Like many people my age (62), I was taught both at home and in school that Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a great president. FDR, I was taught, saved American democracy in the 1930s with the New Deal and led the nation to victory against Hitlerism in the 1940s. That view of FDR was reinforced by many television documentaries and history books. And virtually every poll of historians including the most recent C-Span poll places FDR in the top five of all U.S. presidents (usually in third place behind Lincoln and Washington). This is so despite persuasive revisionist historical works that paint a very different picture of FDRs presidency. Lets start with the New Deal. In her book The Forgotten Man, Amity Shlaes shows that the New Deal so lionized by liberal historians and Democrats did not restore the U.S. economy as promised by FDR and his brain trust, but instead extended the sufferings of the Great Depression for seven more years. Unemployment remained well beyond 10 percent throughout the 1930s, only subsiding with the coming of World War II. The cause of the duration of the Depression, she writes, was Washingtons persistent intervention in the economy. The end result of the New Deals bold persistent experimentation was inflexible statism that has evolved into a gargantuan federal government exercising nearly unlimited powers to a degree that would have shocked the Founders of our country.
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