All Episodes
Feb. 16, 2026 - Rubin Report - Dave Rubin
32:12
The Real Reason Conservatives Are Rethinking Ronald Reagan | Presidents Series | Michael Knowles

Michael Knowles and Dave Rubin argue Ronald Reagan’s 1980s-era rhetoric—like "tear down this wall" at the Brandenburg Gate or framing Soviet collectivism as the enemy—united Cold War hawks, libertarians, and Democrats but wouldn’t work today amid 75,000 annual fentanyl deaths tied to illegal immigration and rising threats from China, Russia, and Iran. Knowles credits Reagan’s Cold War victory despite cognitive decline, contrasting him with modern Democratic presidents like Biden or Obama, who faced less while achieving far less. Reagan’s 1980 Alzheimer’s letter revealed faith in destiny, dismissed as naive but pivotal in his legacy of "25 years of growth," now overshadowed by polarization and cultural battles he never confronted. [Automatically generated summary]

Participants
Main
d
dave rubin
blaze 08:03
m
michael j knowles
dailywire 23:33
|

Speaker Time Text
Reagan's Legacy Revisited 00:10:44
michael j knowles
Trump is kind of the Reagan for our times.
But, you know, Reagan really fit his era.
And I think also this is why Reagan has fallen a little bit out of favor after we had put him up in the pantheon for the past 25 years, is a recognition that you can't dig a guy up from the grave.
You know, let the poor man rest.
He did his part.
But you can't just go back to the same old slogans of the 1980s.
I think part of the reason that politicians aren't quite as aspirational in their rhetoric now is the problems have gotten worse.
Ronald Reagan could minimize illegal immigration in the 1980s when there were relatively few of them and it wasn't a big problem.
When you have like 20 million of them with face tattoos bringing in fentanyl, killing 75,000 Americans a year, this is a different situation and you need to get a little bit tougher.
Same thing, we're no longer the unchallenged global hegemon.
You know, Reagan there, confident he was going to win the Cold War and then leads to that post-war piece.
That's one thing.
Now you have China legitimately threatening our interests.
You have Russia, as weakened as Russia is, legitimately threatening our interests.
You have Iran legitimately threatening our interests.
You have to speak a little bit differently.
So, yes, look, we could all take a note from Reagan on rhetoric.
He was a master of turning a phrase, but we have to avoid the temptation to just go back and relive the 80s because for some of us, that was our childhood, or because we recognize it as a halcyon era.
It wouldn't play today.
You know, there's a reason that we have Don instead of Ron today.
unidentified
All right, I'm Dave Rubin.
dave rubin
This is the Rubin Report, and it's President's Week.
And all week long, we are bringing you some of my wisest and brightest friends who know all about presidents of the past.
And joining me today is the host of the Michael Knowles show, a man who once lived in California with me and as you all know, fled before I did and promised he wasn't going to, but we've still managed to remain, I don't know, I guess quasi friends.
Knowles, what's up?
michael j knowles
I love that intro.
I bring on all my wisest and smartest friends and Michael and Mike.
We're going to bring Michael on also in addition.
dave rubin
Well, as I was saying, because usually I have you on and you're always talking about all of your old dead friends because you bring up a lot of old references, your musical tastes, old, your philosophical underpinnings, all from older, long gone people.
So that's how I consider you in some sense.
michael j knowles
Even my food and drink, you know, even your studio and the sale sounds great.
Yes, I like very old, dead things.
dave rubin
I do.
unidentified
I do.
dave rubin
And speaking of old and dead, and it is President's Week, we let all of you guys pick your presidents, and you chose Ronald Reagan.
And I feel like we mostly are doing, you know, we're doing a couple of founders and Richard Nixon.
Outside of Trump, Reagan is the one that I was around for, that I have some affinity for, who I remember just a bit.
Actually, joking aside, I think my literal first memory as a child of anything sort of media related was when he got shot.
I remember, what year was that?
1981.
I was five years old, and I remember watching the news with my parents, and they had like a, you know, like a cartoon body showing where the bullet went and all that stuff.
In any event, let's talk about Ronald Reagan, a man who I'm going to guess you consider a top five president.
michael j knowles
He's, yeah, I actually just wrote down my top presidents, and he is proper, yeah, I think I put him at least in the top six or seven.
He's up there.
