Which one?
mzpro5
A cat can have kittens in the oven but that doesn't make them biscuits
Location: Budda'spet, Hungry Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 7:26am
Yibbyl wrote:
This is so pathetically ridiculous!
In the 1st pick, we see proof of Obama's seriously declining eyesight. He wasn't bowing down out of respect, he simply was struggling to see where the other, noticeably shorter leader's hand was to accurately grasp it in an attempt to shake hands! Oh, the humanity!
In the 2nd pic, all we are seeing is a very parched Obama sipping his favorite drink, a cherry flavored Icee, which was in the hands of an aid! BFD! Like no one here has ever been thirsty!
The fact that some try to make an acknowledgement of a host culture's traditional customs into a sign of weakness, i.e. "bowing down", shows nothing more than prove that they willingly put on their own blinders so as to keep focused on some POS political party's propaganda. That, to me, is true weakness.
Oh I don't have a problem with whatever Obama is doing, HC asked for pics and I was only obliging.
In the 1st pick, we see proof of Obama's seriously declining eyesight. He wasn't bowing down out of respect, he simply was struggling to see where the other, noticeably shorter leader's hand was to accurately grasp it in an attempt to shake hands! Oh, the humanity!
In the 2nd pic, all we are seeing is a very parched Obama sipping his favorite drink, a cherry flavored Icee, which was in the hands of an aid! BFD! Like no one here has ever been thirsty!
The fact that some try to make an acknowledgement of a host culture's traditional customs into a sign of weakness, i.e. "bowing down", shows nothing more than prove that they willingly put on their own blinders so as to keep focused on some POS political party's propaganda. That, to me, is true weakness.
Location: Gaäd only knows Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 7:23am
mzpro5 wrote:
The ball is in your court.
This is so pathetically ridiculous!
In the 1st pick, we see proof of Obama's seriously declining eyesight. He wasn't bowing down out of respect, he simply was struggling to see where the other, noticeably shorter leader's hand was to accurately grasp it in an attempt to shake hands! Oh, the humanity!
In the 2nd pic, all we are seeing is a very parched Obama sipping his favorite drink, a cherry flavored Icee, which was in the hands of an aid! BFD! Like no one here has ever been thirsty!
The fact that some try to make an acknowledgement of a host culture's traditional customs into a sign of weakness, i.e. "bowing down", shows nothing more than prove that they willingly put on their own blinders so as to keep focused on some POS political party's propaganda. That, to me, is true weakness.
mzpro5
A cat can have kittens in the oven but that doesn't make them biscuits
Location: Budda'spet, Hungry Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr:
Posted:
Feb 9, 2012 - 6:53am
hippiechick wrote:
Say what?
And if you show me that pic of him bowing, I will show you the pic of Bush holding hands with the Saudi prince.
The ball is in your court.
hippiechick
Did you ever grow anything in the garden of your mind?
Location: topsy turvy land Gender: Zodiac: Chinese Yr: