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FDR
and Crisis
by
Karen De Coster
Robert
Higgs, in his masterful 1987 book Crisis
and Leviathan, asserts the facts so precisely: "the institutional
revolution of the 1930's depended crucially on the existence of
national emergency, a condition that was partly real, partly contrived,
enormously exploited for political purposes."
The
thesis of Crisis and Leviathan elucidates the explanations
for the growth of government. That is, government creates crisis
or exacerbates an already existing crisis that brings forth a shift
in the ideology of the masses. The ideology of the masses, after
all, tends to follow opinions conveyed by government leaders. This
shift in ideology tends toward "Nannyism," or the notion that extensions
of government power are both necessary and legitimate to maintain
order and economic stability. Hence, under the guise of crisis,
the power grabs look less menacing to the masses. Therefore, big
government has succeeded in getting bigger at the expense of individual
liberties and in spite of Constitutional limitations.
Franklin
Delano Roosevelt presided over two of the most austere crises in
American history – the Great Depression and the Second World War.
FDR, more than any other American president before him, unjustly
exploited the country's economic crisis to put his death-grip on
the Constitution and those whom it was intended to serve.
Economy
of Despair
An
economic crisis loomed large just prior to FDR taking his oath of
office in March of 1933. State governments nationwide were
declaring bank holidays to prevent runs on the banks, and Roosevelt,
just days after taking office, initiated a national banking holiday
under the semblance of "national emergency". This action suspended
all banking transactions and created the opportunity for FDR to
follow-up with the Gold Reserve Act, which meant the demise of the
gold standard, and ultimately, a bonanza of runaway inflation for
big government.
A
result of this action was the prohibition of the private ownership
of gold, except for jewelry and certain commercial/industrial uses.
The government reneged on any and all promises to pay out gold,
and also forbade private contractual commitments to pay in gold.
It was thievery on a grand scale. Roosevelt's first fireside chat
resulted from this banking predicament, as he assured the public
in his charming aloofness that he could lead a nation through
this drama intact. Washington bureaucrats, with FDR in command,
had successfully hoarded gold, devalued the dollar, and created
a cry from the public for even more government intervention.
The
Two "Deals"
Creating
"emergency" became the stratagem for Roosevelt and his "Brain Trust"
as he took the country from one zero hour to the next. The first
New Deal addressed the crises blamed on the Hoover administration:
economic isolation, monopolies run amok, unemployment, and problems
regulating competition. Roosevelt urged that the federal government
was the only solution to these crises, and only his New Deal legislation
could save the country.
The
labor crisis, assured FDR, could be solved if the government could
put more people to work and raise the prices of products and services.
After all, as Tom DiLorenzo points out in Reassessing the Presidency,
the crisis presented by Roosevelt was "a Depression caused by low
wages and prices", requiring the "obvious solution of government-mandated
price and wage increases". How to do that? First, under the National
Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), the National Recovery Administration
was set into motion to thwart the impending crisis. This managerial-state
nightmare allowed every industry to be organized into a "Code Authority"
or federally-managed type of cooperative. Under this, the business
work week would be shortened and hours of labor would be reduced
to better disperse employment and drive down production output.
Then, a minimum wage was set, as well as minimum prices.
The
National Recovery Administration, in effect, cartelized every American
industry and regulated distribution, production, prices, wages,
and hours worked. Effectively, Roosevelt's power grabs had managed
to socialize American business, for the market system was almost
entirely under government authority. Higgs tells us:
The
industrial recovery act emerged from a grand compromise. The
most prominent parties included businessmen seeking higher prices
and barriers to competition, labor unionists seeking government
sponsorship and protection of their organizational activities
and collective bargaining, do-gooders concerned about working
conditions and child labor, and proponents of massive governmental
spending for public works.
All
of the above were accomplished by a president who alleged that his
predecessor, Herbert Hoover, had allowed government to grow to such
absurd proportions, that it was he who would have to cut it down
in size. Truth is, Hoover's big government was dwarfed by Roosevelt's
bloated tyranny.
Then,
government public works programs would invade the scene, supplying
even more jobs in the name of forestry, flood control, soil protection,
and general infrastructure. American workers welcomed these measures.
After all, a fragile population craves the safety net of big government
when they are convinced that their way of life is threatened, which
was the implied effect of the Depression era. No jobs meant a poor
standard of living. New jobs, even government jobs created at the
expense of sound economics, were welcomed with open arms. The populace
was timorous, and they believed their standard of living to be in
jeopardy. The crisis mentality had successfully wormed its way into
the American psyche.
