The American Spectator
 
_The Arranged Teddy Roosevelt_ 
(http://spectator.org/archives/2010/06/17/the-arranged-teddy-roosevelt) 
By _Conrad Black_ (http://spectator.org/people/conrad-black)  on 6.17.10  
_Theodore Roosevelt's History of the United  States_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0061834327/theamericansp-20) :
His Own  Words,
Selected and Arranged by  Daniel Ruddy
(Smithsonian Books, 418 pages, $27.99)  
This is a very diligent and scholarly pastiche of Theodore Roosevelt’s  
voluminous historical reflections, put together with such skill and evident  
grasp of the material that it often seems it could have been composed as a  
single volume by the author. As anyone even slightly familiar with TR would  
expect, the text tends to be epigrammatic, and is carried through dozens of  
two-to-six page sub-chapters on historic personalities and events by 
Roosevelt's  invective-laden, gloriously emphatic, and usually acerbic opinions 
about  everyone.  
The ranks of those he admires are thin, distinguished, and in a few,  
cases, surprising. He goes to ingenious lengths to find new heights from which  
to praise George Washington, though he acknowledges that he was "not a 
genius,"  and was a capable, but not consummately brilliant military commander. 
Rather,  Roosevelt's praise of the first president's integrity, courage, and 
judgment are  expressed in even greater superlatives than is conventional. 
The author's  intellectual snobbery does not come into play on this subject, 
and Washington's  astute land acquisitions in the West, which made him one of 
America's wealthier  men, and were not at all improper but drew on 
knowledge acquired in his military  capacities, are not mentioned, though such 
factors are sometimes a terrible  bugbear with TR in judging others.  
Roosevelt's admiration for Abraham Lincoln is almost as great as his  
admiration for Washington and is based on the usual grounds for Lincoln's  
generally recognized, irresistible, claims to greatness. Almost to his own  
surprise, TR admires Lincoln's gradual loss of personal animus, so that after  
1858 he almost never attacked an opponent personally. It is one of Lincoln's  
many distinctions that he always seemed pained rather than angered by 
betrayals,  reversals, and the failings of others, but it is slightly 
surprising 
that TR  admires that.  
Andrew Jackson comes out quite well as a capable general and a fierce  
president who crushed secessionism for 30 years by his rough treatment of the  
South Carolina nullifiers and his threat to hang his vice president (John C.  
Calhoun). Roosevelt also admired the revocation of the charter of the Bank 
of  the United States, even though it led, first to deflation, and then to 
inflation  and a horrible economic depression. He ignored Jackson's 
championship of slavery  and his severe mistreatment of the Indians (whom 
Roosevelt 
strenuously  disdained).  
Beyond, that, among the presidents, the unlikely fourth place finisher  is 
Zachary Taylor, because of his support of the Clay-Webster compromisers. (He 
 even defends Taylor for putting down mats on the floors of the White House 
so he  could spit on them without having to look for cuspidors.) Even more 
surprising  than Taylor is the next nominee to the Pantheon, Chester A. 
Arthur, whom TR  considered "very good." He is followed by Grover Cleveland, 
who 
gets good marks  as an honest, pleasant man, though over-influenced by 
corporate interests. There  is a gentlemanly nod to the Adamses and to U.S. 
Grant, as a general and  auto-biographer. After that, Roosevelt lays about him 
with a broadax and makes a  hecatomb of his other predecessors and two 
subsequent presidents.  
HIS PREMIER VICTIM is Thomas Jefferson, whose "influence upon the  United 
States as a whole was very distinctly evil." The Declaration of  Independence 
is not mentioned, and Jefferson is reviled as someone who did not  really 
believe in the central government; who fathered nullification and  therefore 
secessionism; was "the most incapable executive that ever filled the  
president's chair"; was a coward opposite the provocations that led to the war  
of 
1812; and was "the underhanded but malignantly bitter leader of the  
anti-national forces" against Washington. He does credit Jefferson with being a 
 
