Is BHO the New FDR?

 

Intellectual Fraud

Intelligent Design

Mega Fix

Ron Brown

Popes & Bankers

TWA Flight 800

Church

General

 

 

 

© Jack Cashill

AmericanThinker.com - March 21, 2010

On the cover of its November 24, 2008 edition, Time Magazine photo-shopped Barack Obama into a classic image of a jaunty Franklin Delano Roosevelt, right down to the politically incorrect cigarette holder.

The article is headlined, “The New New Deal.” There is no question mark. Back in those heady days of hope and change, Obama promised to remake Washington in his own image much as FDR had before him.

“His top priority will be stabilizing the financial system,” Time ingenuously reported, followed by investing in renewable energy, universal health care, middle-class tax cuts and education reform.”

A year and a half later, Obama has indeed honored Time’s bold prediction. The parallels between FDR and BHO are hard to miss: the eagerness to improvise, the impulse to control, the urge to scapegoat, the willingness to let business wonder what fresh hell tomorrow might bring. To understand the long-term effects of this style in the real world, it pays to revisit the past.

If there is any one image that evokes the whimsy of the original New Deal, it is this one: FDR sitting in his bedroom with Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. picking the daily price of gold.

As I recount in my book Popes and Bankers, Morgenthau would later report that on one more whimsical than average day FDR decided to set the gold price at 21 cents. “Why 21 cents?” asked Morgenthau. “It's a lucky number,” the President remarked, “because it's three times seven.” Say what you will, but the man knew his timetables!

Just five years earlier, America had sat astride the economic world, the repository of most of its gold and even more of its hope. The president at that time, Republican Calvin Coolidge, could not have differed more from FDR.

Businesses, Coolidge believed, welcomed an administration whose approach to its business clientele mirrored Holiday Inn’s—“no surprises.” Businesses, Coolidge felt, could plan more confidently if they could trust their government not to jack with the law of the land.

As vice-president under Harding, Coolidge had seen how the White House’s hands off-approach to the sharp downturn of 1920 had allowed businesses to cut their losses, trim their payrolls and get back to work quickly. The years since had, by all accounts, been years of sustained and substantial growth.

As to the precipitating event that led to the crash of 1929, fingers point in a thousand directions—towards a bumbling Fed among others--but a market crash does not necessarily lead to depression, even recession. Case in point: October 1987. That the depression of the 1930s merited a capital “D” and the curious descriptor “Great” is due in no small part to the two activist presidents who mismanaged it.

Sworn in as president eight months before the crash, Herbert Hoover contributed his own fair share to the unraveling but not by being passive. “Words are not of any great importance in times of economic disturbance,” he announced. “It is action that counts.”

Unfortunately, just about every action Hoover took proved to be the wrong one. He raised taxes, browbeat businesses into sustaining wages and employment, bullied the stock market, and signed into law the flamingly disastrous Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which triggered a fury of retaliatory measures around the world and sharply cut American exports as well as imports.

The improvisational Roosevelt made Hoover look like Coolidge. In his March 1933 inaugural address, Roosevelt may have eased the fears of the ordinary Joe, but he intensified the fears of those who made the economy work.

“The rulers of the exchange of mankind's goods,” he insisted, “have failed through their own stubbornness and their own incompetence.” From that day forward, no business person could anticipate FDR’s market logic du jour any better than he could his gold price.

After describing a variety of actions to get people back to work, Roosevelt turned his inaugural sights on “the evils of the old order.” That this order had made America so dang prosperous that its dispossessed could drive their own cars to California was lost on Roosevelt and his allies.

“There must be a strict supervision of all banking and credits and investments,” FDR railed, fully ignoring the role of government in creating the mess at hand. “There must be an end to speculation with other people's money, and there must be provision for an adequate but sound currency.”

Roosevelt proved to have unusual ideas as to what exactly constituted a “sound currency,” especially when it came to gold. Two days after the inauguration, he used the legal cover of the wartime Trading With The Enemy Act to declare war on those who were “hoarding” gold.

Three days later, he signed into law the Emergency Banking Act. This bill gave FDR the authority to demand the surrender of all gold by American citizens in exchange for paper money. Those who failed to surrender their gold-yikes!--could face as much as ten years in prison.

The civic strip mining of America’s gold was executed without benefit of a single Congressional hearing. Needless to say, this process did not inspire a lot of confidence within the business community.

Roosevelt was just as adventurous on the banking front. Upon taking office he ordered all banks that were closed to remain closed, even though he had no authority under the Constitution to do this. The Emergency Banking Act, which he had Congress pass immediately thereafter, gave him the power not only to close banks but also to print money wartime style as he saw fit.

From day one, Roosevelt had done his best to dethrone the “privileged princes of these new economic dynasties,” FDR-code for those bankers who had not failed their customers.

“These economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the institutions of America,” he argued at his second inaugural. “What they really complain of is that we seek to take away their power.” Sound familiar?

Ironically, however, it was the major investment bankers like the House of Morgan that were diversified enough to weather the Depression and protect their depositors. Royalism did not cause the great majority of bank failures. Regulation did.

Some 90 percent of failures occurred in states whose “unit” banking laws forbade banks from branching out beyond their base. Canada, which had no such laws, had no such problems.

In June 1933, Roosevelt signed into law the Glass-Steagall Act. Banks now had to choose between investment and deposit banking. They could not do both.

A classic in political scapegoating, the act rewarded those banks that had done the worst and punished the banks that had done the best. It provided deposit insurance for the struggling banks and forced the successful ones to divest their investment banking operations.

In 1935, forced to choose between deposit banking and investment banking, the House of Morgan shocked Wall Street by abandoning the side of the business that had made it rich and famous. With the investor class paralyzed by uncertainty, commercial banking remained its bread and butter.

For all of the sound and fury of FDR’s reign, and for all the soothing charm of his style, the New Deal did not deliver. And no one knew that better than a bummed Morgenthau.

"We are spending more money than we have ever spent before and it does not work,” he told a Congressional hearing in 1939.

“I want to see this country prosperous. I want to see people get jobs. We have never made good on our promises. I say after eight years of this administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started and an enormous debt to boot."

In 1939, 17—as in a 17 percent unemployment rate--was no one’s idea of a lucky number. In 2010, alas, we’re working our way up.

Who is Jack Cashill?

 

 

to top of page  

Subscribe to the Cashill Newsletter. It's FREE!

Receive political news, invitations to political events and special offers.

 
Home | Professional | Personal | International | National | Regional | Books & DVDs | Articles By Title | Email Jack
copyright 2005 Jack Cashill
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

eXTReMe Tracker