Woodrow Wilson at 150 – Fourteen Points
Woodrow Wilson was born 150 years ago, on December 28, 1856. 88 years ago -- on January 8, 1918 -- Wilson gave his famous Fourteen Points address to Congress, using the occasion of the Great War to propose ideas to remake the world. Several historical eras later, we still are in the grip of Wilson’s ideas.
Indeed, most American presidents since Wilson have had to confront his vision – adapting his ideas, borrowing his rhetoric, learning from his mistakes, pushing off against his fanciful schemes, and tapping into the American idealism to which Wilson gave voice. George Bush is only the most recent president to simultaneously draw upon and push off against the Wilsonian vision. Depending on who you listen to, Bush is either a direct heir of Woodrow Wilson or the ultimate anti-Wilson. Bush’s neo-con advisors have been described as “Wilsonians in boots.” But the Bush administration has had no use for international law and collective security which is the heart of Wilsonianism.
In the quest to untangle Wilson’s legacy today, here are my Fourteen Points on Woodrow Wilson.
1- Woodrow Wilson had a radical liberal vision of world order but, ironically, he did not bring a developed view of world affairs or an ambitious foreign policy agenda to his presidency in 1913. Nor did he expect to be consumed by foreign affairs. “It would be the irony of fate if my administration had to deal chiefly with foreign affairs,” is what he told a Princeton colleague before he went off to Washington to take the oath of office. (Sound familiar?)
2- Nonetheless, Wilson became the founding father of the liberal tradition of American foreign affairs. He did it initially with speeches. It began in his justification of war with Germany, speaking before a joint session of Congress in the spring of 1917 seeking a declaration of war against Germany so that the world could be “made safe for democracy.”
Indeed, the entering intellectual wedge of Wilson’s liberal vision was the conviction – felt most emphatically about Germany – that the internal characteristics of states matter most in matters of war and peace. Autocratic and militarist states make war; democracies make peace. This is the cornerstone of Wilsonianism and, more generally, the liberal international tradition. As Wilson said it: “A steadfast concert of peace can never be maintained except by a partnership of democratic nations. No autocratic nation could be trusted to keep faith within it or observe its covenants . . . Only free peoples can hold their purpose and their honor steady. . . “
3- Six big ideas make up Wilsonianism. First, as noted above, the foundation of a peaceful order must be built on a community of democratic states. War was the product of antiquated social systems. Second, free trade and socioeconomic exchange have a modernizing and civilizing effect on states, undercutting tyranny and oligopoly and strengthening the fabric of international community. Third, international law and international bodies of cooperation and dispute settlement also have a modernizing and civilizing effect on states, promoting peace and strengthening the fabric of international community. Fourth, a stable and peaceful order must be built around a “community of power.” This was a new concept that Wilson introduced by which he essentially meant a system of collective security. Fifth, these conditions – democracy, trade, law, collective security – were possible because the world was moving in a progressive and modernizing direction. A “new order of things” was emerging. Finally, the United States was at the vanguard of this movement and it had special responsibilities to lead, direct, and inspire the world – due to its founding ideas, geopolitical position, and enlightened leadership (read Wilson). America was the great moral agent in history.
4- Wilson’s famous Fourteen Points speech to Congress, delivered on January 8, 1918, is arguably the most important statement of American foreign policy in the 20th century. (The Atlantic Charter is a close second in my view). It was Wilson’s statement of America’s war aims – but it was also a blueprint to reorganize world politics (wielding the ideas mentioned above). The actual drafting of the speech occurred on January 5, 1918, at the White House when Wilson and Colonel House hammered it into shape. Colonel House records in his diary: “We actually got down to work at half past ten, and finished remaking the map of the world, as we would have it, by half past twelve-o-clock.” (Not bad for one night’s work!)
5- The Wilsonian tradition has dominated 20th century American diplomacy. No less than Henry Kissinger has suggested so (in his Diplomacy in 1994). “It is above all to the drumbeat of Wilsonian idealism that American foreign policy has marched since his watershed presidency, and continues to march to this day.”
