Julia Hahn writing in Breitbart
* * *
In recent decades, a revisionist history of American
trade policy has developed an almost religious status in Washington D.C.
* YEP...
(*SNORT*)
In this context, the candidacy of Donald Trump has been
presented as a deviation from America’s historic “free trade” policy when, in
fact, America was founded on Alexander Hamilton’s protectionist economic system
whose greatest defenders would become Abraham Lincoln’s Republican Party.
* TRUE!
(*LOL*)
Our nation’s long, successful record of trade
protectionism has been “deliberately forgotten,” says economist Ian Fletcher.
* YEP. "DELIBERATE" IS RIGHT. THE LIES. THE
PROPAGANDA. JUST DISGUSTING...
Today, “standard economic history taught in the United
States is distorted by ideology and has key facts airbrushed out,” Fletcher
says.
"The idea that America’s economic tradition has been economic liberty, laissez faire, and wide-open cowboy capitalism — which would naturally include free trade… is simply not real history. The reality is that all four presidents on Mount Rushmore were protectionists. (Even Jefferson came around after the War of 1812). Protectionism is, in fact, the real American way."
* FOLKS! THIS IS AMERICAN HISTORY! THIS IS THE REAL
HISTORY OF AMERICA AND AMERICAN GREATNESS!
As Lincoln declared, “Give us a protective tariff and we
will have the greatest nation on earth.”
Lincoln warned that “the abandonment of the protective
policy by the American Government… must produce want and ruin among our people.”
(*SHRUG*)
(*SILENCE*)
In 1816, Thomas Jefferson wrote, “manufactures are now as
necessary to our independence as to our comfort… keep pace with me in
purchasing nothing foreign where an equivalent of domestic fabric can be
obtained, without regard to difference of price.”
* NOW I'LL BE HONEST... I WOULDN'T GO THAT FAR. PRICE
DOES MATTER. BUT IT'S NOT THE ONLY PART OF THE EQUATION THAT MATTERS! JOBS
MATTER! A STRONG, SECURE, AND PROUD LOWER MIDDLE CLASS MATTERS! AND OBVIOUSLY A
STRONG, SECURE, AND PROUD MIDDLE CLASS MATTERS!
* A PERMANENT WELFARE CLASS IS FOR ALL INTENTS AND
PURPOSES NOT JUST A SOCIAL THREAT TO OUR VERY CIVILIZATION BUT IT'S ALSO A
NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT! AN UNDERCLASS WITHOUT HOPE BREEDS DISCONTENT AND
DISCONTENT BREEDS...
(*SHRUG*)
* YOU GET THE PICTURE, FOLKS.
* COLLEGE IS NOT THE "ONE SIZE FITS ALL"
SOLUTION TO OUR ECONOMIC PROBLEMS. A "LADDER" TO PROSPERITY VIA THE FACTORY
FLOOR WAS A MUST IN OUR GRANDPARENT'S DAY AND IT'S STILL A MUST TODAY - NO
MATTER WHAT THE ELITES TELL YOU!
In 1832, the Great Compromiser, Henry Clay, was vocal
about his disdain for “free traders.”
“It is not free trade that they are recommending to our acceptance. It is in effect, the British colonial system that we are invited to adopt; and, if their policy prevail, it will lead substantially to the re-colonization of these States, under the commercial dominion of Great Britain.”
Clay’s rival, Andrew Jackson, in explaining his support
for a tariff, wrote:
“We have been too long subject to the policy of the British merchants. It is time we should become a little more Americanized, and, instead of feeding the paupers and laborers of Europe, feed our own, or else, in a short time, by continuing our present policy, we shall all be paupers ourselves.”
Said Republican President William McKinley:
“Under free trade, the trader is the master and the producer the slave. Protection is but the law of nature, the law of self-preservation, of self-development, of securing the highest and best destiny of the race of man,” “[Free trade] destroys the dignity and independence of American labor… It will take away from the people of this country who work for a living — and the majority of them live by the sweat of their faces — it will take from them heart and home and hope. It will be self-destruction.”
