Today Is the 102
nd anniversary of Ronald Reagan's birth.
Many revere the man not so much for his years in office but for voicing his vision of American ideals clearly and with enthusiasm. Among the best examples of that vision was elucidated in his 1964 stump speech "A Time for Choosing." Excerpt:
You and I are told increasingly we
 have to choose between a left or  right. Well I'd like to suggest there
 is no such thing as a left or  right. There's only an up or down: up to
 man's ages-old dream, the  ultimate in individual freedom consistent 
with law and order, or down to  the ant heap of totalitarianism. And 
regardless of their sincerity, their humanitarian motive, those who 
would trade our freedom for security have embarked on this downward 
course. 
It was delivered on behalf of Barry Goldwater's run for president. But far more effectively, it established Mr. Reagan as a first-rate conservative voice in America.
Wait. Don't leave yet just because you think you have heard the 1964 speech before. 
Some time in Mr Reagan's first term as president, circa 1982, while traveling in my car, I heard what I consider to be a very important expansion on that speech. I have repeatedly tried to find that later version, but I have not yet succeeded.
So I had a dilemma. Continue to search and wait to pass along what Mr. Reagan attempted to portray or pass along his words as best as I could recall. I made the decision a few years ago that until  someone answers my request to unearth the last version of that speech and provide the man's actual words, I would on various occasions publish it. It is what I remember about Mr. Reagan's more detailed explanation of the political mechanism that Americans find themselves saddled with and he meant for you to know it.
He clearly was attempting to provide us with a new model that could be used to override the Marxist model that he rejected. In my opinion he was correct in rejecting it. 
When we stick to the mono-directional model made famous by Marx and promulgated by our media, we are playing on the field of their choosing. Mr. Reagan offered us an alternative, and we ought to have learned to listen to him by now.
Please forgive me my inabilities to be precise. It is more important that those who love freedom know the essence of his vision as I recall them.
Thank you.
As best as I can recall, Mr. Reagan referred to a political platform. He likened what he considered to be the Marxist political spectrum of left and right to a see-saw of
 a platform.
The Left would gain control, and they'd pile up programs 
on their side of the platform. The foundation beneath the platform would
 begin to sink from the weight of their efforts. This resulted in the 
platform being tilted noticeably. It made the voters feel uncomfortable.
 So the voters would turn to the Right to straighten things out. 
Well the right might try to prop up the left side a bit, and refill 
the foundation, but in doing so, they'd dig a hole under their side of 
the platform next. Those who gain power always have interests who want 
something back -- usually in the form of legislation that favors them or
 taxes their competitors -- for their support. Thus the weight of these 
efforts and favors repaid cause the platform to tip to the right this 
time. That sinking feeling leaves the voters uncomfortable again.
So the voters would then put the Left back into power. And the Left 
would begin to fill in the hole under the right, but pile up more 
programs on their side and drive their side of the platform even deeper 
into the foundation of America's liberties.
And so it would go on, back and forth, Left and Right, Left then 
Right. Pretty soon the citizens of this great nation would find 
themselves in a pit of despair; a pit dug by the machinations of those 
who built up the oppressive weight of government. Government has been 
built up incrementally, one law after another, ruling upon ruling, 
practice becoming entrenched policy. And it was all done under the guise
 of representing a left or a right side, but both headed in one 
direction -- into the pit of tyranny. All those vested interests would 
insist it stay that way. Worse, as they'd get more 
demanding they'd cloak it with fairness. They were owed all 
that they'd "earned" for their efforts to gain "their people" power in 
the past.
At some point the vast majority of Americans will insist on climbing 
out of the hole dug for them by this political machine -- that single 
minded and ruthless incremental see-saw of power-seeking achieved by 
eating away at the foundation of our liberties. Taxes and regulations 
and busybodyness that is in no way justified in a nation dedicated to 
individual freedom.
Americans were passed a birthright containing the fresh air of 
freedom. It is what  our Founders had envisioned, and it is what our 
fathers fought to keep. And it's pretty much still been available to 
most Americans for around 200 years. If we do not stop the digging soon,
 somewhere along the way, Americans will demand to be let out of this 
pit. May God bless them then as He has in the past.
It is my opinion that the Tea Party movement is the realization of Mr. Reagan's vision. 
We will no longer limit ourselves to the thinking that we must choose to
 accept a Left or a Right.  We are trying to climb out of the Marxist/Statist pit dug by influential forces who've been incrementally overriding the restraints on their power. We are seeking freedom from the tyranny of 
those tired old partisans who claim to be working for our common good but 
are enthusiastically enslaving us and our posterity.