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History Unfolding
A historian's comments on current events, foreign and domestic.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Living Through History
[Although the pace has slowed, people are still arriving here
because they have received an email on the current state of America.
If you are curious about my own views of the origins and consequences
of the current crisis in American life, I recommend this link.
However, the email attributed to myself comparing President Obama
to Adolf Hitler, is a forgery which I did not write. All visitors
may also be interested to read the following post. Meanwhile,
here is the best explanation I've found of why that email
is so incredibly popular.]
The great crises of American history, from the American Revolution
and the writing of the Constitution through the Civil War and
onward to the Depression and Second World War, look very different
in retrospect than they did at the time. We experience them over
days or weeks of reading or, in the case of historians like myself,
intermittent years of study, but even then, they go much more
quickly in one's office or study than they did at the time. We
now know what would endure and what would not, what achievements
would have the greatest long-term impact, and what new problems
would be left behind for future generations. Those like myself
who expected the crisis may be even more disappointed than others
because so many of our fellow countrymen have not yet grasped
how deep our problems are--not to speak of an angry minority who,
if history can be trusted, never will. Tonight marks another milestone
in the Obama Administration. The Senate has voted on strict party
lines to allow the health care reform bill to come to the floor,
allowing us to hope that some version of it will indeed be passed.
Yet during this same week, other evidence has suggested how far
we have to go--and the events of the past year have also made
clear how much this crisis differs from the last one.
Thus, in 1932 and in 2008, a series of catastrophes led to a change
of Administration, in each case from a laissez-faire Republican
to an activist Democrat. In both cases this result had been foreshadowed
by the Congressional elections of two years previously, which
had given the Democrats control of at least one house of Congress.
Yet the timing was in many ways profoundly different. The economic
crisis had lasted for three horrible years when FDR won election,
but less than one when Obama won his. That has had two very different,
but serious, impacts upon the Administration, the Republican opposition,
and the country.
To begin with, Obama, unlike Roosevelt, did not come to power
in the midst of a crisis so serious that no even halfway reasonable
person could deny the need for drastic, unprecedented action.
Even now unemployement is only about half what it was in March
1933. Our banking system has been threatened with collapse; theirs
was collapsing, and without the backing of the FDIC. The initial
New Deal measures, including the NRA--which actually gave the
government the kind of coordinating power over the private sector
that today's "conservatives" claim that Obama wants--sailed
through with large majorities, and the country was at least as
unified during 1933 as it was on the eve of war in 1941, if not
more so. Things had not gone half so far in January 2009, and
the Republican Party decided it could rely on a stance of total
opposition, one that has gotten worse, not better, as the year
has gone on. Two Republican Senators from Maine voted for the
stimulus. Neither voted to allow debate on the health care reform
measure tonight. In addition, as many observers (led by the excellent
website fivethirtyeight.com ) have pointed out, Democrats from
districts and states that rejected Obama are terribly frightened
of voting for his major initiatives.
Health care reform, while desperately necessary, will do no immediate
political good--it will take years to implement even the relatively
modest reforms we are now talking about, and a lot longer to control
costs. Jobs are even more necessary, both for the health of the
nation and the political health of the President and his party.
Here the Administration has been too cautious and the voters of
New Jersey, in particular, seem to have taken their anger out
on the Democrats. There are, however, signs that the Congress,
whose rear ends are on the line, is taking note, and talk of another
stimulus package. Perhaps this time it should frankly take the
form of large grants to state and local governments, who are cutting
back education and other services at a truly alarming rate, and
therefore increasing unemployment and slowing recovery. The Administration
needs to make the voters feel that it is acting on their behalf,
and by the time Obama runs for re-election he will have to have
presented a coherent long-term plan for the economy.
Another problem was highlighted Friday by Paul Krugman in one
of his scariest columns. It explained to me, for the first time,
why the big banks--apparently on the verge of collapse only a
year ago--have rebounded so dramatically (although there are still
big questions about Bank of America in particular.) Prominent
among their worthless assets were the collateralized debt obligations
and other exotic instruments they had bought from AIG--their supposed
protection against an economic downturn (yes, that's right!) on
which AIG could not pay off. The AIG rescue, arranged by the Bush
Administration last year, it turns out, actually committed the
Federal Government to pay off those obligations, rather than force
the big banks to take some responsibility for their own folly
and take a substantial loss. Timothy Geithner, then head of the
New York Federal Reserve Bank, was apparently on board with this,
and there is no sign that he wants to see the superbanks take
a big hit--much less bring back something like the late, lamented
Glass-Steagall Act and put them out of business. In my opinion,
this leaves us with at least a 50-50 chance of another major financial
crisis during the next three years or so. Meanwhile, as Krugman
has pointed out, the federal government has used up an enormous
amount of its resources and its political capital without bringing
about any real change in a dysfunctional system. The powers that
be, led by Geithner and Larry Summers, were not yet ready to acknowledge
that it was necessary. Sadly, almost every other available distinguished
economic policy maker would have done the same. It takes more
than one year of crisis, however frightening, to bring truly new
ideas into the policy arena.
And as if that were not enough, the sectional divisions within
the country, while not yet quite as bad as in the 1860s when they
led to actual war, are actually far worse than they were in the
1930s. The South in the 1930s was sufficiently devastated by the
Depression to welcome the New Deal, and indeed, for three decades
certain areas of the region--especially those served by the Tennessee
Valley Authority, including both Tennessee and large parts of
Alabama--sent men to Washington who were economic liberals. But
politics in most of the South--including that new electoral giant,
Texas--have now been dominated by social issues, race, and anti-government
feeling (much of it of racial origin) for decades, and much, though
not all, of the region is so far quite immune to President Obama's
appeal.
