By Thomas Sowell
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
The past year marked a number of important anniversaries.
It was the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the First World War — a war
which many at the time saw as madness, and predicted that it would be the
harbinger of a Second World War a generation later.
2014 was also the 70th anniversary of the fateful landing
at Normandy that marked the beginning of the end of World War II.
2014 was likewise the 60th anniversary of the Brown v.
Board of Education Supreme Court decision that marked the beginning of the end
of racial segregation, the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
and of the beginning of President Lyndon Johnson’s “war on poverty” programs.
Anniversaries are opportunities to look back at historic
turning points, compare the rhetoric of the time with the reality that we now
know unfolded — and to learn hard lessons about the difference between rhetoric
and reality for our own time.
A hundred years ago, the President of the United States
was Woodrow Wilson — the first president to openly claim that the Constitution
of the United States was outdated, and that courts should erode the limits that
the Constitution placed on the federal government.
Today, after a hundred years of courts’ eroding the
Constitution’s protections of personal freedom, we now have a president who has
taken us dangerously close to one-man rule, unilaterally changing laws passed
by Congress and refusing to enforce other laws — on immigration especially.
Like Woodrow Wilson, our current president is
charismatic, vain, narrow, and headstrong. Someone said of Woodrow Wilson that
he had no friends, only devoted slaves and enemies. That description comes all
too close to describing Barack Obama, with his devoted political palace guard in
the White House that he listens to, in contrast to the generals he ignores on
military issues and the doctors he ignores on medical issues.
Both Wilson and Obama have been great phrase makers and
crowd pleasers. We are still trying to cope with the havoc left in the wake of
Woodrow Wilson’s ringing phrase about “the self-determination of peoples.”
First of all, it was never “self-determination.” It was
the arbitrary determination of the fate of millions of people in nations carved
out of empires dismembered by the victors after the First World War. Neither
the Irish in Britain nor the Germans in Bohemia were allowed to determine who
would rule them. Nor was anybody in Africa.
The consequence of fragmenting large nations was the
creation of small and vulnerable nations that Hitler was able to pick off, one
by one, during the 1930s.
Minorities who protested that they were being oppressed
under the Austro-Hungarian Empire got their own nations, where their own
oppression of other minorities was often worse than they had experienced in the
Austro-Hungarian Empire.
We are still trying to sort out the chaos in the Middle
East growing out of the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire. How long it will
take to sort out the havoc left behind by Barack Obama’s foreign policies only
the future will tell.
It should be noted that, after the charismatic Woodrow
Wilson, none of the next three presidents was the least bit charismatic. Let us
hope that the voters today have also learned how dangerous charisma and glib
rhetoric can be — and what a childish self-indulgence it is to choose a
president on the basis of symbolism. Woodrow Wilson was the first Southerner to
be elected president since the Civil War, as Obama was to become the first
black president. But neither fact qualified them to wield the enormous powers
of the presidency. Nor will being the first woman president, the first Hispanic
president, or other such firsts.
Since 2014 has been the 50th anniversary of President
Lyndon Johnson’s “war on poverty,” we should note that this was another war
that the Johnson administration lost. Both President Johnson and President John
F. Kennedy before him said that the purpose of the “war on poverty” was to help
people become self-supporting, to end dependency on government programs. But 50
years and trillions of dollars later, there is more dependency than ever.
Let’s hope we have learned something from past debacles.
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