* TO MY FELLOW MEMBERS OF THE MIDDLE CLASS... AND TO
THOSE OF YOU WHOM I WOULD DESCRIBE AS THE UPPER MIDDLE CLASS - OR EVEN THE RICH
- I ASK: DO NOT THE WORDS OF MCKINLEY RESONATE WITH YOU?
* I DON'T LIKE SLUMS. I'M NOT A FAN OF GHETTOS. THE PEOPLE
BORN IN SLUMS NEED A PATHWAY OUT! GOOD, HONEST BLUE COLLAR WORK IS ONE SUCH
PATHWAY!
Historically, “free trade” was a policy supported by
Southern agrarians, who benefited disproportionately from a low-tariff trading
system. Northern industrialist Republicans favored higher tariffs to ensure
American workers and industry would thrive, and be “protected” from foreign
aggression that would seek to weaken America by making it reliant on foreign
goods. Yet this is now a forgotten history.
* NOT TO ME!
(*LOL*)
* NOT TO THOSE OF US WHO ARE WELL-EDUCATED!
(AS TO THOSE OF YOU WHO HAVE BEEN MISEDUCATED... READING THIS PIECE SHOULD HELP!)
(*WINK*)
Following World War II, America began switching from a
policy of protection, to a policy of “free trade,” which used international
trade deals as a means of diplomacy and alliance-building, slowly eroding and
ultimately destroying America’s status as the world’s dominant manufacturing
power.
* "FREE TRADE" WORKS VERY WELL WHEN ONE IS THE
ONLY SURVIVING MAJOR INDUSTRIAL POWER OF A WORLD WAR...
(*SNORT*)
* IT'S NOT 1945 ANYMORE... OR 1955... OR 1965...
(*ROLLING MY EYES*)
“For some time now our ‘best and brightest’ have been
invoking false doctrines that are systematically undermining American
prosperity,” writes Clyde Prestowitz, counselor to the Secretary of Commerce
under President Reagan.
“Reversing America’s traditional national economic-development policies, U.S. leaders after World War II increasingly embraced consumerism and a faith in the efficacy of unfettered markets and trade that evolved over time into a new gospel of laissez-faire globalization.”
* AND FOLKS... THAT "UNFETTERED MARKETS"
BUSINESS... PURE CRAP. THEORY - NOT REALITY. NEVER EXISTED, NEVER WILL. (HAVE
YOU EVER HEARD OF "NON-TARIFF BARRIERS," FOLKS?)
(*JUST SHAKING MY HEAD*)
It wasn’t until the mid-90s, however, that trade
unilateralism and internationalism were fully embraced as the new dogma.
* YEP. THE CLINTON YEARS. (THOUGH PAPPY BUSH OF COURSE
SET US ON THE GENERAL COURSE VIA HIS GLOBALIST AGENDA.)
Both Presidents Nixon and Reagan would be much more
closely aligned with Trump on trade than they would be with today’s free trade
dogmatists.
* THIS IS TRUE! (AND THE SAME APPLIES TO FOREIGN POLICY
AND BASIC MILITARY DOCTRINE AS WELL!)
Under the leadership of Clinton and Bush, America began
ceding control of its trading policies to international bureaucrats. Today’s
Republican free traders are the champions of Clinton’s trade legacy — NAFTA,
the WTO, and China’s entrance into the WTO.
(*SADLY NODDING*)
If the Founders had desired the dissolution of
sovereignty and creation of international dependence guaranteed by
organizations like the WTO or the Trans-Pacific Partnership Commission, it is
perhaps unlikely they would have ever fought for Independence in the first
place.
(*HALF-SMILE*)
As Jackson said while discussing his support for trade
protections:
“If our liberty and republican form of government, procured for us by our revolutionary fathers, are worth the blood and treasure at which they were obtained, it surely is our duty to protect and defend them.”
* GOD DAMN RIGHT! AMERICA FIRST! AMERICANS FIRST!