Under the circumstances, we should not perhaps be surprised that
things have moved so slowly. As I have already said many times
and will undoubtedly have occasion to repeat again, northern abolitionists
saw little to praise in the first year of Lincoln's Administration,
and during 1862, many Republicans saw General McClellan--and not
without reason--the same way that many liberal Democrats today
see Secretary Geithner, that is, as a man with too much sympathy
for the enemy. President Obama's handling of Afghanistan--still
in progress as I write--suggests that he wants to base decisions
upon real data. That encourages me to believe that he will look
both for new measures and new men and women as things continue
to get worse. But meanwhile, he also needs to put his own magic
to work to change the way the country is thinking about its problems.
He is not, in my opinion, making enough speeches or holding enough
press conferences, particularly on domestic affairs. He has not
put forth a New Deal, New Frontier or Great Society, thus giving
his enemies too much power to define him. I believe that this
crisis will still be continuing not just three, but eight years
from now, but that gives him enough time to put the nation on
a new path. Meanwhile, if anything is to be done anytime soon,
the Democrats need his political magic to avoid serious losses
next fall.
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Echoes of Vietnam
As the Administration struggles over Afghanistan, the parallels
with Vietnam multiply. Two relate the country itself: the third,
to developments within Washington, D.C. None of them holds out
much hope of avoiding another setback, albeit on a lesser scale.
In Afghanistan since 2001, as in Vietnam after 1954, we have put
our trust in one local leader: Hamid Karzai now, and Ngo Dinh
Diem then. Neither one has lived up to our expectations as a worthy,
modernizing third-world leader, although Diem managed to put up
a better front in those more innocent days. I was reminded of
the comparison a week or two ago when the New York Times
ran a long story about Karzai's brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai. It
revealed, first that brother Ahmed is almost universally believed
to be deeply involved in the poppy trade, and secondly, that he
has been on a regular retainer from the Central Intelligence Agency.
A bell rang in my head.
Ngo Dinh Diem's right-hand man was his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu, his
"counselor," minister of the interior, and head of various
security services. Nhu did not traffic in drugs, although he was
widely rumored to consume them. His beautiful wife, Madame Nhu,
had political ambitions, a very sharp tongue, and an unfortunate
facility with the English language, which enabled her directly
to address the American people with frequently disastrous results.
Nhu thought of himself as an intellectual and promulgated a philosophy
called personalism, which stressed the duties of Vietnamese citizens
to the state. He despised all political opposition and within
a few years of 1954 had become easily the most hated man in Vietnam.
With rare but critical exceptions, most Americans in Vietnam regarded
him as the regime's biggest liability. Elbridge Durbrow, Eisenhower's
last Ambassador there, suggested bluntly to Diem that Nhu should
be appointed an Ambassador elsewhere. Even Ed Lansdale, the Air
Force General and one-time CIA operative who did so much to put
Diem in power in 1954-5, thought Diem would be better off without
him. What Americans never seemed to realize was that Nhu was far
more critical to his President/brother than Robert F. Kennedy
was to his. While Diem was trotting around the globe (and visiting
the US) in 1954, making friends and influencing people, Nhu was
setting up the Ngo family machine (which included two other brothers
as well.) Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge renewed the demand for
Nhu's departure in the fall of 1963, during the Buddhist crisis,
but Diem told him it was "out of the question."
Nhu had patrons, however, within the CIA, which funded many of
his operations. Two stattion chiefs, William Colby (from 1959
to 1962) and John Richardson (1962-3) met with Nhu once or twice
a week, developing relationships at least as important as those
between Diem and successive Ambassadors. Recognizing their importance,
I in 1992, when I was beginning work on American Tragedy,
asked the Agency to release the accounts of all the conversations
between Colby and Richardson on the one hand and Nhu on the other.
The Agency replied that their records could not be searched for
those documents. Imagine my surprise, earlier this year, when
I discovered that the CIA had published some internally commissioned
histories of its role in Vietnam, including one, "The CIA
and the Ngo family," which drew on almost every page upon
the exact documents that I had requested. In a somewhat testy
conversation with a CIA FOIA officer, I received the distinct
impression that the Agency has constructed a separate database
of its files for the sole purpose of responding to FOIA requests,
and that it does not include anything that they are determined
not to release.
Like Ngo Dinh Nhu, who was assassinated along with his brother
on November 2, 1963, Ahmed Wali Karzai seems to be both a presumed
US asset and a liability to his brother, another ineffective leader.
The denouement of the Afghan presidential election debacle last
month also recalls Vietnam. There, too, the United States insisted
after Diem's overthrow in establishing a new constitution and,
eventually in 1967, a presidential election designed to ratify
the rule of General Nguyen van Thieu, who had supplanted another
general, Nguyen Cao Ky, as the US favorite. The CIA provided get-out-the-vote
money for Thieu, but his minions apparently were lax in distributing
it, and in the election, Thieu won with an embarrassing plurality
of only 38%. Second in a multi-candidate field was a peace candidate,
Truong Dinh Dzu, whom Thieu managed to jail a few years later.
The real parallel to the recent election, however, occurred four
years later, when Thieu ran for re-election. Both Nguyen Cao Ky
and Duong Van Minh, the Buddhist General who had led the coup
against Diem, had hopes of defeating Thieu in a three-way race,
and the North Vietnamese reportedly let Henry Kissinger know that
a change of president would make it much easier to conclude a
peace agreement. Thieu however found a legal stratagem to bar
Ky from the race, and Big Minh, as he was known, realized that
he had no chance in a two-man race and withdrew himself. According
to recent reports, U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker offered Minh
$1 million to run in order to give the election some legitimacy,
but he refused. None of this could have helped Thieu much in the
struggle that really counted, the long-term battle against the
Viet Cong.
Viewed from across the ocean, the election in Afghanistan seems
to have turned out even worse. To begin with, the Taliban successfully
prevented voters in large parts of the country from taking part.
In addition, Karzai evidently defeated his main rival, Abdullah
Abdullah, with the help of massive vote fraud. An international
inquiry resulted, and the Americans--replaying, in a sense, the
role of Ellsworth Bunker--managed to insist upon holding the election
again. But Abdullah Abdullah, arguing that the second election
would be just as bad as the first, withdrew--for reasons about
which we can as yet only speculate. Once again the United States
retains the local leader it thinks it wants--but at an obvious
cost in that leader's legitimacy which cannot bode well for his
future.
