Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

In an educated world, Rep. Waters would be hounded from office and reduced to asking if Mr. Hoffmeister would like fries with that; an occupation admirably suited to her self-evident lack of economic acumen.

In this world, however, her constituents will cheer her words, and vote her another term.

Tam, from See Atlas. See Atlas shrug. Shrug, Atlas, shrug!

There’s a lot more that’s even better, but this piece makes a nice standalone quote.

This was in response to Rep. Waters’ (Socialist – Los Angeles) pronouncement to oil company executives that “This Liberal will be all about socializin… ah, uh, uh… Will be about… basically taking over, and the government running all of your companies.”

Fox News said that the word she was so desperately searching for was “nationalizing,” but I disagree. She recognized her Freudian slip. “Socializing” was precisely the right word, and the one that could not be uttered in a chamber where she swore to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. (And obviously lied about it.)

When Your Only Tool is a Hammer…

I have an audiobook copy of Barack ChangeHope Obama’s The Audacity of Hope, and I just began listening to it this morning.

Pardon my cynicism, but something struck me from the very prologue. During Barack HopeChange Obama’s run for the Senate, he says, he toured around Illinois talking to people, and this is what they told him (from pages 5 & 6):

(W)hether I was meeting with two people or fifty, whether I was in one of the well-shaded, stately homes of the North Shore, a walk-up apartment on the West Side, or a farmhouse outside of Bloomington, whether people were friendly, indifferent, or occasionally hostile, I tried my best to keep my mouth shut and hear what they had to say. I listened to people talk about their jobs, their businesses, their local school; their anger at Bush and their anger at Democrats; their dogs, their back pain, their war service, and the things they remembered from childhood. Some had well developed theories to explain the loss of manufacturing jobs or the high cost of health care. Some recited what they had heard on Rush Limbaugh or NPR. But most of them were too busy with work or their kids to pay much attention to politics, and they spoke instead of what they saw before them: a plant closed, a promotion, a high heating bill, a parent in a nursing home, a child’s first step.

No blinding insights emerged from these months of conversation. If anything, what struck me was just how modest people’s hopes were, and how much of what they believed seemed to hold constant across race, region, religion, and class. Most of them thought that anybody willing to work should be able to find a job that paid a living wage. They figured that people shouldn’t have to file for bankruptcy because they got sick. They believed that every child should have a genuinely good education – that it shouldn’t be just a bunch of talk – and that those same children should be able to go to college even if their parents weren’t rich. They wanted to be safe, from criminals and from terrorists; they wanted clean air, clean water, and time with their kids. And when they got old, they wanted to be able to retire with some dignity and respect.

That was about it. It wasn’t much. And although they understood that how they did in life depended mostly on their own efforts – although they didn’t expect government to solve all their problems, and certainly didn’t like seeing their tax dollars wasted – they figured that government should help.

Now, on the surface this sounds marvelous. Look at the simple values that we as Americans all desire: A living wage. A good education. Health. Safety. Security.

And we don’t think government should solve all our problems!

Here’s HopeChange’s reaction to this subtle enlightenment:

I told them that they were right: government couldn’t solve all their problems. But with a slight change in priorities we could make sure every child had a decent shot at life and meet the challenges we faced as a nation. More often than not, folks would nod in agreement and ask how they could get involved. And by the time I was back on the road, with a map on the passenger’s seat, on my way to my next stop, I knew once again just why I’d gone into politics.

By George, he’s a politician! He’ll make government do as much as it CAN!

When the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail.

Let’s look at how well government has done so far:

“Anybody willing to work should be able to find a job that paid a living wage.” The current federal minimum wage is $5.85 per hour, or $12,168 per year based on a 40-hour work week. The federal poverty level for a single person household is $10,210. Ta-daaaa! Problem fixed! If you can get a job flipping burgers for 40 hours a week, you can live above the poverty line (unless you’re doing it in Hawaii.) For a three-person household the poverty level is $17,170, so at least two have to work, one at least part-time.

That problem would appear to be fixed, at least by government definition, would it not?

Oh, wait… What if there aren’t any jobs where you are? Why, should fixing that be the responsibility of government, too?