6- Wilson’s vision embodied both impulses toward “liberal imperialism” (or, more politely, “liberal interventionism”) and “liberal internationalism” – an awkward and problematic duality that continues among liberals today.
The “liberal imperial” impulse was on display in Wilson’s earlier interventions in Mexico in 1914 and 1916. Wilson said that America’s deployment of force was to help Mexico “adjust her unruly household.” Regarding Latin America, Wilson said: “We are friends of constitutional government in America; we are more than its friends, we are its champions. I am going to teach the South American republics to elect good men.” Indeed, Wilson used military force in an attempt to teach Southern republics, intervening in Cuba, the Dominion Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua.
The “liberal internationalist” impulse was articulated later during the Great War in the Fourteen Points address and in proposals for collective security and the League of Nations. This sentiment was stated perhaps most clearly in the summer of 1918 as the war was reaching its climax. Wilson gave his July 4th address at Mount Vernon and described his vision of postwar order: “What see seek is the reign of law, based on the consent of the governed and sustained by the organized opinion of mankind.”
7- Wilson’s vision was deeply progressive. The world could be made anew. The old world of autocracy, militarism, and despotism could be overturned and a new world of democracy and rule of law was over the horizon. America had a leading role to play in this progressive world-historical drama, but the forces of history were already moving the world in this direction. America was God’s chosen midwife of progressive change.
8- Wilson championed a world ordered by international law (Anne-Marie, he would have liked the phrase “forging a world of liberty under law,” yes?), but he had a very 19th century view of international law. That is, Wilson did not see international law primarily as formal, legal-binding commitments that transferred sovereignty upward to international or supranational authorities. International law had more of a socializing dynamic, creating norms and expectations that states would slowly come to embrace as their own. Wilson did not see the great liberal project involving a deep transformation of states themselves – as sovereign legal units. States would just act better – which for Wilson meant they would act in less selfish and nationalist ways. So international laws and the system of collective security anchored in the League of Nations would provide a socializing role, gradually bringing states into a “community of power.”
9- The popular historical account that America “chose isolation over internationalism” after World War I is a myth. The Senate rejection of the Peace Treaty was not inevitable. A majority of the Senate was in fact internationalist. Wilson blew it. A majority of the Senate was willing to buy onto the treaty, although some wanted clarifying reservations. The “Irreconcilables” (such as Borah, LaFollette, and Norris) who sought to defeat the treaty were a minority. Wilson would not compromise and, as a result, he was unable or unwilling to split the mild reservationists off from the hard-line opponents. (Remember that the mild reservationists included senators like Frank Kellogg from Minnesota who went on to be Secretary of State under Coolidge and negotiated the infamous Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 that “outlawed war.” His later ideas might have been fanciful, but he was an internationalist.)
The main issue was Article X of the League of Nations Covenant which defined the obligations of member states to uphold the peace in the face of “external aggression” against “the territorial integrity and existing independence of all Members of the League.” The worry of some Senators was that the treaty violated the Senate’s constitutional authority to decide if and when to use force abroad. Wilson explicitly acknowledged that the treaty did not abridge the nation’s sovereign rights or the Senate’s prerogatives. The Senate’s constitutional authority was not altered. As such, he did not think the mild reservationists were subverting the technical commitments and liabilities inherent in the treat. Why did Wilson resist? I think what was most important was the moral blow that these reservations would mean to the treaty, as he saw it (enfeebled as he was at this point). Recall his view of international law. He was not trying to trap America in sovereignty-restricting treaties. He was trying to bring the U.S. and other states into a community of nations whose views of commitments and collective action would evolve in a progressive direction.
10- Wilson’s bold proposals at Versailles were premised on a belief that the world was in the midst of a major democratic revolution. The crowds who cheered him in Europe seemed to be confirmation of this fast-developing global revolution. Russia’s revolution was initially seen in this light. With the assumption that Europe and the wider world would embrace American democratic principles, Wilson could pass over otherwise thorny issues of the postwar settlement. The view in Wilson’s head that a democratic revolution was gaining strength – not an altogether silly idea when Wilson headed for Paris in December 1918 – meant that history was on his side and its forces would bring leaders to power in Europe that would buy into his new vision. Alas, in retrospect, the winter of 1918-19 was a democratic high tide rather than a gathering flood.
