June 08, 2004
My Ronald Reagan Moment
By
Michelle Malkin
The passing of
President Reagan brought me back to January 26,
1982. That was the date the “Great Communicator”
first inspired me. I was 11 years old.
In his
State of the Union Address that evening, Reagan
spoke of recessions, regulations, entitlements, Soviets,
and sanctions. My parents nodded vigorously in
agreement. I almost nodded off.
Towards the end of the televised
speech, however, Reagan lifted America’s spirits—and
piqued a child’s interest—by talking about something
elementary:
American heroes.
With his twinkling eyes and
unabashed patriotism, Reagan reminded me of my late
maternal grandfather. Lolo ‘Zario had fought alongside
American troops against the Japanese and survived
the
Bataan Death March during
World War II. He had a hearty laugh, but was deadly
serious when he held forth on freedom and sacrifice. My
grandfather commanded my attention and respect when he
spoke of these things. So did the president.
“We don't have to turn to our
history books for heroes,” Reagan said that night.
“They're all around us.”
The president looked into the
audience and singled out
Jeremiah Denton, an American pilot shot down by
North Vietnamese troops and imprisoned for eight brutal
years. He was beaten, starved, and thrown into solitary
confinement. In 1966, during a televised propaganda
interview with a
pro-Commie journalist arranged by his captors,
Denton was pressured to condemn American wartime
“atrocities.”
Instead, Denton stood by his
country: "[W]hatever the position of my
government is, I believe in it, I support it, and I will
support it as long as I live." Denton pretended the
camera lighting bothered his eyes. With his clueless
jailers surrounding him, Denton looked into the lens,
blinked his eyes in
Morse Code, and covertly broadcast the truth to the
world—Jane
Fonda be damned—by spelling out “T-O-R-T-U-R-E.”
In his speech, Reagan recounted Denton's words upon
landing in the Philippines after being freed: “The
plane door opened and Jeremiah Denton came slowly down
the ramp. He caught sight of our flag, saluted it, said,
‘God bless America,’ and then thanked us for bringing
him home.”
Reagan next pointed out Lenny
Skutnik, a man whose name and story remain etched in my
mind after all these years. “Just two weeks ago,”
Reagan recounted, “in the midst of a terrible tragedy
on the Potomac, we saw again the spirit of American
heroism at its finest the heroism of dedicated rescue
workers saving crash victims from icy waters. And we saw
the heroism of one of our young government employees,
Lenny Skutnik, who, when he saw a woman lose her
grip on the helicopter line, dived into the water and
dragged her to safety.”
Reagan’s stirring salute to Skutnik
inspired me to research and memorize his story for a
seventh-grade English class assignment.
Skutnik was a young worker at the
Congressional Budget Office. He had been driving home
from work when
Air Florida Flight 90 fell from the sky just 20
seconds after takeoff from Washington National Airport.
Skutnik jumped out of his car near
the Fourteenth Street Bridge, where a crowd watched
helplessly as a female passenger screamed for help in
the icy waters. A
helicopter rescue team had tossed her a line, but
she was unable to hold on. Skutnik instinctively ripped
off his overcoat, kicked off his shoes, dove into the
river, and pulled 22-year-old flight attendant Priscilla
Tirado to safety. She and four others survived. (Skutnik,
a remarkably humble man who refused to be called a hero,
still lives and works in the nation’s capital.)
After Reagan’s speech, a cynical press referred
sneeringly to the “Lenny Skutnik moment.”
This elitist disdain for recognizing everyday heroes
persists. Just last year, linguist
Geoffrey Nunberg complained in the New York Times
about
“bathetic ‘Skutnik moments.’”
“Bathetic?” I didn’t know that
condescending word when I was 11. But I do know that
on a chilly night in January 1982, the president ignited
a young heart.
It was my “Ronald Reagan moment”—an indelible
moment when the exceptional goodness of America, and the
boundless capacity of ordinary Americans to do
extraordinary things, came alive. The flame endures.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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