By Kevin
D. Williamson
Wednesday,
October 04, 2023
As
Ecclesiastes tells us: “What has been will be again, what has been done will be
done again; there is nothing new under the sun.” War, death, poverty—and
protectionism, too, which very often is a contributor to the other three.
I have
had Puritans on the brain lately—and not the nice Plymouth Rock kind of
Puritans but the angry ones who fought the English Civil Wars. I am
particularly struck by the fact that when Oliver Cromwell et al. got around to
abolishing the British monarchy, they created what was only the second
Protestant republic of any real consequence in Europe at that time, joining the
Dutch. The two republics had more in common than theology: The English had been
supporters of the Dutch Republic in its long struggle for independence from
Spain, and Spain had been a military and political problem for Catholic England
long before it was a military, political, and religious problem for Protestant
England. With similar cultures, similar religious orientations, and a vast
array of shared political and economic interests, it was natural that the
English and the Dutch should have been fast allies. In fact, they had so much
in common that the English actually proposed uniting their countries into a
single confederation and dispatched a senior diplomat to open
negotiations.
Of
course, the two brother republics almost immediately went to war with one
another.
In a sense,
the two countries were too much alike. The British would one day be the world’s
unquestioned masters of the seas and the greatest power in international trade,
but the Dutch were a few years ahead of them still in the middle of the 17th century.
In fact, most trade between England and English colonies overseas was conducted
by means of Dutch merchant ships. This rubbed the English the wrong way but,
instead of creating the economic and political incentives at home that would
have encouraged and supported the development of the kind of merchant navy that
England needed, the aptly nicknamed Rump Parliament simply passed a law trying
to force one into existence, mandating that foreign ships could not transport
goods from distant ports—Asia, Africa, or the Americas—to England or to English
possessions, while European merchant ships would be allowed to dock in English
ports only to unload goods from their countries of origin. Anticipating our
Jones Act, the Navigation Act of 1651 mandated that goods coming from distant
ports must be transported to England in English ships with English owners and
crews that were in the majority English.
Never
mind that England didn’t actually have a fleet yet to service that trade—even
the coastal trade in England itself was at the time largely served by the
Dutch. With its relatively small and agrarian economy—stifled by the fact that
England then lacked the kind of free trade the Dutch enjoyed—Cromwell’s
commonwealth did not constitute a very large share of the Dutch maritime trade,
but the Navigation Act was enough to irritate the Dutch. And when the English
began attacking Dutch ships, it was war. The war accomplished what wars
accomplish—people were killed, property was destroyed—and, in the end, the
Dutch and the English resumed trade on terms that weren’t really any more
favorable to the English than they had been before the war. The English would
not finally realize naval supremacy for about a century, and, in the end, they
won their supremacy by building ships and developing a corps of well-trained
professional sailors, both merchant and military. They didn’t get there by
politicking—they put in the work and made the big investments, which is really
the only way anything big ever gets done.
And,
what have we learned?
Americans
living in New England this winter risk facing a very strange problem—a strange
problem for Americans, anyway: a shortage of natural gas. The United States
produces oodles of the stuff, of course, and, recently, American producers have
been exporting liquified natural gas (LNG) to Europe to help make up for
Russian supplies taken offline by Vladimir Putin’s vicious and stupid war in
Ukraine. It would be an easy thing to ship LNG from U.S. producers to New
England consumers who need it, but, because of the Jones Act, it is as a
practical matter impossible to do that. The Jones Act requires that such
shipping be done by U.S.-flagged ships and, inconveniently, there is no fleet
of U.S.-flagged LNG tankers available. That is why LNG consumers in New Hampshire
and Maine use imported gas from Trinidad and Tobago—and have, from time to
time, resorted to Russian imports, too, as recently as during the
administration of Donald Trump. There are all sorts of ways to get
U.S.-produced energy to U.S. consumers, but we have to do the work: Somebody
has to build the pipelines or the fleet and infrastructure to get that
done—and, more to the point, somebody in Washington has to let them.
Instead, Washington blocks the development of critical energy infrastructure
for political reasons—and then grandstands about using the Jones Act to
protect nonexistent jobs on nonexistent LNG tankers!
For the
esteemed ladies and gentlemen of Washington who allow our republic to be thus
misgoverned, “rump” is too kind a designation.
“What
has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there
is nothing new under the sun.”
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