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Remembering  With Astonishment Woodrow Wilson�s Reign of Terror in
Defense of "Freedom"

by Joseph R. Stromberg

Wilson�s New Freedom Replaces the Old Ones

Any standard US history text will at least mention, in passing, the
suppression of American antiwar dissent in World War I. The great
conservative sociologist, the late Robert Nisbet, wrote in 1988 that:

"The blunt fact is that when [under Wilson] America was introduced to the
War State in 1917, it was introduced also to what would later be known as
the total, or totalitarian, state."

A bit harsh, what? American historians really hate coming to grips with
what happened in America, starting in April 1917. They so fail because a
fair reading would entail some responsibility for St. Woodrow, who oversaw
the whole sorry show. Instead, his worshippers like to quote his little,
operationally meaningless expressions of regret about it. But as Nisbet
notes, Wilson "was an ardent prophet of the state, the state indeed as it
was known to European scholars and statesmen�. He preached it�. From
him supremely comes the politicization, the centralization, and the
commitment to bureaucracy of American society during the past seventy-
five years."

No, historians don�t dwell on Woodrow�s reign of terror. They imagine that
"reactionary" subordinates and local bullies did it all, while Woodrow was
busy running the war effort and planning the better world to come. Such
a kindly fellow was our Woodrow. Historians, in short, would rather devote
whole chapters to "McCarthyism," which inconvenienced a few Stalinists
for a time, than deal with a real saga of repression and embarrassingly
stupid violence.

The Hysterical Cretins Take Charge

To read the story of American official and popular attitudes toward our
allegedly highly valued freedoms during World War I is to conclude that the
country was overrun with vicious morons. Some of the morons were
judges, legislators, and bureaucrats. Others arose from the masses, so to
speak, to demand that the people make political war on themselves, the
better to fight those terrible Germans. On any fair reading of the period,
there was probably more real freedom of speech in Germany and in the
German Reichstag in the same years than in the "home of the free" or the
World�s Greatest (and Least) Deliberative Body.

The repression drew on pre-existing conflicts. Cases are so numerous that
only a few can be mentioned here. The pre-war numskull state-level
sedition laws did service during Wilson�s crusade. Some politicians and
businessmen used the crisis to crush their trade union antagonists, in a
continuation of pre-war labor struggles. The administration suppressed its
critics to the Left, while warring on the whole German-American
population. This raises an interesting question: if you have allowed
immigrants from a particular society to settle among you for almost a
century, is it really great statesmanship to find yourselves a war with their
country of origin? Conversely, if you anticipate a future war or "war" with a
particular society or state, it is great statesmanship to allow members of
that society or state to settle among you, now, as motor voters? Perhaps
the morons who run this country can look into it.

The Anglophile Willies Find Us A War

The Anglophile Wilson administration�s decided lack of genuine neutrality
toward the European war had produced a series of crises. By late February
1917, the President asked Congress for power to outfit American merchant
ships with arms � a perfect way to insure an incident which would lead to
war between the US and Germany. Senator Robert M. LaFollette of
Wisconsin, Progressive Republican, led a filibuster � along with the few
remaining antiwar Senators � against the bill. It was known during the
debate that at least one Senator on the pro-war side had a loaded revolver
on him. Tempers were strained, and Senator Lane of Oregon stood near
LaFollette with a sharpened rat-tail file in his pocket, in case the latter
needed defending from the ardent patriots in the world�s greatest
deliberative body.

The bill failed, but Wilson asserted a new-found "presidential power" to
arm the ships on his own motion. In April, he asked for, and received, a
declaration of war. During the rather tense, even hysterical debate, pro-
war speakers began handing out accusations of "treason" to their fellow
members of the great deliberative body. LaFollette and a few others voted
No. On his way out of the chamber, a "patriot" handed LaFollette a coil of
rope, underscoring, one supposes, the refined good manners to which
warmongers adhere, especially when they have gotten their way.

LaFollette later commented that "the espionage bills, the conscription
bills, and other forcible military measures� being ground out by the war
machine in this country" demonstrated the war party�s "fear that it has no
popular support." Certainly, the administration acted as if it thought so. A
sedition bill so insanely broad that it would have embarrassed the
Federalist Party was quickly passed. It was now a federal crime entailing
draconian penalties to question the war, its conduct, its costs, or
anything. A great steel door shut down on the American mind, such as it
was.

Defending Freedom via the Abolition Thereof

All free communication came to an end. People were arrested and
indicted for casual remarks made in private conversation. It was not the
New Left of the 1960s that actually invented the claim that the personal is
the political � it was the United States government.

A great wave of repression came down on "the freest people in the
world," as Americans liked to call themselves. Government gumshoes,
federal, state, and local, delighted in following up idle charges of
"disloyalty," "treason," "pro-Germanism," and "slacking." Legislatures
outlawed the teaching of the German language and the public
performance of music by such dangerous Teutons as Beethoven. Wilson
and the administration � in charge of the enlarged federal apparatus of
repression � encouraged, aided, and abetted local efforts, including those
of self-appointed, hyperthyroid "patriotic" snoops and bullies. Tarring and
feathering came back in style for those accused of the "crimes" mentioned
above. Here and there, a local Barney Fife, or an Army officer who hadn�t
quite made it over to Northern France, would shoot a "traitor" for saying
the wrong thing in a public place. The hero would then be tried for it,
acquitted, and finally, lionized in the moronic press.

Not fully satisfied with their good works so far, many hotheads and morons
in positions of public authority demanded redoubled efforts to ferret out
"traitors" and "slackers." They called for military courts to try domestic
dissenters. Firing squads, they said, should be kept busy, full time. I am
leaving out the names of these authentically American Robespierres to
spare the feelings of their descendants, who might perhaps agree that
these fellows were vicious idiots.

