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Thursday, July 03, 2008
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Spreading Freedom Far and Wide
by Rebecca Hagelin
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“Tell us about the American miracle.”

It was in 1983 when West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl spoke those words to President Ronald Reagan. They were gathered at the annual “G7” economic summit attended by the heads of the leading industrialized nations.

Two years earlier, Reagan had gone to his first G7 meeting in Ottawa, where he outlined his economic recovery plan. The other world leaders didn’t appear to be very impressed. By 1983, though, it was a different story. Reagan’s plan was in full swing -- and the U.S. was defeating inflation and unemployment at a time when the rest of the world was still in recession.

Gathered in historic Williamsburg, Va., those leaders had one question: How did he do it? According to Reagan:

First, I gave them my thoughts about how excessive tax rates take away the incentive to produce, and how lower tax rates, in the end, generate more economic growth and also greater revenue for government. Then I told them what we had done to lower our tax rates, and some of the other things we were trying to do, such as reducing the size of government, eliminating unnecessary regulations and interference in the free market, and turning over to private enterprise some of the functions government had taken over.

He must have made quite an impression. Before long, Reagan was reading about their own efforts to cut taxes and reduce regulations back home. “The next time I’d see them,” he wrote later, “they’d say the policies were stimulating a turnaround like the one we had had in the United States.”

That’s what the United States has been doing since its inception -- spreading the gospel of freedom across the globe. And as we celebrate another birthday (our 232nd), it’s worth taking a second look at that “American miracle.”

What’s the common thread in what President Reagan told the other leaders that day? Liberty. Yes, the very idea that sparked a revolution in this nation -- indeed, that created this nation. After all, if you cut taxes, reduce regulations and shrink the size of government, what are you doing? You’re freeing individuals to use their God-given talents and imaginations to build a better life for themselves and their children. That’s what America has always been about.

You simply can’t spark an “American miracle” if you put your faith, first and foremost, in government. You have to believe in the individual. You have to trust that free men and women will innovate and strive in ways that aren’t possible when big government stands over them, watching and scolding like an unwelcome nanny. Continued...

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About The Author

Rebecca Hagelin, a vice president of The Heritage Foundation is the author of Home Invasion: Protecting Your Family in a Culture that's Gone Stark Raving Mad and runs the Web site HomeInvasion.org.

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Subject: #16 a reply
Liberty to Iraqis - no good reason?
Two democratic countries in the region - no good reason?
Alienate allies who's courage falters when their financial interests are at stake - no good reason
Paying for a decisive action rather than a throw missile drop bomb diplomacy of the previous administration - no good reason

Wendy
"The left opposes the War on the grounds that it kills Iraqis, offends Europeans, and decreases funds available for social welfare spending. The left is anti-American (if such behavior is not anti-American, then nothing is)."

What exactly is anti-American about
- not wanting to kill Iraqis for no good reason
- not wanting to alienate our allies for no good reason
- not wanting to waste money for no good reason

I don't understand how any of these attitudes is anti-American. Please explain.
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