╌>

A Rare Moment of Unity

  

Category:  Op/Ed

Via:  mbfc-is-censorship-tool  •  6 years ago  •  10 comments

A Rare Moment of Unity
Like Reagan’s passing, Bush’s presented the nation a rare moment of unity. He lived a very full life. Former Sen. Bob Dole movingly saluted Bush’s casket. The two had been rivals within the Republican Party for decades. But time has a way of salving wounds and statesmen such as Dole and Bush eventually come to terms with one another. And they were both veterans of the war. Bush had been shot down over the Pacific. Dole had been left for dead on a hill in Italy. Both carried that war with them...

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T




AP_18339633669505.sized-770x415xt.jpg
Former President George W. Bush speaks at the funeral for his father, former President George H.W. Bush, at the National Cathedral on Dec. 5, 2018, in Washington.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)



When President Ronald Reagan passed away in 2004, I was still living and working in the Baltimore-Washington area. Reagan’s passing triggered something not just in me, but in the whole country.

Reagan was president when I came of age politically. I was too young to vote for him, but like many my age, I saw him as the champion of America. Reagan-Bush ‘84 signs dotted the fruited plains then and are icons of our past now. They even turned up in Stranger Things .

Reagan restored America’s pride after Watergate and Vietnam. Many Americans saw the Soviet Union as ascendant before 1980. He saw it as an evil empire to be defeated. He rejuvenated the economy. He rebuilt the military. And though it officially ended on his successor’s watch, he won the Cold War. His eight years in the White House were important.

Sure, sure, Iran-Contra. He also told the Soviet premier to “tear down this wall” in Berlin. And a few years later, down the wall came, and we witnessed a new birth of freedom with our own eyes. For those who did not live to experience the wall, the Cold War and all that, it is hard to put that astonishing moment into proper words or perspective.

During those eight years, the Democrats opposed everything Reagan did, lobbed every insult at him and suggested that he was a madman who would blow up the world. The media hammered him relentlessly. Comedians mocked him. The Great Communicator communicated. As life goes in these United States, a Republican president in death is treated far better than he ever was in life.

When Reagan’s body lay in state at the capitol, a friend of mine and I decided this moment was worth whatever it took to visit him. He was, for those of us of a certain age, the president. Even though he had been out of office for more than a decade, and had suffered tragically from Alzheimer's over the final years of his amazing life.

So we stood in line overnight for more than 8 hours, with thousands of other Americans who wanted to pay their respects. Despite the wait, there was no complaining among the more than 100,000 in line. Every minute was worth it. Surely not all of those who stood in line voted for him, supported him, or even liked him. We all wanted to be part of this moment.

This week we said goodbye to Reagan’s vice president and successor, former President George H. W. Bush. The 41 st president’s passing marked the final end of an era: He was the last of the World War II generation to be elected president. That generation, the Greatest Generation, defended the world from tyranny and will pass from this earth soon. We lose so much every time a veteran of that war departs us. He could be called the greatest of the Greatest Generation, so rich was his service.



Like Reagan’s passing, Bush’s presented the nation a rare moment of unity. He lived a very full life. Former Sen. Bob Dole movingly saluted Bush’s casket. The two had been rivals within the Republican Party for decades. But time has a way of salving wounds and statesmen such as Dole and Bush eventually come to terms with one another. And they were both veterans of the war. Bush had been shot down over the Pacific. Dole had been left for dead on a hill in Italy. Both carried that war with them for the rest of their days and it informed their public service in ways the rest of us cannot fathom.

In life, Bush was a patriot, a statesman, a father, a husband – a good and decent man who served this nation from his 18 th birthday to his last. His career stirred all the usual sturm and drang of politics and culture. Every president has successes and failures – 41 had both David Souter and Clarence Thomas. The media dubbed him a “wimp” despite his being a volunteer for the war and a hero in it. He was vilified and praised, and never deserved the extremes of either. That’s politics in a free republic.

But now that he has gone, for a brief moment this week we were a unified nation eulogizing not just the passing of a man, but a moment in all of our lives. A moment in our nation’s history. We recognize the passing of leaders as a mile marker toward our own mortality, and hopefully, the strength of the nation that survives us.

May we never stop noting these moments. These moments are not, as some surmise, times in which we over-glorify a specific man for specific things. They are times in which we are reminded that we are in fact a people, a nation founded on ideas, ideas which should never perish from the earth.



Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1  seeder  XXJefferson51    6 years ago

“But now that he has gone, for a brief moment this week we were a unified nation eulogizing not just the passing of a man, but a moment in all of our lives. A moment in our nation’s history. We recognize the passing of leaders as a mile marker toward our own mortality, and hopefully, the strength of the nation that survives us.

May we never stop noting these moments. These moments are not, as some surmise, times in which we over-glorify a specific man for specific things. They are times in which we are reminded that we are in fact a people, a nation founded on ideas, ideas which should never perish from the earth.”

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1.1  devangelical  replied to  XXJefferson51 @1    6 years ago
a Republican president in death is treated far better than he ever was in life

go figure

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1.1.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  devangelical @1.1    6 years ago

Thats the way it is with the liberal lamestream media.  

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Guide
2  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu     6 years ago

Thanks for seeding this:

I certainly agree a united states of America is better, stronger and an much more wonderful country when we are united. Unfortunately, I dont see many walking that talk these days. Division is the path of today, where it leads us time will tell. Will we ever really be a United States of America ?

Good question.  

Until each one of us at least trys, I sincerely doubt it. It is a personal choice. One that sometimes isn't easy to keep. Once made you are pulled by some on both sides to abandon your united stans and rejoin the division. 

But who really wins in a devided country, certainly not the masses. Our politicians and media have devided us up for their own power and profit. Not ours. 

One country ... devided or united WE he people right now still have a choice. Voting straight party line is how bad people gain control over us, voting for only really qualified people instead may help. 

I hope the people of our country can start mending this division before it tears it to shreds. But I doubt it starts with the politicians or our media, they have too much too lose.

Thanks again for seeding this. INO: WE are a greater nation when we cooperate and get along.  United we stand devided we'll fall, our choice still. For now. 

Good Luck America !!! 

PS: RIP President Bush and thank you for your outstanding service to our nation may your spirit live on in our country  !!  

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu @2    6 years ago

There are certain things that should unify all Americans and a moving tribute to a genuine American hero and great man like George Bush is one of them.  

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Principal
4  Perrie Halpern R.A.    6 years ago

This article seemed to miss the real moments of unity. When party divisions didn't matter. The fact that HW was close friends with Bill Clinton, despite being political adversaries says a lot. The fact that HW could reach across party lines to get legislation done. The fact that he had friends that were Dems is amazing. These are the true moments of unity, that this article just seems to miss totally. 

The funerals for HW was a tribute to the man, who had so much grace and such class, that everyone admired him no matter which party they came from. That says something. 

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
4.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A. @4    6 years ago

Like father, like son. 

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
5  seeder  XXJefferson51    6 years ago

And I believe that with democrat party control in the House for the next two years that Trump will reach across the aisle and try to work with them to get some of the things they want to accomplish done as well as some of the things we want to do.  

 
 

Who is online

Gsquared
Igknorantzruls
Snuffy
Tessylo
arkpdx
Thrawn 31
Dragon
Gazoo
zuksam


125 visitors