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Barack Obama: The Kingfish Reborn
American Thinker ^
| November 07, 2008
| Henry P. Wickham, Jr.
Posted on 11/06/2008 11:54:45 PM PST by neverdem
John McCain once referred to Barack Obama's upcoming presidency as the second term of Jimmy Carter. Obama has provided plenty of support for this observation. However, as this seemingly endless campaign progressed, and as domestic issues prevailed over those of foreign policy, it has become more accurate to say that Obama's election is the first term of the Huey Long administration.
Huey Long was Louisiana's wonder boy; a talented demagogue who regularly appealed to the basest instincts of voters. The Kingfish, as he was known in Louisiana, managed to be elected in 1918 to Louisiana's powerful Railroad Commission at the mere age of 25. By 1928 he was governor, and in 1932 he was elected to the United States Senate. During this time he built a formidable political machine in Louisiana, not at all unlike the Chicago machine in which Obama prospered.
Supporters of both Long and Obama were quick with allusions to and the illusions of the presence of the divine. As one Huey Long supporter put it:
"Rally us under this young man [Huey Long] who came out of the woods of north Louisiana, who leads us like Moses out of the land of bondage into the land of milk and honey where every man is a king but no man wears a crown, Amen."
However, Huey's supporters were no more enthusiastic than Oprah the Baptist, as she prepared the way for Barack "the One." And who dares to challenge the gods?
Like Obama's ascent, Long's meteoric rise was fueled to a large degree by subterfuge, the effective use of a corrupt local machine, class warfare, and the demonization of business and the successful. Huey Long had a deep animosity toward those who produce wealth and this leveling instinct pervaded his policies. Like Obama, he publically condemned Marxism while effectively applying Marxist principles.
Huey Long as a United States Senator had broken with Franklin Roosevelt because he felt that Roosevelt's confiscatory policies were not radical enough. To broaden the reach of the policies that he and his machine implemented in Louisiana, in February of 1934 he created the "Share Our Wealth Society;" its slogan being "Every Man a King." This "Society," which epitomized Long's view of the federal government as the great leveler, advocated the confiscation of an individual's wealth greater than $5,000,000. He advocated confiscation of an individual's income greater than $1,000,000.
From this revenue Long promised the following goodies: $5,000.00 cash to every family or "enough for a home, an automobile, a radio, and the ordinary conveniences; guaranteed minimal annual income; guaranteed pensions for the aged; guaranteed grants for everyone's education; and bonuses to veterans.
If the money were not available, Huey Long was not above governmental confiscation in kind. If Long felt that a favored citizen needed a car and the money wasn't there, then the government could simply take a car from someone else who had "too many." (What's a little thing like the Constitution's "taking" provision among friends?)
The unspoken and resoundingly foolish premise of the Huey Long's "Share Our Wealth" scheme was the belief that people will continue to work, invest, take risks, and produce tax revenues regardless of the tax rates and the confiscatory policies of the government. For Long, productivity just happened, and its very existence and its fruits were the servant of the right-thinking political class. Thus Long asserted that he would share our wealth, as if the state has a preemptory claim on everyone's earnings.
Certain follies are perennial and seemingly invincible, and Barack Obama's outlook on private enterprise shares with Huey Long many of the same assumptions. While living lavishly from the labor of others, both Huey Long and Barack Obama comfortably railed against the vice of greed. Yet both elevate as their overriding principle of government the vices of envy and sloth. In light of this mere reemphasis among vices, it is extraordinary that both Long and Obama and their supporters can exude such an air of moral superiority and self satisfaction. At least greed is capable of producing something useful.
Barack Obama's prosperity-killing policies echo those of Huey Long. As Obama told "Joe the Plumber," we need to "spread the wealth." (Not a word about creating wealth or rewarding those who do.) Obama has pledged to punish risk-taking and productivity, every bit as much as Huey Long did, by hiking marginal income tax rates, payroll taxes, and capital gain taxes. He even acknowledges that higher tax rates don't necessarily translate into higher revenue for the government, revenues not really being the point. Obama has been clear that he will attack those industries that he does not favor (eg. coal, oil) as relentlessly as Huey Long attacked Standard Oil.
Demonstrating a certain symmetry in his thinking, he pledges to reward the unproductive by hiking the (un)earned income tax credit. When considering the perverse effects of these paternalistic policies on the electorate, whether they be Long's or Obama's, consider the recent statement made by an Obama supporter. She gleefully asserted that Obama's election will mean that she does not have to worry any longer about her mortgage payments or gasoline for her car. This Obama supporter unwittingly celebrates both her own infantilization and the success of Obama's rhetoric as he himself would define that success.
Fortunately for America, Huey Long's agenda in the 1930s likely had little chance of implementation. The American belief in self-reliance, our distrust of an overly large government, America's strong entrepreneurial and risk-taking spirit, and our work ethic and good sense largely neutralized Long's influence (even had he not been assassinated). The damage to the American economy in the 1930s can better be attributed to the many follies of Roosevelt's New Deal.
