I find it enlightening to review the many promises made by
incoming presidents over the years, and to then compare those
promises with what they actually accomplished.
The country is fixated on what Mr. Obama has promised and his
big plans. With Washington now owned by the left, there is no
little bit of damage that he and his cohorts in Congress might do.
But a look at history will reveal that things never turn out as
even the wisest among us expect. Presidents usually end up
remembered not for what they promised, but for persistent and nasty
little problems they did not foresee. Just ask LBJ, Nixon, Carter,
Clinton, or George W. Bush.
Take economics. The Democrats' so-called stimulus is designed to
fundamentally restructure our economy and set the country on a new
course. We may be in the minority, but we happen to think that any
change will be negative and likely result in unhappy times we have
unfortunately seen before. The U.S. economy has enjoyed steady
economic growth since its earliest days, with the exception of two
protracted periods of stasis and decline: the 1930s and the 1970s.
We asked economist Steve Moore to take a look at the more recent
decade. Growth fell during those ten years by 45 percent from the
postwar pace and Jimmy Carter's "misery index," which combines
inflation and unemployment, jumped from its postwar average of 7
percent to a truly miserable 21 percent. A new term was coined --
stagflation -- and it’s about to make a comeback.
Mr. Obama’s economic policies, Moore warns, coming in the wake
of the imploding Bush presidency's bailouts of the past several
months, could return us to interest rates, unemployment, and
inflation not seen since that dreaded Carter era. If the
unanticipated recession is what we will remember George W. Bush by,
then unanticipated stagflation could be Mr. Obama's legacy --
unanticipated by Mr. Obama, that is.
What about events abroad? Mr. Obama has promised to withdraw
from Iraq and to send more troops instead into Afghanistan. He will
also, he tells us, finally locate the elusive Mr. Osama bin Laden
and bring him to justice (presumably in an air-conditioned
courtroom, subject to the federal rules of evidence and all the
other constitutional niceties accorded to American miscreants). But
where, oh where, you might wonder, is this Osama, and what is it
that we are actually trying to achieve in Afghanistan? In a pair of
pieces we examine these questions. Historian and analyst Angelo
Codevilla, in our cover story, contends it’s more likely we'll find
Mr. Elvis Presley among the living than the permanently missing Mr.
bin Laden. Meanwhile, foreign policy hand Stefan Halper explains
why our chance of accomplishing whatever it is we are trying to
accomplish in Afghanistan -- a good question by itself -- is not
much better than that experienced by the British in the 1840s or
the Russians in the 1980s. To give our previous comparison a
different twist: If George W. Bush will be remembered for an Iraq
war he did not, in the early days of his presidency, anticipate,
will Mr. Obama -- a president promising to reshape the world -- end
up remembered for a debacle in Afghanistan?
George Friedman, in his perceptive new book The Next 100
Years, reminds us that things that appear to be permanent at
any given moment can change with the blink of an eye. As we
anticipate the Obama-Pelosi-Reid domination of government, we
should look back to 1980: we had been defeated in a lengthy war
with North Vietnam aided by China, the U.S. was in decline about
everywhere you looked, and the USSR was at the peak of its power. A
mere 20 years later the Soviet Union was out of business, the
economic boom was roaring along, and China was busily turning
itself into a capitalist country. Then came September 11 and the
world was turned on its ear. So let us remind Mr. Obama that nobody
has a clear view of the future. But you can bet the farm on one
thing. It will look vastly different from what this president, or
anyone else, may think right now.
About the Author
Alfred S. Regnery is the publisher of The American Spectator. He is the former president and publisher of Regnery Publishing, Inc., which produced twenty-two New York Times bestsellers during his tenure. Regnery also served in the Justice Department during the Reagan Administration, worked on the U.S. Senate staff, and has been in private law practice. He currently serves on several corporate and non-profit boards, and is the Chairman of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute .
His first book, Upstream: The Ascendance of American Conservatism, was published in 2008. The book has been praised as one of the best authoritative accounts on the history of the American conservative movement.