Reagan’s daughter writes article about ‘sad chaos’ in US

Reagan’s daughter writes article about ‘sad chaos’ in US

40th President of the United States Ronald Wilson Reagan

The daughter of the 40th US President Ronald Reagan, Patti Davis, wrote an article for The New York Times, “My Father Ronald Reagan Would Weep for America,” in which she spoke about her worries about the fate of the country. Reagan’s daughter says the United States is on the brink of disaster, caught in a “quagmire of anger” and “hatred.”

In addition, Davis regrets that he cannot now talk to his father and find out his opinion on internal political processes, especially against the backdrop of party disputes and civil strife.

Democracy is difficult to maintain, and dictatorships often arise not by the will of one person, but by the consent of society,” Davis wrote. In her opinion, politicians should not divide Americans; they should talk more to people than to each other. All other decisions could harm America’s democratic structure.

At the end of the article, Davis wrote about the “sad chaos” in the United States and how hard it was for her to realize that her country was rapidly changing for the worse.

Ronald Reagan was the 40th President of the United States from 1981 to 1989, a member of the conservative Republican Party. He died in 2004 at the age of 93. Under Reagan, the Cold War ended, the reduction of nuclear weapons and the improvement of relations with the USSR began.

Source: Rosbalt

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