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How The 1960s Made Everything Worse
FFF ^ | Richard Ebling

Posted on 04/13/2018 9:10:11 PM PDT by vannrox

Fifty years separate us, now, from 1968 and the two momentous legacies of the then soon to ending failed presidency of Lyndon Johnson: The declaring of war on America’s supposed domestic ills in the form of the “Great Society” programs, and the aggressive military intervention in a real war in Vietnam. Both of these “wars” reflected the arrogance and hubris of the social engineer who believes that he has the power and ability to remake and direct society in his own preferred image.

The Vietnam War still leaves a searing memory of a military conflict ten thousand miles away from the United States, which went on for more than a decade, and at the cost of 55,000 American lives and at least one million casualties among the Vietnamese people. It was a war that tore the United States apart unlike any other armed conflict in American history other than the Civil War of the 1860s.

Hundreds of thousands of young men, not fortunate enough to have a college deferment, were conscripted into the U.S. Armed Forces and sent off to fight a war that at least half of the American people either did not support or did not understand, and which finally ended with one of the most humiliating defeats in American military history.

Vietnam: The Hubris of War Planning and Conflict Fine-Tuning

A part of the Vietnam War tragedy was due to the fact that it was managed by “the best and the brightest,” as David Halberstam called them in his well-known book with that title. These were the people within the Kennedy and Johnson administrations who orchestrated and escalated the war as the conflict progressed through the 1960s. Halberstam referred to these war managers as the “whiz kids.” They believed that they had the theoretical and quantitative knowledge and ability to fine-tune a military conflict. By incremental “escalation,” they could bring to bear just enough pressure at vital points considered crucial to the enemy in North Vietnam. This would compel the appropriate response from the communist regime in Hanoi to assure that the conflict ended in an “acceptable” outcome.

The disaster and destruction that befell both the American and the Vietnamese people resulted from their arrogant pretense of possessing all the necessary and relevant knowledge for them to design and direct a war on the other side of the world, and, seemingly, all according to a central plan constructed in Washington, D.C.

What they learned (or should have learned) were the inescapable limits to man’s ability to try to consciously direct the future course of human events, and the ever-present occurrence of “unintended consequences.” It was a costly lesson in the need for humility and caution in believing that it is in our power to socially engineer global affairs to our own liking.

The Great Society: Designing a “War” on America’s Ills The same was also the case in the domestic policies of the Lyndon Johnson administration, which became known as the Great Society agenda. While the Vietnam War became inseparably intertwined with Johnson’s name and was a defining mark of his presidency, he really viewed his Great Society agenda as the legacy for which he wanted to be remembered. In his mind, he was attempting to fulfill and complete the New Deal programs initiated by his mentor, FDR, in the 1930s.

What guided the Great Society agenda was an arrogant pretense of knowledge. There was a general attitude among many economists and a large number of self-proclaimed social critics that most of the “evils” of the world – poverty, illiteracy, lack of decent housing or medical care, and environmental degradation – were all due to a lack of willpower and well intentioned and implemented policy. The guiding premise was that the private sector had failed in meeting these problems and, indeed, may have contributed to them due to a disregard for “national needs,” while pursuing private purposes.

In a speech in May of 1964, President Johnson proposed a series of “activist” government policies that would create a “Great Society” for America. He told his audience that he was determined “to assemble the best thought and broadest knowledge from all over the world to find [the] answers” to these social ills. In 1965, following Johnson’s reelection to the presidency, he initiated a wide variety of pieces of legislation to fight his declared “wars” on these social ills.

Government programs and spending were either introduced or expanded in almost every domestic direction.

Among the leading Great Society programs were:

Medicare and Medicaid (as amendments to the Social Security Act) Economic Opportunity Act Office of Economic Opportunity Community Action Agencies Elementary and Secondary Education Act Higher Education Act Model Cities Program Housing and Urban Development Act Urban Mass Transit Act Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Food Stamps) National Endowments for the Arts National Endowments for the Humanities Wilderness, Endangered Species and Federal Water Pollution Control Acts Political Paternalism and the Reduction of Freedom

The fundamental premise upon which the Great Society vision for America was based was the idea of political paternalism. Good men, with enough political power, authority and financial resources, can successfully solve the problems of society. The dilemma, however, is that for government to do anything for us, it must at the same time have the police power do things to us.

