EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK -- S.J. Cahn
It was the first class I truly hated.
Despised, really. Dreaded. Felt genuinely stupid in.
Spanish I. My fifth-period class, right after lunch, in the sixth
grade.
And I still remember it for two reasons:
1. The first sentence in Spanish that I learned, “La Carretera
Panamericana es muy larga.†(The Panamerican Highway is very long.)
2. Hearing Ronald Reagan had been shot.
March 30, 1981, was otherwise unremarkable. We’d played volleyball at
lunch. I wasn’t looking forward to listening to Senor Leeds.
The first news came soon after we’d all settled in, which can take
some time when 30 or so 11- and 12-year-olds have just finished running
around a playground. That first news was that Reagan was dead.
Clearer reports followed quickly. The president was only wounded,
though it was unclear how severely. (I don’t think we ever were aware
that Al Haig was briefly in charge of the nation.) By the end of class,
we knew the president was in surgery but out of danger.
I remember it to this day, much as I imagine people remember where
they were when they heard John Kennedy was killed.
The president had been shot. The president. For an 11-year-old, those
words were almost unfathomable.
It wasn’t -- and this will get me blacklisted from most Newport Beach
functions -- because I liked Reagan or agreed with his policies. At that
point, I leaned much more toward my mother’s Democratic beliefs than my
father’s GOP ones.
Even today, I think his trickle-down economics failed, led to the
early ‘90s recession and included tax cuts that unfairly favored the
wealthy; Reagan loosened regulations on mental institutions that flooded
our streets with people who are not capable of holding jobs; and a number
of his brilliant military exploits -- the invasion of Grenada, in
particular -- were ridiculous, dangerous public relations moves.
But Reagan is the first president I can remember in the White House.
Jimmy Carter, somehow, doesn’t make much appearance in my memory. And I
remember Chevy Chase’s ridiculous Jerry Ford impersonation during the
first year of Saturday Night Live far better than I remember Ford.
So it’s Reagan, whether I like it or not, who jumps into my mind when
I think of the presidency: his Morning in America theme; him standing
tall and proud in a cowboy hat; that voice and attitude he could, at
times, turn into pure, firm leadership.
His presence, simply, was that powerful.
Call me impressionable. But he was my country’s leader during my
formative years. And I’m not alone.
For nearly all of the people I talked to in college and graduate
school -- some who leaned so far left they’d be immediately escorted out
of Orange County, let alone Newport Beach -- Reagan loomed largely upon
their psyches, upon their budding ideals of America and certainly on
their idea of what the presidency is or should be.
He was the man they vehemently loved or thoroughly loathed. He proved
their most liberal thoughts true or nurtured their conservatism.
But there was no escaping his shadow.
For that reason alone, as he turns 90 and continues his fight with
Alzheimer’s disease and his recent fall, Reagan should know that he
succeeded in something few others before him, and certainly none since,
have.
He was the president.
* S.J. CAHN is the Daily Pilot city editor.
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