It is as clueless as it pointless to bitch about the amount of American media coverage that the death of Ronald Reagan has and will generate, IMHO.
And 60th anniversary or no, it is disingenous to complain that it trumps the anniversary of D-Day, as well.
Your political viewpoint aside, he was one of only 43 men ever to be President of our United States.
We have no Kingship. We should, but we don't. Therefore the Presidency is our ultimate symbol of who we are as a people and as a nation. This is where the confusion comes in.
In England the Prime Minister is a politician, and a working one at that, who must descend into Parliament without ceremony and defend his policies on a regular basis before an active and vocal oppostition.
For the ceremonial unity of the nation, the Brits have the Royal family.
In America, the office of the Presidency must serve these dual purposes, causing it to often do scant justice to both.
Only the most idiot partisan few would hold that George Bush would be the best candidate to handle the job of a working Prime Minister. He'd be badly exposed during the first five minutes of any active English style debate.
Fewer still would seriously hold that, say, Richard Nixon served well as our national symbol of who we are as a nation.
You see what I mean? The schizophrenic nature of our Presidency has served not served us well. Working politicians are not best equipped to be inclusive national symbols, and those candidates chosen for their symbolic qualities often do not make good working politicians.
How many companies would thrive if the position of CEO were a popularity contest?
Ronald Reagan should have been our King. He would have made a great one. George Bush is the prototypical likable idiot Prince. As such, more Americans could warmly endorse him.
It is Ronald Reagan as the symbol of America, and therefore America herself, that we will celebrate during the coming days and weeks. This is entirely appropriate.
It is Ronald Reagan the (for quite a few of us) disastrous and deluded politician whom others will begrudge this celebration.
I, personally don't mind one damn bit, for I am able to seperate one from the other.