One of the knocks for Reagan right now is he was so valorized on the right for the last 20, 25 years that he became this kind of mythical legendary figure.
And so then there was a correction to that, and some people pointed out that there were bad aspects of the Reagan presidency.
Even a little bit of naïve té from Reagan, the clearest example being the issue that we're all talking about right now, which is mass illegal immigration.
Reagan signed the amnesty.
Now, he signed the amnesty because he thought he was dealing with the Democrats in good faith, Democrats who controlled the Congress.
And he said, okay, I'll give an amnesty to this relatively small number of illegals if you close the border.
And they said, yeah, sure thing, Ron.
unidentified
You bet.
michael j knowles
We got it, Gipper.
And then what happens?
They got the amnesty and we never got the secured border.
So there's been a little correction to the legacy of Reagan, but he really was a great president.
He really did more or less win the Cold War.
He really revitalized the economy of the nation after the hideous stagflation under Jimmy Carter.
And he also revitalized the spirit of the nation because the nation had been reeling after, well, after Jimmy Carter made us all feel ashamed.
And after Jerry Ford, who in many ways was a patriotic president because he did the right thing and pardoned Richard Nixon, but it killed his political career and it just made us feel this kind of malaise after Nixon, who was wrongfully chased out of the presidency.
The downfall of Richard Nixon was an op by people who never forgave him for being right about Alger Hiss, a communist who was at the high levels of the State Department, helped found the United Nations.
You know, the lore goes way, way, way back, but even that was a national trauma.
Before him, LVJ was absolutely awful.
Before him, JFK was assassinated and was a pretty bad president even before he was assassinated.
So, you know, basically, since Eisenhower, you hadn't really felt great about yourself as an American.
And then in comes Reagan, and probably the most important part of his legacy is he made America feel good and moral and strong again.
He made America great again, which is why actually that phrase was from the Reagan campaign.
And Trump very wisely borrowed it for his campaign.
unidentified
Right.
dave rubin
People don't realize that.
It was a Reagan phrase.
Everyone thinks it was just like this Trump bumper sticker that came out of nowhere.
So you hit on a couple of things that I wanted to address.
And actually, if people want more on Richard Nixon and what you just referenced, I did a great show.
He just taped it.
It'll be up in a day or two with Jeffrey Tucker from the Brownstone Institute, who goes all into that.
But let's talk about the fact that Reagan started on the other side politically.
I know a little something about that.
That is part of what has made Trump's MAGA movement so big these days.
You like those kind of stories when Democrats, particularly from California, who are in Hollywood, I mean, he was a big Hollywood star, when they come around.
michael j knowles
Yes, those are some of my favorite stories, actually.
And it was important, too, for Reagan.
As part of this national healing, after the tumultuous 60s, after the trauma of Nixon's resignation, after Carter, it was very helpful to have a guy who Americans really felt, heard them, and understood their condition.
And Reagan had that famous line, a line that's been echoed by some of my friends since then, which is, I didn't leave my party, my party left me.
Ronald Reagan, in some ways, made peace with the advance of liberalism of the 20th century.
Yes, he fought against it.
Yes, he changed course a little bit for America.
Yes, he was the fulfillment of the post-war conservative movement founded by guys like William F. Buckley Jr. and Frank Meyer and Burnham and these other guys.
But he also kind of made peace with liberalism.
No more did the conservatives try to repeal the New Deal.
Ronald Reagan liked the New Deal.
He was a New Deal Democrat.
And would the country have been better off if we hadn't had the New Deal and had FDR not bullied the Supreme Court, threatened to essentially blow up that part of the constitutional order if they didn't give it to him?
Yeah, maybe we would have been better off, woulda, coulda, shoulda.
You know, this is all interesting hypothetical history.
But Reagan was a man of the moment and a man of political reality.
And so he said, okay, we're going to keep what is best of or what at least we're stuck with from liberalism, but we're going to roll back the parts that are rollbackable, you know, and that we don't need to deal with and that are really hurting us.
And then ultimately, Ronald Reagan was a cold warrior.
I mean, that is what he focused on.
And so Reagan, as the culmination of that post-war conservative movement, made a lot of sense because that movement included libertarians and traditionalist conservatives and disaffected Democrats, especially Warhawk Democrats.
And why, you know, these are three groups that are quite disparate.
They don't agree on basically anything, but they formed this three-legged stool of the Reagan coalition of the conservative movement.
