Heather Cox Richardson recalls the days of bipartisan consensus around the goals of liberal democracy, in which government protected the rights of individuals. By today’s MAGA standards, President Dwight D. Eisenhower would be considered a dangerous leftwinger.
She wrote on her blog, “Letters from an American”:
Cas Mudde, a political scientist who specializes in extremism and democracy, observed yesterday on Bluesky that “the fight against the far right is secondary to the fight to strengthen liberal democracy.” That’s a smart observation.
During World War II, when the United States led the defense of democracy against fascism, and after it, when the U.S. stood against communism, members of both major political parties celebrated American liberal democracy. Democratic presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Harry Truman and Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower made it a point to emphasize the importance of the rule of law and people’s right to choose their government, as well as how much more effectively democracies managed their economies and how much fairer those economies were than those in which authoritarians and their cronies pocketed most of a country’s wealth.
Those mid-twentieth-century presidents helped to construct a “liberal consensus” in which Americans rallied behind a democratic government that regulated business, provided a basic social safety net, promoted infrastructure, and protected civil rights. That government was so widely popular that political scientists in the 1960s posited that politicians should stop trying to court voters by defending its broadly accepted principles. Instead, they should put together coalitions of interest groups that could win elections.
As traditional Republicans and Democrats moved away from a defense of democracy, the power to define the U.S. government fell to a small faction of “Movement Conservatives” who were determined to undermine the liberal consensus. Big-business Republicans who hated regulations and taxes joined with racist former Democrats and patriarchal white evangelicals who wanted to reinforce traditional race and gender hierarchies to insist that the government had grown far too big and was crushing individual Americans.
In their telling, a government that prevented businessmen from abusing their workers, made sure widows and orphans didn’t have to eat from garbage cans, built the interstate highways, and enforced equal rights was destroying the individualism that made America great, and they argued that such a government was a small step from communism. They looked at government protection of equal rights for racial, ethnic, gender, and religious minorities, as well as women, and argued that those protections both cost tax dollars to pay for the bureaucrats who enforced equal rights and undermined a man’s ability to act as he wished in his place of business, in society, and in his home. The government of the liberal consensus was, they claimed, a redistribution of wealth from hardworking taxpayers—usually white and male—to undeserving marginalized Americans.
When voters elected Ronald Reagan in 1980, the Movement Conservatives’ image of the American government became more and more prevalent, although Americans never stopped liking the reality of the post–World War II government that served the needs of ordinary Americans. That image fed forty years of cuts to the post–World War II government, including sweeping cuts to regulations and to taxes on the wealthy and on corporations, always with the argument that a large government was destroying American individualism.
It was this image of government as a behemoth undermining individual Americans that Donald Trump rode to the presidency in 2016 with his promises to “drain the swamp” of Washington, D.C., and it is this image that is leading Trump voters to cheer on billionaires Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy as they vow to cut services on which Americans depend in order to cut regulations and taxes once again for the very wealthy and corporations.
But that image of the American government is not the one on which the nation was founded.
Liberal democracy was the product of a moment in the 1600s in which European thinkers rethought old ideas about human society to emphasize the importance of the individual and his (it was almost always a “him” in those days) rights. Men like John Locke rejected the idea that God had appointed kings and noblemen to rule over subjects by virtue of their family lineage, and began to explore the idea that since government was a social compact to enable men to live together in peace, it should rest not on birth or wealth or religion, all of which were arbitrary, but on natural laws that men could figure out through their own experiences.
The Founders of what would become the United States rested their philosophy on an idea that came from Locke’s observations: that individuals had the right to freedom, or “liberty,” including the right to consent to the government under which they lived. “We hold these truths to be self-evident,” Thomas Jefferson wrote, “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,” and that “to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”
In the early years of the American nation, defending the rights of individuals meant keeping the government small so that it could not crush a man through taxation or involuntary service to the government or arbitrary restrictions. The Bill of Rights—the first ten amendments to the Constitution—explicitly prohibited the government from engaging in actions that would hamper individual freedom.
