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Capitalism's Savior (Everything You Believe About FDR Is False)
Wall Street Journal ^ | Wednesday, October 29, 2003 | CONRAD BLACK

Posted on 10/29/2003 6:40:41 AM PST by presidio9

Edited on 04/22/2004 11:50:13 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

Those worried about the recent sluggishness of the American economy should look to the time of Franklin D. Roosevelt. When he entered office in 1933, unemployment was at 33%, there was almost no public-sector relief for the jobless, 45% of family homes had been -- or were in imminent danger of being -- foreclosed, and the Chicago Grain Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange and the banking system had collapsed. Almost no one was engaged in agriculture on an economically sustainable basis and the nation's food supply was apt to be severely interrupted at any time.


(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Miscellaneous; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: burnacrossjohngault; capitalism; fdr; greatdepression; johngaultisaracist; lincol; shantyirish
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To: presidio9
The Roosevelt Myth.
121 posted on 10/29/2003 2:18:59 PM PST by aristeides
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To: presidio9
Does that change the fact that abolishing slavery was one of the best most important things that this country has ever done?

That's a loaded question, because it presents the result without examining the process that was needed to reach it. Curing cancer would be a good thing, too. But if curing cancer requires us to do massive medical experiments on the population and in the process kill several million people who had no cancer to begin with, I would contend that the "cost" of the process far outweighed the "benefit" of the result.

Was a civil war the most effective means of ending slavery in the United States? I'm not taking a position one way or another -- I simply present it to illustrate that sometimes things aren't as clearly obvious as they might seem.

122 posted on 10/29/2003 2:19:38 PM PST by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: JohnGalt
I mentioned the movie for humor effect, I asked if you cheered for Lincoln watching Gangs of New York-- clearly humor-- in passing after I clicked on your screen name and saw you were from New York and took a flyer that you might be Irish.

Total BS. You were sanctimonious and I called you on it. After the fact you tried to act like you were joking because you realized how ridiculous it is to inject ficticous portrayals as fact. But that's just you. You can't help yourself.

Abolishing slavery was a good thing; using violence to achieve an end is always worse; that's how us Christians were raised anyway.

...so then it follows that the the war in Iraq was a bad thing, right? Geeze, you just can't stay out of your own way. This is why I treat your posts with the respect that they deserve: NONE.

123 posted on 10/29/2003 2:21:42 PM PST by presidio9 (gungagalunga)
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To: Alberta's Child
Was a civil war the most effective means of ending slavery in the United States? I'm not taking a position one way or another -- I simply present it to illustrate that sometimes things aren't as clearly obvious as they might seem.

The fact is the Civil War happened. 300,000 died trying to free millions. 300,000 died trying to keep them in chains. The result is they are free. That's a good thing.

124 posted on 10/29/2003 2:26:55 PM PST by presidio9 (gungagalunga)
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To: Alberta's Child; aristeides; JohnGalt; presidio9
Slavery was a pretty bizarre institution. Each slave plantation was like a little communist nation with the workers having no rights.

Like all utopian schemes, it was sort of doomed from the outset, I think.

125 posted on 10/29/2003 2:31:54 PM PST by Scenic Sounds (Me caigo a mis rodillas y hablo a las estrellas de plata. "¿Qué misterios usted está encubriendo?")
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To: presidio9
A total "whitewash." The author avoids questions of Constitutionality, broken promises, deliberate rationalizations and lies, and fails to take into account the role played by the inherent strength of the fundamental social underpinnings of the American societies of the era as opposed to those to which they are being compared.

If our recovery--as poor as it was under Roosevelt--was in fact better than those in some other lands; so too was the previous prosperity of America, as well as the post World War II (and post Roosevelt) recovery of America. Roosevelt does not deserve credit for a self-reliant population--or the fruits of having such a population. Quite the contrary, he did everything he could to make them less self-reliant.

All in all, a "whitewash," pure and simple.

William Flax Return Of The Gods Web Site

126 posted on 10/29/2003 2:39:13 PM PST by Ohioan
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To: presidio9
OK, so let's see how many of us will "put our money where are mouths are" . . .

Today, there are millions of Christians in the Sudan who are enslaved by their Muslim enemies.

1. Would it be worth "spending" 300,000 lives to free them?

2. Would it be worth "spending" 1 life to free them?

3. Would it be worth "spending" 1 life to free them if that one life were yours?

My guess is that your answers to these questions depend entirely upon how close these lives are to your own. It's easy to think in terms of abstractions by illustrating how many lives were lost in a "noble" effort to achieve a "positive" result and end slavery 140 years ago, but I am quite certain of one thing: If there were millions of blacks enslaved in Confederate states today, and the Union went to war to free those slaves, you and I wouldn't be found within a hundred miles of a Union Army recruiting office.

