Fascism
Comes to America
Part 11: Making America Over and the Communist 'Ideal'
by
Ralph Raico
by Ralph Raico
It would be
a mistake to think that the New Deal represented a total break with
the past trends of American history. From the beginning, we have
always had a Hamiltonian element, statist and centralizing, at war
with our Jeffersonian legacy of individualism and decentralized
government. The notion that Franklin Roosevelt overthrew a basically
laissez-faire system is untenable. One has only to recall, amid
countless other interventions, the federal income tax and the Federal
Reserve System, both put in place under Woodrow Wilson, as well
as Wilsons war-socialism, never entirely stamped out after
World War I. Herbert Hoover, during his long post-presidential period,
used to boast that his administration had decisively rejected laissez
faire. He was the last president who thought that splendid accomplishment
even worth mentioning.
But
the changes under FDR that started with his first Hundred Days were
on such a scale and left such an enduring ideological residue that
they represent a quantum leap of statism in American history.
The
cutting edge of the revolution was the hordes of New Dealers who
manned the old and newly minted bureaucracies. As the archestablishment
historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. wrote:
They
brought with them an alertness, an excitement, an appetite for power,
an instinct for crisis and a dedication to public service which
became during the thirties the essence of Washington.
No
group was filled with more excitement or had a greater appetite for
power than those quintessential New Dealers, the Brain Trust. The
impact of those erstwhile professors, first assembled by Raymond Moley
for the 1932 campaign, could be discerned in most of the new legislation
and in its overall collectivist thrust.
Rexford
Tugwell and making America over
The most prominent
of the Brain Trusters and the man often considered the chief ideologist
of the first New Deal (roughly, 193334), was Rexford
Guy Tugwell. Tugwell was a follower of the school of thought known
as Institutional Economics, founded by the eccentric writer on economics,
Thorstein Veblen. His official position was assistant secretary
of agriculture, that is, second in command to Henry A. Wallace,
but his influence and empire-building extended far beyond that.
In more ways than one, Tugwell is reminiscent of Ellsworth Toohey,
in Ayn Rands great novel, The Fountainhead.
Tugwell
was another of the progressive thinkers enamored of the experiment
in war-socialism under Wilson, especially of Bernard Baruchs
War Industries Board (WIB). The First World War, Tugwell gushed,
was an industrial engineers Utopia. He lamented
the Armistice, which prevented the WIB from expanding into a
great experiment in control of production and consumption.
While
still in academe, Tugwell was eager to observe a land where such
a great experiment was well under way. In 1927, he traveled
to the Soviet Union. Certain aspects of the dictatorial political
system he found offensive, of course, but the mighty changes in
society and the economy dazzled him.
Through
scientific economic planning the Soviets were able to carry
out their industrial operations with a completely thought-out program.
The future, he announced, is becoming visible
in Russia.
As
the Depression set in, terms like planned economy and
national planning became the watchwords of the day.
They had been bruited about by advanced thinkers for years and popularized
by best-selling writers like George Soule and Stuart Chase, who
lauded the Soviet Gosplan (central planning), asking plaintively,
Why should the Russians have all the fun of remaking a world?
The flagship of progressivism, The New Republic, made
the cant phrases its constant refrain. (Just as a matter of curiosity:
when was The New Republic ever right about anything?)
Now, with FDR in charge, fervent apostles of the nebulous creed
wielded real power in Washington.
Tugwell
could not have been as effective as he was if hed been merely
a dry-as-dust economist. Instead, he was a True Believer, filled
with a messianic sense of mission. This he once expressed in a poem
he composed as a young man, entitled The Dreamer:
I
am strong.
I am big and well made.
I am sick of a nations stenches.
I am sick of propertied czars.
I have dreamed my great dream of their passing.
I have gathered my tools and my charts.
My plans are finished and practical.
I shall roll up my sleeves and make America over.
America
with its tens of millions of people had to be made over,
because its market economy was thoroughly obsolete, headed for the
scrapheap of history:
The
traditional incentives, hope of money-making and fear of money-loss,
will be weakened, and a kind of civil-service loyalty and fervor
will need to grow gradually into acceptance.
Echoing
socialist critics from the early 19th century on, Tugwell scorned
the free market as anarchical, an uncoordinated muddle of hopelessly
conflicting aims and purposes. It would have to be replaced by national
planning, or technocracy, another shibboleth of the day,
implying rule by the technical experts, like himself.
In
the future, for instance, New industries will not just happen,
as the automobile industry did; they will have to be foreseen, to
be argued for, before they can be entered upon so,
innovation by bureaucratic committee, bringing to mind another work
by Ayn Rand, Anthem.
The
constitutional structure of America was as archaic as the economic,
according to Tugwell. It would have to be radically overhauled,
and many a sacred precedent would have to go, he declared,
adding ominously that this entailed calling on an enlarged
and nationalized police power for enforcement. Here were
getting into Atlas
Shrugged territory.
Communism
and the New Deal
Nowadays, anyone
who alludes to the manifold impact of Communism on 20th-century
America must face the dread accusation of McCarthyism.
