Ronald Reagan: The Small-Town Boy Who Changed the World

Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan was arguably the last truly great and transformative American President. His story starts in a small town in Illinois and ends with the fall of Communism. At the time, he was the oldest man to be President, showing Americans that advanced age didn’t mean diminished energy – he united a nation like few have before and none have since.

Ronald Reagan: The Early Years

Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in 1911 in Tampico, Illinois to Jack and Nelle Reagan. His father was a salesman and sometimes raconteur. The family moved around before settling down in Dixon, Illinois. Two things remained with Reagan from his childhood: First, an appreciation for hard working, ordinary Americans. Second, a deep moral conviction against injustice in the world.

His father gave him the nickname “Dutch” as a child, one of many that would follow Reagan throughout his life. He was so named because he resembled a stereotypical Dutch boy.

Two values were strong in the Reagan household: First, the family held a deep religious faith. For Reagan’s father, it was Catholicism. For his mother (and later Reagan) it would be the Disciples of Christ. Second, the family was outraged by injustice in the world. Reagan’s father opposed the Klan, not least of all because of their anti-Catholicism. His mother was a member of the Social Gospel movement and believed in a special role for America in eliminating injustice in the world.

One incident from Reagan’s youth was particularly impactful: When his college football team played nearby, two black teammates were not allowed to stay at the hotel. Reagan’s mother let the pair stay overnight and prepared them breakfast in the morning. Reagan himself was later an active and vocal backer of the Civil Rights Movement.

Reagan was an unremarkable student both at Dixon High School and Eureka College, but he was very active in campus extra-curriculars. He excelled at football and swimming. He also acquired a taste for acting, as well as his father’s passion for storytelling – something that would serve him immensely throughout his political career. He also got his first taste of politics at Eureka.

ronald reagan

After college, Reagan got a job as the voice of the Chicago Cubs for Des Moines, Iowa. Here he earned a reputation for excellence in transforming bare bones cables about the game into vivid descriptions of action. While out on the West Coast with the Cubs, he conducted a screen test for Warner Bros. that sparked his film career.

Reagan’s film career was not an instant success. Reagan worked on B movies, quipping that the producers “didn’t want it good, they wanted it Thursday.” His performance as George Gipp in Knute Rockne, All Americanis perhaps his most fondly remembered role, one which led to his nickname, “The Gipper.” Another, less flattering nickname, “Bonzo,” came from Bedtime for Bonzo, a romantic comedy about a pair of psychologists who adopt a chimp as a pet.

Perhaps his most accomplished film role was his final one: Jack Browning in the 1964 remake of The Killers. Here Reagan broke type by playing a villain, starring alongside Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Clu Gulager, and John Cassavettes.

During the Second World War, Ronald Reagan served in the United States Army Air Service. Poor eyesight prohibited Reagan from overseas deployment during the war, but he served with distinction, nonetheless, producing over 400 training films for the military and earning the rank of captain.

After his film career cooled down, Reagan achieved his greatest fame as the host of General Electric Theaterand Death Valley Days, two anthology series of the kind that were popular during the Golden Age of Television. However, Reagan was beginning to get a taste of the political arena.

Reagan’s First Foray into Politics

ronald reagan

Reagan was a Roosevelt New Deal Democrat during the 1930s and 1940s. Throughout the 1950s, he remained a liberal Democrat who was active in the Civil Rights Movement. However, as the 1960s dawned, Reagan’s view of the world began to change. It all began with the House Un-American Activities Committee.

Reagan was summoned before HUAC, the powerful committee whose mission it was to root out Communism from the United States. Reagan opposed any legislation banning the Communist Party, membership in such or the restriction of speech. However, he was happy to help Congress in its mission to find Communists in the Screen Actors’ Guild.

In fact, Reagan would soon be President of the Screen Actors’ Guild. He began serving on the SAG board in 1941 as an alternate, leaving the board for the war and winning a special election as President of SAG in 1947. He was re-elected to the position six times, negotiating residual payments for television and film actors alike.

