When President Harding died in San Fransisco while on his Voyage of
Understanding in 1922 (White House spin being what is was even then,
even if it was not called that yet) the national outpouring of grief
caused people to line railroad tracks while his body was transported
back to Washington and after the state funeral to Ohio for burial. The
New York Times wisely editorialized on the say after his death that the
President's sudden death was not the right time for Americans to
consider "the place which history will assign to" him for good reason.
The Teapot Dome scandals broke shortly thereafter and his presidency is
now seen as one of the worst, led by a former newspaper publisher far
more interested in wine, women and song, so to speak, than the
operations of the government or the welfare of his country. His
successor's grip on the new technologies of the day, so tenuous that he
insisted on calling the most significant of them, the raddio (with a
flat a), did not help and, after President Cooolidge famously chose not
to run for a second full term in 1928, was succeeded by Herbert Hoover.
The
country did not recover from the Harding administration and his virtual
withdrawal of the nation from international involvement (unpopular as
ever after President Wilson's dream of a League of Nations went to
defeat in the United States) was not helpful either as Europe tried to
pick up the pieces from the empires destroyed by the world war. Seven
years after his death, the stock market crashed and a decade later
Europe was again at war.
To be sure, there are many factors
unrelated to the Harding administration which led to the tragedies that
unfolded, but the idea that we can change presidents and immediately
fix what was broken or unattended to when the country, for whatever
misbegotten reason, chooses some unprepared or unqualified person as
its president is an absurdity.
The Harding parallel is not
perfect since President Bush's departure saddened nobody and his
incompetence almost universally accepted by the time he left, but I
suspect that the extent of the damage his administration has done to
our country, its institutions, its standing in the world and, yes, its
security, is vastly underestimated.
The world is infinitely more
complicated and dangerous since President Harding's time and, since
President Hoover was succeeded by the greatest President since Lincoln,
the role of the federal government in protecting the welfare of the
American people is considerably greater today than President Harding
could have even imagined in his most stunning alcoholic stupor.
A
president in these times who chooses to read books to children on a
photo op, rather than to address a threat to the country detailed to
him a month earlier, whose disdain for the functions of government
leads him to put a useless crony (one of the hallmarks of the Harding
administration) in charge of the agency which provides disaster relief,
and whose comic book view of the world leads his country into
lawlessness, and a foolish war, can damage his country in so many ways
that recovery could take decades if it is possible at all.
So,
here we are in the worst economic straits since, well, since President
Hoover with so many crisis facing the nation in the aftermath of the
disastrous eight years, and Americans look to perhaps the best
president we have had since John F Kennedy told us we could do better,
with some shockingly expecting miracles, or that the mistakes
made---mistakes made by voters as much as anyone else--- in 2000 and
2004 can be made to disappear.
And at the same time, the New
York Times tells us of "revisionist historians"---the same fools who
told us that a second President Bush would not be the disaster he
turned out to be because he would surround himself with "smart
people"--- who have decided that P
resident Roosevelt did not get us out of the Depression and was as responsible for it as was President Hoover.
Fortunately, this is the same New York Times which publishes
Frank Rich to tell us, with so much more truth that it is amazing to see his words share the same newspaper, that
Any
citizen or business that overspent or overborrowed in the bubble
subscribed to its reckless culture. That culture has crumbled
everywhere now, and a new economic order will have to rise from its
ruins.
This is what [President] Obama is talking about when he
insists on pushing for change simultaneously on so many fronts -- green
jobs, health care, education, new financial regulation, infrastructure
spending and all the rest. As has been true since he promised "a new
foundation for growth" at his inauguration, the most important question
is not whether he will try to do too much at once but whether he will
and can do enough. Change is hard. Change is traumatic
and the same New York Times that warns us, with Op-Eds from
Joseph Stiglitz to join those of the great
Paul Krugman in warning us of how much there is to be done.
Sadly,
it is also the same New York Times which in its own financial distress
exacerbated by the new technologies of the day has
demanded
extraordinary concessions by the people who work at the Boston Globe
with the threat to close down as great a newspaper as there has ever
been in thirty days.
I have railed about all of this for some time now (see, for instance, this poorly entitled
rant)
but I am certain that I cannot live without the Globe and the Times and
the Washington Post and so on, and unclear that anyone else can, too.
My
dad used to bring the Evening Globe home every night and I tore through
it even at a very young age---mostly for the Red Sox and comics then.
Today, the first thing I look at when I wake up is the Globe web
site---first for the Red Sox and then other things.
But my soon
to be 23 year old daughter, my doppleganger in so many ways, "reads"
newspapers rarely and then almost always on line.
I am grateful
for the huge amounts of information now available to me from my couch,
and for the new voices I am able to read without getting newsprint on
my fingers, but, with the greatest respect to all of you, I cannot rely
on just your voices. I am aware of the fact that almost any newspaper
article about something in which you are personally involved has
radical mistakes in it which make one question how accurate the reports
are where you have no personal knowledge, and the slippage in ethics,
in standards, and in coverage is obvious and well known.
But we
need newspapers: especially the likes of the Boston Globe. Tomorrow is,
of course, Opening Day, among the most important on my calendar. Many
have determined
what will happen in the months to come, based upon
reporting in the Globe.
I cannot imagine how to get through the season, or life itself without the Globe: without
Ellen Goodman or Derrick Jackson, Joan Venocchi or even Jeff Jacoby. What about the Sunday magazine? (Can you think of any other magazine that would put
"brown bagging" on its cover?) Who told us about lawlessness in the Bush era?
The Globe.
In
the days before there was an internet, I could not walk within ten
blocks of Times Square without going to the out of town newsstand to
buy the paper, and when I worked downtown I browbeat a news dealer in
the Trade Center into carrying the Globe, even showing disappointment
over how long it took to restore his sale of the Globe after the first
bombing of the Trade Center in 1993.
It will probably rain
Boston tomorrow and, thus, instead of enjoying a Sox home game to start
the season for the first time in many years, we can ponder the long
road ahead and how much we need the Globe to help us walk down it.