But in the middle of the nineteenth century, Republican president Abraham Lincoln began the process of adjusting American liberalism to the conditions of the modern world. While the Founders had focused on protecting individual rights from an overreaching government, Lincoln realized that maintaining the rights of individuals required government action.
To protect individual opportunity, Lincoln argued, the government must work to guarantee that all men—not just rich white men—were equal before the law and had equal access to resources, including education. To keep the rich from taking over the nation, he said, the government must keep the economic playing field between rich and poor level, dramatically expand opportunity, and develop the economy.
Under Lincoln, Republicans reenvisioned liberalism. They reworked the Founders’ initial stand against a strong government, memorialized by the Framers in the Bill of Rights, into an active government designed to protect individuals by guaranteeing equal access to resources and equality before the law for white men and Black men alike. They enlisted the power of the federal government to turn the ideas of the Declaration of Independence into reality.
Under Republican president Theodore Roosevelt, progressives at the turn of the twentieth century would continue this reworking of American liberalism to address the extraordinary concentrations of wealth and power made possible by industrialization. In that era, corrupt industrialists increased their profits by abusing their workers, adulterating milk with formaldehyde and painting candies with lead paint, dumping toxic waste into neighborhoods, and paying legislators to let them do whatever they wished.
Those concerned about the survival of liberal democracy worried that individuals were not actually free when their lives were controlled by the corporations that poisoned their food and water while making it impossible for individuals to get an education or make enough money ever to become independent.
To restore the rights of individuals, progressives of both parties reversed the idea that liberalism required a small government. They insisted that individuals needed a big government to protect them from the excesses and powerful industrialists of the modern world. Under the new governmental system that Theodore Roosevelt pioneered, the government cleaned up the sewage systems and tenements in cities, protected public lands, invested in public health and education, raised taxes, and called for universal health insurance, all to protect the ability of individuals to live freely without being crushed by outside influences.
Reformers sought, as Roosevelt said, to return to “an economic system under which each man shall be guaranteed the opportunity to show the best that there is in him.”
It is that system of government’s protection of the individual in the face of the stresses of the modern world that Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, and the presidents who followed them until 1981 embraced. The post–World War II liberal consensus was the American recognition that protecting the rights of individuals in the modern era required not a weak government but a strong one.
When Movement Conservatives convinced followers to redefine “liberal” as an epithet rather than a reflection of the nation’s quest to defend the rights of individuals—which was quite deliberate—they undermined the central principle of the United States of America. In its place, they resurrected the ideology of the world the American Founders rejected, a world in which an impoverished majority suffers under the rule of a powerful few.

Makes me wonder what a conversation between someone like Heather Cox Richardson and trump would be like? (Or, add our own Diane into that mix.)
Could a reasoned dialogue even begin to take place, since the donald and his cult have blown up the rules of civilized discourse?
Also, what jumped off the screen (to me) was the line, “But in the middle of the nineteenth century, Republican president Abraham Lincoln began the process of adjusting American liberalism to the conditions of the modern world.“
The “modern world”…
Of course, what is new and modern is rooted in where we have been.
And, the trump cult seems to want to return to some version of the past that never really existed. Some warped view of 1950s America but also way, way back. We’re talking pre-Enlightenment here. A burgeoning ‘Age of Non-Reason’.
And that very dangerous version of the past is informing what the future, the new “modern” will look like. For us and the entire planet.
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During WWII, the U.S. fought Germany, Italy, and Japan–not against fascism! WWII was a battle between imperialistic countries over resources and markets. The marriage of corporate and government power, a defining characteristic of fascism, lived on, and the U.S. used its military to defend its sphere of influence by supporting dictators and stamping out worker-led efforts that might have increased wages, benefits, and working conditions in so-called “third world” countries. After the Soviet Union’s implosion, the U.S. sought to further expand its control of resources and markets by engaging in various “regime change operations” and implementing economic sanctions so that resource-rich countries could be plundered for the benefit of the U.S. ownership class. Fondness for “liberal democracy” and the “rule of law” have had little to do with the corporate and government priorities of the U.S. since WWII.