Reagan joined the Republican Party in 1962, after his experience in SAG led him to believe that Communists were bad faith actors who connived behind the scenes. He quit his job hosting General Electric Theater, as the sponsor company prohibited Reagan from being active in politics. In the meantime, he gave apolitical speeches with a conservative bent.

But it was Medicaid that drew Reagan into the political sphere whole hog. He considered this the beginning of creeping socialism in America and said as much in a series of talks sponsored by the American Medical Association. Reagan consistently opposed the expansions of government by the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations. He also joined the NRA, as a lifetime member.

In 1964, during Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater’s run for President, Reagan came into national prominence with his now famous “A Time For Choosing” speech. This speech laid out the choice between creeping socialism and a free America. While Goldwater went down in historic defeat, it was often quipped that he actually won – it just took them until Reagan’s election in 1980 to count the votes.

Ronald Reagan: Governor of California

ronald reagan

Off the back of his impressive performance in support of Senator Goldwater, several influential California GOP members recruited Reagan to run for Governor against Pat Brown, who was running for a third term. Reagan ran on an aggressive conservative platform, vowing to “to send the welfare bums back to work” and “to clean up the mess at Berkeley,” the latter a reference to burgeoning student protests.

As Governor of America’s largest state, Reagan was quickly thrust into the national spotlight. He had to confront militant leftist student protests on campus. He also signed into law two bills that would haunt him personally for the rest of his life: First, Reagan signed the bill into law that legalized abortion. He later stated that had he been more experienced, that he would not have signed the bill, about which he expressed deep regret for the rest of his life.

The second was the Mulford Act, one of the most robust gun control laws in the nation at the time. The law was passed in response to Black Panther protests at the State Capitol in Sacramento.

Reagan’s greatest regret came in 1969, when he signed into law the Family Law Act. This law legalized “no fault” divorce in the state. The first of its kind, the law acted as a model for the rest of the nation on the matter.

In 1968, Reagan came in third behind eventual nominee and the previous nominee for Governor of California, Richard Nixon and New York Governor Nelson Rockafeller, the standard bearer of the party’s liberal wing.

Presidential Ambitions: 1976

ronald reagan

While Reagan had previously run for President in 1968, this was largely a favorite son campaign designed at picking up the pieces at a brokered convention. In 1976, Reagan ran for President in earnest, hoping to replace weak and unelected President Gerald Ford on the Republican ticket.

He very nearly did it. Reagan scored a stunning upset in New Hampshire early on, winning all of the state’s delegates. The race was very tight going into the convention. So much so that Reagan vowed to nominate a moderate as his running mate. But when the delegates voted, President Ford carried the day. He went on to defeat in the 1976 Presidential election against the man Reagan would defeat four years later, Jimmy Carter.

Between the elections, Reagan was mostly known for his vocal opposition to the Briggs Initiative, a California bill that would have barred homosexuals from teaching in public schools. As Reagan was gearing up for a third bid which would rely upon the religious right for support, his stand on this issue speaks to his moral convictions.

Ronald Reagan in the White House

As everyone knows, Ronald Reagan finally won the White House in 1980. After a crowded and competitive Republican Primary and an overture to former President Gerald Ford for VP, Reagan won the primary and the general election, becoming the 40th President of the United States.

Reagan’s first term was arguably the most transformative since Johnson and the most aggressively conservative since Coolidge. Reagan attempted to end the Department of Education and reinstitute organized prayer in public schools. He appointed the first woman, Sandra Day O’Connor, to the Supreme Court. In breaking the air traffic controllers strike, he ended the power of big labor bosses.

He made history in 1981 when, three months into his Administration, he became the first American President to survive being shot in an assassination attempt.

But no summary of Reagan’s life would be complete without discussing his two primary accomplishments as President. First, there was the liberalization of the economy conducted under the rubric of “Reaganomics.” This differed from traditional conservatism, which favored tight budgets above all else, instead arguing that preference for the “supply side” of the economy would lead to greater prosperity.