The other parallel relates to those two externally very similar
Presidents, John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama. Kennedy did not
inherit an ongoing war in Southeast Asia, but he did, as I showed
clearly in American Tragedy, inherit a policy. The Eisenhower
Administration had committed the US to fight for either Laos or
South Vietnam in internal policy statements, and Kennedy as a
result faced a flurry of recommendations to intervene in both
countries--supported by his entire senior foreign policy team--almost
as soon as he came into office. I shall leave aside the details
regrading Laos today, but here are some of the key facts about
Vietnam.
On July 28, Secretary of State Rusk, in a White House meeting,
suggested that the United States prepare for ground intervention
in Laos, an air attack on North Vietnam in retaliation for Viet
Cong activity in South Vietnam, and a troop intervention in South
Vietnam, if necessary, to deal with the consequences. Kennedy
made it clear that he had no intention of intervening in Laos
and that he doubted the wisdom of the attack on Hanoi. A new series
of meetings a month later, also focusing on plans for intervention
in Laos, had the same result. But Deputy National Security Adviser
Walt Rostow continued to beat the drum for military intervention
during September, and in early October, the Joint Chiefs called
for sending more than 20,000 men to South Vietnam right away.
The State Department endorsed these plans on October 11. Kennedy
replied by agreeing to send his special military representative,
General Maxwell Taylor, to South Vietnam--along with Rostow--to
look into the situation--and he himself revised Taylor's instructions
to make it clear that he did not want the United States
to take over military responsibility in South Vietnam. Nonetheless,
Taylor returned with a recommendation for a small token force
that could be expanded if necessary. This, however, was quickly
overtaken by a new Pentagon recommendation for a larger intervention,
eventually endorsed by Rusk, Secretary McNamara, and McGeorge
Bundy. After more meetings, Kennedy on November 15 finally made
clear in no uncertain terms that he did not intend to put American
forces in Southeast Asia. Such a war, he said, would draw little
or no allied support and would be most difficult to explain to
the American people. After that meeting he apparently had a talk
with McGeorge Bundy, his National Security Adviser, in which he
complained that none of his team seemed to understand what he
wanted in Southest Asia. Bundy responded with the suggestion of
making Averell Harriman--who was bringing negotiations on Laos
to a successful conclusion--the Assistant Secretary of State for
the Far East, while moving Rostow out of the White House. Kennedy
agreed.
Press reports suggest that President Obama has beene equally dissatisfied
by the proposals his team--which does not seem to have questioned
the fatal flaw in the Bush Administration strategy of trying to
install client regimes in the Muslim world--has been giving him
for Afghanistan. Unfortunately we live in a different world, and
he, unlike Kennedy, has not managed to keep the argument a secret.
Thanks to the McChrystal leak, we all know what the General wants
now, while very little of the pressure on Kennedy leaked through
during 1961. President Obama also seems to understand that nothing
the US does is going to help very much if the Karzai government,
which has now been in power almost as long as Diem was before
he was overthrown, cannot improve. But whether he, like Kennedy,
will overrule his team is unknown. Gary Wills in the current New
York Review of Books says that many believe that Obama will
be a one-term President if he withdraws from both Iraq and Afghanistan.
I personally think the chances are at least as good that he will
be a one-term President if he does not.
Saturday, November 07, 2009
The New Civil Conflict
[People are still arriving here because they have received
an email on the current state of America. If you are curious about
my own views of the origins and consequences of the current crisis
in American life, I recommend this link. However, the email
attributed to myself comparing President Obama to Adolf Hitler,
is a forgery which I did not write. All visitors may also be interested
to read the following post. Meanwhile, here is the best explanation
I've found of why that email is so incredibly popular.] For an
afterword on the hoax, see the bottom of this post.
War, wrote Mao Zedong,is politics with bloodshed, and politics
is war without bloodshed. He was right: the advances of our civilization
have depended upon finding non-violent substitutes for violent
conflict. I first began to understand this in the 1980s, when
I was working intermittently on two different books, one on the
case of Sacco and Vanzetti (a project I inherited from a dead
friend), and the second on European conflict over several centuries,
beginning in 1559. As I studied in detail how the lawyers on both
sides of that famous murder case tried everything they could get
away with to win (the prosecution, in particular, withheld a lot
of exculpatory evidence that today they would have to reveal),
I realized that contestants in the legal process would be content
with no less, since they have, in effect, submitted to it rather
than fight the dispute out by force of arms. Meanwhile, as I showed
in Politics and War, Europe from 1559 through 1659 was
inherently, continually unstable because the rich, rather than
the poor, routinely took the law into their own hands and refused
to submit to higher authority--a situation that began to change
in the latter half the 17th century. The United States was the
first modern nation based entirely upon written laws, and Lincoln
in the Civil War argued that the real stake in the war was not
slavery, but whether a free government could preserve itself against
a violent internal threat. The answer was yes.
Today's struggles, like those of early modern Europe, deal with
money, prestige, and even religious hatred. Moneyed interests,
represented by our leading industries--finance and health care--are
perhaps as powerful in Washington today as they were in the late
nineteenth century. Today's battles, like those of the civil war,
also involve sectional rivalry. Much of the South lives in a different
mental universe that the Northeast and the Far West, as illustrated
dramatically in a book I have begun reading, Confederates in
the Attic, as well as by the behavior of Southern legislators
in Congress or the Justice of the Peace who refused to grant a
marriage license to a biracial couple. (He has since resigned.)
This is the country that Barack Obama wants to take in a new direction.
It is not clear how much of a success will be possible.
