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Chuck Collins

Chuck Collins

Posted: August 31, 2010 02:52 PM

Co-authored by Sami Pizzigati.

August 31st marks the 100th anniversary of the most "radical speech" an American ex-president has ever delivered.

Ex-presidents almost always follow a small number of well-worn scripts. Some rush to cash in on their celebrity. Some do charitable good deeds. Some just lay low.

Exactly one century ago, on August 31, 1910, we had an ex-president who took a brash and bold leap that took him far beyond these narrowly circumscribed roles. On that day, in the middle of Middle America, a former President -- Theodore Roosevelt -- essentially called on his fellow citizens to smash the nation's rich down to democratic size.

"We need," Roosevelt told a massive assembly of 30,000 listeners, "to destroy privilege." "Ruin for our democracy", he warned, "will be inevitable if our national life brings us nothing better than swollen fortunes for the few."

Those listeners -- in Osawatomie, Kansas -- roared their approval. Back East, apologists for grand fortune would be aghast. Editorial writers would label Roosevelt "frankly socialistic," even "anarchistic." A later historian, George Mowry, would call TR's talk, soon to be known as his "New Nationalism" address, "the most radical speech ever given by an ex-president."

Time hasn't dimmed that radicalism. Indeed, TR's speech speaks powerfully to us today, mainly because we confront, a hundred years after he spoke in Osawatomie, the same concentrated wealth and power that TR so feared.

As president, between 1901 and early 1909, Roosevelt had taken on a plutocracy just as entrenched as ours today. He won some battles and ducked many others. But he left the White House feeling the nation, under his successor William Howard Taft, would be headed in the right direction.

But Taft disappointed Roosevelt and outraged the progressive wing of Roosevelt's Republican Party. TR saw a burning need to spell out a clearer vision for his nation's future, and he jumped at the invitation from Osawatomie to help dedicate the historic small city's John Brown Memorial Park.

The event quickly figured to be the biggest in Kansas political history. Roosevelt had just finished a triumphal global tour. He ranked, observers agreed, as the "world's most popular citizen."

Kansans would pull out all the stops to set the stage for a memorable speech. By the appointed day, Osawatomie had never looked better. Bands and dignitaries would be everywhere.

"We are ready for plutocrat and peasant," wrote one local editor, "to honor the ground where John Brown made his decisive stand for freedom."

Plutocrats never did show. But average Kansans did. They started coming the day before TR's scheduled appearance, in a driving rain, via "foot, bicycles, motors, buggies, wagons, trains."

The rain, fortunately, would stop before the mud became too deep. Roosevelt would have open skies when he stepped up onto his podium, a kitchen table, to begin his address. The "surging throng," says historian Robert La Forte, "continually cheered" for the next hour and a half.

Most Americans today would cheer, too.

Are you outraged by the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico?

Our national resources, Roosevelt pronounced, "must be used for the benefit of all our people, and not monopolized for the benefit of the few."

Think corporations wield too much clout?

"The Constitution guarantees protections to property, and we must make that promise good," Roosevelt noted. "But it does not give the right of suffrage to any corporation."

We must "prohibit the use of corporate funds directly or indirectly for political purposes," TR enunciated, and hold corporate officials "personally responsible when any corporation breaks the law."

Again and again, Roosevelt urged his listeners to demand state "and, especially, national, restraint upon unfair money-getting." The absence of that restraint, he noted, "has tended to create a small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful men, whose chief object is to hold and increase their power."

But TR didn't stop there. Restraining fortunes based on "unfair money-getting" had to be only a first step. A fortune "gained without doing damage to the community," he added, deserves no praise. Americans needed to set a higher standard. We should permit fortunes "to be gained only so long as the gaining represents benefit to the community."

And even those fortunes, Roosevelt added, needed to be checked, because the "really big fortune, the swollen fortune, by the mere fact of its size acquires qualities" that "differentiate it in kind as well as in degree from what is possessed by men of relatively small means," qualities that help ensure the "political domination of money."

To check the growth and limit the power of these fortunes, Roosevelt called for a progressive income tax and an "inheritance tax on big fortunes, properly safeguarded against evasion and increasing rapidly in amount with the sizes of the estate."

Three years after TR's Osawatomie speech, we would have an income tax in the United States. Six years later after Osawatomie, we would have an estate tax. By the middle of the 20th century, many of the corporate regulatory reforms that Roosevelt demanded on that August day a century ago would be the law of the land.

By that mid century, the plutocracy that Roosevelt decried had essentially disappeared. The United States had become a middle class nation where average workers, as TR envisioned in 1910, had "a wage more than sufficient to cover the bare cost of living, and hours of labor short enough" to leave them "time and energy" to bear their "share in the management of the community."

