SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 27
Betrayal of the Old Right,
Lecture 2
The New Deal and World War II
Why the Old “Right”?
• Last time, we raised the problem: why does
Rothbard call the Old Right by that name
when Nock and Mencken were classical
liberals?
• Also, some of the anti-war people allied
with the Old Right were Progressives, like
Charles A. Beard and Harry Elmer Barnes.
The New Deal
• After FDR became President in March
1933, he proposed a number of radical
measures, such as the NIRA.
• Roosevelt had said in the 1932 that Hoover
was a big spender and that the government
needed to reduce spending.
The New Deal Continued
• Roosevelt received an unprecedented grant of
power from Congress when he took office. There
were very few limits on what he could do, except
for the power of the Supreme Court to declare
measures unconstitutional.
• Some supporters of the New Deal, like Rexford
Tugwell, were sympathetic to planning both in
Soviet Russia and Fascist Italy.
More New Deal
• Both Hitler and Mussolini were at first
sympathetic to the New Deal.
• The NRA, under General Hugh Johnson,
had some authoritarian elements like those
characteristic of fascism. Johnson condoned
illegal boycotts of businessmen that
wouldn’t conform to “voluntary” NRA
guidelines.
Business and the New Deal
• These measures were not opposed by all
business interests. On the contrary, some
businesses supported them, because they
would help eliminate their competition.
• The Swope Plan was an example. Gerard
Swope helped draft the NIRA. He was
president of General Electric
Business and the New Deal
Continued
• Also, these measures brought back some of
the wartime measures introduced during
WWI. Bernard Baruch, an influential
administrator during WWI, was the mentor
of Hugh Johnson.
Anti-New Deal Movements
• Not all businessmen favored the New Deal.
• Those more inclined to the free market were often
conservative Democrats, like John J. Raskob of
Dupont.
• The conservative business groups founded the
American Liberty League.
• Although Herbert Hoover’s interventionist
measures prefigured the New Deal, he thought
FDR had gone too far. He wrote an attack on the
New Deal, Challenge to Liberty (1934)
Anti-New Deal Movements and
the Old Right
• Mencken, Nock, and other members of the
Old Right allied with the anti-New Deal
organizations.
• This is the real answer to our question,
what makes the Old Right “right”. The
movement became more allied to
conservative business interests as the New
Deal progressed.
The Alliance
• “In fact, the individualists were in a bind
at this sudden accession of old enemies
as allies. On the positive side, it meant
a rapid acceleration of libertarian
rhetoric on the part of numerous
influential politicians. And, furthermore,
there were no other conceivable
political allies available.
The Alliance Continued
• But, on the negative side, the
acceptance of libertarian ideas by
Hoover, the Liberty League, et al., was
clearly superficial and in the realm of
general rhetoric only; given their true
preferences, not one of them would
have accepted the Spencerian laissez-
faire model for America”
Moves Toward War
• So far, we have been talking about opposition to
the domestic programs of the New Deal.
• One of the most important points of the Old Right
during the 1920s had been opposition to American
entry into WWI.
• At first, Roosevelt didn’t disagree. He was
interested in domestic reform, not international
affairs. Charles Beard, American Foreign Policy
in the Making, 1932-1940, discusses this.
Moves Toward War Continued
• Roosevelt’s policy changed in the late 1930s. He
came to believe that the US should oppose both
the increasing power of Germany under Hitler and
also Japanese imperialism in China.
• A key turning point was the Chicago Bridge
Speech of October 1937 that called for
quarantining the aggressors. Soviet Russia wasn’t
included among the aggressors.
Quarantine the Aggressors
• Here is the key passage from Roosevelt’s
speech:”It seems to be unfortunately true
that the epidemic of world lawlessness is
spreading. When an epidemic of physical
disease starts to spread, the community
approves and joins in a quarantine of the
patients in order to protect the health of the
community against the spread of the
disease.”
Collective Security
• The key assumption in Roosevelt’s speech
has been the basis for subsequent American
foreign policy.