127 posted on 10/29/2003 2:42:18 PM PST by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: presidio9
The fact is the Civil War happened. 300,000 died trying to free millions. 300,000 died trying to keep them in chains. The result is they are free. That's a good thing.

The American Civil War was communism's first major defeat. If the world had drawn the proper conclusions, we might have been spared a great deal of needless suffering in the twentieth century.

128 posted on 10/29/2003 2:44:01 PM PST by Scenic Sounds (Me caigo a mis rodillas y hablo a las estrellas de plata. "¿Qué misterios usted está encubriendo?")
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To: Scenic Sounds
That's an interesting perspective. I would also point out, though, that the American Civil War was the first victory for the centralization of political and economic power in a democratic government. I'm not so sure that the long-term results are going to be positive, though.
129 posted on 10/29/2003 2:47:18 PM PST by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: Alberta's Child
That's an interesting perspective. I would also point out, though, that the American Civil War was the first victory for the centralization of political and economic power in a democratic government.

No question about that.

I would argue, though, that the seeds of centralization were planted long before when President Washington sided with Hamilton in his argument with Jefferson about the propriety of a national bank. Chief Justice Marshall then reiterated the same arguments.

Since then, the United States government has grown more or less as fast as Congress has wished. The Civil War just provided Congress with another dragon to slay and another reason for rapid growth.

I'm not so sure that the long-term results are going to be positive, though.

In the last analysis, we the people have to decide how big a government we want. If we ever really want to, we can reduce the size of the federal government.

130 posted on 10/29/2003 3:01:51 PM PST by Scenic Sounds (Me caigo a mis rodillas y hablo a las estrellas de plata. "¿Qué misterios usted está encubriendo?")
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To: Orion78
He was a key member of the US delegation when the charter was written.

From "The Fearful Master"

"In 1950 the State Department issued a volume entitled 'Postwar Foreign Policy Preparationm 1939-45.' It described in detail the policies and documents leading up to the creation of the United Nations and named all the men who shaped these policies. This and other records reveal that the following men were key government figures in UN planning within the U. S. State Department and Treasury Department: Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Virginius Frank Coe, Dean Acheson, Noel Field, Laurence Duggan, Henry Julian Wadleigh, John Carter Vincent, David Weintraub, Nathan Gregory Silvermaster, Harold Glasser, Victor Perlo, Irving Kaplan, Solomon Adler, Abraham George Silverman, William L. Ullman, and William H. Taylor. With the single exception of Dean Acheson, all these men have since been identified in sworn testimony as secret Communist agents."
131 posted on 10/29/2003 3:19:21 PM PST by Dead Dog
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To: KC_Conspirator
True, he didn't end the Depression, but he did keep the political system more or less intact. He gave people hope that they might otherwise not have had, and prevented a more drastic break with the past. Libertarians naturally complain that he restricted our freedoms, but some loss of liberties in time of crisis was inevitable. The striking thing is that we retained such rights and independence that we did. Overthrow of the political system or Nazi victory would have been far harder to reverse or adapt to than even FDR's transformation of the country.

Black is right that FDR kept ideas of freedom and parliamentary self-government alive in a world where more radical and totalitarian ideas had more appeal. Arguably his international significance is greater than his importance to the US. Maybe we could have muddled through the Depression, but other countries needed an example that bad economic times need not lead to dictatorship. Then again, the Depression hit hardest here and in Germany, so we might well have succombed to tyranny as Germany did.

But Black is wrong in contrasting FDR with the appeasers who ran the rest of the Western world. FDR showed how much of an appeaser he really was in his dealings with Stalin. If some could believe Roosevelt was different from Chamberlain and Daladier, it's because the US wasn't involved in Munich and other European affairs. Had we been, there's no reason to think FDR's response would have been different from Chamberlain's. Appeasment was a common response, because the public didn't want another war. In the thirties the question was whether appeasement was to be a means of deferring the inevitable war until the Western powers had the weapons to win it, or whether the free world would delude ourselves into thinking that it could win Hitler over and permanently prevent war.

It's a mistake to assume that most people in the Thirties thought as we do now about capitalism and the alternatives. Roosevelt had to function at a time when very many people assumed that free markets had failed. So it's natural that he would have moved in a more statist direction. What hurts FDR's reputation today is that he came to regard his policies not as temporary expedients but as more permanent constructions. If he'd kept it mind that Americans couldn't retain their liberties if they had to permanently rely on the government for employment and fork over the lion's share of such money as they did earn to the tax man, we might think better of him today.