Thus, as a vote nears in the House of Representatives, today's
papers report that Speaker Pelosi has given in to conservative
Democrats who insist that neither the public option (which will
not be an entitlement program but will be funded by premiums)
or any private plan sold through a government-sponsored exchange
will cover abortions, except in cases of rape, incest, or threat
to the mother's life. (It will be interesting to see if that exemption
survives.) That is a concession to very strong religious beliefs,
which are prevailing against the law as declared (perhaps unwisely,
as a I have noted) by the Supreme Court in 1973 and frequently
reaffirmed since. Meanwhile, the New York Times reports,
the Speaker has been attending fundraisers around the country
in the company of some of the health care industry's leading lobbyists.
For reasons which I do not understand, she has forbidden even
a symbolic vote on the House floor on a single-payer plan. The
whole process of designing the legislation, indeed, has largely
been a matter of figuring out how much reform the insurance industry
is willing to tolerate. Since we can save money only at their
expense, this does not leave too much room for optimism about
how much a new plan will do to ease the crisis in health care
costs about which the President has said so much.
Some weeks ago I saw Michael Moore's new movie, Capitalism,
A Love Story. It contained some wonderful footage and fascinating
material, but I thought it was below his best work (including
Sicko) because it was rather frenetic and, actually, contradictory.
The movie began with a short love note to the 1950s, including
a reference to 90% marginal tax rates, whose proceeds, Moore pointed
out, went into schools, hospitals, and interstate highways (although
they also went into nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.) But
at the end he argued that capitalism needed to be given up and
replaced with democracy, a view which I cannot share. Capitalism
can be productive economically (although even that is once again
in question now), and more important, it seems in the long run
to reflect human nature far better than socialism. The best solution
is to allow democracy to balance the excesses of capitalism, at
which the United States was reasonably successful, I would argue,
from the 1930s through the 1970s. The President and much of Congress
would now like to restore that balance, but it is not at all clear
that they can.
Franklin Roosevelt, to be sure, managed 75 years ago to implement
changes far more sweeping than anything Obama is talking about,
and in so doing saved democracy, not only in the United States,
but ultimately in the rest of the industrialized world. But how
did he manage it? Timing is everything, and Roosevelt, unlike
Obama, did not reach the White House until our great economic
crisis was three years old. Because of that, he initially enjoyed
majorities of 318-117 in the House and 61-35 in the Senate--and
even some Republicans, in those days, supported many of those
reforms. Because the initial burst of New Deal legislation did
something to relieve extreme distress, he actually increased those
majorities in 1934 to 332-103 in the House and 71-26 in the Senate.
(These figures include two left-wing Midwestern third parties,
the Farmer-Labor party of Minnesota and the Wisconsin Progressives,
in FDR's column.) Those majorities allowed him to pass the Wagner
Act, assuring union rights, and Social Security. And in 1936,
when he carried 46 of 48 states and won 523 out of 531 electoral
votes, he increased them yet again, to 347 to 88 in the House
and 79-17 in the Senate. Those majorities were torn about, sadly,
by his plan to pack the Supreme Court, but they did allow for
the passage of the first federal wages and hours legislation before
a Republican reaction occurred in the elections of 1938, two years
into another new recession. And ironically, those majorities possible
because race, for the most part, was not yet an issue in national
politics. Because white supremacy still ruled the south, most
southern whites unhesitatingly voted for FDR, whose programs literally
saved many of their lives (although they also did what they could,
in many instances, to prevent New Deal benefits from reaching
blacks.) Because white supremacy has now been overturned, while
the Democratic Party has been unable to deliver real benefits
for southern whites, they now vote monolithically Republican.
This story does not bode well for Barack Obama's attempts to transform
America again. Not only did he begin with considerably smaller
majorities than Roosevelt, but he entered office when the bottom
of the current economic crisis was years away. Now, last week's
elections suggest, Democrats will bear much of the voters' anger
over the economy next fall, and increases in their majorities
do not seem very likely. Much may happen before then. The President
may call for, and the Republicans will undoubtedly try to reject,
a second stimulus package, on the very Rooseveltian grounds that
the first one simply hasn't done enough. But so far his Administration,
reflecting his own personality (similar in this respect to Lincoln's),
has striven for relatively moderate solutions to our problems.
Like Lincoln, he may find himself forced by events to take a new
approach.
My mood about the political scene swings a great deal lately,
rather like that of fans watching an athletic contest or soldiers
in a battle. That, I realize, is altogether natural, since we
are in a struggle for the future of the nation, and the outcome
is not guaranteed. And to paraphrase Clausewitz, results in politics,
as in war, are never final. Should the current crisis end with
another Gilded Age, the new Prophet generation--which could start
to be born within as little as ten years--will undoubtedly grow
up with a keen sense of its injustices and a determination to
set things right. I shall not live to see what they can accomplish,
but history tells me that we must accept any outcome within our
own lifetimes as temporary, certain that the human drama of the
struggle over all our futures will continue as long as the human
race.
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Conservatives discover generations
It's been a long time since I reviewed the basics of generational
theory here, and most long-time readers must be familiar with
it, but since I now have so many new ones every week, a quick
summary may be in order to put this week's remarks in context.
The theory of William Strauss and Neil Howe, as I have mentioned,
sees a period crisis in the life of the United States (and, I
have concluded, of other nations as well) every 80 years or so
(1774-1794, 1860-1872, 1929-45, 2008 - ?). Those crises are closely
related to a generational rhythm that produces a new generation
every twenty years. Each generation belongs to one of four archetypes,
known as Prophets, Nomads, Heroes, and Artists. Each generation
also has a specific name. The current generations are Boomers
(Prophets, born 1943-60), Gen Xers (Nomads, born 1961-81), Millennials
(Heroes, born 1982-2002?) and Homelanders (artists, who have been
born for at least a few years now.) During the previous cycle
the Hero generation were the GIs, now frequently known as the
"Greatest" generation (born about 1904-24), and the
Artist generation was the Silents, born 1925-42, many of whom
are still active in public life and about whom I have written
a great deal here.