When not satisfied with forcing supposed "traitors" to kiss the flag or sing
the praises of the Archangel Woodrow, mobs of patriotic fellows would
occasionally hang someone. Meanwhile, Congress, deliberating again,
strengthened the Espionage Act to criminalize whatever microscopic bit of
free discussion might accidentally still remain. Congress even considered
outlawing all discussion of the origins of the war or how America entered,
which would have effectively ended all work by historians. Fortunately,
however, many of the historians were otherwise employed � in producing
propaganda for the cause. For a good discussion of these matters, see H.
C. Peterson and Gilbert C. Fite, Opponents of War, 1917- 1918 (University
of Wisconsin Press, 1957).

Cultural Faux Pas Hardly Noticed At Home

Busy saving and improving the world, high administration officials, including
the President, said next to nothing the whole time, only pausing to chide
the patriots when their excesses were bad for business or began to look
bad in the eyes of the world. Appearances matter, you know, old chap.
Mustn�t embarrass the British. US leaders did not really ask anyone to
stop.

If France and Britain had ever been embarrassed about crusading for high
values alongside the autocratic Czar of Russia, they must have felt some
discomfort with the under-civilized Americans coming to their aid. For
civilized people everywhere, including in North America, the combined
outburst of state repression and popular mob violence made the United
States the laughing stock of the world. Violent morons did indeed appear
to be having their day in the "freest land on earth." Conservative historian
John Lukacs once wrote that the problem with the United States has
been, not barbarism, but savagery. Surveying Woodrow�s home front, one
begins to understand.

The judges and courts were utterly useless for spotting American
freedoms allegedly "protected" by ten amendments. They were indeed
part of the problem. They were about as judicious as Judge Jeffreys or
Judge Freissler. The celebrated Justice Holmes was on the wrong side of
every case that came before him, his celebrated dissents notwithstanding.

I suppose that the unbounded moronism and cretinhood of the patriotic
forces in World War might be written off as one of the necessary costs of
state-building. Some, like Albert Jay Nock, Randolph Bourne, and Oswald
Garrison Villard � who lived through the period � came to question the
state building project itself. H. L. Mencken, a German-American, was � as
such � a target of the marching morons, and his observation of the wartime
debasement of American life formed the context for his low opinion of
American politics and civilization.

The people�s participation in suppressing their own rights, so to speak,
calls to mind the radical phase of the French Revolution. There, everyone
who was not a republican zealot was thought of as an "enemy" to be
guillotined. In the American variation, the Rousseauian form of
republicanism, in which the people force particular individuals "to be
free," held hands with Americans� notion of their natural goodness as
"natural men" produced by the frontier experience. A decaying
Protestantism kept watch over the whole sideshow. The constant attack
on evil German Kultur suggests that many of the participants doubted,
down deep, that America had any sort of culture at all. Perhaps much of
this reflected the absence of genuine natural social authority in the
United States, the lack of which drove people � screaming bloody murder �
into the arms of state power.

It is the most remarkable thing imaginable: a "war," effectively, against the
American people and their rights, waged with the support of the above-
mentioned moronic sections of the people, allegedly in service of
defeating the German enemies of freedom. What utter rubbish. Thanks,
Woodrow.

Everywhere, loyalty oaths were demanded. The flag salute became
institutionalized, so long ago that "conservatives" now defend it as a
timeless national institution. No one asked Why, in a free society, anyone
should be under any obligation to salute anyone or anything? No one asked
whether or not hounding, harassing, and brutalizing people was really the
best means for winning them over to the lovely government and society
based upon freedom.

In 1917-1918, it was largely the Left that resisted, and insisted on
discussing the war and its causes. Their failure of analysis � i.e., that
"capitalism" as such caused the war � must not blind us to their heroism.
The I.W.W. (Wobblies) were especially tough to take down. For their
resistance to Woodrow, one can almost forgive them their crazy ideology.

By contrast, the public seems to have accepted World War II with
complete resignation. A clear majority had opposed entry into the Second
Global Bloodbath. Pearl Harbor ended all discussion � though its origins
held a certain interest for some � and people did what they had to do.
Perhaps some of them didn�t mind being dragooned into being the now
topical "Greatest Generation." My own feeling is that popular resignation in
World War II rested partly on the fact that, having seen Woodrow�s minions
at work in 1917-1918, would-be critics knew what to expect and chose not
to be martyrs.

Perpetual War for Perpetual War

Are there any parallels to the present situation, since Tuesday? There may
be, but this is not the time for them. My main interest is in whether or not
the geniuses who helped bring about the latest crisis will feel a need to
suppress all possible criticism. I suppose we could get used to being
silenced. It will be very difficult, however, if they cross the line and
demand that we agree with them. If they do that, all bets are off, the Van
Creveld thesis about legitimacy comes into play, and we�ll all be regretting
any number of past historical turning points and wondering which one of
them was most important in bringing about the final unraveling of the
American story.

When I first composed this piece, I thought that I had perhaps used the
word "moron" too many times. Now comes word that some cretin has
managed to murder a Sikh, and another fool has disposed of a Pakistani.
Looking for an unarmed, inoffensive Arab to kill, the bozos can't even get
that right. Morons.

September 18, 2001

Joseph R. Stromberg [send him mail] is the JoAnn B. Rothbard Historian in
Residence at the Ludwig von Mises Institute and a columnist for
Antiwar.com.

Copyright � 2001 LewRockwell.com

Joseph Stromberg Archives


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