Roosevelt
went for the throat during his Second New Deal. Here, what may be
considered to be one the most corrupt government programs ever,
the Social Security Act, was forged. Essentially a fund to pay pensions,
it doubled as a Treasury reserve fund for the purpose of lending
for spending. Author John T. Flynn explains:
The
plan was to make the payroll tax big enough to pay the benefits,
plus enough more to create a so-called reserve of $47,000,000,000
in 40 years. It was given the fraudulent name of Old-Age Reserve
Fund. The Security Board would collect the taxes each year,
use a small part of it to pay the pensions and put the rest
in the "Fund". That is, it would lend it to the Treasury and
the Treasury would then spend it for any purpose it had in mind.
At the end of 40 years, Roosevelt was told, this money could
be used to pay off the national debt.
Security
was the crisis, and old-age was the hook. And what better way to
ensure security than to guarantee monetary payment from an "insurance"
fund beyond the age of 65? Roosevelt clearly had endeared himself
to a generation that was being ravaged by Depression and unemployment.
The freedom-for-security trade-off seemed a good deal at the time.
Still and all, Roosevelt's Nipple-in-the-Sky offering had assured
his constituency of prolonged government intervention on the basis
of need, and unfailing indemnity against any and all hardship. What
more could the people ask for?
The
populace wanted jobs, and the Works Progress Administration (WPA)
promised jobs. In April of 1935, the Roosevelt régime put
this program into motion, one that employed over eight million people
on the dole of the national government. Public projects were undertaken
on everything from building bridges and recording music to establishing
federal writing projects and theatre projects. With a twenty-percent
unemployment rate looming at the time, the masses were jobless and
restless, and were unwilling to turn down handouts of government
jobs and makeshift careers. FDR had successfully entrapped the populace
behind a wall of fear and vulnerability; they had become disciples
of the New Deal dominion, embracing government appropriations beyond
that which had ever been seen before. They were trapped and begging.
Nonetheless,
not everybody had to beg for work. Those who had jobs met up with
the "security" of Roosevelt's National Labor Relations Act, which
empowered labor union monstrosities using coercion and extortion
to collectively bargain, and essentially gave unions the license
for violence under the guise of "right to organize". This kind of
empowerment had the appearance of providing for the well-being of
the common worker, however, it was merely a ploy to further centralize
and expand government control over industry, gain the favors of
big business, and empower a leading democratic political force.
Only government decree could put such power into the hands of an
elite few. And only government can create such a monopoly on labor.
The heavily appeased unions became a powerful political force and
permanent fixture in perpetual support for the Democratic Party,
and remains so to this day. The labor unions, after all, had been
on the decline – in terms of both membership and might prior
to Roosevelt's political gratuities. FDR had managed to stimulate
this declining movement and turn the unions into a useful and influential
force.
Conclusion
As
a whole, Roosevelt's fabricated crises – banking, labor, wellness,
old-age subsistence gave birth to a centralized, planned economy,
one that began an irreversible encroachment on individual livelihood.
The masses fully consented to government usurpation while falling
under the spell of "crisis". Government acted in ways that, typically,
without a crisis hanging overhead, it could not get away with. Even
when each crisis was over, we were left with remnants of this big
government that weren't there before the crisis. Robert Higgs refers
to this as the "ratcheting effect". We ratchet back some of the
"new" big government usurpation, but keep the majority of it long
after the bogus "crisis" is over. Each ratchet leaves us with more
government and less freedom.
Mainstream
historians, journalists, and commentators often speak of the vast
legacy left behind by Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In reality, the
only legacy left behind by this tyrant is the residuum of his departure
from the gold standard, which gave us a managed currency system
producing massive inflation and destructive business cycles; gigantic
welfare state programs for the aged and for the unwilling; sanctioned
malignancy of unionism; collectivization of industry; unconstitutional
shift of unmitigated authority to a hand-assembled judicial branch;
and a public takeover of formerly private business endeavors. And
he used economic depression – and later, war as the crises that
required his heavy hand.
The
crisis-mongering Roosevelt, like Lincoln and Wilson before him,
aided in paving the way for the czarism that was to permeate our
modern executive branch of government.
August
27, 2001
Karen
De Coster [send her
mail] is a politically incorrect CPA, and an MA student in economics
at Walsh College in Michigan.
Copyright © 2001 Karen De Coster
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De Coster Archives
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