Series 2558: Constituent Correspondence, 2000-2003

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35846

From: 		<larry_arnn@claremont.org>
To: 		RM.GOV_PO.GOV_MAIL
Created: 	3/8/2000 4:20 PM
Subject: 	Claremont Institute Precepts: Two Speeches And A Warning
Message: 		





The Claremont Institute--PRECEPTS|      |March 8, 2000
Visit <http://www.claremont.org>|       |No. 221

Just this past week, China threatened the United States
with nuclear war. Two anniversaries that pass together this
week remind us what we should think about that.

Seventeen years ago today Ronald Reagan gave his "Evil
Empire" speech. It fits in a category with Winston
Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech at Fulton, Missouri on
March 5, 1946. Both speeches concerned the Soviet Union.
Both have much more to do with the United States and its
place in the world.

The most famous phrase of the evil empire speech occurs
near the end, where Reagan urges his audience to "beware
the temptation of pride--the temptation of blithely
declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides
equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the
aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the
arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove
yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good
and evil."

Typically, the press seized on the phrase "evil empire"--
they could not help but draw a connection to the Evil
Empire of "Star Wars" fame--neglecting the essence of the
speech and denouncing it as a dangerous and imprudent
provocation of the Soviets.

The reaction to Reagan in 1983 was similar to the reception
given 37 years before to Churchill's bold condemnation of
Soviet aggression in Eastern Europe. "From Stettin in the
Baltic, to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has
descended across the Continent," he said famously. In
America, both the isolationist and the liberal press
denounced Churchill's speech, if for different reasons.
Stalin attacked it bitterly.

Both Reagan and Churchill built their foreign policy upon a
moral view, a view of good and evil. Both pursued
sophisticated and resolute policies in the face of fierce
resistance and at great risk. They were able to maintain
these policies because they were built upon the same simple
distinction, which is sometimes apparent to so few, between
despotism and liberty.

Today, China has made its second threat of destruction of
American civilians upon a massive scale.  They would
accomplish this destruction if we were to intervene to
fulfill our commitment to the people of the island of
Taiwan. In a few days, Taiwan will conduct democratic
elections to choose a government.  Their current president
will retire after those elections. In mainland China, such
events are impossible.  And therefore, this election
constitutes a danger to the strong men of the Chinese
Politburo who rule because, and only because, the Army
supports them with force.

If you doubt that the answer to such threats is strength,
we invite you to read both these great speeches on our
website, http://www.claremont.org. If you doubt that such threats constitute a danger to liberty, we invite you to
contemplate the massive prudence of Reagan and Churchill. 
And if you do not doubt these great truths, read the
speeches anyway.  They are noble.

Also, I would direct your attention to an interesting new
Reagan website produced by our friends at The Federalist
Digest. It is called, fittingly, Reagan 2000, and features
many of Reagan's speeches. You can find it at
http://www.reagan2000.com.

Sincerely,
Larry P. Arnn
President, The Claremont Institute

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