The Ghost of FDR

Date: June 10th, 2010

By Robert Ringer

In my recent interview with Dr. Christopher Metzler of Georgetown University, he repeatedly expressed concern over what it’s going to take to wake up millions of Americans who still appear to be hung over from an excess of Obama-Aid. I share Dr. Metzler’s concern, and have been unimpressed with the constant drumbeat about Barack Obama’s “rapidly declining” poll numbers.

Maybe I’ve been living on different planet, but it seems to me that Der Fuhrbama’s approval ratings have been gently moving back and forth between roughly 43 and 48 percent for as long as I can remember. Nothing he does, no matter how anti-Constitutional, how criminal, or how arrogant, seems to phase 40 percent or so of the population.

I understand the roughly 30 percent who sincerely want the United States to become a hard-core socialist nation. They have a genuine desire to redistribute wealth and live under an all-powerful central government. I get it. They are a visible enemy, and you clearly understand that you have to push back against them day in and day out.

But the other 10-15 percent – those who don’t want to live under a socialist regime, yet still approve of the job BHO is doing – are the ones who have people like Dr. Metzler and myself puzzled. Do they ever watch anything but sports and Ice Road Truckers on television? Do they ever read nonfiction adult books or watch Fox News? Are their legs irreversibly tingled by the idea, of and by itself, of an African-American in the White House? Are they simply not able to get over it?

Yet, if you think about the nonstop illegalities that went on when Franklin Delano Roosevelt had a chokehold on the U.S. economy, Obama’s strong poll numbers should not be that surprising. In rereading Amity Shlaes’ The Forgotten Man, I was again reminded of the eerie similarities between the modi operandi of FDR and Barack Obama. So much so that BHO could pass as the ghost of FDR.

One cannot help but draw the conclusion that Obama must have studied the FDR playbook carefully, because he came out of the starting gate seemingly determined to follow his progressive strategy to the T. Like FDR, Obama is a truly licentious creature, totally devoid of ethics and harboring a complete disregard for the law, the wishes of the electorate, the Constitution, and the natural rights of man.

From his creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) under David Lilienthal to his attempt to pack the Supreme Court with an additional (and more liberal) number of judges, FDR sincerely believed that the Constitution was an outdated document.

There is one section, in particular, in The Forgotten Man that reminded me of the current-day antics (health care, cap and trade, financial regulation, etc.) of Barack Obama. Early on, through the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRI), which was signed into law in 1933, FDR basically threw out the Constitution and engaged in a Herculean effort to force his will and progressive ideas on the American people.

Fortunately, in a landmark case in 1935, Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that Title I of the NIRA was unconstitutional, and the Act was trashed shortly thereafter.

In her book, Shlaes quotes Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes on the unanimous verdict in the Schechter case: “Extraordinary conditions [the Great Depression] may call for extraordinary remedies. But the argument necessarily falls short of an attempt to justify action which lies outside the sphere of constitutional power.” He went on to say that the National Recovery Administration (NRA), which administered and enforced the NIRI, had resorted to “coercive exercise of the law-making power.”

Further, Justice Louis Brandeis told Tommy Corcoran and Ben Cohen, the two attorneys who had been the key legal advisors on FDR’s New Deal, “This is the end of this business of centralization, and I want you to go back and tell the president that we’re not going to let this government centralize everything. It’s come to an end.”

In reference to the Supreme Court decision, Senator William Borah of Idaho spelled it out clearly when he said, “We live under a written Constitution … fortunate or unfortunate, it is a fact.” What a novel thought.

BHO’s own public disdain for the Supreme Court can be traced back to FDR, who gave many a tongue-lashing to members of the highest court in the land. After the court shattered his grandiose plans to have the NRA stalk businesses nationwide under a phony stretch of the Interstate Commerce Clause (the same stretch used to pass Obamacare), FDR stated that by refusing to interpret the Commerce Clause in a way that would give him and his fellow New Dealers the police-state powers they desired, they were taking the country back to “the horse and buggy age.”

Now, here’s the scary part when thinking about BHO and his New New Deal: FDR, after a disastrous first term, was reelected anyway! And after four more years of the Great Depression, he was reelected for an unprecedented third term … then, finally, a fourth!

When he mercifully croaked in 1945, he left, as his legacy to the nation, a fraudulent, anti-Constitutional Social Security program, an anti-prosperity tax structure, and a solid foundation for a genuine welfare-state that would grow out of control each year until it finally began to collapse early in the next century.

