Reagan’s Children and Legacy

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‘The Joan Crawford Hour’

Reagan’s daughter, Patti Davis, on her personal life:

* She had herself sterilized at 24 (a procedure that was reversed 10 years later) because “I was terrified that if I became a mother I would become like my mother and abuse a child in the ways that she abused me.”

I began this post three days ago. I have gotten behind. I was concerned about Reagan’s children taking offence to me putting their father on ‘The Faggot Wagon’. Their main concern is with crazy Republicans hijacking their Dad and using him like a Pimp would his whore. With Trump saying Hillary was “schlonged” by Obama – anything goes!

Patti Reagan came out with a Lesbian Love Story, like our family biographer did, Sandra Faulkner, who wrote ‘Love Match’. It is safe to say the Reagan and Presco family are on the ‘Faggot Wagon’ on their way to a date with destiny.

In the top photo we see the Heiress, Shannon Rosamond, sitting next to Vic Presco, who is seated next to the actor, Garth Benton, who was married to the actress, Harlee McBride, and had two daughters by her. Christine was married to the Jive-ass actor, Rick Partlow. Patti’s parents were thespians who hung with other bad boy and girl actors. Then there is Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor who allegedly slept with Ronny, and Carrie Fisher, who wrote a screenplay about Rosamond.

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For a lady married eight times (two of which were to the same man), it would be fair to say Elizabeth Taylor enjoyed the company of various men throughout her her glittering showbiz career.

And now it has been claimed that not only did she have a string of romances with fellow screen stars – but also with Presidents Ronald Reagan and John F Kennedy.

The former liaison allegedly occurred when she was a teenager, with the latter encounter reportedly taking place as a threesome with actor Robert Stack, according to an explosive new biography.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2216454/New-book-claims-Elizabeth-Taylor-slept-Ronald-Reagan–engaged-threesome-JFK.html#ixzz3v94knv8y
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So, you see, we are nothing but Shucksters, Jive & Dance Men, Shady Ladies of the Stage! We would do anything for a buck! Even sell blow-jobs in Greyhound Bus station.

Beauty Queen, Judy Nelson, got schlonged – and sued!

Jon Presco

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harlee_McBride

Tom Snyder and the Rowdy Girls

Beauty and the Volley Beast

She may have received a lukewarm reception from publishers, but Patti Davis has been undeterred about getting her new novel — centered on a lesbian love story — out into the world.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/22/reagan-daughter-lesbian-novel-patti-davis_n_2935413.html

Responding to a question about Sen. Ted Cruz often positively invoking her father’s name on the campaign trail and during debates, Davis said, “It may be this week he’s doing it more than the others. But they all kind of do it. But yet, they are so not like him. My father would be so appalled at what’s going on. He would be so appalled at these candidates. I don’t think he would be a Republican. And if another Ronald Reagan came along right now, I don’t think the Republican Party would accept him.”

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/biography/reagan-children/

http://abcnews.go.com/ThisWeek/family-feud-reagans-children-debate-legacy-father/story?id=12786615

Patti Davis, the daughter of Ronald and Nancy Reagan, has self-published a novel about a woman who unexpectedly falls in love with another woman.

Entitled Till Human Voices Wake Us, the book is not based on personal experiences, Davis says. The novel centers on a woman, who after the death of her son, falls in love with her sister-in-law. The 60-year-old Davis couldn’t find a publisher to distribute the book, so she self-published it as an e-book (it’s currently selling for $2.99 on Amazon.com).