“People shouldn’t have to file for bankruptcy because they got sick.” That one’s a lot tougher. Illness and injury can take you out of the workforce, and if you’re not covered by insurance, or if the insurance you do have isn’t any good, then you’re pretty much up the creek unless you are bankrupt or close to it. Most minimum-wage jobs don’t have much in the way of benefits, and if you are long-term or permanently disabled the money will run out fast unless you’re Bill Gates.

This really, truly, deeply sucks, and if you want to know why big-“L” Libertarianism isn’t more popular, this is one very large reason. There is no explaining to someone why their child, parent, sibling or spouse has to suffer, why their insurance company won’t pay for medicines or procedures, why their life’s accumulation of wealth and property has to be used up, sold off or given away just so they can qualify for Medicare or Medicaid. “Life isn’t fair” isn’t any comfort at all.

But Medicare and Medicaid – as limited and restrictive as they are – took up $511 billion of the $1.412 trillion federal budget for fiscal year 2006. That’s more than a third of the entire budget, and it’s expected to go higher. Much higher.

Individuals going bankrupt would appear to be the least cause of our angst. In fact, it would appear that our government’s attempts at “solving” one problem has led to one a few orders of magnitude larger.

Oopsie!

“Every child should have a genuinely good education.” Well, we’re definitely failing at that (and I have an upcoming post – really! – on the topic). Jimmy National Malaise Carter created the Department of Education in 1979 with the specific intent of reversing the downward trend. It’s failed to live up to the task.

So we throw more money at it. Kinda like Medicare and Medicaid. As Dean Esmay once put it,

When a government agency screws up, it argues that it would have done a better job if only it had more money and power, and it often gets it.

But Barack No Child Left Behind Obama says “with a slight change in priorities we could make sure every child had a decent shot at life and meet the challenges we faced as a nation.” Wow. That’s great!

Specifically, what change, and in what priorities? ‘Cause I think it would be great if we could just make sure every child could read – something I don’t think we were all that far away from less than 100 years ago. Before the Federal government had its hands in everything.

“Those same children should be able to go to college even if their parents weren’t rich.” You know, I haven’t figured out just when it was that a college degree became an entitlement. Back when a high school diploma meant more than a student had a merely adequate attendance record, a college degree indicated that the bearer was somewhat extraordinary, not just the son or daughter of someone wealthy. Albert Einstein didn’t come from a rich family. Neither did Percy Julian. While most who graduated with a BS or a BA weren’t geniuses, college was difficult enough that expense wasn’t the only thing that kept people from attending.

But now, with degree programs in such disciplines as Women’s Studies and EcoSocial Design, pretty much anyone can get a sheepskin, and unless the degree is in something technical it may only mean that the holder is able to learn. Maybe.

What entitlement is next? Everybody should be able to get a Ph.D?

“Safe from criminals and terrorists.” That would be nice. How safe do you want to be? 100%? 99.4%? Shall we put CCTV cameras on every corner (and discover, as the Brits have done, that it doesn’t really help?) Should you completely farm out your protection to the State, where a 911 dispatcher might not give a s#!t about what happens to you? Or the cops? We were promised an additional 100,000 police officers under Bill Clinton’s administration, but that didn’t work out so well. Of course, under a ChangeHope administration, we will never be allowed to fail! And when we begin engaging in unconditional negotiations with our ideological opponents in Tehran, Pyongyang, Beirut, Damascus, and a luxuriously goat-skin upholstered cave in the mountains of Northern Waziristan, terrorism will become but an unpleasant memory!

“Clean air, clean water, and time with their kids.” We’ve actually done pretty well with the clean air and clean water thing, though with standard government “efficiency.” The Great Lakes are cleaner than they’ve been in the last 50 years, Los Angeles is no longer synonymous with killer smog, and acid rain is now a problem primarily in Europe and Asia. Of course, most of the heavy industrial manufacturing has moved primarily to Europe and Asia, but hey, our air and water are cleaner! And time with the kids? With one parent working 40 hours a week and the other part time, why can’t they spend time with the kids? Besides, the government will soon, I’m sure, be passing a new Family and Medical Leave act that forces businesses to pay their employees up to twelve weeks each year to spend time with their kids!