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James,
I don’t agree with your analysis.
Germany, Japan, and Italy were fascist powers. Indeed, they were the Axis powers.
If they had won, I and my entire family would have been murdered because of our religion.
Did you ever see any footage from the concentration camps?
True, Japanese Americans were arrested and put in concentration camps but they were not murdered en masse.
I’m sorry you don’t see a difference.
That’s your problem, not mine.
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You missed his entire point.
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In the U.S., high school students are taught causes of WWI and WWII. The U.S. did not enter WWII because of Germany’s treatment of Jews. If anything, the U.S. government was largely indifferent to the plight of Europe’s Jewish population both before and during WWII. Before the U.S. entered WWII, over 100 American companies did business with Nazi Germany, including Ford and IBM. WWII had been going on for two years before the U.S. declared war on Germany. After WWII, Francisco Franco, Spain’s fascist leader, remained in power until his death in 1975. Moreover, after WWII, the U.S. implemented Operation Paperclip to bring Nazi scientists and engineers to the U.S. in an effort to develop weapons useful toward defending its sphere of influence and weaken the Soviet Union. The U.S. government has always feared socialism and communism more than fascism!
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James,
None of that changes the fact that the Axis powers were fascists. After Hitler invaded the USSR, the latter joined our alliance even though Stalin committed crimes in par with Hitler. History is complicated.
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@James Eales: You kind of missed the part that the US was attacked by Japan and brought into WWII by force of Japanese arms at Pearl Harbor. A few days later, Germany declared war on the US.
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The point is that the U.S. did not fight WWII over fascism because they were (and are) fascistic themselves. The war was over resources among fascistic powers asserting their right to dominate the globe. The U.S. did business with Germany before they entered the war and continued the same practices since the war. We imported nazis by the hundreds (and not just scientists – nazi functionaries too) while the Jews rotted for years in displaced persons camps. Yes, history is complicated. That means that the U.S. role in it is not the simplistic rosy beacon of light/they hate us for our freedoms nonsense that our propaganda outlets feed us.
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Dienne, I don’t agree.
How many people were killed in concentration camps in the U.S., Britain, and France? Were there bigots in all those nations? Yes. Were those nation fascist? No. Did they systematically exterminate any group? No.
I don’t understand your hatred for the U.S.
Nor do I understand your numerous defenses of Putin, one of the worst villains of our time.
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Saying you don’t agree is like right wingers who “don’t agree” with climate change. Facts are facts. All the European powers caused mass death through colonialism, which was the pursuit of domination of resources. The U S. inherited that tradition. We may not have had concentration camps per se (except for the Japanese internment camps), but we were founded on genocide and slavery and when we became powerful enough we adapted colonial aims to our own methods. We don’t “rule” other countries the same way, but we instill violence until other countries knuckle under and install puppet dictators. Look at the millions we’ve killed (directly or through proxies) in Korea, Vietnam, Loss, Cambodia, Indonesia, Argentina, Chile, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and dozens more. We and the other Allied forces were and are no more moral than the Axis powers. It’s about power, not humanitarianism.
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Dienne,
You are under the misapprehension that your beliefs are facts, and that everyone is wrong. The fact is that your views differ from those of 99.9% of professional historians. You are a conspiracy theorist.
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Few questions, if I may. During the run up to the Iraq War, did you believe the government’s justification for it? Do you now accept that it was all based on lies? If so (and the answer is yes, it was all lies), then why do you deny that they’ve likely lied to us about other things (and lie to us still)? I mean, they lied about Vietnam, they lied about Iran Contra, they lied about Iraq (multiple times), they lied about Afghanistan, they lied about Libya, they lied about Syria, but everything else is the god’s honest truth? How many times does someone have to lie to you before you stop believing them?
In any case, I’d really recommend you do some deep diligence about people like Henry Kissinger, the Dulles Brothers, Zbigniew Brzyzinski, everyone involved with the Project for a New American Century (who are all, despite your claims otherwise, neocons, including and especially Darth Cheney), and many others. The record is well documented and very clear. And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.
