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How the State Became Immaculate, Part 3
by James Bovard, October
2000
During the 1920sand early 1930s, the U.S. government provided huge loans to foreign
nations whose exports were subsequently blocked by high U.S. tariffs,
artificially held down interest rates and flooded the nation with cheap
credit, and championed cartel operations by private businesses.
Economic historian Robert Skidelsky
recently attributed the start of the Great Depression to the collapse in
world grain prices a collapse directly tied to the disastrous
attempt to corner the world wheat markets by the Hoover
administrations Federal Farm Board. The federal government also
severely reduced the currency supply from 1929 through 1932, thereby
aggravating the economic slowdown.
After the stock-market crash,
politicians were quick to place the blame on laissez-faire economic
policies. President Franklin D. Roosevelt denounced the economic system
of the 1920s as an economic tyranny and declared that
the collapse of 1929 showed up the despotism for what it
was. The selling of the Great Depression as proof of the failure of
free markets was one of the greatest intellectual cons in history.
President Roosevelt declared in his
first inaugural address: We now realize that if we are to go
forward, we must move as a trained and loyal army willing to sacrifice
for the good of a common discipline, because without such discipline no
progress is made, no leadership can become effective. The military
metaphors, which practically called for the entire populace to march in
lock step, were similar to rhetoric used by European dictators at the time.
Roosevelt had assured listeners in 1932, The day of enlightened
administration has come.
FDR perennially glorified government
power as the great liberator of the common man. In a 1936 message to
Congress, he denounced his critics:
They realize that in 34 months we have built up new instruments of public
power. In the hands of a peoples government this power is
wholesome and proper. But in the hands of political puppets of an
economic autocracy such power would provide shackles for the liberties
of the people.
Because FDR proclaimed that the
federal government was a peoples government, good
citizens had no excuse for fearing an increase in government power. The
question of liberty became totally divorced from the amount of
government power and instead depended solely on
politicians intent toward the governed. The mere fact that the
power was in the hands of benevolent politicians was the only safeguard
needed.
Roosevelt sometimes practically
portrayed the state as a god. In his 1936 acceptance speech at the
Democratic National Convention, he declared, In the place of the
palace of privilege we seek to build a temple out of faith and hope and
charity.
In 1937, he praised the members of
political parties for respecting as sacred all branches of their
government. In the same speech, Roosevelt assured listeners, in
practically Orwellian terms, Your government knows your mind,
and you know your governments mind. For Roosevelt, faith
in the state was simply faith in his own wisdom and benevolence.
Roosevelts concept of the state is important because he radically
expanded the federal government and most of the programs he
created survive to this day.
The members of Roosevelts
Brain Trust were confident of their ability to forcibly improve other
Americans lives. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Rexford
Tugwell, in a 1934 book that praised the Soviet Unions economic
management, captured the spirit of the New Deal: We have
developed efficiency and science in the art of government. Our
administrative, executive, and judicial bodies have proved competent to
handle the most difficult matters.
Tugwell informed America: We
must now supply a real and visible guiding hand to do the task which that
mythical, non-existent invisible agency was supposed to perform, but
never did. The Roosevelt administrations guiding
hand paid farmers in 1933 to slaughter 6 million baby pigs (at a
time of widespread hunger) and plow up 10 million acres of cotton fields
(at a time when millions were wearing rags).
The Agriculture Department was
ridiculed for solving the paradox of want amidst plenty by doing
away with the plenty. Tugwell did concede that a major
impediment to government planning in the United States was the
unreasoning, almost hysterical attachment of certain Americans to
the Constitution.
The aftermath of the Roosevelt
revolution
The more powerful the federal
government became, the more avidly some politicians exalted government.
Adlai Stevenson, the governor of Illinois and later a two-time Democratic
Party presidential candidate, declared in 1948: Government is more
than the sum of all the interests; it is the paramount interest, the public
interest.
Passion for the use of government
force was hailed as the distinguishing trait of progressive thinking. Sen.
