When I was much younger and just married with a baby on the way, our apartment was destroyed by global cooling. The roof was flat and the snow and ice got so heavy the ceiling caved in.
There was a farm across the street that was bought and turned into a subdivision. The builder built one street with town homes on either side before going belly up in those awesome Jimmy Carter years. One was for sale and we made a full price offer. The home was $52,000 and we had to come up with $2800 down payment. The seller was so desperate to sell that he paid the closing costs (thanks Carter!).
You could hardly call us "rich" - our combined take home gross pay was $16,000.
When we applied for the loan, the interest rate was at 18 3/4% (thanks Carter!). In the 90 days it took to close, the loan fell to 12 1/8 % (thanks Ronnie Reagan!). That saved us ~$450 a month in interest.
It is just outright absurd to say Reagan only helped the rich. He helped EVERYONE.
No amount of taxes he settled for (he had a hostile congress) made up that $450. We came out ahead.
All that is true.
What the economic data from his terms shows are that what was true for me was more true for people of color. For them, they rose from the bottom quintile of earnings to higher ones faster than white people did.
He ran against the ERA and then appointed Sandra Day O'Connor as the first woman to the supreme court. The anti Reagan propaganda will only mention the ERA bit. Some of us are not fooled.
In his debate with Carter, Carter made a huge gaffe. Said something about asking his daughter Amy for advice on how to save the world from the threat of nuclear annihilation. Reagan did save the world from that threat. He talked really tough against the commies and then met them face to face and negotiated peace with them.
He made one of the greatest speeches in history at the Brandenburg Gates at the Berlin Wall. "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." He offered peace and friendship to his enemies. And FREEDOM.
He worked with Tip O'Neill and saved Social Security. The propaganda is that he wanted to end it. In his "time for choosing" speech in 1964, he railed against Social Security being a ponzi scheme. It was sold to the people as a retirement plan and then in the courts the government claimed it was a welfare plan. The people would never have gone for it as a welfare plan in those days, we had to be lied into it. What Reagan wanted all along was for it to be solvent and to stand on its own. And for it to provide better benefits for retirees.
As he put it in 1964, "A young man, 21 years of age, working at an average salary—his Social Security contribution would, in the open market, buy him an insurance policy that would guarantee 220 dollars a month at age 65. The government promises 127. He could live it up until he's 31 and then take out a policy that would pay more than Social Security. Now are we so lacking in business sense that we can't put this program on a sound basis, so that people who do require those payments will find they can get them when they're due—that the cupboard isn't bare?"
The social security surpluses were required by law to be invested in government T-Bills. That surplus money went into the treasury and got spent by the Democrats who ran congress. Reagan submitted budgets to congress each year and each time the Democrats declared them D.O.A. and wrote new budgets with their own spending priorities. Reagan vetoed 39 times but had to settle some of the time to get his own legislation passed (something Obama never figured out, something that Clinton did brilliantly). Those surpluses made it look like Clinton was running surpluses, but in actuality, the debt rose in every year Clinton was president (because the SS surplus invested in T-Bills which is DEBT).
"Trickle down economics" did work. Though that is a loaded phrase to describe what really happened.
Revenues doubled and congress TRIPLED spending. There was a kind of economic war between the parties. Reagan told Tip O'Neill, "I'm going to take away your allowance." Democrats were so determined to undermine Reagan that their failures earned him the nickname of the "teflon president."
Debtor nation? That can be good and bad. It's bad if you're a 3rd world nation, which we nearly were under Carter. There wasn't much of a surplus in that regard in the first place - less than what we spent on foreign aid. What it meant was that the Reagan economic boom was so great that foreigners wanted to invest here, and americans invested here too instead of overseas. It was great, not a negative.
He warned us that times would get worse before getting better. There was a significant recession right away as he predicted. Then things took off. His economy added 24M new jobs. Most of those jobs went to women who joined the workforce in large numbers and were empowered. That 24M job figure not measured from the highest point in unemployment in 1983, but true net jobs gained. The figures people throw around for Obama are not net jobs, but from when we hit the worst of the unemployment after the recession.
The debt? He inherited deficits and debts from Carter. The amounts were smaller because the economy was in ruins, but it was still there and structural. The rate of deficit and debt increase was much better in the 8 years of Reagan than the 4 years of Carter. That is, the debt doubled in 4 years of Carter and should have gone up 4x (2x then another 2x each term) but went up 3x.
Since Reagan left office, there have been 16 years of democrat presidents (Clinton and Obama), and 12 years of republican presidents (Bush I, Bush II). The debt has increased 7x.
AIDS
Regardless of whether Reagan talked about it or not, he did something about it. He spent ever increasing amounts of money on researching treatment and a cure. The amounts were appropriate for a disease that killed very few early on and the amounts grew to far more than was spent to research bigger killers (cancer, heart disease, etc.) as more people died from AIDS.
http://www.amfar.org/thirty-years-of-hiv/aids-snapshots-of-an-epidemic/
In 1982, there were 618 deaths from AIDS and 771 total cases reported.
In 1985, there were 12,529 deaths and 15,527 cases reported. This is when he made his first speech about it. By then, funding for research had increased 20x.
Reagan gave amnesty to 3M Mexican immigrants. What's not to like about that?