Prestowitz says that the new consensus of trade globalism
has now become so dominant that we’ve been led “to assume our current economic
orthodoxy is the ‘American Way.’ Nothing could be further from the truth. In
fact, it is a reversal of the doctrine of national economic development that
made us the richest country on earth.”
Consider the recent comments of talk radio host Mark
Levin...
* SUCH A FRIGGIN' DISAPPOINTMENT...
(*SIGHING*)
...as an example of the transmogrification of the Republican
worldview on this issue. Mr. Levin recently suggested that the dangers of
tariffs and protectionism are axiomatic — “It’s been tried and it’s failed
miserably… It’s a fact… for me, it’s an open and shut case… it’s a disaster. I
know it.”
* UNFORTUNATELY... WHAT LEVIN "KNOWS" IS...
WRONG.
(*SNORT*)
During earlier times in our history, prominent political
and business leaders spoke out against such free trade dogmatism. As Jefferson
wrote in explaining why his views had evolved to favor more protectionist
policies:
“In so complicated a science as political economy, no one
axiom can be laid down as wise and expedient for all times and circumstances,
and for their contraries.”
* YEP! GOD BLESS GOOD OL' TOM!
* LET ME TELL YOU FOLKS... IF "FREE TRADE"
BENEFITED US I'D SUPPORT IT. IT DOESN'T. THE BENEFITS ARE OUTWEIGHED BY THE
COSTS - BOTH FINANCIAL AND SOCIETAL.
* I'M 54-YEARS-OLD. I'VE SEEN THE RESULTS OF "FREE
TRADE." I'VE SEEN THE RESULTS OF "GLOBALISM." I WANT MY COUNTRY
BACK!
In 1875, Joseph Wharton — the steel industrialist who
founded the nation’s first business school and Trump’s alma mater, the Wharton
School of the University of Pennsylvania — was more blunt in expressing his
disdain for such religious free traders:
"They assume for their dogmas an infallibility as absolute as that claimed by the Pope for his dicta… and preaching everywhere the superior claims of their strange creed over the mere bonds of patriotism so that the revenues, development, and the existence of States are to perish in order that their fungus, Trade Philanthropy, may fatten for a while upon the decay, these verbose prophets of the new philosophy have become a nuisance and a source of infection which healthy political organisms can hardly afford to tolerate."
* YEP. THE FREE TRADE FANATICS ARE JUST AS CRAZY AS THE
GLOBAL WARMING FANATICS. THEY'RE AS FANATICAL AS ANY ADHERENT OF POLITICAL
CORRECTNESS UBER ALLES.
Prestowitz [again] explains:
"Beginning with Alexander Hamilton’s proposals for the industrial and technological development of the United States through use of subsidies, tariffs and patents, U.S. leaders pursued the 'American System' of government-business partnership for national development of things like the Erie Canal, the telegraph, the transcontinental railroad, the aircraft industry, the RCA company founded by the U.S. Navy, and much more… The American System consisted of government policies and programs aimed at developing advanced infrastructure and protecting and subsidizing development of intellectual property and manufacturing industries. This, of course, was antithetical to the free-market, laissez-faire policies...” [which Great Britain — and eventually the U.S. — would come to adopt].
Indeed, Henry Clay, the foremost proponent of the
American System, made clear that ideological “free trade” was the American
System’s antithesis:
"When gentlemen have succeeded in their design of an immediate or gradual destruction of the American System, what is their substitute? Free trade! Free trade! The call for free trade is as unavailing as the cry of a spoiled child, in its nurse’s arms, for the moon, or the stars that glitter in the firmament of heaven. It never has existed; it never will exist. Trade implies, at least two parties. To be free, it should be fair, equal and reciprocal."
* YEP! CLAY NAILED IT!
Many of the Founders demonstrated commitment to promoting
American manufacturing. At his inauguration, George Washington is said to have
spurned the fashion of his day — opting not to wear an elegant suit from Europe
but instead a woolen suit made of cloth woven at the Hartford Woolen
Manufactory in Connecticut. “I hope it will not be a great while, before it
will be unfashionable for a gentleman to appear in any other dress,” Washington
wrote in 1789.
