Salesman For Progressivism
by Thomas Brewton
The recent death of Professor Schlesinger brings to mind his wonderfully
well-written historical surveys. It also reminds us of the misguided
liberalism he ardently espoused and sold to a generation of Americans.
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., was a history professor at Harvard and the
City University of New York, twice winner of the Pulitzer Prize for
works of history, and a member of President John F. Kennedy's White
House staff.
His life-long devotion to liberal-Progressivism came partly from his
family background, and partly from his undergraduate education at
Harvard. When he received his degree in 1938, Harvard was in the
vanguard of the relatively small number of secular
universities that were educating the Eastern liberal establishment.
Among his many historical analyses, one of the best known is The Age of
Roosevelt, a three-volume, worshipful panegyric to the vast
liberal-socialistic changes wrought by President Franklin Roosevelt's
New Deal.
Franklin Roosevelt was himself a Harvard graduate, trained during the
university's transition from Christianity to socialism. In December,
1933, FDR adopted the collectivist, statist economic doctrines of
British economist John Maynard Keynes's, which prescribed massive
Federal spending on anything, whether it produced useful products or
not. Deficit spending, at unprecedented peacetime levels, was based on
the Keynesian presumption that private businesses had failed and that
henceforward the
Federal government would have permanently to fund the major part of
employment and economic activity.
Keynes was also a palpable influence on the climate of opinion at
Harvard during Schlesinger's undergraduate years there. Harvard was the
launching pad for Keynesian economics in the United States, and
Professor Alvin Hansen was the foremost Keynesian exponent in this
country.
Between 1933 and 1940, the New Deal nationalized agriculture, promoted
the expansion of membership and power of communist-led labor unions, and
pushed businesses into the National Recovery Administration (NRA), an
imitative version of Mussolini's Fascist state corporatism.
In The Vital Center (1949) and The Politics of Hope (1963) Schlesinger
depicted such actions, the creeping socialism of English Fabians, as a
moderate and responsible mean between a failed conservatism and a
revolutionary, radical socialism. He described Teddy Roosevelt's New
Nationalism, Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom, and Franklin Roosevelt's New
Deal as continuations of the 19th century's Progress that presumably was
leading mankind toward social perfection.
Professor Schlesinger wrote that liberalism is not socialism, because it
rejects the "...classical connotation of state ownership of the basic
means of production and distribution."
This, however, was an intellectually dishonest dodge. Henri de
Saint-Simon and Auguste Comte, who first codified socialism as a
coherent doctrine, explicitly identified government regulation alone as
both the essential element of socialism, and as sufficient to effect it.
The social engineering mechanisms they proposed were precisely the sort
that were imposed in the 1930s New Deal: a managed currency; control of
farm output and prices; regulation of industrial output, prices, and
wage rates;
steeply-graduated income tax rates; welfare-state benefits, and, as an
outgrowth, PC control of education, so that only liberal-socialist
doctrine might be taught.
Anyone reading Schlesinger's "The Age of Roosevelt" would come away
believing that the New Deal had greatly improved business conditions and
had effectively ended the Depression.
That picture, however, was a white-wash job. Statistics from the Federal
Reserve Board and the Bureau of Labor Statistics relate a far bleaker
reality. For eight years under the New Deal, unemployment averaged in
the teens, more than twice today's number. In 1939, the seventh year of
the New Deal, unemployment averaged 16.7% for the entire year, almost
four times as high as the 4.6% rate in January of 2007.
The Fed's index of industrial production moved downward more often than
up. Compared to the 1923-25 index base, industrial production was down
29% at the end of the New Deal's first year. In 1939, when the economy
was gearing up for the impending World War II, industrial production was
still 8% below the level of fourteen years earlier.
Compare those numbers to our most recent recession, from the peak in
1999 to the bottom in 2001, when industrial production declined only
about 1.75%.
There is no way to avoid the conclusion that the New Deal's chaotic,
anti-business programs produced the worst economic performance, for the
longest time on record in the United States.
While the record of the politics the historian preached is questionable
at best, Professor Schlesinger was enormously successful in selling it
to a generation of Americans who will bear the costs of his
salesmanship.
Thomas E. Brewton is a staff writer for the New Media Alliance, Inc. The
New Media Alliance is a non-profit (501c3) national coalition of
writers, journalists and grass-roots media outlets. His weblog is THE
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