• This assumption is that American security
depends on security everywhere. Charles
Beard stressed the importance of this
assumption.
• The Old Right rejected this assumption
John T. Flynn
• John T. Flynn was one of the most important
people on the Old Right. He linked criticism of
FDR’s domestic and foreign policies.
• His basic argument was that Roosevelt needed to
have outlets for the government spending he
wanted. Purely domestic spending was too
controversial. Roosevelt needed to picture the US
as threatened by foreign powers in order to get
support for bigger government.
Flynn and German Historians
• Flynn was a pioneer in the study of the influence
of domestic considerations on foreign policy.
• In Weimar Germany, Eckart Kehr argued that
domestic considerations influenced German naval
policy in the period 1894-1901. Beard was aware
of his work.
• Later, the anti-revisionist Fritz Fischer also
stressed the importance of domestic interests on
German foreign policy.
Flynn Continued
• Here is a key passage from Flynn:
• "We have created a huge national debt to relieve
poverty and idleness and produce recovery. With
the money we have built schools, hospitals,
playgrounds, roads, parkways. But now it is no
longer possible to support such expenditures.
Powerful resistance has developed. . . . But the
spending must go on or the present government
will face a collapse. And hence this one great
imperious call to national defense is invoked"
Garet Garrett
• Another important person on the Old Right
was Garet Garrett, who was an editor of the
Saturday Evening Post.
• “Led by a revolutionary elite of
intellectuals,the New Deal centralized
political and economic power in the
Executive, and Garrett traced this
process step by step.
Garrett Continued
• As a consequence,the “ultimate power
of initiative” passed from private
enterprise to government, which
“became the great capitalist and
enterpriser. Unconsciously business
concedes the fact when it talks of a
mixed economy, even accepts it as
inevitable.”
More Garrett
• Garrett, like Flynn, was also a critic of
Roosevelt’s interventionist policies. He
didn’t ignore the possibility that Germany
might pose a threat to America, but he
thought this should be met by internal
defense rather than foreign involvements.
Garrett on Wilsonianism
• Here is Garrett on the dangers of Wilson-
type interventionism:
• “They are defeatists who develop the
beautiful thought that if America will now
put her strength forth in the world, instead
of keeping it selfishly to herself, the
principle of evil can be chained down. . . .
Garrett on Wilsonianism
Continued
• Suppose we had reconquered Europe for
democracy, and the principle of evil were
chained down. What should we do about
the peace? Leave it to Europe? We did that
once [without success]. . . . Should we stay
there to police it? Or should we come home
and stand ready to go back to mind or mend
it when something went wrong?"
The End of Isolation
• Roosevelt followed a confrontational policy
toward Japan. According to the revisionists, such
as Tansill and Barnes, Roosevelt’s aim was to
provoke a Japanese attack so that America would
enter the war in Europe through the “back door”
of Japan.
• Roosevelt was relying on the fact that Germany
and Japan had signed the Axis Pact.
The End of Isolation Continued
• The most powerful anti-interventionist
organization was the America First Committee.
Flynn was the head of the New York chapter.
Lindbergh was the Committee’s most famous
speaker.
• Once Pearl Harbor was attacked, the AFC
dissolved. The leadership thought that war in
Europe was inevitable and made no attempt to
separate the war in the Pacific from the European
war.
The Pearl Harbor Attack
• Hitler declared war on the US, so Roosevelt
got his wish to enter the war.
• Why did he do so? In part because there
was no attempt by the US isolationists to
confine the war to Japan.
• If Hitler hadn’t declared war, Roosevelt
intended to ask Congress for a declaration
of war against Germany anyway.
Revisionism During the War
• Once the war started, the activities of the Old
Right in opposing FDR’s foreign policy were
curtailed.
• However, people on the Old Right thought that
Roosevelt had provoked Japan. Herbert Hoover
held this view.
• In 1944, John T. Flynn published The Truth
About Pearl Harbor and in 1945 The Final Secret
of Pearl Harbor, charging that Roosevelt had
provoked the Japanese attack.