Why?
Because they all had a common enemy.
dave rubin
Which, by the way, is similar to what Trump has done now, but we can show it.
unidentified
Exactly.
michael j knowles
Yeah.
I mean, Trump in some ways is just Reagan for the 21st century, for better and for worse.
You know, he's kind of Reagan on steroids.
But the fact that you could have the libertarians say, look, we hate the collectivism of the Soviet Union.
And you'd have the traditionalists say, we hate the atheism and the modernism of the Soviet Union.
And you could have these Warhawk Democrats who kind of become the neocons say, we hate the imperial ambitions of the Soviet Union.
And Reagan could unite these guys.
And part of the way he could unite them is precisely what you're talking about.
He had been on the other side.
He had a real appeal to people.
He was obviously an extraordinary communicator.
He was the great communicator.
And the fact that he had been a Hollywood star, his enemies tried to degrade him as a B-movie actor.
He was a big, big Hollywood star and a leading man.
So that obviously reaches out to people in a way that we didn't see again until Donald Trump, who was a big television star, big reality TV star, really reaches out to the common man.
But the other thing that made Reagan so effective is that Reagan was the head of the Screen Actors Guild.
So, you know, everybody focuses on the fact that he was really good on radio and film, but he also knew how to deal with actual communists, first of all, in Hollywood.
And he knew how to make deals.
He knew how to get things done.
This is another part that you see an echo of in Trump because Trump is this great communicator from his time on TV and tabloids and film.
But he also is actually a businessman, and he's had a very successful business career, no matter how much the left wants to degrade that.
And so he too can make deals, you know?
And so while both of those figures are seen as cowboys, radicals, I mean, everything they said about Trump, they said about Reagan in 1980 and in the late 70s.
He's a Nazi.
He's a white supremacist.
He's mainstreaming the worst bigoted parts of the right.
I mean, all this stuff you can find it.
But what's funny is whatever you want to say about their radical vision or their rhetoric, what really distinguishes them is they could reach out to that other side, the disaffected voter, the person who might have been on a Democrat who said, my party's left me.
I'm going to come on over here.
Building New Coalitions 00:02:18
michael j knowles
They built up a new coalition that ended up winning the country.
In the case of Ronald Reagan, you have 1984.
He wins 49 states, freaking Minnesota.
It's always Minnesota.
Minnesota is the holdout because of Mondale.
Though I once spoke to the guy who ran Reagan 84, and he thought that there was funny business, and they might have won Minnesota too.
They just didn't want to look like sore winners.
It was Ed Rollins.
dave rubin
But with Trump, you got to let that one go.
michael j knowles
You don't want to look like a sore winner.
But then you have Trump.
Obviously, he comes back.
He's booted out of office for various and sundry reasons.
Some may be unjustified.
But in any case, he comes back.
He wins the popular vote.
So even the fact that the reelection is even bigger than the first election shows you, well, there's real momentum here.
And look, we hope that will continue with Trump.
But when it comes to Reagan, Reagan really set the stage for a quarter century of growth.
Every good thing that happened under the Clinton presidency, really you can trace back to Ronald Reagan.
The George Bush presidency, George H.W. Bush, was effectively Ronald Reagan's third term.
It wasn't really until 9-11 that you see America now on a new sort of course.
But the consequences of Reagan are almost impossible to overstate.
dave rubin
Starting something new isn't just hard.
It can be terrifying.
Before any business launches, the doubts will show up fast.
What if it doesn't work?
What if nobody buys anything?
Pushing past that fear isn't easy, but taking the leap can change everything.
And having the right tools makes all the difference.
That's where Shopify comes in.
Shopify powers millions of businesses around the world and nearly 10% of all e-commerce in the U.S., from massive household names to brands just getting started.
It's easy to build a professional online store with hundreds of ready-to-use templates that match any brand style.
Finding customers doesn't have to be complicated.
Shopify makes it simple with easy-to-run email and social media campaigns.
Everything lives in one place, payments, inventory, analytics, and more, making business operations smoother.
And that purple shop pay button delivers the best converting checkout on the planet, helping reduce abandoned carts and increase sales.
It's time to turn those what-ifs into things with Shopify today.
Sign up for your $1 per month trial at shopify.com slash Ruben.
That's shopify.com slash Ruben.
Do you view the sort of the second term?