“When they got old, they wanted to be able to retire with some dignity and respect.” You know, before Social Security, that generally was the case, only family members did the caring and respecting. Now even with Social Security – $544 billion, or 38.5% of the federal 2006 budget – we’ve still got seniors who can’t afford dignity or respect. Of course they’re living, on average, fifteen years longer than was the median in 1940 when the first check went out (due in large part to our incredibly expensive, highly advanced health care system, Medicare and Medicaid).

So, in balance our government has managed to accomplish some good, but the question I have is “how much and at what cost?” Milton Friedman once wrote:

I want people to take thought about their condition and to recognize that the maintenance of a free society is a very difficult and complicated thing and it requires a self-denying ordinance of the most extreme kind. It requires a willingness to put up with temporary evils on the basis of the subtle and sophisticated understanding that if you step in to do something about them you not only may make them worse, you will spread your tentacles and get bad results elsewhere.

He also noted:

There are four ways in which you can spend money. You can spend your own money on yourself. When you do that, why then you really watch out what you’re doing, and you try to get the most for your money. Then you can spend your own money on somebody else. For example, I buy a birthday present for someone. Well, then I’m not so careful about the content of the present, but I’m very careful about the cost. Then, I can spend somebody else’s money on myself. And if I spend somebody else’s money on myself, then I’m sure going to have a good lunch! Finally, I can spend somebody else’s money on somebody else. And if I spend somebody else’s money on somebody else, I’m not concerned about how much it is, and I’m not concerned about what they get. And that’s government. And that’s close to 40% of our national income.

As Friedman noted, spending someone else’s money on somebody else is what government does. And the job Barack Utopia Obama is going for is to be the engineer in the locomotive that is our federal government.

The support for Obama comes largely from idealists who think that government is the mechanism for making the world a better place, and it will accomplish this end if only the right people are in charge. I have a quote for them from C.S. Lewis:

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their consciences.

Hillary is looking less and less loathsome as time goes by…

As for me, I concur with the words of Louisiana attorney Ashton O’Dwyer, who stayed in his home in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina plowed through. In the face of police officers and national guardsmen moving through his neighborhood disarming homeowners in the name of making them safe, he said “Treat me with benign neglect.” That is what I would prefer my government do.

Unfortunately, he and I are among the few who hold that position.

An Interesting Perspective on the Question

An Interesting Perspective on the Question

Also from Ian Hamet:

John McCain served America honorably and heroically in the Vietnam war, but only himself as a US Senator. Anyone who supported, let alone authored, the direct assault on every citizen’s right of free speech that was the McCain-Feingold bill has no business anywhere but locked in stocks in the public square for daily ridicule, or else wearing a suit of tar and feathers while being given a ride out of town on a rail. The Presidency has had some vile men in it, but rarely one who has been so openly contemptuous of the Constitution before he even takes the oath to uphold and defend it. There is no way in hell I will (vote) for McCain.

An understandable position, but insofar as I can see, McCain is hardly alone in is contempt for the Constitution.

Please, RTWT. What he has to say about Hillary alone is reason enough.

Must Be Nice

Must Be Nice!

So, what happens when you’re a lawmaker and you violate the law? Write a new one!

Ald. Richard Mell (33rd) is a former hunter with an arsenal of weapons that reportedly features shotguns, rifles and pistols, including a Walther PPK of James Bond fame.

But there’s a problem.

Mell forgot to re-register the weapons as required every year by the ordinance that he helped to pass as one of the City Council’s most senior members.

So, what does an alderman do when he finds himself in violation of the law? He writes a new law. Mell has quietly introduced an ordinance that would reopen gun registration in Chicago and create a one-month amnesty for himself and other gun owners in the same predicament.

As others have pointed out that the law as written makes it illegal to re-register any grandfathered handguns – forget to keep up the registration once, and you can never re-register them again.

But here’s the part of the story that really irks me:

“I knew it was the law. I thought it was being done [by a staff member]. If you have a person you trust to do it and they don’t do it, then it doesn’t get done. I’m not gonna say it’s embarrassing. I’m just gonna say I should have done it,” the alderman said.

So a staff member was supposed to take time on the clock to do Alderman Richard Mell’s personal business? What else does he do on the public’s dime? Pick up Mell’s dry cleaning? Do his grocery shopping?