11- Wilson’s liberal vision of order was expanded and deepened in the 1940s when America again had an opportunity to remake the world. FDR and Truman had both been young Wilsonians during the first world war. Wilson did not have the last word on how to build liberal international order. Wilson’s liberal ideas were modified, expanded, and updated.
To be sure, FDR shared Wilson’s vision of an enlightened peace, as he made clear in the Atlantic Charter in 1941. Truman’s deep belief in the necessity of the United Nations was shaped by his earlier devotion to Wilson’s proposal for a League of Nations. FDR and Truman also learned lessons from Wilson. They cared much more about getting the postwar international economic system organized in an open and orderly manner, and indeed they started working on this part of the postwar agenda even before the United States entered the war. More importantly, they saw that Wilson’s vision of a world democratic order was a bridge too far. Postwar order would need to be built around a Western core of states that formed a natural political community. Atlantic community came first. Collective security would be built around traditional alliance partnership. Specific strategic bargains – political, economic, and security – were also part of the post-1945 liberal international order. A broader array of institutions were built and capacities deployed to manage and sustain liberal order. Finally, American power – or hegemony – was built into the postwar liberal order. All of these innovations updated the Wilsonian vision.
12- Wilson was the first American president to wield “soft power” on the global stage. He did this by speaking not just to other statesmen but to public audiences in Europe and around the world. As the war ended, he had the extraordinary support of European public opinion as he gave voice to their war-weary hopes. When Wilson sailed form Europe in December 1918 aboard the George Washington, he had a top hat on his head and the world in his hands.
Here is Wilson scholar Thomas Knock’s description of Wilson entering Paris: “Thirty-six thousand French soldiers held back the crowds as the procession of eight horse-drawn carriages, the first carrying Wilson and President Raymond Poncare, passed along the avenues. Cannon boomed in the distance. Bouquets of violets rained down on Mrs. Wilson, almost burying her carriage. The cheers were deafening, even frightening. ‘I saw Foch pass, Clemenceau pass, Lloyd George, generals, returning troops,’ wrote one journalist, ‘but Wilson heard from the carriage something different, inhuman – or superhuman.’” As Knock notes, the same scene repeated itself when Wilson visited London, Carlisle, and Manchester the next week. “After his entrance into Rome in early January – where the streets were sprinkled with golden sand, in accordance with ancient tradition, and the banners read ‘Welcome to the God of Peace’ – it was said that Caesar had never had a grander triumph. In Milan, the ovations verged on hysteria, and Wilson was moved to tears.”
13- Wilson’s big ideas and ultimate failure in remaking the world after the war was a boon to realist critics – most famously, E.H. Carr – and the debate that ensued laid the foundation for the modern discipline of international relations. But the mid-century critics of Wilson were wrong on most of their big claims.
E.H. Carr’s Twenty-Years Crisis laid out the indictment of Wilson. He and the other liberal utopians built their grand schemes on false assumptions about states, power, and history. Of course, Carr looked pretty persuasive when he stepped forward in the 1930s to argue that liberal utopians had it all wrong; the return of anarchy and war reveals the enduring truth of power politics. But Carr and the realists had it wrong: (1) Wilson and the liberals were not utopian -- they had a reasonable theory about how the world worked and, given that, how to build order. (2) Wilson and the liberals were not idealists – they were actually, at least in part, liberal historical materialists or liberal modernization theorists who saw democracy, trade, and institutionalized governance as springing from deep materialist historical forces. (3) Wilson and the liberals did not ignore power politics but saw how it could be tamed and bound through collective policies and practices. For at least half a century after World War II, the West and the wider community of democracies pioneered a political order that seem to confirm the core of Wilsonian thinking – updated and modified as noted above.