If government is to plan our retirement, provide our education, oversee and guarantee our health care, supply our housing and give us various amounts of cash and other in-kind benefits, then that same government must, invariably, determine and dictate the form, quality, quantity and conditions under which we can be and will remain eligible for such welfare redistributive benefits.

Thus, many of the welfare programs specified, for example, the makeup and membership of a household to receive government housing, child allowances and cash payments. Federal money to education invariably ended up coming with standards, requirements and restrictions on the content of what was taught and the benchmarks for measuring student success for continued funding.

Government financing of health care necessarily incorporated regulations, controls and rules about the pricing of health care services, the types of treatments and coverage permitted or restricted and access to what care in terms of age and gender.

Increasingly, the individual’s options and choices were narrowed by, and confined to, what the government directly supplied, or mandated through its rules and regulations. This, obviously, hit those in the lower income categories the most.

Once such individuals and groups were completely or heavily dependent upon these government programs, escape from them was difficult due to the significant loss of benefits if such a recipient wished to find private-sector employment at a wage that would greatly reduce or terminate their eligibility for these programs. Thus, an underclass of more or less permanent wards of the state was created with intergenerational dependency on government transfers growing in frequency.

This political paternalism, obviously, also implied that those in the government establishing these standards and rules for welfare eligibility all presumed to know what all those receiving such benefits and services “really” needed. That is, what kind of housing, what type of medical care, what content of education, what kind of nutritional requirements the recipients of these programs should receive.

Political Hubris and Unintended Consequences

This was no less an arrogance or hubris on the part of the government welfare providers that the poor and unfortunate recipients of this government largess clearly did not have the knowledge, experience, or forethought to make such decisions for themselves. Since the State was providing these benefits, the State clearly knew best what “these” people really needed for them to have some minimum form of a “decent life.”

The “poor” were classified and homogenized into one or a small handful of sizes that were to “fit all,” with little regard or sensitivity to the diversity between individuals and their personal and family needs and values.

Here, in essence, was the same fundamental flaw in the Great Society agenda as was to be found in the executing of the Vietnam War: the confidence and belief on the part of the implementers of these programs that they could redesign the social order at home just like the foreign policy makers believed they could remake entire societies abroad.

And here, too, were a series of unintended consequences. These included the weakening and break-up of groups and families due to intergenerational dependency on government programs; the emergence of an “entitlement mentality” that taxpayer funded transfers from the government were as legitimate a source of income as earning a living from a private-sector job; the entrapment of those on welfare in isolated, poorly-managed and increasingly crime-infested public housing projects; and the deterioration of educational standards in public schools, especially in inner city areas of the country.

For the free market critic, the entire direction of the Great Society agenda was wrong-headed. Precisely because it was desirable to see an improvement in the condition of those least and less well off in society, the government’s role had to be less rather than more. As a later president was to say, “Government was the problem, not the solution.”

The Free-Market Agenda for a Truly Great Society

The free-market agenda for a truly great society was for people to have the liberty to make their own decisions, find and take advantage of their opportunities and have the latitude and incentive to design their own lives, according to their own conception of the good, desirable and worthwhile. Government controls, regulations, redistributions and handouts were the opposite of the direction needed for America.

Government regulations and licensing requirements had to be abolished to make it easier for the less well off to start their own businesses, or expand their existing businesses to improve their own lives and create employment opportunities for others.

Taxes had to be dramatically lowered in all personal income and corporate brackets to leave the income, wealth and savings in the hands of people, themselves, to generate over time the investment and capital formation that would create jobs, raise the productivity and value of those in the work force and increase standards of living for all over time through more and better goods and services of all kinds offered on the market.

Union power had to be reduced since it had historically been used to limit entry into the labor market in many “closed-shop” sectors of the economy to artificially keep up the wages and benefits of those fortunate enough to belong to a particular labor union monopoly, at the expense of others locked out of employment opportunities.

Individual freedom, personal choice and responsibility and open, competitive markets in a setting of limited government taxing, limited government spending and limited or no government regulation was the social and institutional circumstance most conducive to really fight a war on poverty and illiteracy, and a lack of economic opportunity, with equal justice for all before the law.