Joseph Clark of Pennsylvania wrote in 1953 that a liberal is here
defined as one who believes in utilizing the full force of government for
the advancement of social, political, and economic justice at the
municipal, state, national, and international levels.
President John F. Kennedy declared in
1963: The federal government is the people and the budget is a
reflection of their need. Thus, the fact that politicians wanted to
increase government revenue and expand their own power automatically
proved that the American people had unmet needs especially the
need to pay more taxes. Liberals were not alone in putting government on a
pedestal. Russell Kirk, one of the most respected conservative writers of
the 1950s, declared, Government is ... a device of Divine wisdom to
supply human wants. Kirks comment should be considered
blasphemy by any religious enthusiast who imagines a deity possessing
fewer character defects than the average congressman.
During the New Frontier in the early
1960s, Kennedy and his experts promoted the idea of government as an
all-wise problem-solver, the natural home of the best and the
brightest. President Lyndon Johnson declared in 1964: I
believe there is always a national answer to each national problem, and,
believing this, I do not believe that there are necessarily two sides to
every question.
Hubert Humphrey, Johnsons
vice president and a three-time presidential candidate, denounced critics
of government: Candidates who make an attack on Washington are
making an attack on government programs, on the poor, on blacks, on
minorities, on the cities. Its a disguised form of racism, a
disguised new form of conservatism. Thus, anyone who did not
support big government was practically the moral equivalent of a
Klansman.
Clinton carries the torch
Today President Bill Clinton is
devoting his presidency to persuading the American people that
government is far more wonderful than they suspect. In a speech to the
Democratic National Committee on January 21, 1997, he listed as one of
the top achievements of his first term: We ended the notion that
government is the problem.... Make no mistake, our view prevailed. And you
should be proud of it. Clinton also sought to change the public
perception of the presidency: I think that it is my job to lead,
challenge, and take care of the country. And I suppose the older I get, the
more it becomes the role of a father figure instead of an older
brother.
The concept of the state profoundly
influences how people perceive the nature of government action. Nothing
better illustrates how the government and much of the media
is seeking to deceive the American public than the spin that
followed the federal raid to seize Elián Gonzalez on April 22, 2000.
Attorney General Janet Reno called a
press conference a few hours after the raid and, when asked about the
soon-to-be-famous photo of the Border Patrol agent pointing his
submachine gun towards the boy, stressed that the agents
finger was not on the trigger. The Hechler and Koch MP-5
submachine gun sprays 800 rounds a minute and a finger a half
inch away from the trigger means nothing.
Two days later, Reno declared,
One of the things that is so very important is that the force was
not used. It was a show of force that prevented people from getting
hurt. This would be news to the people kicked, shoved, and knocked
down by federal agents.
White House spokesman Joe Lockhart,
responding to a question about the use of excessive force, stressed that
the agents drove up in white minivans as if the
color of the vehicles proved they were on a mission of mercy. New
York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, in an article headlined,
Reno for President, declared that the machine-gun photo
warmed my heart and that it symbolized that
America is a country where the rule of law rules. This picture
illustrates what happens to those who defy the rule of law and how far
our government and people will go to preserve it. Garry Wills,
author of A Necessary Evil: A History of American Distrust of
Government, wrote on the New York Times op-ed page:
The readiness of people to deplore jack-booted
tactics reveals the intransigence that made the rescue necessary.
Like a variation of old-time Soviet psychiatry, fear of government agents
with machine guns is now a symptom of mental illness.
If politicians and intellectuals had
not already succeeded in confusing and deceiving many Americans about
the nature of government power, the Clinton administrations spin
on the Elián Gonzalez raid could not have worked. The fact that so many
Americans swallowed the administrations propaganda is a warning
that the first bulwark against unlimited power the common sense
of the citizenry is weak.
Mr. Bovard is the author of the recently published Feeling
Your Pain: The Explosion and Abuse of Government Power under Clinton-Gore
(St. Martins Press, August 2000).
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