14- Wilsonianism has made it into the 21st century -- but it is in trouble. (1) The uncomfortable duality of “liberal imperialism” and “liberal internationalism” mentioned earlier has worsened. David Rieff and others have helped us debate this issue on this blog. (2) Bush has wrapped himself in the first core idea of Wilsonian – championing the spread democracy to promote peace and security. But his foreign policy has been a disaster and in many political quarters it is deeply discredited. Wilsonianism and liberal internationalism – which are so much more than Bush understands – will also take a hit. Bush did not get into trouble in foreign policy by embracing Wilsonianism. He got into trouble in foreign policy and sought refugee embracing aspects of it. But the political hit will be sustained nonetheless. (3) The liberal breakthrough after World War II – updated Wilsonianism – required a form of American hegemony to make it work, and that postwar liberal, rule-based hegemony is now at risk, at least in the hands of the Bush administration. (4) the 21st century version of Wilsonianism is actually much more radical than anything Wilson proposed. The rights and obligations of the “international community” has moved way beyond anything Wilson foresaw. He talked about a “community of power” but this was really just a highly socialized democratic state system in which members made security commitments to each other. The more complex and extensive forms of collective action and interventions that are embedded in today’s international order have generated an authority crisis that liberal international theory itself cannot explain or solve. Wilsonianism is in crisis but it is a crisis of success. The historical success – or triumph – of Wilsonanism has brought us to this crisis.
Not bad for a President who came down to Washington from Princeton largely uninterested in foreign affairs!












Comments (25)
John thank you for the detailed discussion of Wilson.
Two questions. Didn't Theodore Roosevelt dislike Wilson because he tought Wilson was not belicose enough? If so it would suggest that there is a strain in the Republican Party that is in fundamental agreement with Wilsonian Liberalism?
Do you agree with Michael Mandelbaum that the main elements of Wilson's views have carried the day around the globe? Liberalism, free markets and peaceful coexistence are in varying degrees accepted throughout much of the world?
Daniel A. Greenbaum
January 3, 2007 1:59 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't know why you want to deny Wilson was idealist. He clearly was, unless by "idealism" you mean something strictly philosophical like Platonic or Hegelian idealism. And you quote, seemingly with approval, Kissinger characterizes of Wilsonian foreign policy as "Wilsonian idealism". In the more ordinary sense in which the word is used in politics, "idealist" refers to people who have high and noble aspirations of some kind, who are not satisfied with the world as it exists, and believe in the capacity for progressive change leading to the achievement of those aspirations. I think the point is that idealism as such is not incompatible with practical and hard-headed political calculation. We have here only a difference between ends and means.
So let's start with the idea that Wilson, among others, articulated a vision of an ideal liberal, democratic international order toward which we should aim. In that ideal state of affairs, the internal characteristics of states are just as important as the external characteristics, since as you note some kinds of states are more inclined toward aggression than others. Such an order could be counted on to be steadfast in the preservation of peace.
But practical steps must be taken to achieve this ideal order, over the long term, because the world we live in clearly consists of many states whose internal characteristics fall short of the liberal, democratic ideal. So how do we proceed?
We could set up an organization of states in which each state already closely approximates the liberal democratic ideal, and then try to expand it outward; or we could instead build a broader but more imperfect international order dedicated to preserving peace, independence and territorial integrity among its members, and then expect that over time the moderating influences of commerce, exchange of ideas, cooperative problem solving and security would have a liberalizing and democratizing effect on its members. What was Wilson's approach?
Wilson's 14th point is this: "A general association of nations must be formed under specific covenants for the purpose of affording mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike." He didn't specify that this general association, which he thought was urgently needed, should consist only liberal democracies. And the League of Nations that came into existence had a very broad membership. It was certainly not composed only of democratic states.
Where I see Wilson as differing from many contemporary liberal internationalists was in the importance he attached to peace and its preservation. Wilson thought only something close to the ideal liberal order could be counted on to steadfastly preserve the peace over the long run. But he recognized that it was impossible under postwar conditions to create a concert with the capacity to preserve the peace if it was composed only of democratic nations. And he energetically worked to create a practical, functioning, capable international system dedicated to preserving order and peace now in the present.