I once believed as you do, then along came the Bush administration. Even still, I believed it was a Republican phenomenon, that the Democrats would get us back on course. And then along came the Obama administration who codified and extended everything Bush did. Ever since I’ve looked at history and current events with open eyes and I see what we do all over the world. It’s uncomfortable to admit your country is not the white knight you’ve been trained to believe it is, but truth is the only way to hope to correct and atone for what’s happened and continues to happen. Too many lives depend on it for us to keep our eyes closed.
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Dienne,
Yes, our government has lied to us. But not all the time, and its lies have been identified and called out. Not hidden.
What were the lies about Libya? Ghaddafi was a brutal dictator. His agent shot down a passenger jet, killing many innocent civilians. He eventually paid the families of the victims. One of those who died was the daughter of a friend.
Who lied to us about Syria? Assad was a vicious dictator who killed hundreds of thousands of Syrian civilians and protestors. He killed thousands of his own people with poison gas. Assad fled to his protector Putin.
Speaking of lies, why did you believe Putin’s lies about invading Ukraine? There was no lie too absurd for you to swallow, as long as it came from Putin.
You don’t have open eyes. You cite crackpot conspiracy theorists, not reputable historians.
When you equate the U.S. with Nazi Germany, you make yourself not credible.
Thank God we live in a free country where you can spout nonsense and no SS men or KGB will knock down your door and drag you away, never to be seen or heard from again.
If that doesn’t matter to you, you are beyond reason.
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Gotta agree with Diane.
For example, read Stephen Ambrose’s comparison of German World War II POWs in the U.S. to POWs held by other countries.
Ambrose doesn’t sugarcoat the history. (For example, German Nazi POWs were often treated better than some of our own citizens i.e. African-Americans subjected to Jim Crow racism.)
But, facts are indeed facts. There was a difference in how the United States waged World War II.
And, someone who wants to argue that, to quote, “We and the other Allied forces were and are no more moral than the Axis powers.” might as well throw away elections in this United States for the rest of my lifetime.
No thanks.
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Dienne, the US is not yet and certainly was not in WWII era “fascistic.” The uneducated may believe US is a white knight or ‘rosy beacon of light,’ others have their feet on the ground and recognize our many foreign policy errors. You have a binary outlook: we’re not heroes, we’re devils just as bad as our worst enemies. As tho you once thought we were heroes? People of my generation (age 75yo) were disabused of that idea in our mid-teen years.
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Ginny,
Well said.
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One of those murdered by Ghaddafi when he ordered the shooting down of that Pan Am airplane was the 22-year-old daughter of a dear friend of mine (her only child) who was returning from doing humanitarian work in Africa.
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James Eales @ 1/2 11:59am: A warped view of history. The war against imperialism was fought 1914-1918 quite successfully, putting an end to German, Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman and Russian empires, and significantly weakening the British Empire. The US never had anything approaching an empire. For sure, we jumped into the breach to increase our sphere of influence. And mistook worker-led efforts to get out from under tinpot dictatorships for Soviet-style communistic threat, missing many opportunities to build support/ allies rather than creating enemies in our own back yard. But entering WWII was about stopping a predatory nation (with support of two others) from swallowing up all of Europe, and with it all our allies, leaving us vulnerable to the same fate.
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never had an empire? We have for many, many decades enjoyed a Pax Americana worldwide supported by a defense budget as big as those of the next 7 or 8 nations combined. And this little book about the Banana Republic wars that the U.S. fought to preserve the rights of The United Fruit Company (now Chiquita) and the Standard Fruit Copany (now Dole) and their ilk is instructive:
butler_racket.pdf
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Bob,
I thought Gen. Smedley Butler was one of your pseudonyms, but I googled and he is real.
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A fascinating fellow, Smedley. Much-decorated solider who wrote this book about his participation in the Banana Wars.
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Read “How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States,” by Daniel Immerwahr. Published in 2020, the book brilliantly recounts the manner by which the American empire has grown and prospered. (There are several videotaped interviews of Daniel Immerwahr easily found on-line.)
