I posted this on SR so rather than rephrase anything I'll just copy and paste it here verbatim:
It's been over a month since I posted last due to a lack of time and some family issues. Nevertheless, this thread caught my interest because of all eight Presidents I've lived through Reagan was hands down my all time favorite. Like myself in many respects, he was an outsider of the establishment, and as such unafraid to challenge the status quo. I credit Reagan with getting me interested in politics in the first place. Up until that point, it seemed no politicians of the time really bothered to try to change things, and as a result I didn't really care who got elected as it wouldn't make any difference at all. Reagan changed all that. He made the politicians in Washington realize that they couldn't take the tax dollars coming in for granted. He made the people realize that paying high taxes to fund all sorts of dubious programs designed simply to keep politicians in power wasn't a given. More importantly, he seemed truly sincere when he spoke. He actually made you believe that he would do what he said he would. And as a fellow outsider who was truly disgusted with "the system", he appealed to me both intellectually and emotionally.
While undoubtedly the Reagan years will be analyzed to death in the coming weeks, many things stand out in my mind from those days. Of all things, I was deathly afraid of the hair trigger situation between the US and the USSR, or the "evil empire" as Reagan preferred to it. I had read the book "Man's Fate" by Jonathan Schell in college in which likely nuclear scenarios were described in graphic detail. For years afterwards I would have nightmares about this and wake up with my sheets soaking wet. Frankly, I had hoped if it ever came to pass I would be one of the lucky ones who would die instantly when the bombs hit. What would be left afterwards wouldn't be pretty, and we would never recover from it, nor would the planet. And sadly, I saw this course as almost inevitable. The MAD scenario was just that, completely insane. Sooner or later, I thought, there would be some miscommunication, or some underpaid soldier trying to be a hero would do something stupid, and the chain of events that followed would lead inexorably to the end of everything. To me it wasn't a matter of if, it was a matter of when. I personally put the end at sometime between 1990 and 2000. There was a good chance I wouldn't see 30, and 40 was probably out of the question.
Reagan changed all that. He opened my eyes when he talked. He had the confidence that we would not only not be destroyed, but that we would defeat our foe not through open warfare, but by outspending them, and this confidence carried over to the general public. While I still contemplated mankind's demise, I thought that now we at least had a good shot at survival, and we wouldn't have to lose some cities or even hundreds of thousands of soldiers in the process. No, we just put the capitalist machine into action, and there was no way the Soviets could keep up. Of course, there was always the chance they might launch an attack out of desperation when they saw they were destined to lose, but in the end sanity prevailed. Whether with spending or nuclear arms, this was a race they were destined to lose. While Reagan's SDI was (and probably still is) a technical impossibility, it did accomplish its goal of ending the threat of Soviet missiles forever. Sure, nuclear threats still exist today, but even worst case scenarios only result in losing a few cities and maybe tens of millions of lives-a far cry from the 3 billion ghosts an all-out war with the USSR would have produced. And unlike global thermonuclear war we would recover from these scenarios.
There are many other things that stand out in my mind about the Reagan years. While trickle down economics didn't work as hoped, it did at least cement in the public's mind the need to keep tax rates low-if for no other reason than to limit what politicians can spend on pork barrel projects. And there was a renewal of the concept of personal responsibility and a gradual end to the welfare mentality that was wrecking places like New York. While this is still an ongoing process that will take many more years, Reagan can be justifiably credited with starting it when he was governor of California. Prior to Reagan, it was taboo in politics to even talk about welfare reform, let alone do something about it. Indeed, Reagan paved the way for the neoconservative movement, and for many of the politicians who followed. Without Reagan, I dare say, NYC would not have had a Rudy Guiliani to challenge the status quo. While I didn't agree with everything Reagan did, especially cutting student aid, I at least understood his reasons for doing it.
In the final analysis I think we can all credit Reagan with our very existence today, and to a lesser extent with both some of our problems today as well as our advantages. While I've long soured on the concept of totally unregulated capitalism and "trickle-down" economics, I know that dependence on the government can never work. Had Reagan not been in power, we might very well have gone bankrupt ourselves after the USSR fell-not by spending money on weapons, but by spending it on all sorts of ill-fated, ill-conceived social programs. And the extent of government control once these programs were in place would have been straight like a page out of "1984". I think it was Reagan who said that every time the government does something for you, it takes away your right to choose for yourself how you want that same thing done.
While I don't personally believe in an afterlife, I do hope Reagan is now in the "shining city over the hill" he had always talked about. He lived as full a life as anyone could ever hope to.