Reagan's Legacy 00:15:27
dave rubin
So basically, you know, 85 for those four years after that, landslide election.
Now the wall's coming down.
America's back.
Capitalism's cool.
You know, as a child of the 80s, and I know we all do this with our childhood, like you turn it into something that maybe it wasn't exactly, or you think about it in a way that, you know, as a kid, maybe you weren't understanding all the issues of the world.
But in some ways, I view it as peak America.
Like it was just like, it was cool to be patriotic.
It was fun.
Racism was not cool.
No one hate, like, it just wasn't.
It's hard for people in 2026 to realize we had put so much of this nonsense to bed and it was just like make money, succeed, capitalism.
The country's going to grow.
We're going to still do things.
And a lot of that obviously doesn't quite apply anymore.
unidentified
Yes.
dave rubin
Or Trump's trying to bring it back, but we've gone through.
Yeah.
michael j knowles
We have to be afraid that nostalgia is history after a few drinks.
So when you remember the late 80s into the early 90s, yeah, look, there was some bad stuff, massive crime surges, especially in the early 90s.
You had basically peak of American divorce.
You had abortion hitting record highs.
I mean, there was bad stuff going on.
However, you know, some of what we remember actually did happen.
And I find now when I talk to Zoomers, they're so quick to denigrate Reagan now because, you know, he's been exalted for so long and they're a little contrarian.
Or they'll say, oh, you're just remembering things through rosy lenses.
But no, it really was different.
I'll give you one example of this from the 90s.
I just sat down with this guy.
I don't know if you caught it.
He's a meth-maxing, looks mogging guy.
He's actually in the clink right now.
He's clink maxing right now, but his name is Flavicular.
dave rubin
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
I know I did see some of it.
Wait, is he literally in the clink now?
michael j knowles
Yeah, he's jumpsuit mogging his cellmates because he's a jail maxer.
But I think it was for passing a fake ID or doing drugs or whatever.
You know, the guy, the guy.
dave rubin
I must have just missed this.
The guy's done some strange things.
He does crystal meth to stay thin while he's like, the guy's whack job.
michael j knowles
Yeah, he said he'd prefer to vote for Newsom because he finds him sexier than Joe Rush.
Oh, yeah.
You know, he's a confused guy.
And, you know, he's really popular, I think, because it's entertaining and it's kind of reality TV.
I get it.
I hope the guy's life turns out okay because he's in some trouble.
But he said something very illuminating to me.
I was very glad I spoke to him because we were talking about the Clinton impeachment and he said, bro, he should have taken the double-down pill.
I said, what?
He goes, he should have come out and just said, yeah, I did this with Monica Lewinsky.
It was awesome.
Like, it was great.
And I said, oh, well, what you don't understand is he would have been impeached and convicted and removed from office for that.
And he said, no, he wouldn't have, man.
No, he wouldn't.
He would have survived it.
And I thought, oh, this is an example of a 19-year-old actually not realizing that things used to be different.
Had Clinton had to perjure himself if he wanted to stay in office because both parties would have agreed at that time that if he actually just admitted to that, he would have had to be removed.
That is different from today.
Today, you would take the double-down pill.
That is how it would work today, but it is different.
And so, look, that's all a long word-maxing way of saying some of what you remember, Dave, I think is real.
There were real challenges there.
But what we saw was really the culmination of a once-in-a-nation, a once-in-history culmination of historical circumstances.
The beginning of the information technology boom, I mean, just gave an unprecedented degree of material prosperity.
The fact that we won the Cold War, we were the undisputed superpower.
The fact that we had resolved some of our domestic problems, like the racial strife that you saw in the 60s and 70s, really kind of petered away in the 80s.
Even after the AIDS crisis, some of the sexual issues with the gay rights movement, people were kind of chill about it.
You know, that wasn't really a major issue.
And all of that really did exist.
Some of that you have to chalk up to historical circumstances, but some of it you really can attribute to Ronald Reagan's leadership.
He really brought about, to no small degree, the end of the Cold War.
He brought about those circumstances, and he really deserves some credit for it.
dave rubin
Do you think it's partly because from everything I've read about him, and I've gone back and watched many of his speeches, and I've watched some of his state of the unions, everything about him in the public sense was aspirational.
There was no sense of this isn't going to work or we're in a lot of trouble or anything else.
It was, we are going to make it better.