This, too pissed me off:

Mell said he first realized he was in violation of the re-registration requirement about a year ago. When he tried to re-register his guns belatedly, the Chicago Police Department’s Gun Registration Section refused to bend the rules. Mell appealed that ruling to the city’s Department of Administrative Hearings but decided to re-write the law instead.”When we looked at the law, we saw the possibility of winning [the appeal] wasn’t gonna happen,” he said.

Had one of his constituents come to him in a similar predicament, what would Mell have done or said? “Sorry, tough luck” is my bet. Now it’s been a year – so what happened to all of his guns?

He should be hoist on his own petard.

Or tarred and feathered.

AFTER he gets the stupid damned law repealed.

A Few Shots From the NRA Convention

A Few Shots (So to Speak) From the NRA Convention

I was there for the gate opening at 10:00AM. What a crowd! I’ve never seen so much high-speed, low-drag hardware in one place in my life.

And there were a lot of very political statements. Here’s one I particularly liked, on the back of a young man’s T-shirt:


(click each for full size)

Here was the display at the Kentucky State Rifle & Pistol Assoc. booth:

I’ll try to post much more shooty goodness tomorrow, but now I have to get ready for tonight’s blogger get-together.

One other thing, though: I watched most of the speakers at this afternoon’s “Leadership Conference” (starting with Ollie North – since they had a hard time getting us a video feed in the Press room). The general gist of pretty much every speech (as I heard it) was “Please don’t stay home this November. McCain may suck, but he’s better than the Democrat alternative, no matter which one it is!”

What a resounding endorsement of Senator Cylon.

All Markadelphia All the Time

Well, not much longer.

Perennial commenter and fellow blogger Markadelphia has decided to spend more time at his own blog and less at mine (*sniffle*), but I dropped by the other day and found a couple of posts that just begged commentary, so I indulged.

Dammit.

Anyway, Markadelphia responded with a comment that just requires a reply. Here’s his comment with my response. (Yes, I fisked it):

I don’t really have a belief system, Kevin, other than my belief in Christ. I have plenty of problems with liberals. In fact, the list is probably at least two thirds as long as the problems I have with conservatives.

So far, Mark, the problems you appear to have with most self-described liberals seems to be that they’re not liberal enough. It’s that “turning up the power” problem that I keep referring to as “Do it again, only HARDER!

If I don’t understand your philosophy, it certainly isn’t for lack of trying…it is for lack of clarity on your part.

No, it’s because our worldviews are so completely divergent. You simply cannot comprehend that I do not believe the things you believe are true about all people, thus you keep trying to make me fit into your mental image. You convince yourself that if you try just a bit harder you can convince me that you’re right. After all, it’s so obvious to you. You have, after all, asked yourself the right questions! (You knew I had to throw that one in, didn’t you?)

You say you are a classic liberal, the champion of freedom and liberty, and yet you are willing to sign it all away in the name of national security.

That’s how you interpret it, but (as exampled in the comments to the post above) you keep misinterpreting perfectly good complete, meaningful sentences. Meanwhile, what are you willing to sign away in the name of “social justice”?

You shout at the top of your lungs about free speech and yet you blow a bowel when any book, tv program, or film questions our current international policy-calling them kooks and/or traitors and discouraging critical thought.

Here’s a perfect example. What does the First Amendment’s protection of free speech mean? As I understand it, it means that the government cannot shut people up. It does not protect people from any repercussions. If I want to stand directly across from protesters and tell them they’re assholes, the GOVERNMENT can’t shut me up either. If I want to take out a full-page ad directly across from theirs, same thing. If I want to boycott their product or their advertisers and encourage others to do the same, I’m perfectly free to do so. The First Amendment’s freedom of speech clause does not mean you get to protest unopposed. It means the government doesn’t get to threaten you, jail you, or kill you for exercising it. This has, however, been violated under color of law. Abraham Lincoln did it, Woodrow Wilson did it. FDR did it.

You aggressively advocate an “alternative” education to the “socialist crap” being taught in our “collapsing” schools and yet it is clear to me that what you really desire is dissemination of propaganda–propaganda which does go farther back than eight years.