So, yes, it does give one cause for concern that Barack Obama, master of the silver-tongued lie, could conceivably be reelected by a coalition of true-believing socialists, hard-core false-prosperity addicts, and those with irreversible damage caused by one too many leg-tingling episodes.

Which is why all liberty lovers should be focused on vigilance rather than overconfidence in the upcoming elections. Never underestimate the enemy!

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9 Responses to “The Ghost of FDR”

  1. DiOrio101 Says:

    It’s nice to see that someone besides Glenn Beck describes Obama and the Marxist movement in precise terms.

  2. driftwoodkat Says:

    Great article as usual. But the reason I am writing, is to ask permission to post this elsewhere. I do a little blogging on blogster….there are several people there who post mostly on political issues, way more conservatives than liberals.

    Several of these bloggers post articles written by other people of similar mind on a regular basis.

    I would like to post one or two of your articles on my blog to share with my readers. I feel you oftentimes offer a somewhat unique perspective on some of these issues, that I think some of my friends there would enjoy hearing about. Who knows, you may get a few new subscribers out of it. However, I won’t post them without your permission.

    Thanks so much!

    driftwoodkat@bellsouth.net

  3. Sean Says:

    What did Billy Budd say when he was transferred to the ship of his doom??

    “Fairwell to you ole Rights of Man!!!”

    We’re all a bunch of Billy Budd’s unwittingly headed towards our doom under a meglomanical ideological perverse captain. Peter Ustinov was brilliant as the captain in the movie, maybe I should watch it again.

  4. Dane Says:

    Scary thoughts, but scary times elicit scarey thoughts, and deeds.
    One underline: This election and the next one, 2010 and 2012 will determine the course of the USA for the next 50 years. If you value your Grandchildren’s lives–you must vote and influence friends and others to vote in these two elections. A silent majority will be forever silenced, with or withour FOX and Beck and Rush…we must all do our part, no matter how small we think it is.

  5. Star_Dancer Says:

    Why can’t people like Robert Ringer be in government instead of the trash we have there now? Because stupid people elect these idiots. It is SO true that these kids know the name of every rapper out there but most likely don’t know who their own senator or rep is. They know every American Idol winner but have no idea who the speaker of the house is or how many senators and representatives even comprise Congress.

    History? Forget it. They are too concerned about who is sleeping with who in Hollywood and so on and so on. Shame, shame…

    I see dumb people…everywhere.

  6. marteg Says:

    I don’t know if you’re familiar with Joe Vitale and the work he does via thought power – but I would love to get him and his followers working on this.

    We need to keep our minds focused on new people in Congress, and a new President who will be responsible to the Constitution and to the citizenry.

    What strong leader will emerge and replace him?

    (I’d vote for you, but don’t guess you want the job!)

  7. reneesopinion Says:

    Your articles are always so enlightening. I can tell you that as a Black person (I don’t believe the hyphenated nameing such as African American, etc.) there are Blacks in this country that will never give up on Obama. The “tingle up the leg” will never go away. Actually had I not started listeing to Radio station WMAL nearly 38 years ago (where I began listening to Limbaugh) I would be in the same state of mind. I’ve been fortunate however to have worked for years for Corporate American, often assigned to Government contracts, thereby able to experience the difference in the work ethic of government versus private employees. I have a saying of my own: “Government could be run efficiently with only half the size and a reduction of more than 3/4 of the employees on the payrolls. (They would just have to actually work.)
    I can only hope that when states like Virginia and others get their cases to this Supreme Court regarding healthcare, that there is enough muscle left within the court to render the same type of decision that Chief Justice Hughes did many years ago and save our nation from total socialized destruction.
    Now I’m off to find that book – “The Forgotten Man.”

  8. Tom D. Says:

    The following excerpt is from the brilliant book “It Didn’t Start With Watergate” by Victor Lasky, p. 154. Brace yourselves, because it includes a direct quote from Franklin Roosevelt’s OWN SON, John. And it would likely be a famous quote, but for the liberal press burying it:

    “In May 1973 at the height of the controversy over Watergate, Bob Considine asked John Roosevelt, the President’s youngest son, what he thought about the scandal. John Roosevelt responded, `I can’t understand all the commotion in this case. Hell, my father just about invented bugging. Had them spread all over, and thought nothing of it.’”

    Yep. FDR’s own son said that.

  9. Robert Ringer's Voice of Sanity Blog Says:

    [...] The Ghost of FDR [...]

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