A REAGAN FOURTH OF JULY
Grosvenor Square, London. 2011 is the centennial year of Ronald Reagan's birth, which is why this Fourth of July brings tears to my eyes like never before.
This morning at Grosvenor Square in front of the American Embassy in London, England, I was privileged to be at the unveiling ceremony of the bronze statue of President Ronald Reagan, and heard him praised as one of the most beloved men and finest presidents in US history.
Yet it was not simply the praise of past greatness that was so inspiring - it was the optimism for America's future. Condoleezza Rice spoke so clearly of the moral certainty of Ronald Reagan in his goal of ridding the world of Soviet Communism - a goal in which he so triumphantly succeeded.
We forget how dark those days were, she said, when at the onset of the Reagan presidency the Soviets were on the verge of victory over us and hope of our winning the Cold War seemed ridiculously Pollyannish.
What we need right now, said Condi, is an infusion of Ronald Reagan's unquenchable optimism that America's best days are in her future, not her past, that a moral certainty in America's principles and values will triumph over darkness.
Condi is right. This is exactly what we need. We need a Reagan Fourth of July.
