Response
to My Critics
by
Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
My
friends in academia have been telling me to ignore the attacks on
my book The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History. Most of
these attacks have avoided the book's arguments altogether,
resorting instead to smears and character assassination. This is
the kind of treatment that anyone left or right
who strays from the three-by-five card that constitutes the range
of acceptable opinion these days can expect to receive. Such people,
my friends insist, are not worth a single moment of my time, which
should be devoted to my scholarly work.
Sensible advice to be sure. But before I go back into hibernation
for a while, at least one final word. The History News Network,
for which I have written
in the past, has at this point featured four major attacks on my
book . That struck me as, well, rather excessive. One of them was
written by a University of North Carolina law professor who admitted
he hadn't read the book. But he sure had dug up some things I had
written in graduate school ten years earlier.
Although
some of those statements do not reflect my views today, I have no
intention of going through the ritual charade of breast-beating
and apology that public figures routinely undergo when the thought
police come after them. (For heaven's sake, whose views haven't
changed since graduate school?) But I couldn't help laughing
at this professor's indignation that I'd said that the
barbarism of American foreign policy made a major terrorist attack
on American soil inevitable. Which part of that statement is wrong?
The barbarism part? What else would you call a policy that starves
half a million Iraqi children, complete with assurances from Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright that its ghastly price "has been
worth it"? (And I'm the moral outcast here?)
What is crazy about concluding that some people are going to get
very angry about policies like this and perhaps seek revenge? I'd
be shocked if at least half the scholars who read HNN didn't
fundamentally agree with me, yet this point was solemnly advanced
as evidence of my nuttiness.
The
most recent attack comes from someone named David
Greenberg. From what I have been able to gather, David Greenberg
is a professor of history, journalism and media who has written
a book on Richard Nixon. By the end of what I guess was supposed
to be a review, he has essentially said that I have no scholarly
standards.
Greenberg
refers to me as a "hitherto unknown assistant professor of
history at Suffolk County Community College." I never claimed
to be famous, though readers of my other books and articles had
certainly heard of me. My background includes four degrees, three
from Columbia including the Ph.D., and an undergraduate degree from
Harvard. I have also written several other books, including The
Church Confronts Modernity (Columbia University Press,
2004) and a
recent study (more recent, in fact, than the Politically
Incorrect Guide) of Catholic social teaching in light of the
Austrian school of economics. My scholarly and popular articles,
which have appeared in scores of outlets, number about 125, and
my work has been translated into seven languages. I am also the
translator of Alfons Cardinal Stickler's memoirs of Vatican II from
German into English. Some would say this is not a bad record for
a 32-year-old, though (oddly enough) none of it appears in any of
the attack pieces on me that have been featured on HNN. All the
better to paint me as an idiot who can be safely ignored, no doubt.
Part of Greenberg's complaint has to do not so much with my
facts as with my selection of topics. (When intellectual historian
David Gordon of whom it has been said, "Who needs
the Library of Congress when you have David Gordon?"
couldn't find any errors, I knew for sure there weren't
any.) But when Regnery Publishing approached me with the idea for
this book, they gave me a strict word limit of 80,000. Any serious
historian knows how quickly 80,000 words go by. That's why
I point out in my preface that the book is not intended to be a
systematic textbook on American history. Good heavens, how could
it be?
Thus
Mr. Greenberg complains that I don't spend enough time talking
about slavery a bogus charge that to my mind proved he never
intended to treat me fairly. Of course the book discusses slavery,
though not at the length Mr. Greenberg would prefer. The book doesn't
discuss the Spanish-American War at all, despite the watershed
that 1898 represents in the history of American foreign policy.
(That chapter, in fact, simply had to be cut.) I decided to spend
my 80,000 words on aspects of American history that the traditional
narrative either mangles or neglects altogether. How Mr. Greenberg
would spend 80,000 words discussing American history holds no interest
for me, though something tells me his version would include precious
few facts or interpretations we haven't all heard a million
times before.