Even among conservatives, this remains a highly controversial proposition. Regardless, however, Reaganomics involved a significant reduction in red tape, taxes and government largesse.

Second, there was the defeat of Communism, in which Reagan was instrumental. Here, the proof was in the pudding: Reagan wagered that if he could bait the Soviets into an arms race that he would bankrupt their country. On this point, he was entirely correct and that was exactly what happened.

Ronald Reagan was a man who was known for his ability to communicate with the nation. It was a nation that he united when he won a 49-state victory in his re-election bid in 1980. Reagan passed away on June 5, 2004 due to complications from Alzheimer’s Disease. You can visit him at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley, California.

Ronald Reagan: The Small-Town Boy Who Changed the World originally appeared in The Resistance Library at Ammo.com.

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Author: Sam Jacobs

Sam Jacobs is the lead writer and chief historian at Ammo.com. His writing for Ammo.com's Resistance Library has been featured by USA Today, Reason, Bloomberg's Business Week, Zero Hedge, The Guardian, and National Review as well as many other prominent news and alt-news publications. Ammo.com believes that arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. That the rights codified in our Bill of Rights were not given to us in a document, but by our Creator. That an unalienable right is God-given. It isn't granted by a president, a king, or any government – otherwise it can be taken away.

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12 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
April 2, 2022 12:23 pm

FRR

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
April 2, 2022 12:29 pm

He was as good a president as we could have had, considering that most of them are murderous psychopaths. He got rolled on Simpson-Mazzoli, the immigration bill of 1986, when he agreed to grant amnesty to “3 million” illegals in exchange for a secure border that never happened. He’s been out of office for 33 years, and he’s now mostly used as a touchstone by disingenuous globalist neocon Republicans. Media dunderheads like Hannity bring him up because that clicks with boomers. Whenever you hear a politician talk about Reagan, you know you’re about to be sold some non-America-First globalist neocon bullshit.

The Duke of New York
The Duke of New York
April 2, 2022 12:32 pm

At least he had the intellect to speak on issues at length without a teleprompter, can’t think of any president lately that could do that. That and the guts to raise interest rates in the face of burgeoning inflation, somthing which should happen now but never will (due to making the already horrendous debt blow up in our government’s face).

Nobody’s perfect, but Reagan would be a damn site better than what we have now.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  The Duke of New York
April 2, 2022 12:37 pm

Sadly, that’s what its come down to…..which pile smells the least.

NoVaxxedMuchvexed
NoVaxxedMuchvexed
  MrLiberty
April 2, 2022 2:55 pm

A politician dies and ends up standing in front of the pearly gates. Saint Peter looks at him for a second, flicks through his book, and finds his name.

“So, you’re a politician…”

“Well, yes, is that a problem?”

“Oh no, no problem. But we’ve recently adopted a new system for people in your line of work, and unfortunately you will have to spend a day in Hell. After that however, you’re free to choose where you want to spend eternity!”

“Wait, I have to spend a day in Hell?!” says the politician. “Those are the rules,” replies St Peter, clicks his fingers, and WOOMPH, the guy disappears. He awakes, curled up with his hands over his eyes, knowing he’s in Hell. Cautiously, he listens for the screams, sniffs the air for brimstone, and finds… Nothing. Just the smell of, is that fabric softener? And cut grass, this can’t be right?

“Open your eyes!” says a voice. “C’mon, wakey wakey, we’ve only got 24 hours!” Nervously, he uncovers his eyes, looks around, and sees he’s in a hotel room. A nice one too. Wait, this is a penthouse suite… And there’s a smiling man in a suit, holding a martini. “Who are you??” The politician asks.

“Well, I’m Satan!” says the man, handing him the drink and helping him to his feet. “Welcome to Hell!”