Eliminating the disincentives for private sector construction of less expensive housing would better provide more housing for lower income groups. This would include ending or reducing zoning and various building codes that limited the locations for low-income housing and raised the costs of construction; it also required reducing property and other related taxes on the residential housing market.

Shifting to market-based education in place of the government monopoly school system would introduce needed competition in the educational market to improve the quality, variety and availability of education for all, including and especially for those in the lower income categories.

And moving to a truly free-market-based health and medical care system would provide the required market competition to keep costs down, while providing the incentives to improve hospital services and treatments.

Benefiting All Through the Freedom of Each Free market economists, like Friedrich A. Hayek, explained that there is more knowledge and wisdom dispersed and decentralized in all the minds of all the members of society than can ever be known, integrated, or mastered by even the “best and brightest” who assert their ability to manage, direct and redesign the complex society in which we live.

That is the advantage and the benefit of the competitive market order: It brings to bear all that there is to know and can be used to improve the condition of society through the informational mechanism of the price system, and the unhindered interactions of supply and demand.

Shall we rely upon, and be limited to, what the government regulators, planners and redistributors are able to know and understand; or shall we be free to utilize and benefit from what all of us can contribute through the institutions and workings of the free-market economy?

Liberalism: True and False

And that gets us to an extremely important question: What is a just, good and great society? The Great Society advocates of the 1960s argued that theirs was a liberal vision for a better America. But was it?

I suggest that theirs was a false conception of liberalism, and therefore a misguided idea of a free and great society. The real, or true, liberalism, as it took form in the nineteenth century as a political and economic ideal and an agenda for social reform, emphasized the freedom and rights of the individual to his life, liberty and honestly acquired property. The individual human being was an end in himself, not the tool or means to coercing the will of others possessing political power.

These earlier (or, classical) liberals opposed and helped to do away with absolute monarchy and replace it with representative government. They led the cause for, and finally triumphed in bringing about, the end to human slavery. They insisted upon civil liberties and equal justice before the law for those whom the older political order had discriminated against, including Jews, religious dissenters, various ethnic and national groups and women.

They also considered economic liberty – the freedom to own and use private property for consumption and production purposes, to peacefully compete in any trade, profession, or occupation the individual found attractive and advantageous and to freely enter into any voluntary association and market exchange found to be mutually agreeable, including the terms of trade found acceptable by the traders – to be inseparable from any understanding of and practical existence to human freedom.

The classical liberals considered this also to be a “morally” better society. Why? Because it is based on the idea of respecting the dignity of the individual not to be viewed and treated as a “pawn” (a coerced means) to be manipulated, controlled or restricted by police power, to serve someone else’s preferred ends – even if that “someone else” is a large majority of his fellows in society.

The Self-Governing Individual and the Free Society For these liberals, “self-government” did not only mean the right of the citizenry to participate in the political process to select those who will hold political office and enforce the laws of the land. It also crucially meant the “self-governing” individual.

The individual was “sovereign” to freely live his life in peace, deciding what values and goals will give meaning and purpose to his own sojourn on Earth. The individual had the unmolested right to the private property he had honestly produced or acquired in trade, as the means for pursuing and possibly fulfilling his dreams and conceptions of a good and happy life for himself and those others he may care about.

They considered such a truly liberal society also to be the one that provided the free-market incentives and opportunity structures that would have the good effect of directing men (without force, and through the motive of self-interested improvement) to apply their knowledge, ability and experience in ways – as if by an “invisible hand” – to reciprocally help improve the conditions of others as they advanced their own desired ends in the interplay of market competition.

They also argued that such a free society is more conducive not only to raising people out of poverty and making it possible for more people to be self-supporting, but also to foster a proper sense of benevolence and compassion towards others who may have fallen upon misfortune or “hard times” not of their own making. The history of voluntary charity and benevolence in the era of nineteenth century classical liberalism – before the advent of the modern welfare state and its undermining of some of this philanthropic spirit – attests to the magnitude of this private generosity and its success.

The Government Governed Individual

What I have called the false liberalism of the Great Society turned its back on this earlier liberal tradition. Indeed, it turned liberalism on its head. Liberalism now meant bigger government, more intrusive government, more regulating and controlling government, with government’s very visible hand increasingly in every corner and aspect of American life.

