National Day of Prayer: Hypocrisy Redux
I have written several postings that fall under the heading "Interesting People I have Known". A peer and lunching buddy of my Uncle Gordon was my dad, Charles Baker. He deserves his own posting, but that will come later. In brief, my Dad quit school to work in a factory when he was 16 and voted Republican until he met Norman Thomas when he was a conscientious objector during World War II. So impressed was he, that he voted Socialist in one presidential election and for the rest of his life voted a straight Democratic ticket. He was thrice dissappointed when Adlai Stevenson didn't win, but the worst was yet to come in the shape of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. He was so incensed by the Reagan years that he created a Reagan binder that he filled with clippings and his own commentary logging the egregious excesses of the Reagan years. He and my mother were also active correspondents to the White House in those years, and on rare occasions, they would get a form letter back from an assistant to the White House correspondence secretary. The Reagan binder (entitled "The Continuing Saga of Ronnie Wonderful") is the greatest inheritance from my Dad - a material object representing the moral and civic values and lessons he taught us.
Last Thursday was the National Day of Prayer. I hereby enclose a letter my parents sent to President Reagan in 1981. Their comments could equally apply today as Reagan and Bush share the common traits of piously mouthing religious comments while at the same time consistently governing without ethics or moral values.
This letter is particularly appropriate today as it appears that Congress has voted in another tax cut to rob from the middle class and poor to again reward the rich.
May 7, 1981
President Ronald Reagan
The White House
Washington, D.C.
Dear Mr. Reagan,
You have proclaimed today, May 7, as National Day of Prayer. We believe that every day is a good day for prayer.
It is our feeling, after watching the evening news that today is an especially good day for prayer. It is much needed. Today the House of Representatives passed the "Reagan Budget".
We will be praying for the handicapped, the poor, the elderly, and others whose lives will be drastically altered by the cuts in the various programs which affect them. We will be praying that local communities will be able to support the welfare program increases which will become necessary to provide for the thousands of CETA workers who will be jobless and untrained as a result of these cuts.
Above all, Mr. Reagan, we will be praying that your view of the needs of the disadvantaged in our society will be broadened. We will be praying also that you will re-consider the large increases you have proposed for the military. Since the United States and the Soviet Union each has the nuclear capacity to destroy the other, further increases appear to be a waste and rob the needy in our society.
We want you to know, Mr. Reagan, that we are retirees in our sixties and that we are Christians who have always believed in the philosophy that Jesus taught relative to our responsibility to our fellow citizens in need.
Yes, Mr. Reagan, we are praying on this national day of prayer as we do every day. We pray for your health, happiness and success. We pray also that you will review your budget cuts again and consider the very sad effects that they will have on the disadvantaged who need help most.
Sincerely,
Charles W. and Florence R. Baker