By Brent Bozell
Friday, May 30, 2014
It's been 10 years since Ronald Reagan passed away, but
one horrible myth about him will not die. When he passed, The Advocate magazine
published an essay by radical gay playwright Larry Kramer titled "Adolf
Reagan." The rant began: "Our murderer is dead. The man who murdered
more gay people than anyone in the entire history of the world, is dead. More
people than Hitler even."
In Kramer's fever swamp of a brain, Reagan caused AIDS.
He reveled in its fatalities. Now HBO is honoring Kramer's unceasing hatred by
making a TV movie out of his hate-filled 1985 play/jeremiad "The Normal
Heart." The movie ends with a "historic" note bashing Reagan
some more:
"President Ronald Reagan mentioned AIDS publicly for
the first time Sept. 17, 1985, vowing in a news conference to make AIDS
research a 'top priority.' Reagan's proposed budget for 1986 actually called
for an 11 percent reduction in AIDS spending. By the end of 1986, there were
24,559 reported deaths." (Which is higher than all the Jews murdered by
the Nazis?)
This is the stuff of nuttiness. It's bad enough that a
magazine would publish this bile; it's unconscionable that a TV network produce
a movie "based on real events" furthering it.
The real Reagan record on AIDS is different than the
seemingly never-ending mud-slinging. His Department of Health and Human
Services secretary called it a "top priority" in 1983, when the
disease was so new that few people even understood what was happening. AIDS
funding skyrocketed in the 1980s, almost doubling each year beginning in 1983
-- when the media started blaring headlines -- from $44 million to $103
million, $205 million, $508 million, $922 million and then $1.6 billion in
1988.
Now, try finding Walter Mondale "mentioning AIDS
publicly" when he ran against Reagan in 1984. It didn't come up in the
presidential debates. It's nowhere to be found in his 1984 convention speech. A
Nexis search of the Washington Post and The New York Times in 1984 doesn't
locate a Mondale quote on AIDS.
Does that mean he's "Adolf," too?
Kramer's enough of a lunatic that in 2011, he was
recklessly blaming every president from Reagan to President Barack Obama for
AIDS in a letter he passed out to people attending a revival of "The
Normal Heart." It said: "Please know that beginning with Ronald
Reagan (who would not say the word 'AIDS' publicly for seven years), every
single president has said nothing and done nothing, or in the case of the
current president, says the right things and then doesn't do them."
Those in the press giving oxygen to this character
assassin deserve the highest possible condemnation.
In 2006, as The New York Times honored Kramer by putting
him in a panel discussion on the 25th anniversary of the first Times article on
AIDS, he distributed typically crazy remarks in advance, calling for
"Nuremberg trials" to hold not only Reagan, but the owners and
editors of -- how's this for gratitude? -- The New York Times to be tried like
Nazi war criminals for the AIDS holocaust.
They remember none of this at the Times. A few days ago,
reporter Patrick Healy honored him in an article titled "A Lion Still
Roars, With Gratitude." Healy warmly recalled Kramer as "the most
strident, scolding voice in New York City (in the world, really) on behalf of
gay men infected with HIV" in the 1980s.
Healy actually portrayed Kramer as some sort of prophet.
He reported that at a special screening for the HBO film at the Ziegfeld
Theater in New York, the film's director, "Glee" creator Ryan Murphy,
led "a thousand-member audience" in a standing ovation for Kramer.
"Larry, before we begin this film, I only have one thing to say. You were
right."
Kramer has been not only wrong, but factually unglued.
But none of this apparently matters. One might argue that in the 1980s, when
the death toll was climbing and the hopelessness was deepening, that Kramer's
rants of "You're killing us" spurred action. But you can't be a
newspaper or a movie channel that claims to care about facts and history (and
civility), and refuse to acknowledge how deeply wrong Kramer was and continues
to be, screaming that Reagan is worse than Hitler.
Ends don't justify means. But it's worse than that. This
is pure hatred.
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