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There are two separate arguments here: one is the question of whether or not Reagan/Thatcher/Bush are right-wing; the other is whether or not if they had been right-wing, that would have been a good thing. If your answer to Question 1 is “yes, they were right-wing”, then you don’t have to address Question 2, because you can just observe the results of those individuals’ governance and declare those the results of right-wing government. If your answer to Question 1 is “no, they were not right-wing”, then have to grapple with Question 2. You’re correct that I haven’t supplied any arguments in favor of the affirmative answer to Question 2; that’s because I’ve been trying to get you to accept that the answer to Question 1 isn’t “yes” in the first place.
You yourself appear to recognize on some level that the answer to Question 1 is “no”, because you supplied a couple of examples of leaders who were universally recognized as right-wing (Mussolini, Pinochet) and you acknowledged that there is a qualitative difference between those guys and the three people you named. Even if you believe that Reagan was the farthest-right president we’ve had in your lifetime, you also clearly recognize that he’s nowhere near as far-right as Mussolini. So, at this point we’re arguing about how far right on the spectrum a leader has to be before we say he is right-wing. If your answer is “anywhere even slightly to the right of some hypothetical center”, that’s fine, but I don’t think that’s the definition most people here would use to define what makes a government legitimately right-wing. Especially because you’d have to define the center, and that might mean recognizing that the center of the American Overton Window has, for at least 80 years, been far to the left of even the leftmost part of the Overton Window in, say, 1840.
No, I recognize that "right-wing" is a spectrum, just like left-wing. I think Reagan was too right-wing, you think he wasn't right-wing enough. I think right-wing policies have not delivered good results. To me, you are just making a 50 Stalins argument in reverse.
Aside from your complaint about immigration amnesty, how was Reagan not a right-winger? Or is anyone who doesn't want to roll back to the Articles of Confederation not a right-winger? Or have there been no right-wing governments since the Enlightenment?
Yes, the center has moved since 1840. The Overton Window moves in large part because issues change. People in 1840 wouldn't even recognize a lot of our issues. Conservatives who complain about having been fighting a losing battle since slavery was abolished and women were given the right to vote have a point, I guess, but you're still doing a poor job of convincing me that True Conservativism Has Never Been Tried.
Reagan's domestic policies were, courtesy of wikiepdia:
Reduce marginal tax rates on income from labor and capital.
Reduce regulation.
Tighten the money supply to reduce inflation.
Reduce the growth of government spending.
These need to be measured from where the US was in 1980. Marginal tax rates in 1980 were 43% on income over $40k. That could be about $120k now. I would guess that there are people who want to raise taxes that high, but they are no centrists. Income over $20k ($60k) in modern dollars was taxed at 24%.
I don't think tightening the money supply when inflation is at 13% is a right wing idea.
Federal spending under Reagan was about 22% of GDP. This is more then then pre-COVID rate under Trump, but 2.5% less than Biden. In contrast, Obama spent just over 20%.
It is hard to measure regulations.
On foreign policy, Reagan does not seem that right wing, compared to Biden, unless you count being against communism as "right wing."
In hindsight, Reagan looks very centrist. What about him makes you think him more right-wing than Obama? He might have been more right-wing than Nixon (SSI. affirmative action, EPA, clean water act), I suppose. Overall, Nixon looks to the left of Obama on that measure. Obama was very centrist.
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