[From article]
"All this was supposed to have been consigned to the past long ago. The Progressives of the early 1900s -- Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, New Republic founder Herbert Croly -- argued that in an industrial era of mass production and giant businesses, ordinary people were helpless and needed government's guiding hand. It would be more efficient, they argued, for centralized experts to administer national institutions than to let chaotic markets operate freely and to observe the Constitution's horse-and-buggy limits on government power. The Founders were out of date.[. . .]centralized experts are not as wise and ordinary Americans are not as helpless as the Progressives thought.[. . .]
efforts to dismiss the Founders as slaveholders, misogynists or homophobes have been outweighed by the resonance of their words and deeds.[. . .]
Polls and recent election results tell us that racial minorities and the so-called "educated class" -- the people who expect their kind will administer centralized institutions -- still take the side of the Progressives. Most Americans, however, are rejecting the path of dependence and are intent on declaring their independence once again."
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/american_traditions_at_war_CXwJepFPPCgUoBLZXIL4yJ
American traditions at war
New York Post
Last Updated: 4:28 AM, April 1, 2010
Posted: 12:51 AM, April 1, 2010
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