Today's media and politics are dominated by Boomers and Xers--but
the last election was dominated by Millennials, who voted overwhelmingly
for Barack Obama and provided his margin of victory. Millennials
had a very different kind of upbringing than either Boomers, who
were largely left to themselves within a very stable environment(as
the children of the greatest country on earth, how could they
go wrong?, and Xers, who had to deal with by far the highest percentage
of broken homes and got the least attention from their elders
of any living generation. The parents of Millennials--led by Boomers--gave
them very structured lives in which they were expected to perform,
in one way or another, at least 12 hours a day. They did, for
the most part, perform, but they also expected, and received,
rewards. My Millennial students at Williams would do anything
I asked--but they got very angry when I tried to change the rules
in the middle of the game. They were extremely capable, and they
had a rather frightening trust in older generations.
Now as the last election showed, Millennials are the greatest
threat to the right-wing ethos and policies that gained ascendancy
in the United States between 1981 and 2008. What is rather fascinating
is that leading conservatives seem to be figuring this out. Here
is what Glen Beck, of all people, had to say about Millennials
this week.
I do know that there was a story in The Wall Street Journal yesterday
about trophy kids going to work. These are the kids that we've
raised and we've told them, "Who's super special? You are."
And we've never told them anything bad. Well, now they are starting
to enter the workforce, and I love this. We're now having these,
what do you call them, consultants to help new employers adjust
to the employees. Consultants are coming in and saying, "Look,
you've got to adjust the way -- because you've got new employees.
" Now here's a Boston-based consultant doing the other, coaching
a group of college students for job interviews. Who had a consultant
for a job interview? Did anyone within the sound of my voice have
a consultant that you hired to help you with job interviews? My
gosh. Get over yourself. Go out and get a frickin' job. Consultant,
what a bunch of pansy -- I'm sorry. I digress.
Anyway, she said to them, "How do you believe your employers
are going to view you?" She even gave them a clue. She said,
"The word I'm looking for begins with the letter E."
One student raised his hand, said "Excellent." Another
student rhymed in with "Enthusiastic, energetic." Not
even close. Here was the correct answer. "Entitled."
The students collectively responded, "What?" Some were
surprised. Others were hurt that they would be viewed as people
who think they're entitled.
Here's the problem with the Millennial generation, and this is
the problem -- I'm telling you, I've said this for years. You
want your -- go ahead. You want to be a helicopter parent, you
save them for everything, do you know what some companies now
have parent day? In the corporation where your parents can come?
You bring your parent to work, that's the last day you are coming
to my office. I mean if they want to have a sit-down with me.
If they want to come by and see your office, that's cool. You
want to have a sit-down? Get the hell out of my office. I think
we need more people with this theory: Get the hell out of my office.
Now, we're not going to be able to do that because soon the government
will be able to protect everyone so you'll not be able to fire
everyone. You can live more like they live in France where, I'm
not kidding you, countries have whole sections of floors dedicated
to people who just sit in an office and do nothing because the
state won't let them fire them. You can't fire them. So they just,
"You're moving down to 12. Well, have a good time."
And people just go to work and they sit in their office and they
do nothing! That's where we're headed. In the meantime, until
the government tells me I can't do it anymore, get the hell out
of my office. Don't you feel like that? Don't you want -- some
guy who would come to you when he's applying for a job and he
wants to work and the next thing he's like, "Well, I've got
a consultant to help me." Well, I don't know about you, but
you seem to be doing fine, but I'm not going to work like that.
Get the hell away from me.
The Millennials that are coming in now, employers are beginning
to realize that that is the future workforce and they want to
shape the job towards their life rather than have their life adapt
to the workplace. I mean, that's all well and good, but... get
the hell out of my office. "Although members..." this
is from the Wall Street Journal. "Although members from the
other generation were considered somewhat spoiled in their youth,
millennials feel an unusually strong sense of entitlement. Older
adults criticize the high maintenance rookies for demanding too
much too soon. They want to be CEOs tomorrow. More than 85% of
hiring managers and human resources executives say they feel that
Millennials have such a strong sense of entitlement than older
workers according to a survey," blah, blah, blah. "The
generation's greatest expectations, higher pay, 75%." "What?
You're paying what?" "Yeah, that's what I'm paying.
Get the hell out of my office." Flexible work schedule, 61%.
Promotion within a year, 56%. More vacation and personal time
-- oh, I've got a lot of personal time coming your way. Get the
hell... can you finish the sentence? They really do seem to want
everything, and I can't decide whether it's an inability or an
unwillingness to make tradeoffs," says the assistant dean
and MBA and admissions director at Stanford University. A study
of 18 to 28-year-olds found that nearly half had moderate to high
superiority beliefs about themselves. The superiority factor was
measured by responses to statements such as, quote, "I deserve
favors from others." How about this one? "I know that
I have more natural talent than most." They don't want to
work 40 hours a week. They happen to wear clothes that are comfortable.
They want to spice you will the dull workday by listening to their
iPods if they want to. And, "If corporate America doesn't
like it, too bad for them." Really? Get the hell out of my
office. We have a problem with arrogance in this country. This
is what I was talking to you about a little bit yesterday. We
have a real problem with arrogance and if you are a religious
person, you know what happens whenever people become arrogant.
"Oh, they're destroyed." We've got to reconnect with
humility. We've got to reconnect with doing the right thing. We've
got to reconnect with who we are. We're going to be forced soon
to reconnect with what our grandparents taught us and how my generation
and older, what they learned. No, you know what, I'm sorry. I
can't say my generation and older. Because the generation right
before me is so damn screwed up, I don't know what the hell they're
doing. The people who were raised in the Sixties, you are the
people responsible for what we're living in right now. You people
have -- "Oh, I care about the planet. I care..." oh,
shut up. You dope-smoking hippies, look what you have brought
us now. And because you were in charge of the curriculum, everybody
gets a trophy. You know what? There are losers in life. There
are losers in life. The losers in life are the ones who don't
really try very hard because everything is owed to them. The losers
in life are the ones that expect a trophy even though they're
in 18th place. The winners are the ones that try. Those are the
winners. They may not always exceed but they try. When you couple
arrogance with the Social Security problem, when you couple the
idea of, "I know I have more natural talents than most, I
deserve favors from others," when you couple that with "What
about the old people? Are we going to take care of the older generation?"