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Truman & Eisenhower
Truman & EisenhowerTruman & Eisenhower
Truman & Eisenhower
Melissa
 
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign PolicyAmerican Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
cyruskarimian
 
Truman Power Point
Truman Power PointTruman Power Point
Truman Power Point
guest31a9eb2
 
The United States and the Cold War
The United States and the Cold WarThe United States and the Cold War
The United States and the Cold War
Heather Powell
 
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 NotesUnited States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
skorbar7
 
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 NotesUnited States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
skorbar7
 
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
kbeacom
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall PlanTruman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
 
Truman & Eisenhower
Truman & EisenhowerTruman & Eisenhower
Truman & Eisenhower
 
Radical anti-imperialism in the American Foreign Policy
Radical anti-imperialism in the American Foreign PolicyRadical anti-imperialism in the American Foreign Policy
Radical anti-imperialism in the American Foreign Policy
 
Ch.15 searching for order
Ch.15  searching for orderCh.15  searching for order
Ch.15 searching for order
 
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign PolicyAmerican Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
American Government - Chapter 16 - Foreign Policy
 
Ch.16 america looks to the future
Ch.16  america looks to the futureCh.16  america looks to the future
Ch.16 america looks to the future
 
Truman Power Point
Truman Power PointTruman Power Point
Truman Power Point
 
Domain 5 US History - Cold War to Modern Politics
Domain 5 US History - Cold War to Modern PoliticsDomain 5 US History - Cold War to Modern Politics
Domain 5 US History - Cold War to Modern Politics
 
An Overview of the Marshall Plan (the Long Version)
An Overview of the Marshall Plan (the Long Version)An Overview of the Marshall Plan (the Long Version)
An Overview of the Marshall Plan (the Long Version)
 
The United States and the Cold War
The United States and the Cold WarThe United States and the Cold War
The United States and the Cold War
 
Isolationism in the American Foreign Policy
Isolationism in the American Foreign PolicyIsolationism in the American Foreign Policy
Isolationism in the American Foreign Policy
 
3rd Six Weeks Review
3rd Six Weeks Review3rd Six Weeks Review
3rd Six Weeks Review
 
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 NotesUnited States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
United States History Ch. 15 Section 5 Notes
 
Comparing the Logics of American Foreign Policy
Comparing the Logics of American Foreign PolicyComparing the Logics of American Foreign Policy
Comparing the Logics of American Foreign Policy
 
Ch.14 the vietnam war
Ch.14  the vietnam warCh.14  the vietnam war
Ch.14 the vietnam war
 
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 NotesUnited States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
United States History Ch. 16 Section 1 Notes
 
Eoct review questions gps 19 and 20 wwii and cold war
Eoct review questions gps 19 and 20 wwii and cold warEoct review questions gps 19 and 20 wwii and cold war
Eoct review questions gps 19 and 20 wwii and cold war
 
Marshall plan (2)
Marshall plan (2)Marshall plan (2)
Marshall plan (2)
 
Liberalism internationalism in the American Foreign Policy
Liberalism internationalism in the American Foreign PolicyLiberalism internationalism in the American Foreign Policy
Liberalism internationalism in the American Foreign Policy
 
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
20.3--Domestic Politics (Truman & Eisenhower)
 

Andere mochten auch

Andere mochten auch (8)

Principles of Economics, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Principles of Economics, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyPrinciples of Economics, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Principles of Economics, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyEconomic Reasoning, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Money, Monopoly and Market Intervention, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises...
Money, Monopoly and Market Intervention, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises...Money, Monopoly and Market Intervention, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises...
Money, Monopoly and Market Intervention, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises...
 
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyThe Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyEconomic Reasoning, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Economic Reasoning, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Why Capitalism?, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Why Capitalism?, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy Why Capitalism?, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Why Capitalism?, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Praxeology Through Price Theory, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Praxeology Through Price Theory, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyPraxeology Through Price Theory, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Praxeology Through Price Theory, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Tips Be More Productive In Your Business
Tips Be More Productive In Your BusinessTips Be More Productive In Your Business
Tips Be More Productive In Your Business
 

Ähnlich wie The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy

HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
 HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
aryan532920
 
Hitler’s aims and aspirations
Hitler’s aims and aspirationsHitler’s aims and aspirations
Hitler’s aims and aspirations
Elizabeth Lugones
 

Ähnlich wie The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy (20)

The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
 
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
 
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lect...
 
