As I watch the slow-motion dumpster fire of ELECTION 2016! or whatever the TV is calling it these days, I'm thinking back to earlier elections and wondering why we thought we had it so bad back then? Those old "It's the end of everything!" contests look more like High Tea with the Duchess than dogfights and I'm more convinced than ever that the battle for the soul of the Federal government was lost by 1913.*
I'm reminded once more of H. L. Mencken on our system of government:
Sure, he wrote, "Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard," but perhaps more to the point, he gave us this gem:
"Truth would quickly cease to be stranger than fiction, once we got as used to it."
I'm not entirely certain he'd be willing to stand behind that one in this year.
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* What did we get in 1913? The odious Woodrow Wilson, who argued that government should not be deemed evil and advocated the
use of government to allay social ills and advance society's welfare in a textbook, The State, used in college courses through the 1920s. He believed that America's system of checks and balances complicated American governance,and wrote that the Presidency, "will be as big as and as influential as the man who occupies it." There's your modern imperial-style President and the all-encompassing FedGov, neatly wrapped up in one racist, eugencist package.
All one really needs to know about "[t]he odious Woodrow Wilson" is that Mussolini thought he was the cat's meow.
ReplyDeleteCan we just get the elections over so we can move along to demonizing the winners?
ReplyDeleteJust think....if, say, 1976 looked like The End of the World to us then (I don't know if it did, I was more concerned about Shaun Cassidy's hair than I was with politicians at that point of my life), how frightened we should all be for 2020. I mean, if 2016 is gonna wind up looking OK by comparison....
ReplyDeleteWoodrow Wilson, the loyal Democrat?
ReplyDeleteThe man who segregated the federal government and the US Navy?
The man that brought Jim Crow to Washington DC?
The man that screened DW Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" in the White House?
The man that asked for, signed and enforced Sedition Acts during World War I?
The man who nationalized the railroads for the duration of WWI? (Admittedly, they were pretty much a mess.)
ReplyDeleteFederal Reserve Act, Income Tax, "He kept us out of war" until after the election in 1916...
ReplyDeleteWilson gets my vote for the Worst of Them All. Yes, including the current Resident.
ReplyDelete