Rather than self-governing, the individual in this new Great Society was to be governed. Governed by whom? By those who arrogated to themselves the idea that they were “the best and brightest,” the social engineering “whiz kids,” who claimed to know how various segments and groups in the society should and would be made to live.

This paternalistic legacy of the Great Society era remains with us today. Indeed, it is at the center of the political and social controversies enveloping American debate and conflict about the future direction of the country. Many, if not most, of the supposedly “untouchable” entitlement programs that are at the heart of the current budgetary and debt crisis facing both the federal government and state governments are the outgrowths of the redistributive programs either introduced by or greatly expanded during the Great Society presidency of Lyndon Johnson.

LBJ wanted to be remembered for his Great Society legacy. And he has had his wish. His paternalistic and welfare state agenda is the albatross that has a stranglehold over the fiscal neck of the American people, and continues to threaten the freedom of every individual in the country.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: 1960s; capitalism; classicliberalism; conservatism; crime; greatsociety; history; lbj; socialism; war
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To: vannrox
p17

Avocado appliances and wood paneling. Burn it.

And shag carpet....

21 posted on 04/13/2018 9:57:18 PM PDT by Snickering Hound
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To: vannrox

I have siblings 9 years older than me. As a kid in the late 60’s I was more exposed to their age range movies/music/attitudes than stuff suitable for my age.

There were some f’d up movies back then. The confusion of trying to understand the world through through warped media was unsettling to say the least.

The kids today have it even worse.


22 posted on 04/13/2018 10:02:59 PM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: dfwgator

Two heart-breaking stories from baseball in the 60’s: Denny McLain and the 1967 Red Sox.


23 posted on 04/13/2018 10:07:07 PM PDT by Laslo Fripp (The Sybil of Free Republic)
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To: Be Careful

The boomer generation drank the soviet subversion koolaid by the gallon. Couple that with feminism-the pill-abortion etc. and it was a death sentence for western civilization.


24 posted on 04/13/2018 10:09:20 PM PDT by Electric Graffiti (Jeff Sessions IS the insurance policy)
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To: vannrox

Since the 60’s, all Westerners—even the poorest—live like royalty. With devices and amenities and opportunities undreamed by kings in centuries past. But people are not happy with what they have. They are envious of those with “more” (whatever that means to them), squander the treasures they have in their hands and cry poverty, and spurn the people closest to them.

It is not adversity that besets us with our troubles. But the plenty we have that so many take utterly for granted.


25 posted on 04/13/2018 10:14:10 PM PDT by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: vannrox

Good article on the differences between classic liberalism (libertarianism) and today’s Leftist liberalism. I also liked how he traced it back to the problem of LBJ and the “Best and Brightest” thinking that they were so smart that they could singlehandedly cure all of society’s problems. It is the perennial Leftist problem of ego and pride. They like to think that they are like gods with unlimited wisdom, incorruptible character, and unlimited resources. They have proven themselves wrong on all three of those aspects.


26 posted on 04/13/2018 10:15:59 PM PDT by DeweyCA
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To: Snickering Hound

Well, I’m keeping “orange Mary Ann!” :-D


27 posted on 04/13/2018 10:16:37 PM PDT by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: vannrox
I was not in the USA during 1968, You cannot blame me for anything!

I wasn't there, no one saw me, you cannot prove a thing!

28 posted on 04/13/2018 10:18:22 PM PDT by doorgunner69 (Give me the liberty to take care of my own security..........)
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To: bitt
***welfare state agenda is the albatross that has a stranglehold over the fiscal neck of the American people, and continues to threaten the freedom of every individual in the country***

Thar's a whole crib o' corn right thar to be shucked!

29 posted on 04/13/2018 10:19:31 PM PDT by Bob Ireland (The Democrat Party is a criminal enterprise)
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To: BradyLS

At least most of the music was good .


30 posted on 04/13/2018 10:21:29 PM PDT by buckalfa (I was so much older then, but I'm younger than that now.)
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To: familyop
Anti-defense hippies smell bad and carry social diseases. ,/em>

Current version is the "Antifarts" which are pretty much the same thing minus the quirky and sometimes appealing appearance of the ladies. Must include the love of communism.

