Sunday, May 04, 2008

"Everything Seems New"...

Thomas Sowell wrote this piece last week about our hopes that one day America will have a black president. But should it be Barack Obama? Here are some of Sewell's thoughts.
Although Senator Obama has presented himself as the candidate of new things -- using the mantra of "change" endlessly -- the cold fact is that virtually everything has says about domestic policy is straight out of the 1960s and virtually everything he says about foreign policy is straight out of the 1930s.

Protecting criminals, attacking business, increasing government spending, promoting a sense of envy and grievance, raising taxes on people who are productive and subsidizing those who are not -- all this is a re-run of the 1960s.

We paid a terrible price for such 1960s notions in the years that followed, in the form of soaring crime rates, double-digit inflation and double-digit unemployment. During the 1960s, ghettoes across the countries were ravaged by riots from which many have not fully recovered to this day.

The violence and destruction were concentrated not where there was the greatest poverty or injustice but where there were the most liberal politicians, promoting grievances and hamstringing the police.

Internationally, the approach that Senator Obama proposes -- including the media magic of meetings between heads of state -- was tried during the 1930s. That approach, in the name of peace, is what led to the most catastrophic war in human history.

Everything seems new to those too young to remember the old and too ignorant of history to have heard about it.

2 comments:

QP said...

Thanks for highlighting this. I graduated from CWC, part of UD now, in '65. I remember the 60's and Sowell nails it.

Terri Wagner said...

It continued into the 1970s as I well remember. No, I don't want a repeat first time was enough.