Good mourning to you!

Earlier I got an email telling me about the new “Mourning in America” video.

It’s a clever takeoff on a vintage Reagan ad from the 1984 campaign:

It strikes me that strategically, those who remember it (and thus make the connection) would tend to be older voters with good memories.
Although I am loath to admit it (and such an admission would hardly be expected to endear me to conservatives), I didn’t especially like Reagan, and I never voted for him. (I didn’t vote for a Republican on the GOP ticket until 1996, and since then I have been loyal to the GOP.)
However, Reagan certainly looks great by way of contrast to Obama.
So does Bush.
In fact, so does Richard Nixon!
But somehow, I just can’t see anyone with any influence on the right resurrecting any of the Nixon campaign ads.
I looked through the YouTube hits pretty carefully. None of them are a fit — not even as political satire.
Political surrealism, though, is another matter. And it just so happens that in that department, I did find a vintage Nixon campaign ad video that I liked.
Astounding as it may sound, the ad includes a shot of Jerry Garcia.
12 seconds into the Nixon ad, Garcia has a frame all to himself, wearing his American flag hat, and right at that moment Nixon is saying this:

“American youth today has its fringes. But that’s part of the greatness of our country.”

No, seriously; I liked it so much that almost immediately I began to worry that the People Who Take These Things Seriously might want it taken it down, so got a screenshot:
GarciaNixon.JPG
Here’s the embed:

Sorry. I know that the above has absolutely nothing to do with this morning’s mourning meme.
Unless, of course, you still mourn Nixon. And Garcia.


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2 responses to “Good mourning to you!”

  1. M. Simon Avatar

    I don’t want a government that cares.
    I’m sick and tired of government caring.
    BTW I watched the videos at Hill Buzz. They seem to be getting around.

  2. Veeshir Avatar

    I don’t like the comparison.
    The first one is about how we all screwed. It’s not optimistic, which was Ronnie’s M.O.
    The Ronnie Raygun one was about how America is all right. He was always optimistic.
    If you want to copy Ronnie ads, why not copy the ones from 1980?