31 posted on 04/13/2018 10:22:47 PM PDT by doorgunner69 (Give me the liberty to take care of my own security..........)
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To: vannrox

Bullshit on Vietnam. We could have won if the administrations (LBJ and Nixon) had listened to the military leaders on the ground, esp. at the Provincial level. They knew where the enemy was, esp. the Ho Chi Minh Trail and how it could be taken out or just taken to the point that Hanoi could no longer send men and supplies down it with limited impunity.

We should have destroyed the port of Haiphong in the beginning, plugged up the Mu Gia Pass and then bombed (with some good stuff) the HCMT while putting a couple divisions across it. Every military ground veteran who was out there said it could be done.

Our strategies after Tet also greatly improved as did the So. Vietnamese military. Fighting the NVA with AK 47s and PRGs and all the artillery they wanted, with M1’s and some M14’s was not a winning strategy for the ARVN.

The same with poorly armored APCs (Battle of Ap Bac, early on), almost no 155’s to reply against NVN best in the world Soviet Bloc artillery.

No real efforts to take out Hanoi and Red China’s opium/heroin production (there is more to that than you know).

Congress crippled our aid efforts to the Cambodians, deliberately, and many Cambodian soldiers and their families were killed (often by massacres) when it need not have happened). I was there for a week and saw a local militia whose arms looked like a WW I museum collection.

The Cambodian Air Force was a few T-28s, and I counted about 15 Mig 15’s on the runway at Ponchentong Airport that couldn’t fly because they had no spare parts to maintain them. Their jet air force consisted of two French Fougrois Magister trainers that flew over us.

As for the “Great Society”, it was a liberal failure at its creation and LBJ should have known better than to try to bribe societal reform.

Also, many of our Republicans failed to, as usual, take on the Democrats and make decent arguments for their positions, and this failure went right up to the White House and NSC (again, I was there as a journalist and had friends in high places).

We always seems to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory and the Democrats since the 1980’s have made that their national policy. I call it treason.


32 posted on 04/13/2018 10:43:06 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: LongWayHome

I agree, the immigration changes starting with that Act is a cancer that is still eating away at the victim today, with little chance for recovery.


33 posted on 04/13/2018 10:44:44 PM PDT by Mozzafiato
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To: saminfl
Now we have so called conservatives advocating drug use.

Really? Never heard of a conservative advocating drug use. I've heard of plenty advocating legalization, or, at least, de-escalation of the "war on drugs" which has shredded the US Constitution twelve ways from Sunday, but I've never heard a single conservative advocate drug use. You must hang out with a different crowd than me.
34 posted on 04/13/2018 10:53:59 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: vannrox

Giving women the vote caused massive socialist increase in govt programs and interference in everyday life.


35 posted on 04/13/2018 11:06:51 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: shanover

The day the so-called Pill went on the market was an evil day for humankind.


36 posted on 04/13/2018 11:10:13 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: fr_freak

I am a lifelong conservative in ultra-lefty-land. I do not recall knowing of such so-called conservatives either.

I have known persons who claim to be Christians who are such, but that is not at all the same thing.

Both of my siblings destroyed their lives with drugs; I never felt even slightly tempted.


37 posted on 04/13/2018 11:15:42 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: Secret Agent Man

Yes. That was the goal.

Collectivists do not care about people; that is the pretext. They knew that women voted left as a bloc, and they wanted half the population to have the vote for that reason.

Compared to women, every other targeted bloc is pocket change.


38 posted on 04/13/2018 11:17:43 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: vannrox

The political paternalism and welfare policies of the 60’s essentially destroyed the black family. The repercussions have been evident and painful for generations.


39 posted on 04/13/2018 11:23:55 PM PDT by Thrownatbirth (.....Iraq Invasion fan since '91.)
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To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper

We always seems to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory and the Democrats since the 1980’s have made that their national policy. I call it treason.
.......................................................
I agree! I also call the article’s statement about our “Military Defeat” a bunch of Communist Supporting Bull Crap. We DID NOT suffer a “military defeat.” We suffered a Political Choice of throwing in the towel because of the peacenics. We have as a nation, never recovered from the Jane Fondas of that time. I call their actions Treason of the highest order for which they should have been drawn and quartered! And that includes our former Sec. of State, John F. Kerry.


40 posted on 04/13/2018 11:24:27 PM PDT by Mollypitcher1 (I have not yet begun to fight....John Paul Jones)
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