“I use no porter or cheese in my family, but such as is
made in America,” Washington wrote, boasting that these domestic products are
“of an excellent quality.”
* GOOD OL' GEORGE! (WASHINGTON, THAT IS!)
One of the first acts of Congress Washington signed was a
tariff among whose stated purpose was “the encouragement and protection of
manufactures.”
(*NOD*)
Prestowitz further explains that in his 1791 Report on
Manufactures, Alexander Hamilton, our nation’s first Secretary of Treasury,
laid out a proposal that followed the “English mercantilist model closely” by
calling for high tariffs to protect nascent American industry, supporting
agriculture to encourage more exports, promoting “Buy American” policies and
allocating federal funds for transit systems to facilitate commerce such as
roads, bridges, and harbors.
Fletcher notes that “Hamilton’s policies were not adopted
in toto right away.” It took the War of 1812 and witnessing Great Britain’s
abusive trading practices “to push America firmly into the protectionist camp.”
While some Founders were less protectionist than
Hamilton, they were far more protectionist than today’s free traders. Indeed,
the extent to which there was disagreement amongst the Founders did not come
close the chasm that exists today between the Paul Ryan, Wall Street Journal,
Mark Levin “free traders” versus Pat Buchanan “protectionists.”
* GOD BLESS PAT BUCHANAN!
Rather, their disagreements represented comparatively
minor shades of variation between two schools of thought — both of which would
today be regarded as protectionist.
(*NOD*)
Given the objections to Britain’s trading practices and
the belief that trade needs to be “equal and reciprocal,” it seems unlikely the
Founders would support what former Nucor Steel chairman has described as the
“unilateral trade disarmament” of our policies today.
* UNILATERAL TRADE DISARMAMENT... INDEED...
(*SIGHING*)
Henry Clay explained that “equal and reciprocal” free
trade “never has existed; [and] it never will exist.” He warned against
practicing “romantic trade philanthropy… which invokes us to continue to
purchase the produce of foreign industry, without regard to the state or
prosperity of our own.” Clay made clear that he was “utterly and irreconcilably
opposed” to trade which would “throw wide open our ports to foreign
productions” without reciprocation.
* MAKES PERFECT FRIGGIN' SENSE TO ME!
In 1822, President Monroe observed that “whatever may be
the abstract doctrine in favor of unrestricted commerce,” the conditions
necessary for its success — reciprocity and international peace — “has never
occurred and cannot be expected.”
(*NODDING*)
Monroe said, “strong reasons… impose on us the obligation
to cherish and sustain our manufactures.”
Likewise, in 1819 John Adams noted that he did not live
in a world in which “all the nations of the earth” had adopted “the abolition
of all restrictive, exclusive, and monopolizing laws.” Adams concluded that
while foreign nations “preserve in cherishing such laws… I know not how we can
do ourselves justice without introducing… some portions of the same system.”
* AND THE FUNDAMENTALS OF HUMAN NATURE AND NATIONHOOD
HAVEN'T CHANGED SINCE THEN, FOLKS; CHINA IS STILL OUT FOR CHINA; EVERY COUNTRY
IS OUT FOR ITSELF. WE NEED TO BE FOR OURSELVES AS WELL.
In an 1816 letter, Jefferson, an agrarian who had
originally been more supportive of “free trade,” expressed vexation that free
traders attempted to use his earlier writings to promote their ideological
agenda:
"You tell me I am quoted by those who wish to continue our dependence on England for manufactures. There was a time when I might have been so quoted with more candor, but within the thirty years which have since elapsed, how are circumstances changed! […] [He] who is now against domestic manufacture must be for reducing us either to dependence on that foreign nation, or to be clothed in skins, and to live like wild beasts in dens and caverns. I am not one of these. Experience has taught me that manufactures are now as necessary to our independence as to our comfort."