http://www.amazon.com/Love-Match-Nelson-Vs-Navratilova/dp/155972157X

Martina Navratilova, the world’s most famous female tennis player, won a record nine Wimbledon championships. Judy Nelson, born and raised in Texas and the epitome of the “Southern Belle” – tall, statuesque, and blond, beautiful and articulate – was a former National Maid of Cotton and a graduate of Texas Christian University. The two came together . . . and the result was Love Match. Judy and Martina first met when Martina was playing a doubles tournament in Fort Worth in 1982. Judy, married and the mother of two sons, was introduced to Martina by her son Eddie, then eleven, who was serving as a ball boy for one of Martina’s matches. A friendship grew. For two years the women exchanged cards and phone calls. Then, in March 1984, over a long, uninterrupted lunch, they fell in love. Judy, still married, didn’t know what to do, and neither woman was clear about what the declaration of their feelings meant to their lives. What happened thereafter is the explosive substance of Love Match, the unvarnished, objective story of a romance between two women – the choices that were made and the risks that were taken. They made a commitment in church and exchanged rings. For seven years Judy and Martina were inseparable. Then Martina broke off the relationship. Judy was devastated, as were her sons and her parents. At last she decided to act. For she and Martina had agreed, in writing, “that each would share in whatever was accumulated during their relationship.” The ensuing “palimony” case engendered headlines around the world – and intensified the heartache. As the two headed for trial, a settlement was

 

In an interview last weekend at her airy Santa Monica home, Davis defended her book as an attempt to deepen the public’s understanding of her family.

“I wasn’t trying to tell my parents anything with this book because I think that’s a wrong reason to do something,” Davis says. “I did it really because I felt it was the right thing to do. I felt it was the time to tell the truth. I thought the misperceptions about this family were where the unkindnesses were. And it was time to just let all that drop.”

Yet Davis’s family portrait has many cracks, and she seems to relish the role of spoiler.

Davis on her personal life:

* She had herself sterilized at 24 (a procedure that was reversed 10 years later) because “I was terrified that if I became a mother I would become like my mother and abuse a child in the ways that she abused me.”

* She was addicted to diet pills for six years, starting in high school. She became so desperate for them that she stole pills from a classmate and stole her mother’s Quaaludes so she could trade them for amphetamines. She sold marijuana to pay for therapy.

* In the late ’70s, she says her alienation from her father led her to a series of promiscuous relationships, including experimentation in a menage a trois.

Davis on her mother:

* Nancy Reagan screamed at maids and frequently fired them. She regularly hit Patti when she was a child and intruded on her in the bathroom.

* Davis’s half-brother Michael never had his own room in the Reagan home–even when it was his primary residence–because of Nancy’s attempts to keep the children from Reagan’s first marriage to actress Jane Wyman at a distance. Patti wasn’t even aware of Michael and his sister, Maureen, until she was 7, and 18-year-old Maureen was the one who told her of her existence.

While Nancy Reagan was exhorting the country to “Just Say No” to drugs, she was regularly consuming prescription tranquilizers and sleeping pills, Reagan’s controversial daughter, Patti Davis, says in her new autobiography, “The Way I See It.”

“What I witnessed was a problem,” said the former First Daughter in an interview. She declined, however, to call her mother an addict: “I’m not a doctor and that seems to me a medical evaluation.”

In a statement Monday, former President and Mrs. Reagan declined comment on Davis’s allegations: “We have always loved all of our children, including our daughter, Patti. We hope the day will come when she rejoins our family. Toward that end, we see no useful purpose for further comment.” The Reagans’ three other children also declined comment. Davis’s first nonfiction tome, which hits stores today, paints yet another portrait of Nancy Reagan as abusive, cold and cruel and the former President as excessively detached. Patti’s own life has been a strange brew of privilege, promiscuity and drug addiction. Her story embraces fame, politics and emotional scarcity. She flirted with show business, dated rock stars (Bernie Leadon of the Eagles, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson and Kris Kristofferson) and ditched the Secret Service.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2296800/Patti-Davis-Ronald-Reagans-daughter-publishes-lesbian-novel–denies-autobiographical.html

In exclusive interviews, “This Week” anchor Christiane Amanpour sat down with President Ronald Reagan‘s three surviving children to talk about his lasting legacy. As the 100th anniversary of Reagan’s birth approaches, his children have grappled with present-day conservatives who claim their father’s mantle.