Chapter 29: World War II
Chapter 29: World War IIChapter 29: World War II
Chapter 29: World War II
 
Hunting hitler
Hunting hitler Hunting hitler
Hunting hitler
 
Unit 7: World War II [PowerPoint: Part 1]
Unit 7: World War II [PowerPoint: Part 1]Unit 7: World War II [PowerPoint: Part 1]
Unit 7: World War II [PowerPoint: Part 1]
 
Hitler and totalitarianism
Hitler and totalitarianismHitler and totalitarianism
Hitler and totalitarianism
 
GE3.pptx
GE3.pptxGE3.pptx
GE3.pptx
 
Nazism and the_rise_of_hitler
Nazism and the_rise_of_hitlerNazism and the_rise_of_hitler
Nazism and the_rise_of_hitler
 
Opposition.pptx
Opposition.pptxOpposition.pptx
Opposition.pptx
 
Eoct review questions gps 15 and 16 wwi and roaring 20s
Eoct review questions gps 15 and 16 wwi and roaring 20sEoct review questions gps 15 and 16 wwi and roaring 20s
Eoct review questions gps 15 and 16 wwi and roaring 20s
 
World War II Vocabulary
World War II VocabularyWorld War II Vocabulary
World War II Vocabulary
 
Workbook lesson 33
Workbook lesson 33Workbook lesson 33
Workbook lesson 33
 
HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
 HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
HY 1120, American History II 1 Course Learning Outcom.docx
 
Hitler's nazi era in germany
Hitler's nazi era in germanyHitler's nazi era in germany
Hitler's nazi era in germany
 
Hitler’s aims and aspirations
Hitler’s aims and aspirationsHitler’s aims and aspirations
Hitler’s aims and aspirations
 
Whoam i world2_review_part3
Whoam i world2_review_part3Whoam i world2_review_part3
Whoam i world2_review_part3
 
What’s your question2
What’s your question2What’s your question2
What’s your question2
 
Franklin D Roosevelt Qualities
Franklin D Roosevelt QualitiesFranklin D Roosevelt Qualities
Franklin D Roosevelt Qualities
 
Nationalism WWII
Nationalism WWIINationalism WWII
Nationalism WWII
 

Mehr von The Ludwig von Mises Institute

Mehr von The Ludwig von Mises Institute (20)

Money - Malavika Nair
Money - Malavika NairMoney - Malavika Nair
Money - Malavika Nair
 
Business Cycles - Jonathan Newman
Business Cycles - Jonathan NewmanBusiness Cycles - Jonathan Newman
Business Cycles - Jonathan Newman
 
The Age of Crony Capitalism, Lecture 1 - Robert Batemarco
The Age of Crony Capitalism, Lecture 1 - Robert BatemarcoThe Age of Crony Capitalism, Lecture 1 - Robert Batemarco
The Age of Crony Capitalism, Lecture 1 - Robert Batemarco
 
The Ghost of Keynes, Lecture 1 - William Anderson
The Ghost of Keynes, Lecture 1 - William AndersonThe Ghost of Keynes, Lecture 1 - William Anderson
The Ghost of Keynes, Lecture 1 - William Anderson
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 6 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 5 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 3 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 3 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 3 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 3 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 2 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 1 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 1 with Robert Murphy - Mises AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 1 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 1 with Robert Murphy - Mises Academy
 
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 4 with Robert Murphy - MIses Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 4 with Robert Murphy - MIses AcademyAnarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 4 with Robert Murphy - MIses Academy
Anarcho-Capitalism, Lecture 4 with Robert Murphy - MIses Academy
 
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyAyn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyAyn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyAyn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyAyn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 6 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 6 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyAyn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 6 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Lecture 6 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises A...Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 5 with David Gordon - Mises A...
 
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises A...Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 4 with David Gordon - Mises A...
 
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises A...Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 3 with David Gordon - Mises A...
 
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises A...Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises A...
 