The idea of the "great President" is something we might want to rethink. A "great President" is someone who sees the country through a great crisis. He doesn't have to be someone that we'd agree with or find universally admirable. It's enough if he is able to preserve something essential at a time when it's threatened. But we don't need to seek such leaders in ordinary times and should count ourselves lucky if we can get by without them.

132 posted on 10/29/2003 3:25:09 PM PST by x
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To: Scenic Sounds
In the last analysis, we the people have to decide how big a government we want. If we ever really want to, we can reduce the size of the federal government.

I have a slightly different take. In the Constitution, Article I Section 8 limits the powers and duties of the federal government only to those explicitly listed. Adding to the list is defined to be beyond the reach of we the people, by way of Congress, except by Amendments.

There are scores of things that the USA federal government sticks its nose into which cannot be justified in Article I Section 8.

My point is that the country wasn't designed to be so flexible to the whim of the people who might want the government to do this or that.

133 posted on 10/29/2003 3:34:12 PM PST by NutCrackerBoy
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To: Scenic Sounds; x; KC_Conspirator; Alberta's Child
the country wasn't designed to be so flexible to the whim of the people who might want the government to do this or that -NutCrackerBoy

If USA still adhered to the original intent of Article I Section 8, sure there would be increase or decrease in size of federal government, but on a vastly smaller scale than now. But because A1S8 has been blown out of the water, the problem has, contrary to design, fallen to the people to shrink the federal government (or grow it bigger).

The problem now is FDR opened Pandora's box. The federal coffers have been thrown open to the whim of the people. Since there are no limits on what the federal government can do, politicians buy votes all day long. This has affected the dynamics of democracy to say the least. It is very difficult, probably impossible, to put the genie back in the bottle (to mix metaphors).

134 posted on 10/29/2003 3:44:33 PM PST by NutCrackerBoy
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To: presidio9
The war in Iraq is a waste of limited resources no doubt, but that is beside the point. You have permanently revealed yourself as a complete phony on this site for talking tough from your keyboard rather than signing up for a cause, I assume you believe in.

What did you call me on? You started claiming to different people on yesterdays thread and today that my only source was a movie. I called you out on your gutless lying.

135 posted on 10/29/2003 3:55:12 PM PST by JohnGalt (Presidio9 is Jesse Jackson.)
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To: Scenic Sounds
It still amazes me how ignorant some people are that still spout off. Marxisms first great victory was Lincoln's over the South that's why Karl Marx wrote him a congratulatory letter.
136 posted on 10/29/2003 3:59:38 PM PST by JohnGalt (The Constitution as it is, the Union as it was.)
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To: NutCrackerBoy
I have a slightly different take. In the Constitution, Article I Section 8 limits the powers and duties of the federal government only to those explicitly listed. Adding to the list is defined to be beyond the reach of we the people, by way of Congress, except by Amendments.

Well, that's the one thing everybody agrees about. A big dispute is (more correctly, was) over the best way to interpret the meaning of the "necessary and proper" clause.

137 posted on 10/29/2003 4:05:44 PM PST by Scenic Sounds (Me caigo a mis rodillas y hablo a las estrellas de plata. "¿Qué misterios usted está encubriendo?")
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To: JohnGalt; Scenic Sounds
Forgive me, I set a poor tone with that unnecesary first line in my previous post. As far as I can tell on your other posts, you are debating in good faith so I was out of line with my dramatic entry.

Yours in liberty,
138 posted on 10/29/2003 4:06:00 PM PST by JohnGalt (The Constitution as it is, the Union as it was.)
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To: JohnGalt
Oh, don't worry about that.

I don't pay much attention to what Marx said. I think it would be a mistake for me to let him call my shots for me. ;-)

139 posted on 10/29/2003 4:11:41 PM PST by Scenic Sounds (Me caigo a mis rodillas y hablo a las estrellas de plata. "¿Qué misterios usted está encubriendo?")
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To: JohnGalt
Wow, now you are displaying a serious case of historical ignorance--apologies, I was tied up this afternoon. Study the case of Virginia Feb-April 1861 then get back to me.

Let's see. VA first voted against secession, then changed her vote after SC attacked Sumter. She then had troops on the road to attack the federal arsenals at Harper's Ferry and Hamptom Roads before the vote to secede passed. In response to these sneak attacks, the federal forces placed artillery across the Potomac to protect Washington against another surprise attack, which a great many people in the South, including Jackson, were advocating. At this point, Washington was for all practical purposes under siege.

Just exactly where in this timeline do you believe Lincoln behaved appropriately?

BTW, I'm working off the top of my head here, so sequence could be a little off.

140 posted on 10/29/2003 5:43:41 PM PST by Restorer
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