"No, they've done nothing but stand in my way the whole time."
Who's going to get the medical care when Social Security really,
when it comes down to it, Medicare, Medicaid, when it comes down
to universal healthcare? When you're going to have to make a decision
because we can't afford good healthcare for everybody, somebody's
not going to get a kidney transplant. Somebody's not going to
get heart surgery. Somebody's not going to get kidney dialysis.
Somebody's not going to get that surgery. Who's it going to be?
Is it going to be the Millennial that doesn't give a flying crap
about anybody else but themselves because they're special, look
at all the trophies they won? Or is it going to be the 80-year-old
who's already lived past their time? I mean, look what they have
done. You know the answer of that as well as I do.
Now like everything else Beck says, this is intentionally inflammatory,
and one of its major implications--that Millennials haven't had
to work for what they have-is ridiculous. I would estimate that
today's kids spend at least ten times as much psychic energy on
the problem of getting into college, for instance, as my generation
did. But what is interesting is that Beck, in a way, knows what
he's talking about, and is angry for a very good reason. These
kids do not share his values and they are not going to.
Beck believes in the free market--including the free market in
hatred, his product--because it has made him rich and famous.
Millennials won't believe in it unless it delivers for them, and
they shouldn't. And like the last Hero generation, the GIs, they
are going to pose a huge problem for our society in an age of
economic decline. They will expect us to find jobs for them, and
they have the votes to make sure that we do so. They will probably
save a lot more of their money than Boomers and Xers have, and
they will want to make sure to provide for their old age. In short,
they are going to explode the conservative fantasy that the years
1933-80 were an aberration in American history that has now been
consigned to the ash-heap of history.
I was reminded as soon as I read this of another conservative
comment on a Hero generation. In 2004, at the height of the campaign,
Grover Norquist talked a bit indiscreetly to a Spanish reporter
about the GI generation. He didn't date it quite right, but his
basic point--which I quoted here at the time--was correct.
Two million people who fought in World War II and lived through
the Great Depression die every year. That generation has been
an exception in US history, because it has defended anti-American
policies. They voted for the creation of the welfare state and
for obligatory military service. They are the Democratic base,
and they are dying
And we've had four more years pass where the age cohort that is
most Democratic and most pro-statist, are those people who turned
21 years of age between 1932 and 1952--Great Depression, New Deal,
World War II--Social Security, the draft--all that stuff. That
age cohort is now between the ages of 70 and 90 years old, and
every year 2 million of them die. So 8 million people from that
age cohort have passed away since the last election; that means,
net, maybe 1 million Democrats have disappeared
This is an age cohort [the GIs] that voted for a draft before
the war started, and allowed the draft to continue for 25 years
after the war was over. Their idea of the legitimate role of the
state is radically different than anything previous generations
knew, or subsequent generations. Before that generation, whenever
you put a draft in, there were draft riots. After that generation,
there were draft riots. This generation? No problem. Why not?
Of course the government moves people around like pawns on a chessboard.
One side spits off labor law, one side spits off Social Security.
We will all work until we're 65 and have the same pension. You
know, some Bismarck, German thing, okay? Very un-American. Very
unusual for America. The reaction to Great Depression, World War
II, and so on: Centralization-not as much centralization as the
rest of the world got, but much more than is usual in America.
We've spent a lot of time dismantling some of that and moving
away from that level of regimentation: getting rid of the draft.
. .
Norquist knew what he was talking about. The death of retired
GIs probably accounted for George Bush carrying Florida by over
100,000 votes in 2004 after losing it, barely, in 2000 (according
to the most thorough recount.) The GIs had not been consistently
Democratic: social issues had led them to vote for Nixon and then
for Ronald Reagan. But they had been protected by the federal
government all their lives, from child labor legislation through
lower marginal tax rates beginning in 1964 to higher Social Security
benefits, and they had lobbied effectively to keep things that
way.
What Norquist didn't realize, apparently, was that new Millennials
were being added faster than GIs were dying. And while they apparently
will not have to undergo a draft that will put 20 million of them
in uniform, they will expect our government to address their particular
problems at every stage of their life. And if Barack Obama can
persuade them (as I don't think he has yet) that he is addressing
their problems, a new Democratic majority will indeed be reborn.
In Roosevelt's day the media was controlled by Missionaries (his
own prophet generation, born 1863-1884 or so), and the Nomad Lost
generation, born 1885-1903. Most of them hated him. Not until
after the Second World War did GIs become the dominant voice in
the media. That, too, is a parallel to the situation today. But
well before that, they had become the dominant force in politics--as
voters, not candidates. I do not know if Republicans in the 1930s
attacked them, too, as spoiled brats who needed government hand-outs--but
I strongly suspect that the answer is yes.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Human achievement?
For the past two weeks I have been reading most of Neil Sheehan's
new book, A Fiery Peace in a Cold War. Sheehan, who won
a Pulitzer Prize for securing the Pentagon papers from Daniel
Ellsberg back in 1971, has now written two substantial works of
recent history. The hero the the first, A Bright Shining Lie,
was John Paul Vann, a fellow member of the Silent Generation,
who saw the flaws in American strategy in Vietnam but could not
give up the idea, after his reckless personal behavior had helped
force him out of the Army, that we could win. The hero of this
one is some one of whom I do not think I have ever been aware,
Bernard Schriever, a German-American Air Force officer and engineer
whom Sheehan regards as the founder of the American ICBM program.
And although many of the events of this book took place during
a time securely within my memory, they seem as remote, in many
ways, as the days of Pearl Harbor and D-Day, Napoleon and Wellington,
or the Thirty Years War. The book--even more than the one I am
working on now on American entry into the Second World War--is
about another America, one whose strengths and weaknesses become
extraordinarily apparent as time goes on.