This has become a term of abuse in the political lexicon rivaled
only by fascism and Nazism. It well serves
the left-liberal agenda, which demands that much of what really
happened in history be relegated to an Orwellian memory hole. But
it is impossible to understand the New Deal and, later on, FDRs
wartime relationship with Joseph Stalin, unless we engage in what
might be called a bit of scholarly McCarthyism.
Was
FDR a Communist? Of course not, and neither were his big-business
cronies, such as Bernard Baruch and Jesse Jones, head of the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation (RFC), who dispensed government billions to
some of the largest corporations in the country. And although, as
we shall later see, Franklins administration came to be riddled
with Communists, fellow travelers, and Soviet agents of influence,
it would be ridiculous to think of any of the members of his cabinet
as Reds.
Moreover,
FDR and his followers were disdainful of the small and noisy Communist
Party. For one thing, in the early 30s the CPUSA bitterly assailed
Roosevelt and all his doings. The time of the United, or Popular,
Front of Red collaboration with all progressive forces
against the Right lay a few years in the future.
Still,
even the apologist Schlesinger had to concede that some New Dealers
felt a bond of sympathy, vague but real, with Communism. The Communists,
after all, were underdogs; they were supposedly working for the
common man; in the greedy business leader, Communist and New Dealers
shared an enemy. What Schlesinger neglected to mention is the potent,
continuing attraction that the model of the Soviet Union exerted
on the minds of New Dealers in and out of government.
Among
Tugwells mentors was the icon of progressivism, John Dewey,
famed educator, social philosopher, and insufferable windbag. In
1928, in a series of articles in The New Republic,
Dewey praised the new Soviet regime to the skies. It represented
the release of courage, energy, and confidence in life,
the liberation of a people to consciousness of themselves
as a determining power in the shaping of their ultimate fate,
a release of human powers on such an unprecedented scale that
it is of incalculable significance not only for that country, but
for the world. Dewey confessed that words simply failed him
in expressing his unbounded admiration for Soviet education and
its democratization of the arts. In Soviet Russia, they were attempting
scientific regulation of social growth.
Harry
Hopkins, who would soon become Franklins closest advisor,
also fell under the spell of fervent admirers of the Soviet Union.
John A. Kingsbury, one of the countrys leaders in the field
of social work, was a kind of father figure to Hopkins. He provided
Hopkins with his first job as a social worker, and their intimate
friendship continued; years later Hopkins made Kingsbury his assistant
at the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which he headed. Kingsbury
was another progressive dazzled by what he saw in Soviet Russia
in 1932, and became an apostle in spreading the Good News.
Even
Hopkinss personal psychiatrist, Frankwood E. Williams, whom
he began seeing at the time of his troubles in his first marriage,
was a devotee of the new order he observed in Russia. A 1932 voyage
convinced Williams (a nationally prominent psychiatrist, editor
of The Journal of Mental Hygiene) that the Communists
were shaping a society that was free of the mental illness caused
by the atmosphere of competition and rivalry that vitiates
everything from the start and at every step in America. Inspiringly,
this shrink was for once in his life overcome by a religious experience.
It happened while he was packed into a Moscow streetcar, when he
felt that for a moment we are just one body, he and
the commuting Muscovites, as he later explained.
The real
Russia
These are only
a small sample of the innumerable cheerleaders for Soviet Russia
during those years, in the government and among the opinion molders
throughout American culture.
Yet
it was not hard to discover the truth about Russia, for anyone who
discounted the incessant propaganda and ventured beyond carefully
arranged tours where secret police agents served as guides.
Lenin
had erected the first totalitarian state, and his repressive policies
were intensified by Stalin. By 1932, the standard of living of average
Soviet workers was lower than that of the unemployed in Western
countries. Tens of thousands had been shot as dissenters and as
speculators, i.e., for engaging in trade. The Gulag
was rapidly filling up with millions condemned to hunger and death.
And then came the great terror-famine of 193233.
In
this, the forgotten holocaust, some five or six or more millions
died of starvation and diseases of malnutrition, mostly in Ukraine,
but also in the North Caucasus and other regions. From the villages
stretching across this vast area, Red functionaries nervously informed
Moscow that conditions were so bad that cannibalism was becoming
common.
The
correspondent of the New York Times, Walter Duranty,
staunchly denied in print that any famine existed, although he admitted
it in private. For his reporting from Russia, Duranty won a Pulitzer
Prize, on which the Times preens itself to this day.
But
news of the horrors began surfacing around the world, in the New
York Herald Tribune and the Chicago Daily News
and elsewhere. Malcolm Muggeridge exposed them in the British press.
On the basis of accounts in the Paris press, the American ambassador
to France informed the State Department that the Soviet Union was
in the throes of a cruel, unprecedented, unbearable famine.
Congressman
Hamilton Fish Jr. of New York later, because of his noninterventionist
stance, one of Franklins pet peeves introduced a resolution
in the House taking cognizance of the bloody ordeal of millions
of peasants in Russia, but it was buried in committee.
Next
Chapter Table
of Contents
Ralph
Raico [send him mail]
is
a senior fellow of the Mises Institute. You can study the history
of civilization under his guidance here: MP3-CD
and Audio
Tape.
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