The irony of your view on education is that the exact opposite of your view is the reality: virtually all American History textbooks include your version of US history. We are always acting as a force of good and when we are misunderstood it is the fault of the other and not us. I would recommend you read the book Lies My Teacher Told Me by James Loewen for what is actually the problem with social studies curriculum as opposed to the psychosis that is Goldberg’s view.

First, that little factoid must explain why history doesn’t appear to be taught in school much anymore. My daughter graduated from high school in 1997. She had no idea what Pearl Harbor was or its significance. She was aware, however, that Thomas Jefferson fathered children on one of his slaves though!

I looked up the book. I found this (since one of your commenters mentioned how “Loewen really busts out the whupping stick on Woodrow Wilson”) very interesting. From the Barnes & Noble site, first part of the Publisher’s Weekly review:

Loewen’s politically correct critique of 12 American history textbooks-including The American Pageant by Thomas A. Bailey and David M. Kennedy; and Triumph of the American Nation by Paul Lewis Todd and Merle Curtis sure to please liberals and infuriate conservatives.

Surprise, surprise. Now, from an excerpt from the book itself:

Over the past ten years, I have asked dozens of college students who Helen Keller was and what she did. They all know that she was a blind and deaf girl. Most of them know that she was befriended by a teacher, Anne Sullivan, and learned to read and write and even to speak. Some students can recall rather minute details of Keller’s early life: that she lived in Alabama, that she was unruly and without manners before Sullivan came along, and so forth. A few know that Keller graduated from college. But about what happened next, about the whole of her adult life, they are ignorant. A few students venture that Keller became a “public figure” or a “humanitarian,” perhaps on behalf of the blind or deaf. “She wrote, didn’t she?” or “she spoke” — conjectures without content. Keller, who was born in 1880, graduated from Radcliffe in 1904 and died in 1968. To ignore the sixty-four years of her adult life or to encapsulate them with the single word humanitarian is to lie by omission.

The truth is that Helen Keller was a radical socialist. She joined the Socialist party of Massachusetts in 1909. She had become a social radical even before she graduated from Radcliffe, and not, she emphasized, because of any teachings available there. After the Russian Revolution, she sang the praises of the new communist nation: “In the East a new star is risen! With pain and anguish the old order has given birth to the new, and behold in the East a man-child is born! Onward, comrades, all together! Onward to the campfires of Russia! Onward to the coming dawn!” Keller hung a red flag over the desk in her study. Gradually she moved to the left of the Socialist party and became a Wobbly, a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), the syndicalist union persecuted by Woodrow Wilson.

So we’ve established the horrible hidden historical secret that Helen Keller was a socialist! And more, that Woodrow Wilson persecuted the union to which she belonged!

But wait! There’s more!

What we did not learn about Woodrow Wilson is even more remarkable. When I ask my college students to tell me what they recall about President Wilson, they respond with enthusiasm. They say that Wilson led our country reluctantly into World War I and after the war led the struggle nationally and internationally to establish the League of Nations. They associate Wilson with progressive causes like women’s suffrage. A handful of students recall the Wilson administration’s Palmer Raids against left-wing unions. But my students seldom know or speak about two antidemocratic policies that Wilson carried out: his racial segregation of the federal government and his military interventions in foreign countries.

Under Wilson, the United States intervened in Latin America more often than at any other time in our history. We landed troops in Mexico in 1914, Haiti in 1915, the Dominican Republic in 1916, Mexico again in 1916 (and nine more times before the end of Wilson’s presidency), Cuba in 1917, and Panama in 1918. Throughout his administration Wilson maintained forces in Nicaragua, using them to determine Nicaragua’s president and to force passage of a treaty preferential to the United States.

Fucking right-wing capitalist warmonger!

Wilson’s invasions of Latin America are better known than his Russian adventure. Textbooks do cover some of them, and it is fascinating to watch textbook authors attempt to justify these episodes. Any accurate portrayal of the invasions could not possibly show Wilson or the United States in a favorable light. With hindsight we know that Wilson’s interventions in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Nicaragua set the stage for the dictators Batista, Trujillo, the Duvaliers, and the Somozas, whose legacies still reverberate.