Researching my own book, I recently read a column by Drew Pearson
and Robert Allen from August 1941, purporting to describe President
Roosevelt's mood. The President, they said--and rightly so--was
deeply engaged in preparing the nation for war, but he was less
jovial than in the past. During his first eight years he had put
people to work, helped build bridges and dams, and established
the beginnings of the American safety net. Now circumstances forced
him to tend to the construction of warships, bombers and tanks
instead. That choice had been forced upon the United States by
political crises in Europe and East Asia but it was not a happy
one. Pearson and Allen did not know that FDR was about to make
an even more fateful choice: the decision to launch the Manhattan
Project, which culminated, four months after his death, in the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Roosevelt had looked forward to a postwar world of peace and prosperity.
Secretary of War Stimson, along with some (but clearly not all)
of the scientists who had built the weapon, understood the need
to bring it under international control. Meanwhile, in one of
my favorite, little-known documents, some senior military officials
in Washington had presciently sketched out the military situation
that they expected the United States to face when the war was
over. Without knowing about the atomic bomb, they anticipated
a stalemate. . "After the defeat of Japan," they wrote,
"the United States and Russia will be the strongest military
powers in the world. . . .the relative strength and geographic
positions of these two powers are such as to preclude the military
defeat of one of these powers by the other, even if that power
were allied with the British Empire." That in my opinion
was a sound judgment both before and after the development of
atomic weapons and could have provided the basis for a sensible
postwar foreign policy. Unfortunately, that was not to be.
As I had occasion to discuss in an article published a couple
of years ago in a collection, the first war plans formulated for
a conflict against the Soviet Union, beginning in 1947, did not
foresee a stalemate: they planned on an atomic strategic bombing
offensive against the Soviet Union that would lead to its complete
defeat. This remained our plan throughout the 1950s, even though
at the outset we surely lacked, and indeed may never have attained,
the capability to bring it about. Much of the responsibility surely
lies with the Air Force, which secured its independent status
in 1947 based upon the largely mistaken idea that strategic bombing
had won the Second World War and could therefore win the wars
of the future. Without ICBMS--or, until the very late 1950s, intercontinental
bombers--the need to plan for such a war vastly distorted our
whole foreign policy. To cite just one example, it probably led
to our long, painful, and currently troubling alliance with Pakistan,
simply because that nation provided bases that would allow medium-range
bombers to reach targets in the Soviet Union. All the while, the
Soviets--who never believed in long-range strategic bombing--were
steadily improving their air defenses, which, when tried on American
planes in Vietnam, turned out to be formidable indeed. The guiding
spirit of the Air Force, first as chief of the Strategic Air Command
and later as Chief of Staff, was Curtis LeMay, one of the villains
of Sheehan's book, who not only counted upon strategic bombing
to wipe out the Soviet Union (and refused to recognize that bombers
might be obsolete), but also thought that it could solve other
problems, like Castro's regime in Cuba or the Vietnam War, if
only the Air Force were let alone to do the job.
Sheehan thinks the ICBM was the key weapon of the Cold War and
his book is about the men who pushed for it and developed it.
The two main heroes are Schriever, an immigrant from Germany who
actually built and tested the first (though not the most useful)
missiles, and John von Neumann, the Hungarian-born mathematician
and refugee who made major contributions to mathematical theory,
high-speed computing, and nuclear physics. Like so many Americans
during that period, von Neumann viewed the Soviet Union as essentially
similar to Nazi Germany--that is, bent upon world domination--and
thought that it was necessary for the United States not only to
deploy but to use decisive weaponry against it. He made the ICBM
program happen because he predicted early in the 1950s that a
sufficiently small hydrogen warhead could be developed to be delivered
by a missile into the heart of the Soviet Union. That prediction
proved true.
The bulk of Sheehan's book is a story of engineers at work, making
this happen, while outwitting bureaucratic rivals like LeMay (who
feared missiles as a threat to his beloved bomber force), circumventing
the budgetary strictures upon which President Eisenhower tried
to insist (with a big boost from the Sputnik launch), and overcoming
one technical problem after another. Watching them solve these
enormous challenges, I could not help but wonder what similar
advances had taken place during the last thirty years or so. Sadly,
no non-defense project has ever had so much government money and
so much engineering talent focused upon it as has sophisticated
weaponry. The comparable advances in recent decades, I suppose,
have been in the field of computer science, transforming the use
of information in ways whose consequences we cannot yet predict.
Diagnostic health care has made major advances but there have
been relatively few big breakthroughs in treatment or prevention
like the vaccines and new drugs of the first half of the century.
And we have had no comparable effort in fields like clean energy
or mass transit, even though we are talking about such things
now. Unfortunately the United States has changed from a country
of engineers and industrialists to a country of lawyers and financial
analysts; younger, hungrier countries like China and India, as
well as the defeated nations of the Second World War, may be the
source of the next great breakthroughs. Our private economy, certainly,
has not been able to generate a demand for engineering talent,
or capital to put it to work, comparable to that which was mobilized
for the Second World War and the Cold War, except in the field
of computer science and information technology.
And meanwhile, was the great achievement of Schriever and company
worth it? Was it as valuable as Sheehan claims? As soon as the
Soviet Union detonated an atomic bomb in 1949 the United States
government decided that it had to develop the H-bomb as well,
and from there it was only a small step to von Neumann's conclusion
that we needed the means to deliver a huge number of those weapons
onto Soviet cities, one against which the Soviets could not defend.
One dissenter was George F. Kennan, who argued very provocatively
in one of his most brilliant and least-known internal papers that
before doing so, the United States should make another effort
to ban atomic and nuclear weapons. The reason, he argued, was
that such weapons were so purely destructive that they could never
serve the positive foreign policy goals of the United States.
