1. The Gay Truth About Ronald Reagan: 10 Years On - Duke's Download
1 feb 2024 · Most of the gay community has felt for a long time that Ronald Reagan was personally responsible for the tens of thousands of gay men who died from HIV and ...
Reflecting on my article for The Advocate that still provokes controversy a decade later
2. Op-ed: The Gay Truth About Ronald Reagan - Advocate.com
5 jun 2014 · The picture that people like to paint of Reagan in the LGBT community is that he was a ferociously antigay zealot who believed that AIDS was a punishment.
Ronald Reagan failed to successfully combat the AIDS crisis, but does that make him antigay?
3. Donald Regan | US news | The Guardian
11 jun 2003 · Donald Regan, who has died of cancer aged 84, was a jovial but combative and driven man who rose from working-class, Irish, south Boston to be the boss of the ...
Treasury secretary and then chief of staff to Ronald Reagan, he was brought down by the Iran-Contra affair, and Nancy Reagan.
4. The Secret Life of a Gay Political Strategist in Reagan's Washington
28 jul 2022 · An excerpt from James Kirchick's 'Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington' recounts the story of political strategist Terry Dolan.
An excerpt from James Kirchick's ‘Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington’ recounts the story of political strategist Terry Dolan.
5. Ronald Reagan's Family
After he joined the Joffrey Ballet, speculation arose over his sexuality, which has persisted to this day, in spite of his marriages and recent statements that ...
Ronald Reagan's Family. Ronald Reagan’s Parents
6. Donald Regan | Military Wiki - Fandom
He reached the rank of lieutenant colonel while serving in the Pacific theater, and was involved in five major campaigns including Guadalcanal and Okinawa. In ...
Donald Thomas "Don" Regan (December 21, 1918 – June 10, 2003) was the 66th United States Secretary of the Treasury from 1981 to 1985 and the White House Chief of Staff from 1985 to 1987 in the Ronald Reagan Administration. He advocated "Reaganomics" and tax cuts to create jobs and stimulate production. Before serving in the Reagan administration, Regan served as chairman and CEO of Merrill Lynch from 1971 to 1980. He had worked at Merrill Lynch since 1946, and before this he had studied at Harva
7. Ronald Reagan: Family Life - Miller Center
In 1982, she ran in the California primaries for the U.S. Senate; her father refrained from endorsing her because he said it would an act of nepotism. She ...
President Reagan's typical day began with his arrival in the Oval Office at 9a.m. His briefing on national security affairs occurred shortly thereafter, usually lasting fewer than thirty minutes. Reagan usually worked in the office until a little after 5 p.m. and then returned to the residence quarters. During the course of his day, he typically had two hours of "personal staff time" during which he relaxed with aides, napped, and replied to some of his massive correspondence. On several occasions, Reagan responded to letters from people who had fallen on hard economic times by sending a personal check. He often ate dinner with Nancy in front of the television and spent the evening reading fiction or watching television. Throughout his public life, Reagan believed it was a mistake to equate long work hours with effectiveness. "Show me an executive who works long, hard hours, and I'll show you a bad executive," he said in response to a question about his work habits during the 1980 presidential campaign. As President, Reagan often took Wednesday afternoons off and left the office early on Friday so he could go to Camp David, the presidential retreat. He also spent a total of 345 days of his presidency in California, many of them at his ranch northwest of Santa Barbara. Reagan made light of his work habits—once quipping at a Gridiron Dinner that "it's true hard work never killed anybody, but I figure why take the chance?" —but he, his wife, and his aides recognized that he func...
8. The Reagans, surrounded by discreet gays, still did little to help with AIDS.
11 mrt 2016 · By far the most influential gay man in the Reagan inner circle was Robert Gray, an extremely successful Washington public relations man who had ...
Excerpted from The Gay Metropolis: The Landmark History of Gay Life in America by Charles Kaiser.