Big Apple History Through a Socialist Lens
Self-professed
leftist historian and John Jay College professor, Mike Wallace has written a
history of New York City through the New Deal years and World War II. In reading
this long book (976 pages in the print edition), it seemed that it took the
full thirteen years of his history. Needless to say, the book is way too long
and covers way too much minutia.
Wallace discusses at
length how the city’s various ethnic groups approached the coming of World War
II. His view of New York’s ethnic groups is through the lens of cultural
pluralism. Although that view has some merit, he ignores the fact that New York
was becoming more homogenized and, on its way, to being a melting pot. He
ignores two facets causing this. This first is that the public schools were inculcating
Americanism into the minds of its students. Second, he ignores the roll of
baseball which put sometimes antagonistic ethnic groups in rooting for their
respective teams. Indeed, the Yankee-Dodger subway World Series was a classic
and no matter which team they were rooting for, fans marveled at Joe Di Maggio's 56 game hitting streak.
With Hitler’s coming
to power in 1933 New York’s Jews, the largest Jewish community in the world,
stood as one against him. They had to face off against local Nazi’s in the
German American Bund and plea with Roosevelt, to no avail, to open immigration
for Jews fleeing Europe. Here Wallace ignores the role of the New York mob
which stood foursquare behind the Jews in breaking up Nazi rallies. ( Shulmaven:
My Amazon Review of Michael Benson's "Gangsters vs. Nazis" ) Wallace rightly notes
the perfidy of New York Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger in his downplaying of
the Holocaust.
Wallace is all-in on
the New Deal and LaGuardia’s social democratic vision for New York. What he
ignores is that LaGuardia’s vision was funded by a hugely disproportionate
amount of dollars flowing from Washington D.C.
Those who followed him did not have the largess of Washington behind and
that put the city on an unsustainable fiscal path. Simply put, to him business
was bad and government was good.
True to his beliefs
Wallace spends an inordinate amount of time on the three-way split between, the
communists, the socialists, and the New Deal liberals. This would play out in
the dumping of Henry Wallace as Roosevelt’s VP in 1944. He also ignores the
real gravity of the Rosenberg spy ring which went well beyond atomic spying.
Wallace is particularly
good at discussing the policy differences between the Fighting Liberals and the
Wall Street Warriors in their focus on bringing the U.S. into the war. Both
groups had decidedly different war aims. The Fighting Liberals wanted to
globalize the New Deal while the Wall Street Warriors following Henry Luce's "Amercian Century," wanted to establish U.S.
hegemony. Incidentally, both supported
free trade. Many of the architects of the Cold War who came out of Wall Street banks
and law firms are here. They include Dean Acheson, James Forrestal, Paul Nitze,
and John Foster Dulles, who by the way was too cozy with Nazi Germany in the
1930’s.
We also have a whole
bunch of folks who featured in childhood growing up in New York City in the
1950’s. The include future U.S. Congresswoman Bella Abzug, feminist Betty Friedan,
governors Dewey, Harriman, and Rockefeller, expert builder Robert Moses, Congressman
Adam Clayton Power, Mayor Robert Wagner Jr., Attorney General Herbert Brownell,
civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, and builder Bill Zeckendorf. All-in-all, quite a cast of characters.
The book ends with a
discussion on planning for the postwar world. There were many plans drawn up
under the belief that the New Deal was still alive. It wasn’t and it pretty
much died after the 1938 election. To my mind the planners failed to understand
that what New Yorkers wanted were automobiles, houses, and babies. They did not
want to be cooped up in apartments the planners imagined. Those desires set off
the race to the suburbs of Long Island, Westchester, and New Jersey and if you
really think about it represented a continuation of the trend that was
established in the 1920’s that was interrupted by the depression and the war.