* AND JEFFERSON TOUCHES UPON THAT FACET OF HUMAN NATURE I
FIND SO VEXING: FAR TOO MANY REFUSE TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE EVIDENCE BEFORE THEIR
OWN EYES... THE REALITY THEY'VE ACTUALLY LIVED THROUGH. THEY REFUSE TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE DESTRUCTION THE POLICIES OF THE GLOBALISTS HAVE WROUGHT.
Jefferson blasted the free traders who use his former
opinion on trade “only as a stalking horse, to cover their disloyal
propensities to keep us in eternal vassalage to a foreign and unfriendly
people.”
Yet today "religious" free traders continue to use the Founders’
legacy to promote their agenda.
Indeed, compare the words of our Founders and early
Republican presidents to those of today’s conservative commentariat. This
tension is perhaps best exemplified by Mark Levin, who has branded himself a
constitutional scholar and “constitutional conservative.”
* WELL... HE IS A CONSTITUTIONAL SCHOLAR... (HE'S
SOMETIMES WRONG... BUT... I COUNT HIM A CONSTITUTIONAL SCHOLAR NEVERTHELESS.)
In a recent segment, Levin bizarrely suggests that the
bureaucracy necessary for implementing Trump’s “protectionism” would go far
beyond the scope of limited government envisioned by our founders:
"Notice there’s never any discussion about the massive bureaucracy that’s going to be necessary if we have massive tariffs and protectionism — the power of the central government outside the constitution controlling… the movement of goods and services."
* BABBLE! NONSENSE! (I'LL LET OL' HONEST ABE REPLY TO MR.
LEVIN...)
Lincoln would seem to disagree. [The Great Emancipator]
argued that a tariff system was less intrusive than domestic taxation:
"The tariff is the cheaper system, because the duties, being collected in large parcels at a few commercial points, will require comparatively few officers in their collection; while by the direct tax system, the land must be literally covered with assessors and collectors, going forth like swarms of Egyptian locusts, devouring every blade of grass and other green thing."
* SEEMS PRETTY OBVIOUS TO ME THAT LINCOLN NAILED IT!
Curiously, anti-tariff purists seem to favor a taxation
model that is the exact inversion of the Founder’s model — i.e. where income,
consumption or sales are directly taxed, but imports are not.
(*GNASHING MY TEETH*)
This policy, however, would likely only have the effect
of incentivizing people involved in production to shift that production
overseas.
* WHICH IT HAS!
Levin similarly suggests that unrestricted free trade is
a necessity:
"Ladies and gentlemen, I want you to look around your homes, I want you to look at your automobile in many cases. We kind of need trade, don’t we? Otherwise why are you buying all of these things?"
* LEVIN SOUNDS LIKE AN IDIOT. OK. LET'S TAKE HIS EXAMPLE.
HOW MUCH DID YOUR FOREIGN CAR COST? WHAT WOULD A SIMILAR AMERICAN CAR COST?
WHAT DID YOU PAY FOR YOUR LAST PAIR OF FOREIGN-MADE SNEAKERS? $40? $50? $60? $100?
LEVIN IS TELLING ME WE COULDN'T MAKE SNEAKERS HERE FOR THOSE PRICES?
RIDICULOUS!
* FOLKS... THE DIRTY LITTLE SECRET: THE CONSUMER ISN'T
SAVING ANYWHERE NEAR WHAT THE MIDDLE-MEN ARE MAKING VIA THEIR INSANE MARK-UPS!
* BUT YOU KNOW WHAT... LET'S ASSUME FOREIGN GOODS ARE
CHEAPER. THAT STILL LEAVES US WITH AN UNDER-INDUSTRIALIZED AMERICA WHICH ULTIMATELY
REPRESENTS A SOCIETAL AND NATIONAL SECURITY MORTAL THREAT!
In 1775, John Adams posed Levin’s same question and
arrived at the exact opposite conclusion of the “Liberty’s Voice” host. “Can
The Inhabitants of North America live without foreign Trade?” Adams asked. Answering
his own question, Adams concluded:
“We must at first indeed sacrifice some of our appetites coffee, wine, punch, sugar, molasses… and our dress would not be so elegant… But these are trifles in a contest for Liberty.”
