I have been watching the Republican presidential debates with some sense of wonder. As in, I wonder what world the candidates inhabit.
When Ronald Reagan ran for president, he famously intoned: "government isn't the solution - government is the problem." The present batch of candidates takes this mantra to new levels.
It isn't true.
But we seem to have a national amnesia about the role of the federal government in fostering the degree of prosperity that we enjoy. The "Tea Party" and their adherents seem bent on destroying the structure that has built that prosperity.
An integral part of the attack on our general prosperity is an attack on the New Deal. This is nothing new. Republicans attacked the New Deal from the beginning and have been attempting to undo it ever since.
The attacks only began to achieve success in the late 1960's, after a generation came along with no personal memory of the Great Depression and the New Deal and no recollection of the poverty and backwardness of much of rural America before the New Deal.
I am old enough to have seen remnants of the poverty that preceded the New Deal and to have witnessed the transition to greater prosperity that the New Deal set in motion. Just last month I drove through rural Mississippi on highways built during the depression (my father worked on some of them), past schools built by the Works Progress Administration, along recreational waterways held in check by flood control projects. I drove past farms that wouldn't have electricity without the Rural Electrification Act of 1936.
Michel Hiltzik has published a timely book, The New Deal: A Modern History. Yesterday's edition of the on-line magazine, Slate, published a good review of the book and a summary, drawn from the book, of the New Deal's accomplishments. It is worth reading the review here.
It occurs to me that, by comparison to the visionaries who led America out of a very dark time in our history, today's Republicans have a cramped, crabby and very limited vision of our country.
But if we have eyes to see, here in Pamlico County, we see the New Deal at work. We have not been left to our own devices to recover from a major hurricane. Both as individuals and as a county and a state, we have been saved from total economic collapse by measures put in place by the New Deal. Without those measures, banks would have collapsed and even more jobs would have been lost.
Things could be a lot worse, and without the New Deal, they would be.
But the enduring accomplishment of the New Deal is that leaders of that effort had a vision of the future. That vision of Americans working together for progress and improvement dominated government planning and accomplishments for nearly half a century.
Let's not lose the vision.
Friday, October 14, 2011
What Does Government Do For Us?
Topic Tags:
banking,
economic development,
economics,
government,
politics
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