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises A...Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises A...
Libertarianism and Modern Philosophers, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises A...
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Chris Hunter
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
MateoGardella
 
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptxSeal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
negromaestrong
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
kauryashika82
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdfWeb & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
 
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfClass 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
 
Application orientated numerical on hev.ppt
Application orientated numerical on hev.pptApplication orientated numerical on hev.ppt
Application orientated numerical on hev.ppt
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
 
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
 
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxSOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
 
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
 
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
 
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptxSeal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
Seal of Good Local Governance (SGLG) 2024Final.pptx
 
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
PROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docxPROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docx
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
 
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDMeasures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 

The Betrayal of the American Right and the Rise of the Neoconservatives, Lecture 2 with David Gordon - Mises Academy

  • 1. Betrayal of the Old Right, Lecture 2 The New Deal and World War II
  • 2. Why the Old “Right”? • Last time, we raised the problem: why does Rothbard call the Old Right by that name when Nock and Mencken were classical liberals? • Also, some of the anti-war people allied with the Old Right were Progressives, like Charles A. Beard and Harry Elmer Barnes.
  • 3. The New Deal • After FDR became President in March 1933, he proposed a number of radical measures, such as the NIRA. • Roosevelt had said in the 1932 that Hoover was a big spender and that the government needed to reduce spending.
  • 4. The New Deal Continued • Roosevelt received an unprecedented grant of power from Congress when he took office. There were very few limits on what he could do, except for the power of the Supreme Court to declare measures unconstitutional. • Some supporters of the New Deal, like Rexford Tugwell, were sympathetic to planning both in Soviet Russia and Fascist Italy.
  • 5. More New Deal • Both Hitler and Mussolini were at first sympathetic to the New Deal. • The NRA, under General Hugh Johnson, had some authoritarian elements like those characteristic of fascism. Johnson condoned illegal boycotts of businessmen that wouldn’t conform to “voluntary” NRA guidelines.
  • 6. Business and the New Deal • These measures were not opposed by all business interests. On the contrary, some businesses supported them, because they would help eliminate their competition. • The Swope Plan was an example. Gerard Swope helped draft the NIRA. He was president of General Electric
  • 7. Business and the New Deal Continued • Also, these measures brought back some of the wartime measures introduced during WWI. Bernard Baruch, an influential administrator during WWI, was the mentor of Hugh Johnson.
  • 8. Anti-New Deal Movements • Not all businessmen favored the New Deal. • Those more inclined to the free market were often conservative Democrats, like John J. Raskob of Dupont. • The conservative business groups founded the American Liberty League. • Although Herbert Hoover’s interventionist measures prefigured the New Deal, he thought FDR had gone too far. He wrote an attack on the New Deal, Challenge to Liberty (1934)
  • 9. Anti-New Deal Movements and the Old Right • Mencken, Nock, and other members of the Old Right allied with the anti-New Deal organizations. • This is the real answer to our question, what makes the Old Right “right”. The movement became more allied to conservative business interests as the New Deal progressed.
  • 10. The Alliance • “In fact, the individualists were in a bind at this sudden accession of old enemies as allies. On the positive side, it meant a rapid acceleration of libertarian rhetoric on the part of numerous influential politicians. And, furthermore, there were no other conceivable political allies available.
  • 11. The Alliance Continued • But, on the negative side, the acceptance of libertarian ideas by Hoover, the Liberty League, et al., was clearly superficial and in the realm of general rhetoric only; given their true preferences, not one of them would have accepted the Spencerian laissez- faire model for America”
  • 12. Moves Toward War • So far, we have been talking about opposition to the domestic programs of the New Deal. • One of the most important points of the Old Right during the 1920s had been opposition to American entry into WWI. • At first, Roosevelt didn’t disagree. He was interested in domestic reform, not international affairs. Charles Beard, American Foreign Policy in the Making, 1932-1940, discusses this.
