By Jim Powell on 8.31.06 @ 12:07AM
Why do so many on the right admire Theodore Roosevelt?
A lot of conservatives seem to love Theodore Roosevelt, perhaps
because he came across as a rugged individualist and a strong
president. It didn't hurt that he looked great in a cowboy hat.
Yet TR did much to increase the scope of federal power, and
saddle us with a federal income tax. Congress had enacted an income
tax in 1894 but the U.S. Supreme Court struck it down the following
year. With no political opportunities to reintroduce the idea, its
promoters gave up. Then, in 1906, TR began giving speeches saying
that America needed a federal income tax with ever steeper rates.
He inspired Cordell Hull, Democratic congressman from Tennessee, to
draft a proposed constitutional amendment permitting an income tax,
and after it was ratified, an income tax bill. President Woodrow
Wilson signed it into law in 1913.
As President, Roosevelt oversaw a dramatic expansion of
executive power, and was famously quoted as saying, "I love
power...I don't think any harm comes from the concentration of
power in one man's hands." He repeatedly bypassed Congress, issuing
more executive orders than any other president except Franklin
Delano Roosevelt or Woodrow Wilson.
Roosevelt believed the United States should attack other
countries even when we hadn't been attacked or threatened. In 1895,
he suggested attacking Canada. He urged President McKinley to start
a war with Spain and seize the Philippines, a Spanish colony. The
Filipinos were eager for independence and ended up fighting a nasty
guerrilla war in the jungles -- a war that dragged on for years and
resulted in the deaths of more than 4,000 Americans and 200,000
Filipinos. TR fumed, "We should regard with contempt and loathing
the Americans crying on behalf of peace, peace, when there ought
not to be peace."
Roosevelt remarked that free markets were "a riot of
individualistic materialism." He secured passage of a law that
restricted the ability of America's largest industry (railroads) to
set market-rate prices. This began the long decline of railroads,
by making it harder for them to attract the capital needed for
maintenance and improvement.
In 1906, Roosevelt signed the Pure Food & Drugs Act,
supposedly to protect American consumers against bad food. But
there wasn't a food crisis. People were dying of influenza,
measles, dysentery, typhoid fever, polio, typhus, whooping cough
and other communicable diseases. American food was safer than ever,
thanks to entrepreneurs who expanded railroad networks that brought
food to markets faster and developed technologies for canning,
refrigeration and freezing to preserve food. Brand names like
Borden, Campbell, Heinz, Van Camp, Kellogg, Post, Armour and Swift
gave consumers assurances about quality.
The Pure Food & Drugs Act empowered its chief enforcer,
Harvey Washington Wiley, to launch loony crusades against corn
syrup, blended whiskey and Coca-Cola, which he called "soda
fountain dope."
Roosevelt became known as a trust-buster by filing antitrust
lawsuits to break up alleged monopolies. Yet output was increasing
and prices were falling. Markets then, as now, were intensely
competitive, not monopolistic. John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil
dramatically cut prices of its principal product, kerosene.
Rockefeller couldn't prevent the formation of new competitors
including Tide-Water Pipeline, Sun Oil, Union Oil, Pure Oil, Texas
Oil, Gulf Oil and Associated Oil , Royal Dutch and Shell.
In spite of his trust-busting rhetoric, Roosevelt himself
started monopolies. The biggest was the Bureau of Reclamation, a
federal dam-building monopoly that built some 600 dams. It also
squandered vast resources by transferring them from the East and
Midwest, where rain made efficient farming possible, to arid
regions of the West where farmers needed subsidies to grow
anything.
Theodore Roosevelt, conservationist? No. Roosevelt resisted one
of the most important trends in American history, namely the
privatization of government land. George Washington (a former
surveyor), Thomas Jefferson (whose father was a surveyor), and
other Founders believed that property was generally best cared for
in private hands. But TR set aside millions of acres for National
Forests.
Ranchers used their political clout to graze their cattle on
this common property, and their interest was to consume as much
grass as possible, leaving whatever was left to someone else's
herd. Ranchers also did as little as possible to help maintain
National Forest grazing lands, since all the benefits of doing so
would go to someone else. Timber companies did the same thing,
cutting down as many National Forest trees as possible and doing as
little as possible to help maintain the forests. Roosevelt also
approved the National Forest policy of aggressively suppressing all
fires, which led to the build-up of combustibles, and in recent
decades when fires have started, they've often been huge.
As Roosevelt said in his "New Nationalism" speech in Kansas in
1910, he sought "a far more active governmental interference with
social and economic conditions in this country." In short, he was
no conservative. Theodore Roosevelt was a big government man, and
many of our current troubles can be traced to him.
topics:
Constitution, Law, Supreme Court, Oil