Eternal Vigilance is the Price of
Liberty
As I write this review Jon Meacham’s “The Soul of America” is Number One on the New
York Times Bestseller List and deservedly so. This book should be required
reading for every Republican member of Congress who is afraid to stand up to
Donald Trump. After reading “The Soul of America” they will realize that
standing up to him would put them on the side of the greats of American
history. Further radical leftists who seem to hate everything about America
should read “Soul…” because they will learn that America is a work in progress
towards a more perfect union. They will learn that when the chips were down
such dead white guys as Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses Grant,
Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, and
yes Ronald Reagan did a pretty good job in moving our country forward.
Hopefully they will also realize that the multi-cultural America of today
brought us Donald Trump.
Meacham tells great stories as to when
and how America was going off track, the better angels of our nature took
command. For example when slavery divided our land, Lincoln unified it. When a
few year later the KKK was running wild, Grant crushed them. I wish Meacham
would have done a “might have been” had James Garfield survived his assassination
and reinstituted reconstruction. Segregation might have died in its crib in the
1880s instead of waiting until 1954.
Meacham gives credit to both Harding and
Coolidge in their defusing the 1920s revival of the KKK. This bit of history is
not generally taught. Where Meacham is most acute is his discussion of Huey
Long’s challenge to Roosevelt in the 1930s. Here was a politician who
understood media and would say practically anything to get attention. Sound
familiar. Similarly when much of the country was terrorized by the very media
savvy Joe McCarthy in the 1950s, Republican Senator Margaret Chase Smith stood
up to him and his henchman, Roy Cohn. Although Eisenhower did not act quickly
his wait him out strategy worked as McCarthy burned himself out. The link to
today is Roy Cohn who mentored Trump in the dark arts in the 1970s and early
1980s.
Meacham also intertwines the stories of
Lyndon Johnson and Martin Luther King in their bringing on the civil rights
revolution of the 1960s. He also rightly notes that much of the progress
achieved by our leaders were brought about by very active citizen movements giving
backbone to our better angels.
I have few criticisms of the book. He rightly
notes how Truman’s victory over the segregationist Strom Thurmond in 1948 led
to the desegregating of the military. However, had the Republican Tom Dewey
won, it probably would have happened anyway. Dewey as governor of New York led
the fight for path breaking civil rights legislation. Also although he gives
some credit to Lyndon Johnson in his role in passing the 1957 civil rights act,
much of the credit should go to Attorney General Herbert Brownell who authored
the initial bill that was watered down by Johnson. The lesson here is that
there are more than a few better angels among us and they can come from very
unexpected places.
So let us hope there are angels in place
to lead us away from a president who lies when he is moving his lips and divides
us by appealing to our most base instincts. It’s time to get to work as we are
called to defend liberty.
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