There are two ways (at least) that democracies can
fail. The majority can unjustly and
unfairly impose its will on minorities, or the majority, through indifference or
ignorance, can allow a minority to use democratic means to impose its will on
the majority. The danger currently is
that a minority will use an autocratic leader to diminish our democratic norms
to the point where the leader has the power to persecute any person or
institution that disagrees with his/her policies. Adam Hochschild, a journalist and author,
addresses our current situation in Lessons
from a Dark Time, the first in a collection of essays from his book Lessons from a Dark Time and Other Essays. What Hochschild provides us is an example
from our not too distant past that demonstrates how badly our government and
our society can behave when our chief executive has inadequate checks on his
actions. The current threat is Donald
Trump. The villain from the past is none
other than Woodrow Wilson.
As president, Trump has attacked anyone who has had the
temerity to disagree with him. This
includes newspapers, judges, politicians, random individuals, and even leaders
of our traditional allies. This moved Hochschild
to ask what might occur if none of these people or agencies had any power to
check Trump’s policies?
“For a chilling answer, we need
only roll back the clock a century, to a time when the United States endured a
three-year period of unparalleled surveillance, censorship, mass imprisonment,
and anti-immigrant terror. And strangely,
all this happened under a president usually remembered for his internationalist
idealism.”
Wilson may have acquired the trappings of an idealist
intellectual, but he was also a southern racist who was intolerant of any
opposition to his policies. He was
elected as the man who kept us out of war, but subsequently decided he wanted
to join the action. There were plenty
who wanted to join with him, but also a considerable minority who would rather
not get involved.
“President Wilson was not sure
he could count on the backing of some nine million German Americans or the 4.5
million Irish Americans who might be reluctant to fight as allies of
Britain. Hundreds of elected state and
local officials belonged to the Socialist Party, which strongly opposed
American participation in this or any other war. And tens of thousands of Americans were ‘Wobblies,’
member of the militant Industrial Workers of the World, or IWW, and the only
battle they wanted to fight was that of labor against capital.”
Wilson set the table for what was to come by making
inflammatory statements about those who might disagree with the direction he
wished to follow.
“In strikingly Trumpian fashion,
Wilson himself helped sow suspicion of dissenters and hidden enemies…Well before
the declaration of war, he had ominously warned that ‘there are citizens of the
United States, I blush to admit, born under other flags…who have poured the
poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life…Such creatures
of passion, disloyalty, and anarchy must be crushed out’.”
Those were words designed to stir up hatred of anyone
Wilson thought might be an opponent of going to war. It worked, and the public and the government
(local, state, and national) accommodated his wishes.
“The moment the United States
joined the conflict in Europe, a second, less noticed war began at home. Staffed by federal agents, local police, and
civilian vigilantes, it had three targets: anyone who might be a German sympathizer,
left-wing newspapers and magazines, and labor activists. The war against the last two groups would
continue for a year and a half after the First World War ended.”
The “crushing” of German Americans began quickly.
“The government started
arresting and interning native-born Germans who were not naturalized U.S. citizens—but
in a highly selective way, rounding up for example, all those who were IWW
members. Millions rushed to spurn
anything German. Families named Schmidt
quickly became Smith. German-language
textbooks were tossed on bonfires. The
German-born conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Karl Muck, was locked
up, even though he was a citizen of Switzerland; notes he had made on a score
of J.S. Bach’s St. Mathew’s Passion
were suspected of being coded messages to Germany. Berlin, Iowa, changed its name to Lincoln,
and East Germantown, Indiana, became Pershing, named after the general leading
American soldiers in their broad-brimmed hats to France. Hamburger was now ‘Salisbury steak’ and
German measles ‘Liberty measles.’ The New York Herald published the names and
addresses of every German or Austro-Hungarian national living in the city.”
Incidents of anti-German violence became commonplace. Hochschild tells of the sad fate of German-born
Robert Prager in Collinsville, Illinois.
“They kicked and punched him,
stripped off his clothes, wrapped him in an American flag, forced him to sing
the ‘Star Spangled Banner,’ and lynched him from a tree on the outskirts of
town. No matter that he had tried to
enlist in the U.S. Navy but was turned down because he had a glass eye. After a jury deliberated for only forty-five
minutes, eleven members of the mob were acquitted of all charges, while a
military band played outside the courthouse.”
The placing of a target on the backs of German and Austro-Hungarian
nationalists by the New York Herald
may have been self-initiated, or it may have been driven by pressure to “join
the program.”
“People from the highest reaches
of society bayed for blood like a lynch mob.
Elihu Root, a corporate lawyer and former secretary of war, secretary of
state, and senator, was the prototype of the so-called wise men of the
twentieth-century foreign policy establishment who moved smoothly back and forth
between Wall Street and Washington, DC. ‘There
are men walking about the streets of this city tonight who ought to be taken
out at sunrise tomorrow and shot,’ he told an audience at New York’s Union League
Club in August 1917. ‘There are some
newspapers published in this city every day the editors of which deserve
conviction and execution for treason’.”
The most efficient way to control the dissemination of
information by magazines was to put an operative in charge of the Post Office. Albert Burleson was Wilson’s man. Any publication associated with the IWW, the
Socialist Party, or anything considered less than pro-war was harassed or
totally banned from the postal service.
“With so many recent immigrants,
the United States had dozens of foreign-language papers. All were now required to submit English
translations of all articles dealing with the government, the war, or American
allies to the local postmaster before
they could be published—a ruinous expense that caused many periodicals to stop
printing. Another Burleson technique was
to ban a particular issue of a newspaper or magazine and then cancel its
second-class mailing permit, claiming it was no longer publishing
regularly. Before the war was over
seventy-five different publications would be either censored or completely
banned.”
The chaos and tumult of the era provided the perfect
opportunity to attack organized labor whose members could now be considered “traitors
to the war effort.”
“Virtually every IWW office was
raided; at the group’s Chicago headquarters, police smashed tables and chairs,
left papers strewn all over the floor, and took away five tons of material,
including even some of the ashes of the popular Wobbly songwriter Joe Hill,
recently convicted of murder on shaky evidence and executed. In Seattle, authorities turned Wobbly
prisoners over to the local army commander, who then claimed that because they
were in military custody, they had no right of habeas corpus. When 101 Wobblies were put through a four-month
trial in Chicago, a jury found all of them guilty on all counts after a
discussion so brief it averaged less than thirty seconds per defendant. The judge passed out sentences totaling 807
years of prison time.”
After the war ended the Russian Revolution provided the
threat of Bolshevism as an excuse to continue the various persecutions. Woodrow Wilson, again in true Trumpian fashion,
made this contribution to peace between the races.
“Woodrow Wilson, himself a
Southerner and ardent segregationist, predicted that ‘the American negro
returning from abroad would be our greatest medium in conveying Bolshevism to
America’.”
“Nearly 400,000 blacks had
served in the military and then come home to a country where they were denied
good jobs, schooling, and housing. As
they competed with millions of returning white soldiers for scarce work, race
riots broke out, and in the summer in 1919 more than 120 people were
killed. Lynchings—a steady terrifying
feature of black life for many years—reached the highest point in more than a
decade; seventy-eight African Americans were lynched that year, more than one
per week. But all racial tension was
also blamed on the Russians.”
Clearly, our nation is capable of horrible behavior—particularly
when it is led by a horrible president.
Hochschild leaves us with a concluding observation.
“The final lesson from this dark
time is that when a president has no tolerance for opposition, the greatest
godsend he can have is a war. Then
dissent becomes not just ‘fake news’ but treason. We should be wary.”
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