Bunch also does a great job at describing how the Right has attempted to use a distorted description of Reagan’s presidency, stressing only its actions that fit the Right’s current agenda. For example, Reagan’s tax cut of 1981 is constantly emphasized by right-wingers even today, while ignoring the several tax increases he signed into law each of the seven years remaining of his two terms. His “heroic” statements regarding foreign policy are equally stressed, while the cautious foreign policy he actually practiced are forgotten. It amusing for a man who never left the safety of Hollywood during World War II or even completely reading presidential briefings while in the Oval Office that Ronald Reagan is given credit for winning the Cold War over Russia.
Even odder, Ronald Reagan was never that popular a president according to records of opinion polls during his presidency. Issue by issue the majorities of Americans were against Reagan’s policies throughout both his terms, but due to the appearance management of his handlers, voters managed to somehow elect him back into office a second time. Thanks to Bunch Reagan’s false myths are shot down repeatedly in his book however. Bunch accurately displays a more factual synopsis of how the Reagan presidency historically occurred, which is a much different account of events than the mythologized version the right continues to portray.
Books | myths | reagan | right-wing













