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If we learn anything from the Ken Burns documentary concluding Saturday night on the Public Broadcasting System, it's that the progressive, humanitarian future foreseen by America's two great 20th century presidents has regressed in the last thirty years to a version of the darker, oligarchal, corporately manipulated past.
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If we learn anything from the Ken Burns documentary concluding Saturday night on the Public Broadcasting System, it's that the progressive, humanitarian future foreseen by America's two great 20th century presidents has regressed in the last thirty years to a version of the darker, oligarchal, corporately manipulated past.
It was
Theodore Roosevelt, a Progressive Republican, who declared he would stand up to
"the malfactors of great wealth."
Nowadays
Washington insiders would proudly wear that phrase as a team affiliation on
their T-shirts. If somone or some entitly possesses great wealth, he must be
good, because it's only by cuddling up to possessors of great health that elected
can keep their seats. It's the new normal. Elections are too expensive for a
Congressman to look a gift horse, however mangy, in the eye. The Supreme Court
tells us that's the way things should be.
FDR had
some interesting epithets for his opponents as well.
"Economic
Royalists," we heard Franklin Roosevelt say in one ofhis famous Depression
ERa speeches to the country, "fear that we are threatening their
power."
He regarded
the coprorate bosses of his era as a class who saw themselves as "royalty."
They deserved to hoard the wealth because they were born to their position,
their class, their privileges. FDR was born to that class as well; he knew and
understood them. He knew they 'hated' him as a 'traitor.'
JP Morgan,
the darth vader of suffering inflicted on the millions of exploited workers and
their families in America's 'gilded age' -- i.e., society divided into rich
robber barons and impoverished masses -- clashed with both Roosevelts. He could
not believe that Teddy Roosevelt invoked 'emergency' powers to prevent his
takeover of the entire railroad system with toal of setting tranporatation
rates for all goods. It doesn;t say in the constitution you have the power to
do that, his lawyers pointed out.
"The
consitution exists for the poeple, not the people for the Constitution,"
TR said.
Who would
say anythng liek that today?
FDR saved
the country in 1933 by closing the banks until he had a plan to reform them.
Morgan, still around -- no Luke appeared to slay this Darth Vader.
Their hate was
a price he would pay for saving America from chaos and despair, and saving them from the real possibility of a
Soviet-style, class-based revolution.
But while
much of this story might be familiar to many of us, what continues to amaze me
is that the words -- the ideas, ideals and values -- routinely spoken by the
men in the White House are completely absent from today's political vocabulary.
FDR, in
another archived film moment, observes that a public policy should not be
judged by whether "it added to those who already had more than enough, but
whether it added something to those who have too little."
This would
be apostasy today. There is no concept in American society of "having too
much." Given the routine compensation packages for CEOs, bankers and stock
brokers, how could there be? There is no notion in common public opinion tht
they they are fleecing the public good to feather their own no nests.
And there
is no consensus that public policy ought
to be concerned with those who have too little. If you are unemployed, poor,
hungry or homeless or driven inot penury by exorbitant medical costs, the
genearl opinion appears to be that such matters are your own business. Why come
running to us? Congression leaders ask today. We take care of ourselves. Model
your behavior on us.
Americans
wrote thousands of letters every day to FDR when he was in the White House
because, int the words of one, this was the first time he thought someone
actually cared about them.
The
government had an obligation to take action to ensure "a decent place, a
and decent government" for its citizens.
Somehow
we've lost the notion that "providing for the common good" was the
purpose of government.
Maybe
watching a documentary that provides a detailed passage through the major
events of the first half of the 20th century will remind of us how hard life
was for the many and how far we had to come to create the common social
advanatages the Baby Boomer generation could take for granted. Do we have to go
back to 1900 and do it all over?
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