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This is where the DOGE (an agency that doesn’t exist yet and maybe never will — HOPEFULLY) claims it will to its cutting to drain the swamp individauls like FELON47 a nd MAD MUSK built with their lobbyists.
“According to the Congressional Budget Office, the annual cost to pay all federal employees (excluding military personnel) is approximately According to the Congressional Budget Office, the annual cost to pay all federal employees (excluding military personnel) is approximately $271 billion. This figure includes both salaries and benefits like health insurance and pensions.”
“The federal budget for fiscal year (FY) 2024 was $6.75 trillion in total spending, with a deficit of $1.83 trillion”
“2023 – The federal government paid $658 billion in interest on the national debt, which was 10% of the budget.”
The nonexistant DOGE claims it will drastcially cut the cost of federal agencies by dumping federal employees when those wages and benefits represent less than 1.5% of the annual federal budget.
If there is a swamp, it isn’t federal employees. It’s private sector lobbyists paid by rich, greedy, and powerufl idiots like FELON47, MAD MUSK, special interest groups like the Heritage Foundation, and corporations to keep taxes down and weaken or remove safety regulations passed by Congress that were meant to protect the people and the environment from private sector greed and abuse.
This is where the cutting should start. Get rid of the lobbyists with harsh campaing finance reform.
Total lobbying spending in 2023 reached a record-level high, with more than $360.6 million spent by those individuals and entities lobbying state and local elected officials and policymakers.
The next cut to the deficit and the national debt should be a return to the Eisenhower tax rates.
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BeThree has it right, I think, (along with John) and goes to the core of Dienne’s view in calling out the structure of binary ideas that shows up in Dienne’s posts so often and that, without adequate self-critique, lend themselves to conspiracy theories.
Dienne, in my view, there is a kind of albeit siloed realism going on there–a “real-politic” that is nevertheless blind to concrete transcendent principles that are in fact not only written into our founding documents, but written in the blood of those who have actually died for those principles–and even if and when they are drowning, case by case, in the actual activities of “bad actors” and not-so-friendly fire throughout our history (as Diane states so well).
In a word, Dienne’s narratives sometimes have nuance but only focus on the negative side. Dienne compares rotten oranges with rotten oranges and forgets the rest of the fruit, fresh and otherwise, in the basket.
Real-politic understood without a view towards recognizing principles and concrete examples of real excellence equates to a shallow nihilism. (I keep wanting to say “Earth to Dienne! Earth to Dienne!”)
BTW, (giddy me) it seems there is already trouble in paradise, even before January 20, over similar issues–my head is spinning while I write this–I don’t know which rich guy to agree with first.
And to the 2025 group, if students feel bad about slavery, then teachers and parents can know they are exercising their development of a conscience. “Feeling bad” can be a first step out of a thoughtless acceptance of racism. But don’t let the idea of political and moral development bother you. You are MAGA!
But, if you get a chance to see today’s interviews with Lawrence O’Donnell on MSNBC, they are eye-opening. One is with Sheldon Whitehouse who in my view is a fine example of an American hero. We can still keep our ideals even when someone like Whitehouse shares U.S. citizenship with the likes of the two Steves (Bannon and Miller), a country chock full of politically ignorant fools, John Roberts, Samuel Alito, and Marjorie Taylor Greene. And still, this rather than Putin’s Russia. CBK
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The binary structure of argument routinely used by Dienne is indeed a hallmark of Kremlin/Republican disinformation propagandists. Any shades of gray, any nuance or complexity is to be avoided. Right-wing junk spam is designed for simpletons and thus is always “either/or”. Red or Blue? Commie or ‘Murican? Man or Woman? Heathen or Jesus lover? Nuance undermines simplicity and might even lead to empathy, the enemy of RepubliQans. .
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I’m sorry to say that you nailed it. I remember decades ago when Soviet propaganda always included an admonition that “you are no better,” because “what about the oppression of black people?” Until we are perfect, which we will never be, we are not allowed to criticize a brutal, murderous dictatorship.
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How does Heather explain the fact that deregulation happened under Carter?
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