I think we should in our own time focus on this robust but broad and practical internationalism that Wilson endorsed - not a puritanical internationalism based on restricting membership in the main peace and order-preserving body to those who already model some ideal end state.
January 3, 2007 3:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
Very interesting post. Thanks.
However, Wilson was almost surely our most racist President (runner up, Andrew Johnson). He did not merely share the views of his era. He was a racist by the standards even if one considers the era in which he lived. Firing black postmasters, re-segregating government facilities in Washington, banning mixed dining in government buildings, extolling the KKK in his history books, using the Presidency to endorse and sell "Birth of a Nation."
For me, his racism disqualifies him from any list of decent Presidents. I wonder, though, how his racism comports with his internationalism. Or did he not simply consider people of color at all?
I also wonder how idealism and racism can coexist.
January 3, 2007 3:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
In Wilson's day the "world" meant Europe by and large. The other areas of the world were resources to be exploited by the "world". That is consistent with the racism that he apparently also believed in.
Hoppy in Sacramento
January 3, 2007 3:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
All comments, perhaps especially DanK's, very good critiques. But I kept thinking how dated the ostenbily favorable picture made Wilson seem, so that he could be an ancestor of our consort of democracies, restricted to the good guys and Europe.
Back then one could plan the world in an evening, just as the Neocons would like or, in response, Ikenberry's privileged little circle would hope to remake. Back then, you could invade all the Central American states you wanted and still call it spreading Democracy without Kirkpatrict's cynicism, even though we still bear the consequences. But that's the Neocons, too. Back then, one could open the consortium to everyone that mattered, because everyone that mattered meant somethign familiar. Perhaps the British empire would take care of the Ay-rabs for us. And that, most of all, is the Neocons, with their glib notion of state actors as allies and enemies, lack of understanding of the rest of the world, and willingness to act, whatever that bold verb means in practice.
Really sad how glibly the CoD people apply this today, and if I didn't know better, the aside to Professor Slaughter, as in a discussion we are lucky to see, only rammed that home.
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
January 3, 2007 5:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
Nothing is smooth and there is no agreement in all its details but isn't the world heading more in the direction of the CoD? Those who favor the CoD, and those who are against it, give too little focus to the power of economics and the already unifying actions of both corporations and technology. However, the WTO, the World Bank, the Bank of International Settlements and the economic power of the United States, particular its consumers and its central bank are all driving the world to a defacto liberalism, market economy and some form of rule of law.
What obscures this is the tendency of politcal scientists to ignore the power of money. Also the Arab-Islamic World, though not the Islamic World as Indonesia, Malaysis and India all show, are outside this growing unity.
Africa not too long ago also seemed to be the most outside the global system. However, Africa seems to be making a effort to join with the rest of the globe.
The coming years will face a challenge of a contradiction. The developed world has people who act as if they are under dire attack by the poorest parts of the globe. If fear wins out then barriers will remain high but they won't impact China or Japan but Haiti and other poor nations. If barriers are lowered consumers will have more goods at lower prices, more people will join the middle class. This in turn will require a greater appeal to the rule of law.
Daniel A. Greenbaum
January 3, 2007 6:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
So, Item 9 still defines the Republican - John Bolton wing - view of the world today. Let the rest of the world subject themselves to treaties that constrain their sovereignty, but the US is not to be bound in any way.
Makes you wonder what those creeps are going to do when China comes knocking on the door demanding that we repay our debt with restructured debt plans ironed out through international banks under their control...
January 3, 2007 6:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
This is a very good article, but I question whether the Neocon/Bushites have ever embraced Wilsonianism. It seems to me that what they have embraced is the Leninist/Trotskyite historical materialism. Like Lenin and Trotsky, they believe that history is malleable and can be manipulated simply by the right control of production and distribution. What the neocons/Bushites (and the Leninists for that matter) always fail to factor in their plans is the human element. They have no understanding of humanity which is why they believe so fervently, as the totalitarians that they are, that human beings can be controlled by elites with force.
They may claim that they have embraced Wilsonianism, but they haven't because they have no concept of idealism.