All twelve of the textbooks I surveyed mention Wilson’s 1914 invasion of Mexico, but they posit that the interventions were not Wilson’s fault. “President Wilson was urged to send military forces into Mexico to protect American investments and to restore law and order,” according to Triumph of the American Nation, whose authors emphasize that the president at first chose not to intervene.

See! He did all this for the corporations!

But “as the months passed, even President Wilson began to lose patience.” Walter Karp has shown that this version contradicts the facts — the invasion was Wilson’s idea from the start, and it outraged Congress as well as the American people. According to Karp, Wilson’s intervention was so outrageous that leaders of both sides of Mexico’s ongoing civil war demanded that the U.S. forces leave; the pressure of public opinion in the United States and around the world finally influenced Wilson to recall the troops.

See! See! Warmonger!

And he was a rabid anti-communist!

His was the first administration to be obsessed with the specter of communism, abroad and at home. Wilson was blunt about it. In Billings, Montana, stumping the West to seek support for the League of Nations, he warned, “There are apostles of Lenin in our own midst. I can not imagine what it means to be an apostle of Lenin. It means to be an apostle of the night, of chaos, of disorder.” Even after the White Russian alternative collapsed, Wilson refused to extend diplomatic recognition to the Soviet Union. He participated in barring Russia from the peace negotiations after World War I and helped oust Béla Kun, the communist leader who had risen to power in Hungary. Wilson’s sentiment for self-determination and democracy never had a chance against his three bedrock “ism”s: colonialism, racism, and anticommunism. A young Ho Chi Minh appealed to Woodrow Wilson at Versailles for self-determination for Vietnam, but Ho had all three strikes against him. Wilson refused to listen, and France retained control of Indochina.

And, like all right-wingers, he was a racist!

At home, Wilson’s racial policies disgraced the office he held. His Republican predecessors had routinely appointed blacks to important offices, including those of port collector for New Orleans and the District of Columbia and register of the treasury. Presidents sometimes appointed African Americans as postmasters, particularly in southern towns with large black populations. African Americans took part in the Republican Party’s national conventions and enjoyed some access to the White House. Woodrow Wilson, for whom many African Americans voted in 1912, changed all that. A southerner, Wilson had been president of Princeton, the only major northern university that refused to admit blacks. He was an outspoken white supremacist — his wife was even worse — and told “darky” stories in cabinet meetings. His administration submitted a legislative program intended to curtail the civil rights of African Americans, but Congress would not pass it. Unfazed, Wilson used his power as chief executive to segregate the federal government. He appointed southern whites to offices traditionally reserved for blacks. Wilson personally vetoed a clause on racial equality in the Covenant of the League of Nations. The one occasion on which Wilson met with African American leaders in the White House ended in a fiasco as the president virtually threw the visitors out of his office. Wilson’s legacy was extensive: he effectively closed the Democratic Party to African Americans for another two decades, and parts of the federal government remained segregated into the 1950s and beyond.

A racist and an anti-communist, a warmonger and a colonialist. All undeniably true.

But there’s still more:

Wilson displayed little regard for the rights of anyone whose opinions differed from his own. But textbooks take pains to insulate him from wrongdoing. “Congress,” not Wilson, is credited with having passed the Espionage Act of June 1917 and the Sedition Act of the following year, probably the most serious attacks on the civil liberties of Americans since the short-lived Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798. In fact, Wilson tried to strengthen the Espionage Act with a provision giving broad censorship powers directly to the president. Moreover, with Wilson’s approval, his postmaster general used his new censorship powers to suppress all mail that was socialist, anti-British, pro-Irish, or that in any other way might, in his view, have threatened the war effort. Robert Goldstein served ten years in prison for producing The Spirit of ’76, a film about the Revolutionary War that depicted the British, who were now our allies, unfavorably. Textbook authors suggest that wartime pressures excuse Wilson’s suppression of civil liberties, but in 1920, when World War I was long over, Wilson vetoed a bill that would have abolished the Espionage and Sedition acts. Textbook authors blame the anticommunist and anti-labor union witch hunts of Wilson’s second term on his illness and on an attorney general run amok. No evidence supports this view. Indeed, Attorney General Palmer asked Wilson in his last days as president to pardon Eugene V. Debs, who was serving time for a speech attributing World War I to economic interests and denouncing the Espionage Act as undemocratic. The president replied, “Never!” and Debs languished in prison until Warren Harding pardoned him. The American Way adopts perhaps the most innovative approach to absolving Wilson of wrongdoing: Way simply moves the “red scare” to the 1920s, after Wilson had left office!