My
friend Bill Watkins's book Reclaiming
the American Revolution: The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions and
Their Legacy (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004) was the first book
on the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 in a hundred
years. Think about that. That's why my Politically Incorrect
Guide to American History devotes an entire chapter to what
Americans for a long time called the "Principles of '98."
Despised alike by nationalists of the left like Greenberg and neoconservative
nationalists of the right like Max Boot, these principles are central
to any serious understanding of American history. Yet as the paucity
of scholarship on the subject amply reveals, they have simply dropped
down the memory hole. (I must have missed all the bicentennial celebrations
in our nation's capital in 1998.) Why am I not allowed to focus
attention on them? If Greenberg wishes I had covered other issues
instead, why doesn't he just write his own book and stop wasting
everyone's time?
Greenberg goes on to complain that my book is simplistic and merely
a political screed of some kind quite unlike Greenberg's
review, on the other hand, which is doubtless innocent of any political
motivation at all. To the contrary, given its scope and introductory
nature, The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History
is positively filled with some of the best and most recent research.
I
am morally certain that Greenberg is unfamiliar with for
example Robert Higgs, Kevin Gutzman, Dominick Armentano or
Richard Vedder, since the work of these scholars does not confirm
his prejudices. But I would hesitate to describe someone's scholarly
work as without merit simply because it holds no interest for David
Greenberg. Robert Higgs is one of the best economic historians in
America, and one can hardly speak with authority on the U.S. economy
in the 1930s and 1940s without some familiarity with his pioneering
work. Dominick Armentano, professor emeritus at the University of
Hartford, is one of the great scholars of American antitrust law.
Kevin Gutzman, whose publications span the major journals, has produced
some of the most important and original scholarship on Virginia's
political traditions to come out in some time. And although many
readers have probably never heard of it, I venture to suggest that
no one can speak definitively on the New Deal and its effects on
employment without reckoning with the evidence in Out
of Work: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth Century America
by Richard Vedder and Lowell Gallaway.
Finally,
a brief word on the Balkans, a section of my book that was considerably
longer and more detailed in its original manuscript form. Greenberg
is shocked that I question the Clinton administration's line on
the Balkans and on Kosovo in particular. Let me be candid: it is
hard for me to respect people who swallow war propaganda whole when
it comes from a Democratic president but throw up their hands in
disgust at the same behavior in a Republican (and vice versa). In
my book I am as dismissive of the Clinton administration's fabrications
as I was of the WMD nonsense that issued forth from the Bush administration.
I am frankly shocked that someone claiming to be a scholar still
buys into what should now be the laughable claims of the Clinton
administration concerning Kosovo, including intimations of hundreds
of thousands of deaths. "Despite
Tales, the War in Kosovo Was Savage, But Wasn't Genocide,"
read the Wall Street Journal headline of December 31, 1999.
Thank
goodness for principled leftists like Democracy Now's
Amy Goodman, whose interview with Bill Clinton whom she
skewered for his disastrous and immoral foreign policy I
recall with immense delight. As one of my reviewers put it, nothing
makes establishment left and right kiss and make up faster than
the desire to smear someone like Amy Goodman (or me, for that matter),
whose views fall outside the ever-shrinking spectrum of allowable
opinion.
Finally,
remember what my book is: a lighthearted if information-packed overview
of important or often neglected episodes in American history. No,
it doesn't cover every issue under the sun, because 1) it never
says it is going to; 2) it expressly says it is not going to; and
3) the manuscript had to be kept to 80,000 words. Complaints that
do not take these factors into account are simply dishonest. And
while I shall happily entertain serious criticisms that show where
I am factually mistaken or where my interpretations do not hold
water, smear jobs and character assassination only serve to confirm
me in my views.
This
article is reprinted from the History News
Network with permission.
April
12, 2005
Professor
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [send
him mail] holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Harvard
and his Ph.D. from Columbia. His books include the New York
Times (and LRC) bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, and the
just-released book The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy.
Thomas
Woods Archives
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