  • 13. Moves Toward War Continued • Roosevelt’s policy changed in the late 1930s. He came to believe that the US should oppose both the increasing power of Germany under Hitler and also Japanese imperialism in China. • A key turning point was the Chicago Bridge Speech of October 1937 that called for quarantining the aggressors. Soviet Russia wasn’t included among the aggressors.
  • 14. Quarantine the Aggressors • Here is the key passage from Roosevelt’s speech:”It seems to be unfortunately true that the epidemic of world lawlessness is spreading. When an epidemic of physical disease starts to spread, the community approves and joins in a quarantine of the patients in order to protect the health of the community against the spread of the disease.”
  • 15. Collective Security • The key assumption in Roosevelt’s speech has been the basis for subsequent American foreign policy. • This assumption is that American security depends on security everywhere. Charles Beard stressed the importance of this assumption. • The Old Right rejected this assumption
  • 16. John T. Flynn • John T. Flynn was one of the most important people on the Old Right. He linked criticism of FDR’s domestic and foreign policies. • His basic argument was that Roosevelt needed to have outlets for the government spending he wanted. Purely domestic spending was too controversial. Roosevelt needed to picture the US as threatened by foreign powers in order to get support for bigger government.
  • 17. Flynn and German Historians • Flynn was a pioneer in the study of the influence of domestic considerations on foreign policy. • In Weimar Germany, Eckart Kehr argued that domestic considerations influenced German naval policy in the period 1894-1901. Beard was aware of his work. • Later, the anti-revisionist Fritz Fischer also stressed the importance of domestic interests on German foreign policy.
  • 18. Flynn Continued • Here is a key passage from Flynn: • "We have created a huge national debt to relieve poverty and idleness and produce recovery. With the money we have built schools, hospitals, playgrounds, roads, parkways. But now it is no longer possible to support such expenditures. Powerful resistance has developed. . . . But the spending must go on or the present government will face a collapse. And hence this one great imperious call to national defense is invoked"
  • 19. Garet Garrett • Another important person on the Old Right was Garet Garrett, who was an editor of the Saturday Evening Post. • “Led by a revolutionary elite of intellectuals,the New Deal centralized political and economic power in the Executive, and Garrett traced this process step by step.
  • 20. Garrett Continued • As a consequence,the “ultimate power of initiative” passed from private enterprise to government, which “became the great capitalist and enterpriser. Unconsciously business concedes the fact when it talks of a mixed economy, even accepts it as inevitable.”
  • 21. More Garrett • Garrett, like Flynn, was also a critic of Roosevelt’s interventionist policies. He didn’t ignore the possibility that Germany might pose a threat to America, but he thought this should be met by internal defense rather than foreign involvements.
  • 22. Garrett on Wilsonianism • Here is Garrett on the dangers of Wilson- type interventionism: • “They are defeatists who develop the beautiful thought that if America will now put her strength forth in the world, instead of keeping it selfishly to herself, the principle of evil can be chained down. . . .
  • 23. Garrett on Wilsonianism Continued • Suppose we had reconquered Europe for democracy, and the principle of evil were chained down. What should we do about the peace? Leave it to Europe? We did that once [without success]. . . . Should we stay there to police it? Or should we come home and stand ready to go back to mind or mend it when something went wrong?"
  • 24. The End of Isolation • Roosevelt followed a confrontational policy toward Japan. According to the revisionists, such as Tansill and Barnes, Roosevelt’s aim was to provoke a Japanese attack so that America would enter the war in Europe through the “back door” of Japan. • Roosevelt was relying on the fact that Germany and Japan had signed the Axis Pact.
  • 25. The End of Isolation Continued • The most powerful anti-interventionist organization was the America First Committee. Flynn was the head of the New York chapter. Lindbergh was the Committee’s most famous speaker. • Once Pearl Harbor was attacked, the AFC dissolved. The leadership thought that war in Europe was inevitable and made no attempt to separate the war in the Pacific from the European war.
  • 26. The Pearl Harbor Attack • Hitler declared war on the US, so Roosevelt got his wish to enter the war. • Why did he do so? In part because there was no attempt by the US isolationists to confine the war to Japan. • If Hitler hadn’t declared war, Roosevelt intended to ask Congress for a declaration of war against Germany anyway.
  • 27. Revisionism During the War • Once the war started, the activities of the Old Right in opposing FDR’s foreign policy were curtailed. • However, people on the Old Right thought that Roosevelt had provoked Japan. Herbert Hoover held this view. • In 1944, John T. Flynn published The Truth About Pearl Harbor and in 1945 The Final Secret of Pearl Harbor, charging that Roosevelt had provoked the Japanese attack.