"By and large," he wrote, "the conventional weapons
of warfare have admitted and recognized the possibility of surrender
and submission. For that reason, they have traditionally been
designed to spare the unarmed and helpless non-combatant. . .as
well as the combatant prepared to lay down his arms. This general
quality of the conventional weapons of warfare implied a still
more profound and vital recognition: namely that warfare should
be a means to an end other than warfare, an end connected with
the beliefs and the feelings and the attitudes of people, an end
marked by submission to a new political will and perhaps to a
new regime of life, but an end which at least did not negate the
principle of life itself.
"The weapons of mass destruction do not have this quality.
. . . They cannot really be reconciled with a political purpose
directed to shaping, rather than destroying, the lives of the
adversary. They fail to take account of the ultimate responsibility
of men for one another, and even for each other's errors and mistakes."
(Readers with a free hour can read Kennan's entire argument here.
I do not think they will feel they have wasted their time.)
But Kennan was overruled. So, a few years later, was General Matthew
Ridgway, then Chief of Staff, when he suggested at an NSC meeting
that the execution of our war plan against the Soviet Union could
not possibly serve the interests of the United States. In reply,
President Eisenhower himself "said he was speaking very frankly
to the Council in expressing his absolute conviction that in view
of the development of the new weapons of mass destruction, with
the terrible significance which these involved, everything in
any future war with the Soviet bloc would have to be subordinated
to winning that war. This was the one thing which must constantly
be borne in mind, and there was little else with respect to war
objectives that needed to worry anyone very much." The work
on ICBMs and other delivery systems not only went ahead, it proceeded
so rapidly that by the time the first SIOP, or nuclear targeting
plan, was completed by the end of the Eisenhower Administration,
there were far more available warheads than targets, leading to
the multiple targeting of nearly every one.
The Soviet Union, Sheehan stresses, also had an ICBM program,
and gave the arms race something of a push when it launched the
first earth satellite. It was however far behind ours, as it turned
out, and took many years to catch up quantitatively. (What I have
read in recent years suggests that it never caught up qualitatively.)
In fact, the two missiles whose development takes up most of the
book--the Atlas and Titan--were cumbersome, liquid-fueled vehicles
of dubious military utility. It was the Minuteman, to which he
devotes much less space, that became the backbone of the US deterrent.
Meanwhile, before the deployment of ICBMs, our desperate desire
to deploy missiles within range of our enemy led to the placing
of intermediate-range missiles in Britain, in Italy, and in Turkey.
And that in 1962 led the world to the brink of nuclear war when
Khrushchev sent intermediate range nuclear missiles to Cuba, as
well as tactical nuclear weapons. Faced with that situation, the
American military and much of the American political establishment
wanted an immediate invasion of Cuba. That, we now know, would
have led to the detonation at least of tactical Soviet nuclear
weapons (including one that would have incinerated the Guantanamo
naval base), and therefore, almost surely, to a general nuclear
exchange. The only reason that it did not, as Sheehan acknowledges,
was that John F. Kennedy did what Kennan had hoped some one would
do, and took responsibility for Khrushchev's mistake and his predecessors,
first by giving Khrushchev a chance to back down and secondly
by promising secretly to withdraw the missiles from Turkey and
Italy.
Perhaps the American reaction to the events of 1939-49 (from the
outbreak of war in Europe until the Soviet nuclear explosion)
was perfectly natural. Certainly there is no undoing it now, and
no denying that we emerged from the Cold War intact. Yet one of
the most poignant moments in Sheehan's book was a reference to
Albert Einstein, who by 1950, according to Sheehan, deeply regretted
having written the 1939 letter to Franklin Roosevelt that got
the Manhattan Project going, because it had now led to a nuclear
arms race. "Politics," Einstein once said, "is
much harder than physics," and so it proved over the next
few decades. We can take comfort now that we are no longer constantly
prepared to unleash thousands of nuclear warheads upon an opponent
just as ready to do the same. To have reached that point was not
an achievement of which the human race can be proud. The task
of unleashing human creativity for more beneficial aims, and of
finding a civic purpose as compelling as, but less destructive
than, war, still remains.
[Regarding the hoax email circulating under my name, I have fantasized
for months that some big-time conservative talk-show host woudl
call me about it, since they love Obama-Hitler comparisons. (One
small town host did call, but my courage failed me, and I immediately
disowned it instead of waiting until she had me on the air.) Well,
that hasn't happened, but something similar did. Someone posted
a supposed excerpt from a hoax undergraduate thesis by Barack
Obama on a blog, and conservative writer Michael Ledeen picked
it up as real. Rush Limbaugh got it from him and ran with it on
Friday. When Rush's researchers rather tardily found out the truth,
he said--you'll never guess--that it didn't matter, because we
all know Obama believes these things anyway. See mediamatters.org
for the full story.
posted by David Kaiser at 2:27 PM
About Me
Name: David Kaiser
Location: Jamestown, Rhode Island, United States
For the past thirty years I have been a historian of international
and domestic politics, as well as an authority on some of the
more famous criminal cases in American history. For the past five
years I have been using this space to comment on current events.
Links to my books, including, The Road to Dallas: The Assassination
of John F. Kennedy (2008), appear below. Simply click to learn
more about them or to order them. A collection of History Unfolding
from 2004 through 2008 is also available as a book below.
View my complete profile
Books by David Kaiser
History Unfolding: Crisis and Rebirth in American Life, 2004-2008
The Road to Dallas: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy
American Tragedy: Kennedy, Johnson, and the Origins of the Vietnam
War
Epic Season: The 1948 American League Pennant Race
Politics and War: European Conflict from Philip II to Hitler
Postmortem: New Evidence in the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti
Economic Diplomacy and the Origins of the Second World War
Previous Posts
Living Through History
Echoes of Vietnam
The New Civil Conflict
Conservatives discover generations
Human achievement?
The enduring Republican victory
Why Obama won the prize
Afghanistan - An historical perspective
Working in Washington
Two possibilities