This is great.
There's opportunity here.
We're doing it right.
You know, and a little bit of they're doing it wrong, sure, but that it was all aspirational.
And nowadays, it's hard for people to even accept that that might be a way to look at things.
michael j knowles
Yes.
The problem is Reagan was entirely aspirational, and he was real scripted.
You know, he was a product of film, of the studio stuff.
dave rubin
Yeah, he knew how to, like, he'd go on the tonight show and he could land the line, man, and he knew when to wait for the laugh and all this.
michael j knowles
Perfectly, yes.
In a way that actually wouldn't play today.
unidentified
Because when Ronald Reagan goes over there, he says, well, I once heard of a politician who gave a speech on a pile of manure.
And the farmer said it was the first time he ever heard Republican policies on a Democrat platform.
michael j knowles
You know, it's so sorry.
It wasn't correct.
dave rubin
Right.
michael j knowles
And that wouldn't play today.
That would read as inauthentic because we live in this culture of not even reality TV.
We're now living in live streaming, which is the hyper-real, you know, extreme version of reality TV.
So, you know, that's why today we have Trump.
You know, Trump is kind of the Reagan for our times.
But, you know, Reagan really fit his era.
And I think also this is why Reagan has fallen a little bit out of favor after we had put him up in the pantheon for the past 25 years, is a recognition that you can't dig a guy up from the grave.
You know, let the poor man rest.
He did his part.
But you can't just go back to the same old slogans of the 1980s.
I think part of the reason that politicians aren't quite as aspirational in their rhetoric now is the problems have gotten worse.
Ronald Reagan could minimize illegal immigration in the 1980s when there were relatively few of them and it wasn't a big problem.
When you have like 20 million of them with face tattoos bringing in fentanyl, killing 75,000 Americans a year, this is a different situation and you need to get a little bit tougher.
Same thing, we're no longer the unchallenged global hegemon.
You know, Reagan there, confident he was going to win the Cold War, and then leads to that post-war peace.
That's one thing.
Now you have China legitimately threatening our interests.
You have Russia, as weakened as Russia is, legitimately threatening our interests.
You have Iran legitimately threatening our interests.
You have to speak a little bit differently.
So, yes, look, we could all take a note from Reagan on rhetoric.
He was a master of turning a phrase, but we have to avoid the temptation to just go back and relive the 80s because for some of us, that was our childhood, or because we recognize it as a halcyon era.
It wouldn't play today.
You know, there's a reason that we have Don instead of Ron today.
dave rubin
Yeah.
Do you think part of his success also was that the Democrats, even though you pointed out they kind of screwed him on amnesty, there was at least a wing of the Democrat Party, I would probably argue most of it.
That you may have, you personally may have disagreed with them, or conservatives may have disagreed with them, but they basically liked the country.
They were pretty much relatively moderate.
This is even pre-Bill Clinton Democrats, where they could go out to dinner in D.C. and enjoy each other, where now one party's gone completely insane.
So Reagan had the advantage of at least, even if they were going to screw him over, they weren't all completely bananas like it is now.
michael j knowles
This, I think, you see, especially under Eisenhower.
Eisenhower was courted by the Republican Party and the Democrat Party to run for president.
Talk about an amazing degree of consensus.
And he was a Republican, but he's kind of a liberal, moderate Republican.
And it's even difficult for us to understand what that means because when we talk about moderation, or sorry, when we use moderation as a dirty word, we're really thinking, I think, mostly of the culture war issues, abortion, transgenderism, marriage, whatever.
And at that time, none of those were up for debate.
There was no abortion debate.
Just everyone agreed it was bad.
Transgenderism, could you imagine Ike Eisenhower giving a speech?
I mean, it was just completely unthinkable.
And, you know, that was substantially true even up until the 1980s.
So, yes, people always say that Reagan and Tip O'Neill, you know, they'd beat each other up during the day and get a drink after work.
And I think that's a little bit overstated.
I don't think those guys liked each other all that much, actually, but they could do that because the Democrat Party at least had to say, at least had to pretend that they didn't want illegal immigration, that they opposed abortion, even if they publicly allowed for it.
You know, they privately, personally opposed it.
You know, they had to wave the American flag.
They wouldn't go to a rally as they would today and wave the Mexican flag and burn the American flag.
So there was that degree of consensus that getting back to your first point, you say your earliest memory is Reagan getting shot.