January 3, 2007 8:45 PM | Reply | Permalink
Which only goes to show that Southern gentlemen with Scots ancestors are bound to get most things wrong if they choose to hang out at little Presbyterian colleges for too long.
January 3, 2007 9:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
This was a really interesting discussion until I got to this point, which strikes me as unworthy of the previous comments, all of which showed evidence of serious thought.
mjrosenberg asked a very good question. hoppycalif2 seems to be on the right track toward the answer to that question. I don't think anybody has quite accounted for the particularity of Wilson's racist attitudes, however.
How does genteel Southern Scots Presbyterianism account for the particular blend of idealism and racism that mjrosenberg observes?
There is a real contradiction here. The only thing I can add to the discussion is that elistism, like perfectionism, tends to bring out both the best and the worst in people.
It is possible that Wilson held an overvalued ideal of a certain preconceived notion of high civilization. Perhaps he perceived non-whites as the Other, representatives of his anti-Ideal. I am just making this up as I go along, however. I don't know the answer, either.
I would like to hear from somebody who actually knows more about the details of Wilson's life.
Did Wilson believe in the doctrine of the visible elect? That might be a problem, but I am not sure how that doctrine is applied in actual circumstances. And even if he did believe that, it still does not explain how Wilson arrived at his unique blend of ideas.
Persuing this line of thought a little further, if we accept this line of reasoning -- that Wilson's idealism was conceived in a manner that implied an Other, it might appear to suggest that there is a causal relationship between Wilson's idealism and his racism. This would appear to turn mjrosenberg's question around. Is idealism always dangerous? Can we ever trust an idealist?
This question is badly phrased, however, because it implies an Either-Or answer. It just creates another Other.
Perhaps what is dangerous is idealism that is not tempered by irony. Did Wilson lack a sense of irony?
January 4, 2007 8:27 AM | Reply | Permalink
Did he ever!
January 4, 2007 8:33 AM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you. That appears to answer my question. It may also help to explain the fatal fascination of Wilson. The example of Wilson might inspire us to examine our own ideals. Do we take ourselves too seriously?
January 4, 2007 10:13 AM | Reply | Permalink
Some of us do, yeah.
January 4, 2007 10:21 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Unworthy" -- a film, produced, directed and starring Clint Eastwood.
I'm a pessimist. About what? "Whatta ya got?" (Marlon Brando)
My aphorisms don't come up to Nietzsche's, but then, what do you expect? Nietzsche to appear on a semi-literate, liberal leaning, convention worshipping blog?
"Southern gentleman" -- a quick down and dirty marker for Wilson's brand of racism and his filibustering belief that Central America and the Caribbean were the rightful property of the Old South.
"Scots ancestors" -- an ironic reference to the late-nineteenth century moribund nature of the Scottish Enlightenment, one of whose strands was an idealistic belief in the natural goodness of mankind.
"Presbyterian college" -- a quick jab at the Woodrow Wilson School (Ikenberry, Slaughter, and their friends) and a reminder that Princeton was a center of the Great Awakening (Awakening? for me, they shoulda stood in bed), an example of the disease of idealism which regularly sweeps over adolescent America.
January 4, 2007 11:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
In the arts it is relatively harmless to be an elistist or perfectionist. It is probably better, however, if a practical politician is not a creative genius, obsessed with his own unique vision of the world. The outstanding example would be Wagner, of course, but I can't think of any other composer, off hand, that I would trust to be a statesman. Sometimes, in my youth, I would say that I wanted Leonard Bernstein to be president, but I was just joking.
Paderewski, actually, was a Prime Minister of Poland. Paderewski was a composer, but he is not best known for that. From the article about him in Wikipedia, I gather that a single-minded vision might have been appropriate for the circumstances in which Paderewski found himself.
The relevance of this comment is that Paderewski represented Poland at the Paris Peace Conference, and was Polish ambassador to Wilson's League of Nations. It is interesting to think of Wilson as an American counterpart to the pianist superstar. Wilson may be in part a product of Romantic Nationalism, and, in any case, his enthusiastic reception in Europe was probably inspired by the spirit of Romanticism. Europeans probably thought they recognized Wilson as similar to Paderewski.