So Wilson was quite happy to use the Constitution as toilet paper, too.

And all those words are taken from the text of Loewen’s book.

But what does Loewen leave out?

That Woodrow Wilson wasn’t just associated “with progressive causes like women’s suffrage,” he was a dyed-in-the-wool Progressive – the predecessor to today’s “liberal” (who today want to call themselves “Progressives” because we’ve figured out that “liberal” is a word that’s been hijacked). He was the perfect Progressive for his time – nationalist, Darwinist, admirer of Hegel, Christian, and a staunch advocate of reform of the nation through the power of the Federal government.

PBS reports (you believe PBS, right? Bill Moyers’ network?):

An academic rising star, Wilson returned to Princeton in 1890 to become a professor of jurisprudence and economics at his beloved alma mater. The most popular professor on campus, Wilson lectured on the growing gap between the haves and the have-nots in America in the early 1890s. Captains of industry like the Rockefellers, Carnegies and Morgans had become fabulously wealthy, while the majority of American workers lived in poverty. Wilson proposed the federal government be given more power to rein in big business. Publishing his views in magazines like Harper’s and accepting numerous speaking invitations, Wilson soon became a nationally-known public figure. In 1902, Wilson was unanimously elected president of Princeton University.

and

“He apparently had an extraordinary effect on audiences. His voice was powerful and very moving…I think he’s probably at his best when he spoke.” – Louis Auchencloss, historian

Boy, does that description remind you of anyone?

The New Jersey Democratic Party political bosses, who mistakenly thought the college president would play the part of political stooge, convinced Wilson that their support would guarantee his election as the state’s governor. Once in office, Wilson successfully pushed a decidedly progressive agenda, and along the way outwitted the very bosses who thought Wilson a puppet for their use. His New Jersey successes positioned Wilson at the forefront of the cresting, national wave of progressivism.

Surprised?

During his first two years as president, Wilson demonstrated his political acumen in accomplishing one of the most impressive strings of domestic legislative victories in history.

Under Wilson the income tax was passed. Under Wilson, the eight-hour workday, child labor laws, and anti-trust legislation were all herded through Congress.

The Democrats carried majorities in both houses of Congress, and many newly elected rank-and-file lawmakers were eager to gain favor with Wilson by supporting his agenda. Party leaders, controlling powerful committee chairs after many terms in the minority, were also willing to give the president much of what he wanted. Wilson exerted his power boldly-more than any chief executive had done before-by drawing from his strengths as orator, educator and political scholar. He cast complex legislation in moral and uplifting terms. He often conferred with party leaders, to find and build consensus. He participated actively in drafting the details of proposed legislation.

Lest anyone claim that all he did was sign the bills that came to his desk.

Looking ahead to re-election, however, Wilson calculated that further reform was the only politically viable means to capture a second term. Wilson saw as his best course a consolidation of his support among Democratic Party progressives and those of the former Progressive Party. Political realities dovetailed with his own convictions to produce a legislative agenda attractive to social reformers, farmers and labor. In a second flurry of legislative productivity, Wilson championed some of his more far-reaching, previously shelved reforms, including the Nineteenth Amendment extending suffrage to women.

All this from that racist, warmongering, colonial, anti-communist corporatist!

Whose philosophy was thoroughly modern Leftist – the use of power to make the world a better place, as he saw it.

Don’t you find it ironic that you bemoan Rousseau and yet, when it comes to you country, all you see is the good in it?

No, Mark, I see a lot more than just the good. I’m not the one who wrote “We have to face the unpleasant fact that our country is horribly broken and I am simply not going to attempt to appease these psychotic putzes anymore.”

Is the country broken? No, it’s about as fucked up as it usually is, but at least I see the good.

You were bang-on-the-money when you said this, though: “I realize that it is pointless to try to see the middle ground on issues where there is no middle ground.”