“Wait, this is Hell? But… Where’s all the pain and suffering?” he asks.

Satan throws him a wink. “Oh, we’ve been a bit misrepresented over the years, it’s a long story. Anyway, this is your room! The minibar is of course free, as is the room service, there’s extra towels next to the hot-tub, and if you need anything, just call reception. But enough of this! It’s a beautiful day, and if you’d care to look outside…”

Slightly stunned by the opulent surroundings, the man wanders over to the floor-to-ceiling windows through which the sun is glowing, looks far down, and sees a group of people cheering and waving at him from a golf course.

“It’s one of 5 pro-level courses on site, and there’s another 6 just a few minutes drive out past the beach and harbour!” says Satan, answering his unasked question.

So they head down in the lift, walk out through the glittering lobby where everyone waves and welcomes the man, as Satan signs autographs and cheerily talks shop with the laughing staff. And as he walks out, he sees the group on the golf course are made up of every one of his old friends, people he’s admired for years but never met or worked with, and people whose work he’s admired but died long before his career started. And out of the middle of this group walks his wife, with a massive smile and the body she had when she was 20, who throws her arms around him and plants a delicate kiss on his cheek. Everyone cheers and applauds, and as they slap him on the back and trade jokes, his worst enemy arrives, as a 2 foot tall goblin-esque caddy. He spends the day in the bright sunshine on the course, having the time of his life laughing at jokes and carrying important discussions, putting the world to rights with his friends while holding his delighted wife next to him as she gazes lovingly at him.

Later, they return to the hotel for dinner and have an enormous meal, perfectly cooked. As everyone is falling about laughing and flinging bread sticks at each other, his wife whispers in his ear… And they return to their penthouse suite, and spend the rest of the night making love like they did on their honeymoon. After hours of passion, the man falls deep into the 100% Egyptian cotton pillows, and falls into a deep and happy sleep… and is woken up by St Peter.

“So, that was Hell. Wasn’t what you were expecting, I bet?” “No sir!” says the man. “So then,” says St Peter. “You can make your choice. It’s Hell, which you saw, or Heaven, which has choral singing, talking to God, white robes, and so on.”

“Well… I know this sounds strange, but on balance, I think I’d prefer Hell,” says the politician. “Not a problem, we totally understand! Enjoy!” says St Peter, and clicks his fingers again.

The man wakes up in total darkness, the stench of ammonia filling the air and distant screams the only noise. As he adjusts, he can see the only light is from belches of flame far away, illuminating the ragged remains of people being tortured or burning in a sulphurous ocean. A sudden bolt of lightning reveals Satan next to him, wearing the same suit as before and grinning, holding a soldering iron in one hand and a coil of razor-wire in the other. “What’s this??” He cries. “Where’s the hotel?? Where’s my wife??? Where’s the minibar, the golf-courses, the pool, the restaurant, the free drinks and the sunshine???”

“Ah”, says Satan. “You see, yesterday, we were campaigning. But today, you voted.”

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  The Duke of New York
April 2, 2022 2:39 pm

Ronny gave us the coke and crack scourge so just imagine how much better that was than if the Dems had won. The kind of logic the girls on the view would love.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Fleabaggs
April 2, 2022 3:21 pm

Ol’ Trickle down himself.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Anonymous
April 2, 2022 3:33 pm

Are you sure that isn’t just rain???

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Fleabaggs
April 2, 2022 3:33 pm

And he also gave us George H.W. Bush, also famous for starting the crack epidemic in S. Central L.A. and his infamous role somewhere in Dallas on that fateful day. And let’s not forget what a “wonderful” job he did running California like a totalitarian hell-hole during the 1960s. This guy was more against free speech while governor than Castro or Mao.

Ken31
Ken31
April 2, 2022 1:18 pm

This narrative again?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Ken31
April 2, 2022 2:31 pm

Exactly.

BL
BL
  Fleabaggs
April 2, 2022 7:24 pm

In a word…..actor.