Levin has said he opposes Trump’s protectionism because
it will create higher prices for consumers.
"A tariff is really just a tax… imposed on the American people… While Trump and his surrogates may have the money to pay the higher prices his policies would cause, many Americans – who are already having difficulty making ends meet – do not."
* SO... LET ME GET THIS STRAIGHT... LEVIN SEEMS TO
BELIEVE A CHINESE-MADE IPHONE 6s GOES FOR WHAT... $7?
(*SMIRK*)
* MY FRIENDS... LEVIN'S PREMISE MAY BE THEORETICALLY ATTRACTIVE,
BUT IN PRACTICE... IT JUST DOESN'T WORK THAT WAY!
In a declaration that would seem to apply to our
relationship with China today, President Adams warned against the allure of
cheap foreign goods that result from illicit trading practices:
"British manufactures] disgorged upon us all their stores of merchandise and manufactures, not only without profit, but at certain loss for a time… The cheapness of these articles allures us into extravagance and luxury, involves us in debt, exhausts our resources, and at length produces universal complaint."
(*NOD*)
Republican President McKinley rejected the “cheaper is
better” argument outright.
“They [free traders] say, ‘Buy where you can buy the cheapest.’ That is one of their maxims… Of course, that applies to labor as to everything else. Let me give you a maxim that is a thousand times better than that, and it is the protection maxim: ‘Buy where you can pay the easiest.’ And that spot of earth is where labor wins its highest rewards.”
* AMEN! LONG TERM THINKING! BIG PICTURE THINKING! AMERICA
FIRST/AMERICANS FIRST THINKING...!!!
McKinley continued:
"They say, if you had not the Protective Tariff things would be a little cheaper. Well, whether a thing is cheap or whether it is dear depends on what we can earn by our daily labor. Free trade cheapens the product by cheapening the producer. Protection cheapens the product by elevating the producer."
Additionally, Hamilton and Lincoln argued that based on
economies of scale, any temporary increase in costs resulting from a tariff
would eventually decrease as the domestic manufacturer produced more.
* YES...!!!
Hamilton explained that despite an initial “increase of
price” caused by regulations that control foreign competition, once a “domestic
manufacture has attained to perfection… it invariably becomes cheaper.”
* YEP! DOMESTIC COMPETITION! (AND THEN... GRADUALLY OPEN
UP TO FOREIGN COMPETITION... BUT ALWAYS WITH THE CAVEAT "AMERICA FIRST!
AMERICANS FIRST!"
Lincoln similarly said that, “if a duty amount to full
protection be levied upon an article” that could be produced domestically, “at
no distant day, in consequence of such duty,” the domestic article “will be
sold to our people cheaper than before.”
* DUH!
Unlike Levin, Lincoln did not see a tariff as a tax on
low-income Americans because it would only burden the consumer according to the
amount the consumer consumed.
"By the tariff system, the whole revenue is paid by the consumers of foreign goods… the burthen of revenue falls almost entirely on the wealthy and luxurious few, while the substantial and laboring many who live at home, and upon home products, go entirely free."
Levin argues that adopting protectionist policies to
defend America’s industrial independence is not conservative. “What I see
developing is not a conservative coalition, but a coalition on the Republican
side of big government advocates,” Levin said. “The Republican Party now is a
party of the progressive Republicans. Theodore Roosevelt… the protectionists,
Ross Perot, Pat Buchanan, the No-Growthers.”
* NOTHING COULD BE MORE CONSERVATIVE THAN SAVING...
CONSERVING... AMERICA AS A GREAT INDUSTRIAL POWER!
Contrary to Levin’s suggestion, from 1871 to 1913, under
the leadership of mostly Republican presidents, “the average U.S. tariff on
dutiable imports never fell below 38% and gross national product (GNP) grew 4.3
percent annually - twice the pace in free trade Britain and well above the U.S.
average in the 20th century,” notes Alfred Eckes Jr., chairman of the U.S.