sincere democrat and for exploring the West, but his opinion of the third  
president is extreme, relentless, and not entirely rational.  
His strictures are often hilarious, and his description of Jefferson  and 
Madison trying to deal with Napoleon and Talleyrand is an example: "[T]hese  
two timid, well-meaning statesmen… now found themselves pitted against the  
greatest warrior and lawgiver and one of the greatest diplomats of modern 
times…  whose sodden lack of conscience was but heightened by the contrast of 
their  brilliant genius and force of character -- two men who were unable to 
so much as  appreciate that there was shame in the practice of venality, 
dishonesty,  mendacity, cruelty, and treachery." There is some truth to all 
that, but  Jefferson, Madison and their minister in Paris and fellow Virginian 
and next  president, James Monroe, did make the Louisiana Purchase at a 
very advantageous  price. TR discounts this because America was bound to get 
it. In fact, Britain  could have got it, and protected it, as it protected 
Canada.  
Lesser presidents are attacked with almost more ferocity than their  status 
justified. To call Tyler "mediocre, is unwarranted flattery. He is a man  
of monumental littleness." Franklin Pierce, in the words of Thomas Hart 
Benton,  whom TR admired, was a man of "undaunted mendacity, moral callosity, 
and 
mental  obliquity," who, said TR, "had the will but lacked the courage, to 
be a  traitor."  
Benjamin Harrison, whom he served in the Civil Service Commission, was  "a 
genial little runt, a cold-blooded narrow-minded, prejudiced, obstinate,  
timid, old, psalm-singing little, grey, Indianapolis toad." William McKinley, 
to  whom he owed his elevation to national office, "had the backbone of a 
chocolate  éclair." His comments on non-presidential politicians were equally 
declarative.  Alexander Hamilton and John Marshall were great men; Henry 
Clay "excellent,"  Benton was a favorite, Franklin was important but 
inconstant, John Jay diligent  and pure, John Hay interesting but naive, 
Winfield 
Scott a good soldier but  "flatulent," and William Jennings Bryan "a 
professional yodeler, a human  trombone," and a Judas goat for radical 
revolution.  
His opinions of people who weren't American politicians were no less  
amusing. Rudyard Kipling was a "bright, nervous, voluble, underbred little  
fellow," but "an entertaining genius." Tolstoy was "a sexual degenerate… a  
diseased mind." The founder of the British Labour Party, Kier Hardie, was "an  
un-hung traitor," George Bernard Shaw "a blue-rumped ape," and Winston 
Churchill  "a dreadful cad" (an outrageous charge).  
TR's assault on Woodrow Wilson is the fiercest of all. He concedes  
Wilson's intelligence: "Wilson is a wonderful dialectician, with a remarkable  
command of language." But he used his talents entirely for "cowardly infamy….  
His soul is rotten through and through." Again, these comments are not 
rational.  Roosevelt claimed that The Hague Convention required that the U.S. 
go 
to war  over the German invasion of Belgium, (it didn't); and that the 
sinking of the  Lusitania required a U.S. declaration of war on Germany. (It 
didn't --  Germany abandoned unrestricted submarine warfare for two years.)  
When Wilson did take the country to war, TR congratulated him in an  
address worthy of Lincoln and asked to take a regiment to war as he had in 
Cuba.  
This is not recounted in this book, but Wilson said Roosevelt had the  
irresistible charm of an adventurous boy, but didn't want a 59-year-old former  
president in indifferent health (he dies the next year), going into the 
inferno  of the Western Front. He cautioned TR that this wasn't a Boys' Own 
Annual  "splendid little war" like Cuba.  
That TR tired of Wilson's humbug about being "too proud to fight" is  
understandable, but he should have appreciated that he led a united country 
into  
war, that he was a prophet as the first person to inspire the masses of the 
 world with a vision of enduring peace; and that he was an extremely 
effective  war president who mobilized and sent into battle in France huge 
forces 
with  astonishing speed and decisive effect. Wilson was no Madison (of whom 
TR was  even more contemptuous than he was of Jefferson, because of 
Madison's unseemly  flight from Washington before the British burned down the 
White 
House).  
THEODORE ROOSEVELT'S ENERGY, brilliance, historical insights, high  ethics, 
and strength of character are all vividly here. But there are problems.  He 
wanted to go to war with Britain in 1895 over the border between Venezuela  
and British Guiana. "This country needs a war. I don't care whether our sea 
 coast cities are bombarded or not. We would take Canada." This was a mad  
enterprise. The U.S. would not have won a war with the British Empire if it 
was  fully engaged; Canada would have been defended, and the inhabitants of 
Atlantic  coast cities might have become quite bored with being shelled by 
the insuperable  Royal Navy. (Roosevelt felt Canadians were inferior, as mere 
colonists, even  though Canada had been an independent country for 30 years 
by this time.) It was  only three years later that Roosevelt moved to a 
profound Anglophilia that never  deserted him thereafter, because Britain had 
given moral support to the U.S. in  the Spanish-American War.  
With all his informed and immoderate opinions, it is hard to imagine  how 
TR was a capable president, but he was, in a time of peace when the United  
States was unchallenged in its hemisphere and not overly active outside it. 
And  he did have extraordinary insights at times: "If Russia chooses to 
resist the  growth of liberalism...she will sometime experience a red terror 
which will make  the French Revolution pale."  
As to Japan, "Sooner or later they will try to bolster up their power  by 
another war...we have what they want most: the Philippines… our heel of  
Achilles…. (Now) combatants endeavor to strike a crippling blow before the  
actual declaration of war. I have urged as strongly as I know how the immediate 
 
building of impregnable fortifications to protect Pearl Harbor."  
Theodore Roosevelt was a brilliant, erratic, and partly mad figure, and  
extremely interesting for all that, as this book very clearly and readably  
portrays. 
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