Author Topic: The Forgotten Failures of the Great Society  (Read 266 times)

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Offline libertybele

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The Forgotten Failures of the Great Society
« on: January 19, 2020, 02:44:04 am »
The Forgotten Failures of the Great Society

Amity Shlaes has written a powerful book. It is the most interesting and substantive account of Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon’s “war on poverty” to date — and just in time. In Great Society: A New History, she notes that “just as the 1960s forgot the failures of the 1930s, we today forget the failures of the 1960s.” Shlaes has written 510 pages of argumentation, with detailed description and telling digression that traces the arc from the unbridled hopes of the early Sixties to the enormous administrative expansion of the “second New Deal” to the missteps in implementing it that became all too apparent in the Seventies.

The book opens with the roles played by socialist author Michael Harrington, famed for writing The Other America, a book on Appalachian poverty, and Tom Hayden of Students for a Democratic Society in forming the ethos of the ’60s. And then, by way of largely but not entirely biographical accounts, it shows how figures such as United Automobile Workers president Walter Reuther, Los Angeles mayor and Great Society critic Sam Yorty, Johnson-administration anti-poverty czar Sargent Shriver, policy intellectual Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and economist Arthur Burns shaped the Great Society and its aftermath. The advantage of such an approach is that it doesn’t neglect the “great men” of the time, while adding depth. Shlaes tells us that LBJ and Nixon conducted themselves as if they were “domestic commanders in chief.” But the book also incorporates the broader social and economic currents that centralized American life.

Walter Reuther was of a then-familiar type that many today find difficult to understand. As the militant leader of the United Automobile Workers, he wanted Scandinavian-style socialism for America, but he was also an ardent anti-Communist. In the early 1960s he hoped for a youth movement to help his cause. To that end he sponsored a conclave at the UAW’s retreat in Port Huron, Mich. It was there, with Michael Harrington in attendance, that Tom Hayden wrote the Port Huron Statement. Inspired by the direct action of the young black integrationists of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee who courageously insisted on being served at segregated southern lunch counters, the Port Huron Statement made the case for what it called “participatory democracy.” But Hayden’s aim, as he acknowledged, was to advance radicalism by “call[ing] socialism liberalism.”............

https://www.nationalreview.com/magazine/2020/01/27/the-forgotten-failures-of-the-great-society/
Romans 12:16-21

Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly, do not claim to be wiser than you are.  Do not repay anyone evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.  If it is possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all…do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Offline goatprairie

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Re: The Forgotten Failures of the Great Society
« Reply #1 on: January 19, 2020, 06:10:50 am »
The sad thing about most of the ideas of The Great Society is that they weren't needed.
Aside from some provisions of the civil rights bill of 1964 banning race-based discrimination, programs needed to "lift" blacks and other minorities out of poverty weren't needed. Thomas Sowell has written about the great gains made by black Americans from WWII to the sixties.
In fact, the actions stemming from the implementation of GS policies attached a huge anchor to many blacks by promoting welfare and discouraging marriage thereby harming nuclear black families. Affirmative Action aka Affirmative Discrimination told blacks they didn't have to try hard....the gov. would give them things without much effort on their part.
In short, The Great Society's actions were far more destructive than helpful to America.
Thanks for nothing LBJ and the hacks behind creating TGS.

Offline Smokin Joe

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Re: The Forgotten Failures of the Great Society
« Reply #2 on: January 19, 2020, 11:36:47 am »
The sad thing about most of the ideas of The Great Society is that they weren't needed.
Aside from some provisions of the civil rights bill of 1964 banning race-based discrimination, programs needed to "lift" blacks and other minorities out of poverty weren't needed. Thomas Sowell has written about the great gains made by black Americans from WWII to the sixties.
In fact, the actions stemming from the implementation of GS policies attached a huge anchor to many blacks by promoting welfare and discouraging marriage thereby harming nuclear black families. Affirmative Action aka Affirmative Discrimination told blacks they didn't have to try hard....the gov. would give them things without much effort on their part.
In short, The Great Society's actions were far more destructive than helpful to America.
Thanks for nothing LBJ and the hacks behind creating TGS.
:thumbsup:

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The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help.

Ronald Reagan
How God must weep at humans' folly! Stand fast! God knows what he is doing!
Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

C S Lewis