Thursday, April 30, 2020

Hooverville to Trumpville

In 1959 I entered a dark elevator in a Manhattan, NY apartment house, taking me up to the penthouse residence of Herbert Hoover, the 31st President of the United States. The purpose was to meet President Hoover and have my picture taken with him as I had been given the totally arbitrary distinction of being the 1959-60 poster boy for the Boy’s Clubs of America.
            At age 9 I had little sense for the history behind Herbert Hoover or for that matter the organization of Boy’s Clubs, other than being a member and occasionally using their facilities. The Boy’s Clubs of America, under that name, began during Hoover’s first year in office.  Four years after he left office he became Chairman of the BCA and was credited with its national expansion. By the time I met him he was 85 years old and his designation as “Chairman” had long since been prefixed with “Honorary”.
            I grew from that time with a fondness for Herbert, and why not. My picture with him (a handwritten note to me and signature on the photo) was always on a wall in my father’s house and, after some years of storage, eventually made it to one of my walls, although somewhat ignominiously on a wall of an outbuilding we call “the studio”.
            In the past I never looked too deeply into Hoover’s responsibility for the turbulence that erupted during his Administration. I have looked of late because of some important similarities I believe I see with what is clearly a turbulent time this country is currently facing. The details between the two periods are vastly different, but the common broad realities are severely compelling.
            One of the major differences was in character of leadership. Hoover was self-made, worth hundreds of millions of dollars (in 2019 dollars) by the time he took office. His father was an Iowan blacksmith. Given the handle “The Engineer”, he had honored himself in both business and post-WWI public service. Though smart and highly educated, his world view was nearly etched in stone by his business acumen, nationalistic fervor, and the nature of post-war excesses. An unbalanced  economic class structure had evolved and neither Hoover nor his Conservative Republican Party and any desire to disassemble it, but rather, in fact, to reinforce it.
            That world view limited their ability to deal with the crisis that began in late 1929, but I believe it would have limited them regardless of what crisis they may have faced. A major change had to take place, and it eventually did at the ballot box.
            In 1932 Hoover, a decent and respectable American, lost every state but five in the Presidential election of that year. A reversal of only 114 thousand votes and he would have lost every state. Coming into office Hoover had Republican majorities in both houses of Congress. In 1930 he lost the House, but the Senate remained barely Republican. In 1932 the House turned 72% Democratic and the Senate 62% Democratic. A seismic shift had taken place. The United States began a path to make it the preeminent nation on Earth, politically, economically, and socially.
            Ignoring the reprehensible character and personality of Donald Trump (really the antithesis of Hoover), it not hard to see that he and the Republican Party have brought us to a similar precipice.
The gross inequality of wealth (which will be exponentially magnified by the CoViD-19 Pandemic), the authoritarian assault on Democracy, the undermining of truth, the exploitation of social divisions, the international isolationism, the disregarding of science, the acceptance of incompetency, and the manipulation of religious belief for political gain (to name a few) have pushed this Country to the point where confronting a crisis like a pandemic is tragically problematic.
            Donald Trump needs to be removed from Office, just as Hoover did. The Republican Party, with all their tools of conspiracies and fear mongering of social change, need to be removed from power as well. However, the change needs to reflect what the American People saw in 1932. A message needs to be delivered to the World that the narcissism and the self-interest of a few is not the rich tradition that made American leadership the stable center of free democracies.
            Trump, Trumpism, and the Republican Party’s self-interest need to be defeated as Hoover and the Republicans were in 1932...totally. It is critical for another seismic change to take place. In 1932 Hoover still received 40% of the vote. In 2016 Trump received 46% of the vote. After four years of Trump and McConnell it may be that only 6% of the American electorate is what we need to retain Democracy as we know it.

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