Reagan gets brought into the medical center and the doctor is there, Jordano.
I forget his first name.
And he's lying there, Reagan, on the gurney.
And he says, well, I hope you're a Republican.
And Jordano, the doctor, says, Mr. President, we're all Republicans today.
And years later, I was living in New York.
Coincidentally, I became friends with that surgeon's son.
And we were talking about this incident.
He said, yeah, my dad was the surgeon who operated on Reagan, helped save his life.
I said, we're all Republicans today.
He goes, and I promise you, he was not a Republican.
He was a Democrat.
But whereas today, ICE officers are being, I mean, they're being told by nurses on TikTok that the nurses are going to let them bleed out.
Cops can't go into Starbucks and get a drink because they're afraid they're going to put something in their drinks.
You know, the conditions have frayed.
And I think that's another reason that a little bit of the shine has come off Reagan is ultimately it didn't work.
Ultimately, the country is worse.
Reagan said America's best days are in the future.
That might be true.
But today, things seem worse than they did 30 years ago.
But I guess the answer that I would have to Reagan's detractors that way is, hey, guys, he gave us a quarter century, one of the greatest quarter centuries in American history.
Where do you want from?
dave rubin
Right.
I mean, I don't buy that.
Whether things are worse or better or whatever, to me, that's not the argument because you can't blame someone who, first off, he's been dead for 20 years, but also hasn't been in office in basically 40 years.
Like he did the best he could.
It would sort of be like blaming Winston Churchill for problems that London or that the Brits are having today.
Wouldn't it?
michael j knowles
No.
dave rubin
Wouldn't it be like that?
Knowles, oh, look, drink your drink.
What about his letters?
No, purely hypothetically.
Of course.
As you drank the cyanide, this interview is over.
I don't know what percentage of my audience got what just happened there, but whoever did, pretty good.
Sam Altman just announced that ChatGPT can now reference all your past conversations, every thought, question, idea you've ever shared.
And with a former NSA director now on their board, Edward Snowden called it a willful, calculated betrayal of the rights of every person on earth.
We've seen this before.
unidentified
Alexa listens.
dave rubin
Meta tracks everything you do.
Why assume AI will be any different?
And now OpenAI might even start asking for government IDs to use ChatGPT.
That's where Venice.ai comes in.
It gives you the power of AI without giving up your privacy.
It's open source, private, and runs right in your browser.
No spying, no censorship, no data collection.
Your chats stay encrypted and stored only on your device.
Go to venice.ai slash Dave and use code Dave for 20% off a pro plan.
That's venice.ai slash Dave.
Code Dave, real AI, real privacy.
You know, the later years obviously was starting to have some cognitive stuff.
You know, we're just a year plus out of four years of complete cognitive failure by the president, that he was even able to hide it somewhat and do it in a dignified way.
And I guess it was pre-internet, so people couldn't see some of those things.
But even that's pretty remarkable.
unidentified
Yes.
michael j knowles
You know, for a long time, conservatives wanted to insist that Reagan did not have any cognitive problems, even though he left office, what was it, five years before, five or six years before he publicly came out with his Alzheimer's diagnosis.
So you'd say, look, even if he didn't know about it, there would have been some early signs, just given how that disease tends to develop.
However, I think the rejoinder to that is, look, maybe he did have cognitive impairment.
I mean, there's one example that people often point to, which is I think they were at the ranch and Reagan was asked some question by the press and he just didn't have an answer.
He just stared kind of blankly.
And Nancy turns up to him and says, we're doing the best we can.
And Reagan doesn't miss a beat.
Great trained action.
We're doing the best we can.
And so I think if you point to that example, you'd say, okay, look, that might have been at the very least a senior moment.
And people have that in their 30s or 40s.
So knowing what we know now, maybe there were some issues.
But I think the rejoinder to the critics who say he was impaired at the end of his presidency is, it was at the end of the presidency that he basically won the Cold War.
So if that's Reagan impaired, give me someone who is demented over the kinds of Democrat presidents we get today, whether we're talking about Joe Biden, who was quite literally demented, or Barack Obama, who had all of his faculties about him.
And maybe that was actually worse.
dave rubin
So, Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall that you view as that's the peak of the peak right there.
michael j knowles
Probably, and that's a line that was written by Peter Robinson, the great Peter Robinson of Uncommon Knowledge.