Then came the 1960s and the long march of the radicals through America's institutions. America's best attributes that saved us from Huey Long-ism have now been undermined by the decadence so palpable in the faculty lounges, the jurrasic media, the bureaucracies, and many corporate board rooms. Barack Obama's 2008 campaign was a celebration of misery, class warfare, dependence, group and individual entitlements, and a deep animosity toward those who are productive. And Obama prevailed in this post-modern America. As the poet John Dryden observed in 1681, "Fools are more hard to conquer than persuade."
Barack Obama is clearly the beneficiary of this foolish decadence, and he now prepares to administer the sedatives to the American body politic. He calls it a "fundamental transformation" of America; one that the Kingfish would certainly applaud. As the history of the twentieth century shows all too well, where every man is a king, the vast majority are paupers. John Dryden again: "For whatsoe'ver their sufferings were before That change they covet makes them suffer more."
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: barackobama; bho2008; hueylong; obamatransitionfile; thekingfish
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The Kingfish and then some...
1
posted on
11/06/2008 11:54:46 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
Hopefully Louisiana’s new golden boy will take him out in ‘12
2
posted on
11/06/2008 11:58:44 PM PST
by
Def Conservative
(Palin, Jindal, Pence, Sanford, Steele= the new GOP...out with the old)
To: neverdem
I remember Amos and Andy! The King Fish!
3
posted on
11/06/2008 11:59:35 PM PST
by
tallyhoe
To: neverdem
Oh! come on! Can not you Freepers figure it out? You will notice the Crats slowly try to suck you in. They NEED you like a junkie needs the fix. They have to have you. Without you they are nothing. If you understand ...reply.
To: neverdem
5
posted on
11/07/2008 12:04:51 AM PST
by
freekitty
(Give me back my conservative vote.)
To: neverdem
6
posted on
11/07/2008 12:08:08 AM PST
by
Catmom
Comment #7 Removed by Moderator
To: neverdem
The problem here, though, is that unlike the False Messiah, Long actually had executive experience and accomplished something as Governor. And as wacky as Huey was, I’d still have said he loved America, all of those things one could not say of you-know-who. There’s one last Long left in LA politics today, just elected to the legislature from Winn Parish, the family’s home. He’s a Republican.
8
posted on
11/07/2008 12:12:48 AM PST
by
fieldmarshaldj
(~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
To: tallyhoe
Kingfish
9
posted on
11/07/2008 12:12:53 AM PST
by
XR7
10
posted on
11/07/2008 12:14:33 AM PST
by
XR7
To: XR7
11
posted on
11/07/2008 12:15:02 AM PST
by
tallyhoe
To: neverdem
Before reading this I mistakenly thought someone was comparing Zero with a character from Amos & Andy!
To: screaminsunshine
Oh! come on! Can not you Freepers figure it out? You will notice the Crats slowly try to suck you in. They NEED you like a junkie needs the fix. They have to have you. Without you they are nothing. If you understand ...reply.Cryptic comments are not appreciated. Appeals to gimme gubmint programs are nothing new from the rats.
13
posted on
11/07/2008 12:28:14 AM PST
by
neverdem
(Xin loi min oi)
To: neverdem
14
posted on
11/07/2008 12:33:20 AM PST
by
Jeff Chandler
(Chimpy ObaMao is not my president.)
To: tallyhoe
I remember Amos and Andy! The King Fish! I kinda got a kick out of Algonquin J. Calhoun.
Nam Vet
15
posted on
11/07/2008 12:34:38 AM PST
by
Nam Vet
(Obama is the radical left's ' moist dream ' for America.)
Comment #16 Removed by Moderator
To: Jeff Chandler
I won’t. I haven’t said a word. You didn’t see me here.
17
posted on
11/07/2008 12:45:03 AM PST
by
BykrBayb
(May God have mercy on our souls. ~)
To: screaminsunshine
They NEED you like a junkie needs the fix. They have to have you. Without you they are nothing
A funny line in one of Steve Martin's comedy routines went something like this:
I don't neeed you! I can do this act alone! I often do.
It was hilarious because everyone knew that an elaborate comedy act without an audience was pointless.
18
posted on
11/07/2008 12:47:59 AM PST
by
Maurice Tift
(You can't stop the signal, Mal. You can never stop the signal.)
To: Def Conservative
Do not know what changes are coming; but 'change' is coming and that makes me think - when most paranoid - that short of prying power from 'cold dead hands'; we may have Obama 'running America' for more than eight years. . .
19
posted on
11/07/2008 12:50:51 AM PST
by
cricket
(America's Freedom Rings! T hank You ~ U..S.A. Military~)
To: neverdem
Good post. I need to get this to Rod Dreher. He’s a Louisiana native who seemed strangely fascinated with That One.
20
posted on
11/07/2008 3:17:43 AM PST
by
don-o
(My son, Ben - Recruit training at Parris Island from October 20)
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