You almost grasp that there is no “Third Way” (which is what Obama keeps promising, though he never calls it that) when the philosophies are so widely divergent. You have a philosophy, Markadelphia, a belief system. But it’s one that you’ve just slapped together haphazardly. It’s internally contradictory (most are, but yours… whew!), and you bend it to suit whatever situation comes up, but it’s a system you apply daily. I have read your blog.

I’ll finish up with one more excerpt from one of your posts, and then I suggest that we not darken each others doorsteps again:

Fellow blogger Kevin Baker asked me this question on his blog the other day: how will Obama heal our souls? The question reminded of another question that was asked in comments last week: how will Obama get able bodied men to work who are lazy and don’t want to? The answer to both questions is the same.

Barack Obama is not the messiah. He will not heal our souls. What he can do is lead us to the beginning of the path and the rest of it is up to us.

So he’s not the Second Coming of Jesus, he’s the Second Coming of Moses?

In effect, each one of us is a messiah to ourselves. Believe me when I tell you, we really NEED to start down that path or it’s over for our country.

Each of us has that Christ power that inside of us. Every one of us has the capacity for love, hope, and peace. Everyone of us has the power to take these three fundamental traits and put them into action, not just in our communities but in our country at large. We can do this by picking an issue in our communities, getting involved and making it better. I think the reason why most conservatives don’t grasp this concept is that they don’t understand the difference between intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation.

Sure we do. But we also understand that a lot of people who say they’re doing things to improve the world are doing things to improve themselves at the expense of others. As for the ones who really are trying to make a better world, the majority of them get damned dangerous if they get their hands on that power.

They can’t understand people who are motivated to do the things purely for the joy of doing them. Most conservatives believe the only way to motivate people is through money…and fear. It really doesn’t have to be that way.

When you break out of that system, you gain power.

Woodrow Wilson believed precisely what you believe – that the Power of God would allow him to fix everything. Everything he did, he did believing that it would Make the World a Better Place. You think Obama can inspire people to Make the World a Better Place, but for some reason the only place he can do that is from behind the desk in the Oval Office.

What that last excerpt proclaims is what was once known as Social Gospel. Well, you’re at least keeping in theme. Give that last link a read. You’ll reject it out of hand, but still, I keep trying

Personally, I’m against government trying to make people… better. Because the only tool governments have is force, and using that tool, they tend to break a lot of things. When they build mass social movements, they tend to kill a lot of people.

Like the people they think they can make better.

And when that doesn’t work, they try again, only HARDER!

Just remember one thing: THIS “psychotic putz” is armed.

Next Excerpt

Next Excerpt:

From Easy Rider to JFK, Hollywood has been telling us that if only the forces of reaction hadn’t killed their Horst Wessels, we would today be living in a better, more just, and more open-minded country. And if only we could rekindle the hope and ambition of those early radicals, “what might have been” will turn into “what could still be.” This is the vital lie of the left. Western civilization was saved when the barbarians were defeated, at least temporarily, in the early 1970s. We should be not only grateful for our slender victory but vigilant in securing it for posterity.

Jonah Goldberg, Liberal Fascism, p. 199

Today’s Excerpt from Liberal Fascism

Today’s Excerpt from Liberal Fascism

In the liberal telling of America’s story, there are ony two perpetrators of official misdeeds: conservatives and “America” writ large. (P)rogressives, or modern liberals, are never bigots or tyrants, but conservatives often are. For example, one will virtually never hear that the Palmer Raids, Prohibition, or American eugenics were thoroughly progressive phenomena. These are sins America itself must atone for. Meanwhile, real or alleged “conservative” misdeeds – say, McCarthyism – are always the exclusive fault of conservatives and a sign of the policies they would repeat if given power. The only culpable mistake that liberals make is failing to fight “hard enough” for their principles. Liberals are never responsible for historic misdeeds, because they feel no compulsion to defend the inherent goodness of America. Conservatives, meanwhile, not only take the blame for events not of their own making, but find themselves defending liberal misdeeds in order to defend America itself.

Jonah Goldberg, Liberal Fascism, p. 118

The only culpable mistake that liberals make is failing to fight “hard enough” for their principles.

“The philosophy cannot be wrong! Do it again, only HARDER!