Michael Barone, America’ preeminent political scholar, explores the roots of progressivism, that un-American and statist doctrine spawned at the dawn of the 20th century.
Progressivism’s Premise
The Progressives explicitly repudiated the Founders’ vision of limited government. They argued that government needed to redistribute property, to take money from one group of citizens to help others, and to regulate economic activity in ways previously considered unconstitutional.More importantly, says Barone, “They feared revolution.” Even “good” countries experienced such upheavals back in the late 1800’s. People of the early 1900’s looked up to central-planning strong men as the wave of the future, if not out of fear of central-planning communists. You see, fascism, communism and progressivism were not opposing ideologies, they were competing for the support of the same group of people!
The teeming hordes of city dwellers who manned America’s factories became a particular concern of progressives:
Most city residents rented rather than owned their homes; they cashed their paychecks for cash rather than have bank accounts; they depended on charity if they became disabled or widowed.
It was the America of Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie—a very hard America (as I used the term in my 2004 book, Hard America, Soft America), an America with plenty of competition and accountability, but which could be very unforgiving of mistakes and misfortunes. Millions made their way upwards, but most never accumulated significant wealth.Progressivism was sprung from a sense of condescending paternal benevolence, urged along by a will to order.
The Progressives and their progeny, the New Dealers—whether acting out of benevolence, hunger for power, or fear—were paternalistic; but they were also precautionary.
Give the masses work relief, Social Security, deposit insurance, a floor on wages and prices, they thought, and the masses will not revolt or be attracted to the totalitarian faiths advancing in the Old World—the Communism that many intellectuals championed, the fascism that Anne Morrow Lindbergh wrote was “the wave of the future.”The irony here, is that the US government, insulating itself from socialist totalitarian ideologies, itself became more totalitarian and more socialist.
The Progressives argued that economic freedoms were unimportant because ordinary people, lacking property, didn’t really have much economic freedom anyway.
As such, property rights must be subordinated to human rights. It was better to guarantee people education, healthcare, food, housing—the domestic programs that Franklin Roosevelt advanced as victory in World War II neared in 1944 and 1945It’s always for the good of society, security, equality, social justice... As The State increases, the individual decreases.
It is helpful to recall that Benjamin Franklin quote progressives were so fond of spouting in the days after 9/11:
"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both." -- Benjamin Franklin