“There’s a lot of people that try to redefine my father in their own image and likeness,” Michael Reagan said. “And I think that, in fact, they do a disservice.”

“You have these people running for president or want to be President of the United States, trying to literally play their own role of a lifetime and make people believe they are the next Ronald Reagan. And you know something? There was only one Ronald Reagan, thank God. And he was my father,” Michael said.

“I think he would be amused and puzzled at people trying to imitate him,” Patti Davis said. “Because he never imitated anybody. I mean, he was consummately his own person.”

Amanpour asked Ron Reagan how he thought his father would fit into today’s Republican party.

“Somewhat uneasily,” he replied. “After all, he did raise taxes. He cut taxes, but then he raised taxes when he was president. The deficit certainly grew under his administration. He would blame the Democrats for that, of course, but nevertheless, it did grow. When he was governor of California, he signed into law one of the most liberal abortion policies in the country and also an amnesty program for illegal immigrants. So I’m not sure that today’s Republican Party or Tea Party would be all that thrilled with him,” Ron, Reagan’s youngest child, said.

Michael Reagan disagreed with his brother. “He would have endorsed the Tea Party, what they’re doing, and the fact is Ronald Reagan was the original Tea Party,” he told Amanpour. President Reagan “understood that the electorate lived in the grass roots of this country. … It was grassroots America that supported Ronald Reagan back in 1980. That’s why he became the President of the United States of America,” Michael said.

Reagan’s Alzheimer’s Disease

Ron Reagan was frank with Christiane regarding his father’s Alzheimer’s disease and those claims in his new book, “My Father at 100,” about his father’s mental health.

“I don’t diagnose him with Alzheimer’s in office. I simply say that at moments, I saw little flickers of things which — and I don’t even say this in the book, but I’ll say it to you — that, in retrospect, you might wonder whether or not that was, you know, the first glimmers of this condition that would eventually kill him and he would be diagnosed, you know, shortly after leaving office,” Ron said.

Ron’s siblings were not all on the same page with him. “I think it’s unfortunate that the topic of when my father exhibited signs of Alzheimer’s was introduced at this time,” Davis said.

Michael used even stronger language: “I’m upset that within [Ron’s] book he stated that he believed our father had Alzheimer’s while he was President of the United States of America,” Michael said.

“I was outraged by it. Absolutely outraged, you know, that he would put that in there because — because again — and maybe it’s because Ron comes from the left. Maybe this is Ron’s way of — of putting together the fact he didn’t agree with his father’s politics. And so if he can just put in his own mind my dad must have been ill with Alzheimer’s, somehow Ron can forgive my father for all the things he did as President of the United States of America because Ron agreed with none of it,” Michael told Amanpour.

Financial Cost of World War II
1 U.S. $341 billion in 1945 would cost $3,582,143,803,399.78 in 2005.
2 Germany $272 billion in 1945 would cost $2,857,311,186,289.56 in 2005.
3 Soviet Union $192 billion in 1945 would cost $2,016,925,543,263.22 in 2005.
4 Britain $120 billion in 1945 would cost $1,260,578,464,539.51 in 2005.
5 Italy $94 billion in 1945 would cost $987,453,130,555.95 in 2005.
6 Japan $56 billion in 1945 would cost $588,269,950,118.44 in 2005.
Total $1.075 trillion in 1945 would cost $11,292,682,078,166.46 in 2005.

Human Cost of World War II: Official Total Military & Civilian Deaths Allies 44 million, Axis 11 million, 55 million Total
Country Military Civilian Total
1 USSR 13,000,000 7,000,000 20,000,000
2 China 3,500,000 10,000,000 13,500,000
3 Germany 3,500,000 3,800,000 7,300,000
4 Poland 120,000 5,300,000 5,420,000
5 Japan 1,700,000 380,000 2,080,000
6 Yugoslavia 300,000 1,300,000 1,600,000

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