Now that mid 20th century middle class has disappeared. We live amid plutocracy once again. In fact, 2010 marks the first year since 1916 that we don't even have an estate tax on the books. The heirs of the super rich can this year inherit billions in inheritance totally tax-free.

A hundred years ago, Theodore Roosevelt refused to accept these sorts of concentrations of enormous wealth. At Osawatomie, he helped inspire a generation-long struggle to break up these concentrations. That struggle succeeded.

Our struggle has only just begun. We can succeed, too.

Chuck Collins, a senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, is the co-author, with Bill Gates Sr. of Wealth and Our Commonwealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes. Sam Pizzigati, an Institute associate fellow, edits Too Much, an online weekly on excess and inequality.

 

Follow Chuck Collins on Twitter: www.twitter.com/wealthforgood

 
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09:22 AM on 09/01/2010
What an excellent article. "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Sound familiar? It should. The plutocracy has seethed for 60 years and finally saw their champion in Ronald Reagan. The Bushes (part of a dynasty of plutocrats­) saw both their political opportunit­y and the chance to realize the recovery of a plutocracy­. And here we are--a country of "haves and have-nots"­, with a middle class so weakened and diminishin­g that education and real economic opportunit­y will quickly return to the realm of only the rich.
We currently have a partnershi­p of government (politicia­ns), wealthy corporatio­ns, and bankers, determined to return the United States to their version of the Golden and Gilded Age of Robber Barons. Candidate Obama portrayed himself as a progressiv­e, intent upon reversing this process, but once in office he has turned his coat and deserted the middle class in favor of his new-found friends. Current generation­s are going to find the new American landscape pretty unfamiliar and hostile--w­hich sets the stage for a different kind of revolution­--the ugly, non-politi­cal type. Those who cannot remember the past, are indeed condemned to repeat it.
09:17 AM on 09/01/2010
I recall T.R. spoke of the "malefacto­rs of great wealth." He could have just as easily been talking about people like Stephen Schwarzman today.
12:18 AM on 09/01/2010
Curious why don't some of our hot shots study history and learn from it and our present ones don't say it will never happen again we are brain dead or over dosed on stupid pills when you study our behaviors and pronouncem­ents don't they teach any thing in our Ivy covered halls I learned more than those in a one room school house with out door plumbing so much for the deep thinking by proffers with PHD and students that earn one from them. the old viking
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Banjoplayer
a southern progressive
07:28 PM on 08/31/2010
Just curious, I noticed that one of the co-authors is Bill Gates, Sr. Is that the father of Microsoft Bill Gates?

The article is right on, TR was a true Progressiv­e. Recall Beck trashing him in one of his chalk board sermons.
11:38 PM on 08/31/2010
Yes he is.....has often supported higher taxes on the rich.
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TheKurgan
Prof Musician,Socialist,compassionate human being
05:58 PM on 08/31/2010
Wow....loo­k at all those Democratic talking points. Know why Republican­s never really mention TR and instead venerate RR (the man who sponsored terrorism)­? Because TR was against the plutocracy­. He was against the destructio­n of everything but the ultra-rich­. He was a member of the Bull Moose party more than he was a Republican­.
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MoreFreedom
05:15 PM on 08/31/2010
I know of no tax that doesn't play favorites. If you tax income, you aren't taxing accumulate­d wealth. If you tax consumptio­n, you get into problems like, is buying property consuming? If Sales taxes have issues of resale. Import taxes benefit local producers at the expense of producers in other countries and at the expense of those who'd use imported products. Do you tax accumulate­d wealth of individual­s, companies or both? How about trusts?

A better approach is to minimize government to that which governs least, then we don't need such high taxes. From 1776 to about 1910, all levels of government in the US consumed about 10% of GDP, now it's over 50% depending on how you count mandates.
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MidGrounded
06:03 PM on 08/31/2010
When TR spoke, they did not have 300 million plus souls as Americans.­.. like we do now.So explain to me how smaller government will help people now if there is less of it again???

You people keep living in yesteryear­! The whole time the world as zoomed by and left you by leaps and bounds. Explain to me how you accomplish this again??? Either you take away the rights of many, or you just ignore them and hope they go away! That's what I see you saying! Old people don't count anymore Minorities don't count any more, Medically challenged don't count anymore. Justice should only come to those who can pay for it, who are whiter in skin-tone. TR was right then, and now that what he has said has come true ... we need his bravery done in deeds more then ever!
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
07:59 AM on 09/01/2010
We weren't trying to maintain a global empire like we are now.