33 Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed To Ask
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Today
is the official release date for my new book, 33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask,
from Random House/Crown Forum.
These are questions
that receive incomplete, misleading, or absolutely false answers
in the standard treatment of American history. Most are simply never
raised in the first place, since they might give rise to forbidden
thoughts that run counter to established opinion.
A few of the
questions:
- Were the
American Indians really environmentalists?
- Is the U.S.
government too stingy with foreign aid – or not stingy enough?
- Was the
U.S. Constitution meant to be a "living, breathing"
document that changes with the times?
- What really
happened in the Whiskey Rebellion, and why will neither your textbook
nor George Washington tell you?
- What made
American wages rise? (Hint: it wasn't unions or the government.)
- Did the
Iroquois Indians influence the United States Constitution?
- Did school
desegregation narrow the black-white achievement gap?
- Did the
Founding Fathers support immigration?
- What was
"the biggest unknown scandal of the Clinton years"?
- The three
constitutional clauses that have caused the most mischief – what
are they, and what were they really supposed to mean?
- Did capitalism
cause the Great Depression? If not, what did?
- Does the
Constitution really contain an "elastic clause"?
- Did the
Founding Fathers believe in jury nullification – that juries could
refuse to enforce unjust laws?
- Was George
Washington Carver (who supposedly developed 300 products out of
the peanut) really one of America’s greatest scientific geniuses,
as Henry Ford claimed?
In this book
I’m able to cover all kinds of topics I couldn’t get to in The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, and in those
few cases of overlap I include brand new information about them
in 33 Questions.
Let me elaborate
on just one of the questions, chosen more or less at random: How
wild was the "wild" West?
The standard
story there, seared into the American consciousness and folklore
by motion pictures and other tall tales, is one of constant chaos
and peril. But historians have been rejecting that old view for
some time. In fact, implausible as this may sound, what is most
impressive about the old West was how peaceful and cooperative it
was. Although you’d never know it, scholars have repeatedly shown
that the old West was actually safer than most American cities today.
In the absence
of formal government, voluntary institutions emerged that defined
and enforced property rights and adjudicated disputes. Far from
a land of lawlessness and violence, a myth spun from tales designed
to sell dime novels, the old West actually constitutes a fascinating
case study of the ability of market institutions, even in apparently
impossible conditions, to facilitate peaceful interaction and to
carry out functions we normally associate with government.
The story is
all the more impressive when we recall the inauspicious circumstances
in which these events occurred. The settlers were men of vastly
different backgrounds. They had no intention of putting down permanent
roots; they intended to make their fortune and return back home.
They were complete strangers with no pre-existing community camaraderie
on which to build. And yet, according to Andrew Morriss of Case
Western Reserve University School of Law, "This amazing polyglot
of men seeking rapid wealth, and with virtually no intention of
building a lasting society, created a set of customary legal institutions
which not only flourished in California but successfully adapted
to conditions across the West."
33 Questions
About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask also covers
forgotten history about presidential war-making, labor unions, Martin
Luther King, Jr., Social Security, the "imperial presidency,"
discrimination, and a great deal more.
This was very,
very satisfying to write.
As I’ve said
before, media outlets like the New York Times have as their
goal the suppression of fundamental questions. We may debate questions
like whether the top income tax rate should be 34.7 percent or 35.6
percent. The Times is perfectly comfortable with debates
like that. We may not ask whether the income tax should be altogether
abolished (and replaced by nothing). We may ask whether the
Department of Education’s budget should increase by five percent
or six percent. We may not ask whether a federal Department of Education
is necessary, desirable, or constitutional in the first place.
You
get the idea.
Certain issues,
in other words, are simply not meant to be discussed. The point
of my book is to blow the lid off the whole racket.
July
10, 2007
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [view
his website;
send
him mail] is
senior fellow in American history at the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and the author, most recently, of 33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask.
His other books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free chapter
here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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