And I've talked to Peter about that line a number of times, and I said, you wrote that line.
And Peter's answer is, well, Reagan wrote the line, in that I was writing for him.
And, you know, so he might have literally written that line, but that was a line that Reagan wanted to use.
And Peter's obviously being humble about that, too.
It's one of the most consequential four words in American oratorical history.
However, Reagan had to fight for it.
There were a lot of forces who wanted to take that line out.
It was very much in keeping with his foreign policy.
So I think there are many reasons to complement Nixon and Kissinger's policies in the 60s and 70s.
You know, I think they did do a great job for their time.
But Reagan was a pivot.
Reagan was a pivot away from detente sometimes.
Sometimes, you know, sometimes he was cozying up to Gorbachev, and they were all going to agree to abolish nuclear weapons entirely.
Reagan's Brandenburg Gambits 00:03:41
michael j knowles
But then at other times, he was going to saber rattle, and he was going to go there to the Brandenburg Gate and say, tear down this wall.
And sometimes he would jokingly in a mic test say, I've signed a law outlawing the Soviet Union.
The bombs begin in five minutes, and the Soviets would hear it and think that we're actually on the brink of war.
So he had both of those.
In a way, you see an echo today with Trump, who is unpredictable.
Is he the biggest dove, a correction to the neoconism of George W. Bush?
Or is he this big hawk who goes in and drops the Moab and bombs Fordo and takes out Maduro?
And what is he?
Well, you know what he is?
He's unpredictable, which is very helpful.
And he is inclined toward peace.
And so this phrase, peace through strength, is abused, especially by neocons and more hawkish people, to be, you know, violence for strength.
You know, peace through violence or something.
But that wasn't Trump and Reagan.
They really did have peace in mind.
Ronald Reagan, had Gorbachev played ball, Reagan would have abolished nuclear weapons.
He, I think, really did want that.
However, he was willing to make the prudential calculation of how far he could push things.
And at the Brandenburg Gate, I think that's about as far as it goes.
And it worked.
dave rubin
And he was also president when Rocky fought Ivan Drago on Christmas Day in Moscow.
michael j knowles
One of his biggest achievements.
dave rubin
Michael Knowles, do you have anything left to add?
michael j knowles
No, I mean, I said that the Brandenburg Gate was the culmination.
But no, no, you're right.
I think it was Rocky.
Actually, you know, you could say there was a little coda to the Reagan presidency, which is when he wrote that letter and confessed his Alzheimer's diagnosis, you know, disclosed it to the American people.
It's a beautiful handwritten letter.
And he says, you know, at the moment I feel fine.
I feel sorry for Nancy for what's about to come.
But, you know, I'm at peace.
And I have no doubt that America's greatest days will lie ahead.
And, you know, it's this great expression of gratitude.
It's this great expression of humility for a man who would come later, famously, not to even recognize the White House in a snow globe.
And it ties back to the very first thing he talked about, which is he was almost offed at the beginning of his presidency.
And he wrote down in his diary after that, I now know that I owe my life to God.
And I think you see that clearly.
I think clearly you see the hand of God over the Reagan administration.
And even for people now who want to downplay that, I was talking to Yoram Hazoni about this some years ago.
And he said, you know, you kids, you weren't there.
You don't remember.
But for all of the foibles and pitfalls, it really felt like a moment not just of national renewal, but of religious renewal in the country.
I mean, there was something, as Ronald Reagan said in one of his most famous speeches, A Time for Choosing, when he was campaigning for Barry Goldwater.
He said, you know, when great forces are on the move in the world, we learn we're spirits, not animals.
And something is going on in time and space and beyond time and space, whether we know it or not, is called destiny.
And you and I have a rendezvous with destiny.
And that trust in God's providence and that willingness to cooperate with God's grace, I think that was really sincere.
People thought it made Reagan a kook.
In reality, it made him one of the most successful presidents we've ever had.
dave rubin
Well, you did him proud, Knowles.
I thank you for your time.
michael j knowles
Thank you, sir.
Good to see you as always.
dave rubin
Well, you did Bill Clinton at the end.
michael j knowles
Well, Dave, I feel your pain having to listen to my explanation.
dave rubin
I did not have sexual relations with that woman.
But he was talking about Hillary.
That was the thing.
Okay, see ya!
Export Selection