International Trade Commission under President Reagan.
(*TWO THUMBS UP*)
Moreover, contrary to Levin’s telling of history,
defending the American worker through trade protectionism was a priority of the
original Republican Party. Free trade was the policy of Democrats.
* ONE MORE TIME, FOLKS... HISTORICAL TRUTH:
Protectionism was a priority of the original Republican
Party. Free trade was the policy of Democrats.
(*SILENCE*)
As Ian Fletcher has observed, “reading the speech of
19th-century Republican politicians today, with their expressions of concern
for the wages of the American working man, one finds oneself wondering how the
party slipped to its present day let-them-eat-cake position.” The Party of
Lincoln had always been the Party of Protectionism. Indeed, Fletcher notes that
Lincoln’s number two issue after slavery was the tariff.
(*NOD*)
In 1896, the GOP platform pledged to “renew and emphasize
our allegiance to the policy of protection, as the bulwark of American
industrial independence, and the foundation of development and prosperity. This
true American policy taxes foreign products and encourages home industry. It
puts the burden of revenue on foreign goods; it secures the American market for
the American producer. It upholds the American standard of wages for the
American workingman.”
(*TWO THUMBS UP*)
In fact, the GOP’s original view on trade seemed guided
by the same “America First” principle articulated by Donald Trump.
(*NOD*)
As Whig representative and later Republican senator,
Justin Morrill explained during an 1857 tariff debate: “I am ruling America for
the benefit, first, of Americans, and for the ‘rest of mankind’ afterwards.”
(*STANDING OVATION*)
Morrill attacked free trade devotees declaring,
“There is a transcendental philosophy of free trade, with devotees as ardent as any of those who preach the millennium… Free trade abjured patriotism and boasts of cosmopolitanism. It regards the labor of our own people with no more favor than that of the barbarian on the Danube or the cooly on the Ganges.”
* DAMN RIGHT!
President McKinley similarly made clear that the original
Republican Party was a “workers’ party.”
"The protective tariff policy of the Republicans… has made the lives of the masses of our countrymen sweeter and brighter, and has entered the homes of America carrying comfort and cheer and courage. It gives a premium to human energy, and awakens the noblest aspiration in the breasts of men. Our own experience shows that it is the best for our citizenship and our civilization and that it opens up a higher and better destiny for our people."
Interestingly, it is not only today’s Republican Party
that has wiped McKinley from the nation’s memory bank, but also President
Obama, who went so far as to strip his name from Alaska’s Mount McKinley — now
dubbed Denali. Donald Trump proclaimed this a “great insult” and pledged that,
if elected, he would change the name back.
Lastly, [that moron] Levin goes so far as to accuse Trump
of sounding Marxist because of his desire to make the Republican Party a
“workers’ party.”
"Now he [Trump] says the Republican is going to be a new party — the 'workers’ party.' The 'workers’ party?' You’re going to call it the 'workers’ party?' Like the Communist social workers’ union? […] You’re going to sound like Marx now? […] We’re going to start talking about the proletariat? And the bourgeois next? That’s Bernie Sanders stuff!"
* LEVIN GIVES ME A HEADACHE...
While Levin presents himself as a guardian of our Founders’
economic principles, his support for unilateral free trade ironically places
his trading views closer to Karl Marx than it does to the legacy of Washington,
Hamilton, and Lincoln.
* INDEED; READ ON!
In his 1848 address to the Democratic Association of
Brussels, Marx declared that he was “in favor of free trade” because of its
destructive capabilities for hastening social revolution.
"The free trade system is destructive. It breaks up old nationalities and pushes the antagonism of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie to the extreme point. In a word, the free trade system hastens the social revolution. It is in this revolutionary sense alone, gentlemen that I vote in favor of free trade."
* I ONLY WISH MARK LEVIN ACTUALLY KNEW AS MUCH AS HE
THINKS HE KNOWS.