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Reagan
and Generation Next
by Hans Zeiger
Last
year's British Social Attitudes Survey demonstrated that young Brits
born around the time of Margaret Thatcher's Conservative term as
Prime Minister are the most conservative generation alive in their
country. This is the philosophical endorsement of a term dubbed
on British youngsters by their press: "Thatcher's Children."
With equal reason, it ought to be said that the approximately 30
million Americans born between 1981 and 1988 are "Reagan's
Children."
The
passing of President Reagan gave us pause to reflect on his sweeping
impact on the course of world history. The America we love is the
America that Ronald Reagan inspired us to love.
We
would thus be a decent generation to consider ourselves Reagan's
Children. It is not merely for the time he spent in office during
which so many of us were born, myself included, that we should associate
our generation with the name of President Reagan. It is also because
this generation is notably reflective of Reagan's conservatism,
as well as his optimism.
It
is an optimism I first discovered in the Fifth Grade upon reading
Ronald Reagan's autobiography An American Life, and I considered
him a hero after that. Growing up, my bedroom wall displayed a large
poster of Reagan standing beside a pillar along the West Wing corridor,
a 1984 "Americans for Reagan" campaign banner, and a poster
with this quote by the Great Communicator: "Freedom is not
something to be secured in any one moment of time. We must struggle
to preserve it every day. And freedom is never more than one generation
away from extinction."
It
is not difficult to understand the potential perils at which freedom
continues in America when we see the laxity with which responsibility
is matched to freedom. And many young people scorn responsibility.
It
is why Reagan declared, "The future of our nation will be determined,
more than anything else, by the character of our children."
We
have character problems indeed. But there is a strong and vital
corps of young Americans who are committed to the simple, permanent
things, the things of the spirit that define the American character.
These are Reagan's Children who will keep America going.
I have
twice attended the Conservative Political Action Conference, an
annual gathering of conservatives in the nation's capitol, and I've
seen the mighty impact of the Reagan legacy in this generation.
This year, over 2,000 young conservatives came to CPAC.
Several
years ago, Young America's Foundation purchased Ronald Reagan's
California ranch Rancho del Cielo in the Santa Ynez Mountains, and
thousands of conservative students have passed through the ranch
for activist training seminars, intellectual discussions, and conferences.
Among
rankings provided by the college search corporation Princeton Review
is the category, "Students most Nostalgic for Ronald Reagan."
But
it is more than passive nostalgia; Reagan's Children are more conservative
than any generation since statistics were available. The Harvard
Institute of Politics reports that 31 percent of college students
identify as Republicans, compared to 28 percent who are Democrats.
And according to a Higher Education Research Institute report, 24
percent of college freshmen consider themselves liberal while an
all-time high 21 percent say they are conservative. Even the Baby
Boomers and Generation Xers who were Youth for Reagan in 1968, 1976,
1980, and 1984 could not rival with the energy and passion of what
Rolling Stone and the New York Times have recently called, "young
Hipublicans."
President
Reagan often spoke of a bright future, and I do not think he was
a false prophet. "The future of our country," he said,
"the direction that we go as a people, whether we move ahead
to meet the challenges of the future or slide back into the irresponsible
policies of the past, will be determined by those who get involved."
In many ways, it was Reagan who inspired me to become active in
politics when I was a teenager, to take an interest in understanding
and defending liberty.
As
a 13-year old, I wrote a letter to President Reagan: "I have
certainly been inspired a lot by you and that which you stood for...
I cannot fully express my enormous gratitude for your support of
patriotism ... Thanks for leading America to victory!"
I did
not receive a reply, nor did I expect one, for by then, Reagan had
retired to the mysterious quietude of what Nancy called, "The
long goodbye." And likewise, Ronald Reagan could not utter
any last words before he died last Saturday; his mind was long ago
debilitated by Alzheimers disease. But I suppose that if he could
have uttered a final exhortation, it would have been those other
last words once uttered by George Gipp in the movie Knute Rockne-All
American (played by Reagan in 1940): "Someday when things are
tough, maybe you can ask the boys to go in there and win just once
for the Gipper."
The
going is tough. And the boys are in the fight. Then we must, at
this moment and in this generation, renew our faith in America's
future, for that is the best tribute we could pay to the legacy
of Ronald Reagan. May Reagan's Children dare to dream, struggle
to preserve the sacred fire of liberty, and ultimately win one for
the Gipper.
Hans
Zeiger is president of the Scout Honor Coalition. He is a student
at Hillsdale College. www.hanszeiger.com
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