One look at the haircuts should have told them otherwise.
January 4, 2007 11:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
The continued admiration for Woodrow Wilson among some quarters, especially in academia, never ceases to amaze me - or disgust me.
Wilson was the worst President in American history. After winning re-election on an explicitly anti-war platform ("He kept us out of war"), Wilson dragged America into World War I. Just like Bush's war in Iraq, the American intervention in the Great War was a seedy mix of corporate welfare (protecting the "right" of U.S. companies to ship contraband into a war zone with impunity) and foolish, starry-eyed idealism ("Fourteen Points? God Almighty had only ten!") Were it not for American intervention into the Great War, which made German defeat only a matter of time, the Treaty of Versailles would have been impossible. And no Treaty of Versailles means no Nazi regime, no Holocaust, and no World War II. All that unimaginable carnage can be traced back to Wilson's arrogance and his belief that he knew best how the world should be ordered.
Wilson's record on the home front was equally abominable. Under the Sedition Act he rammed through, ordinary criticism of the War was a federal felony. Numerous anti-war dissidents, up to and including Presidential candidate Eugene Debs, were imprisoned under this unconstitutional statute. Wilson was also a virulent racist who kicked duly appointed blacks out of the federal civil service, worshipped racist propaganda, and appointed the racist, anti-Semitic James C. McReynolds to the Attorney General's office and later to the Supreme Court, where he would cause trouble for decades thereafter.
Bush is indeed an ardent Wilsonian, and I can think of no greater and more succinct condemnation of his Presidency. Wilson was one of the 20th century's great historical villians, an evil man on par with Lenin and Hitler.
January 4, 2007 12:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
I see what you mean (especially about the hungry look that Southern imperialists gave to the map of Central America), and I appreciate the amplification. Right now, I am reading Kevin Phillips book, the Cousins Wars, and I am picking up some resonances between that book and what you are saying.
I am not by any stretch of the imagination a historian, but Phillips book is the most comprehensive and balanced book about the Civil War that I have yet read.
Could you recommend some other reading?
January 4, 2007 12:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
Have you read Albion's Seed?
January 4, 2007 12:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hey now! At least the man loved pit bulls -- okay, maybe his own pet was only a Staffordshire Bull Terrier.
January 4, 2007 12:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
In part. It is fascinating. All of the ancestral groups discussed seem to have had some highly unpleasant characteristics. They could hardly avoid coming into conflict with each other. I have not read about the Quakers, yet, but my wife, who has a Quaker background, has read that part. She was put off by their strictness.
January 4, 2007 2:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
January 5, 2007 1:27 AM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks for this good article. I'm interested that you refer to the actions of Roosevelt and Truman as a "they." I was under the impression that FDR and Truman barely spoke before FDR died.
From my long-past study of the defeat of the League, I think you've got it right. Wilson could have had his League if he could have agreed to compromise. One of the factors in his failure to do so was the mutual loathing between Henry Cabot Lodge, Republican senate leader, and Wilson. In some folks' view, the Lodges spoke only to God and Wilson thought he WAS God. This was not a recipe for a dialog. Each wanted to bring the other down.
Racism: Progressives could be racists. Racism and/or "racialism" with it scientific versions was pretty well ingrained, don't you think? My sense is that some of you guys are applying the current definition of the term and the political/cultural environment of anti-racism backward, with not very enlightening results. Understandings of racial characteristics and a hierarchy of quality led to eugenics and the idea of perfecting humans. Isn't that idealism?
January 9, 2007 11:46 AM | Reply | Permalink
As Hitler pointed out, we were well ahead of Germany on the eugenics front.
" . . . three generations of imbeciles are enough."
BUCK v. BELL, 274 U.S. 200 (1927). Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.January 9, 2007 2:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
Was Holmes talking about the Bush family?
January 9, 2007 6:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
I thought you might enjoy how I incorporated one of Wilson's 14 points into my latest YouTube video analyzing Bush's January 10 speech on Iraq. My video is at:
Should the US Just THREATEN to Get Out of Iraq?
January 15, 2007 8:16 PM | Reply | Permalink