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Thursday, January 08, 2009
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Ten Big Lies About America
by Rebecca Hagelin
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In these times of economic troubles the liberals are looking to take more control of your money, your business, your freedom and your future.

 But if you read Michael Medved’s powerful new book, The 10 Big Lies About America , you can help stop them.

I recently had the pleasure of co-hosting (with my colleague, Heritage VP Becky Norton Dunlop) Michael for a book lecture at The Heritage Foundation and he absolutely “brought the house down”, wowing the standing-room only crowd with his energizing speech delivered from memory. When he took questions, he had instant recall about numerous facts, figures and topics. I wasn’t surprised, as I have been in-studio with Michael and watched him answer questions for three hours with no notes. Medved is more than a human encyclopedia – he’s more like a human Google. No wonder he is one of the most successful and effective syndicated radio hosts in the nation. And his knowledge of history and politics is joined by pure raw guts. He’s not afraid to call the liberal mantra and revisionist history what it is: a bed of lies. That’s just what he does in The 10 Big Lies About America.

Take “Big Lie #6,” which is more pertinent than ever these days:

“Government programs offer the only remedy for economic downturns and poverty.”

Liberals love to argue that it is government – not the spirit or will or hard work or free markets and free citizens – that can cure economic ills. The libs love to point to FDR and his “alphabet soup” of government programs, hatched as an effort to pull America out of the Great Depression, as the defining, magical moment for “big government”.  In fact, Michael shows, the “New Deal” did precious little to help get America out of its economic doldrums. It took a world war to do that.

That’s not just the opinion of a smart conservative pundit. It’s also the opinion of Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., a liberal scholar who is considered one of the premier experts on the New Deal. Writing in 1963, he said, “Though the policies of the Hundred Days had ended despair, they had not produced recovery … The New Deal had done remarkable things, especially in social reform, but the formula for full recovery evidently still eluded it.”

That’s just one example of what makes Medved’s book so valuable. He’s done the research to back up his conclusions -- and packaged them in a highly readable book that makes it so much easier for you, as someone who’s actually grateful for both personal freedom and free markets, to fight back.

Another popular distortion is “Big Lie #5,” which reads: “The power of Big Business hurts the country and oppresses the people.” Maybe that’s believable if, Medved says, you don’t realize that our founding fathers were more concerned about the dangers from big government, not big business. Distinctions between the “haves” and the “have-nots” don’t help, and frequently hurt public debates. The fact is, we largely rise and fall as one. As Michael notes:

“The idea that laborers or customers somehow benefit if a corporation feels squeezed or faces shrinking profits remains one of the profoundly illogical legacies of discredited Marxism. If governmental regulators crack down on a given company, they most often harm, rather than help, the interests of its workers (and shareholders, obviously). In the free-market system, the boss, Peter, can’t benefit in the long term at the expense of his employee Paul. They either prosper together or fail together.”

Yet still we hear calls from politicians for increased regulation, which is touted as the only safeguard between poor workers and their greedy, “robber baron” bosses. (Maybe because that would shift more power to the politicians?) Medved shows how absurd it is to put your faith in government rather than the market. Continued...

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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silly silly silly
This paragraph is so silly, and written
apparently with a huge lack of thought.
No room to go into depth here, but try this on
for size:" it is government who can protect
us from those who would do us harm" and
who do you think pays for a world war - the
government! Why do the FDR naysayers always
love to make the assumption that a depression
can be corrected overnight. That would
require a miracle.

...and what exactly are you trying to say? It is so vague as to be meaningless. Which government pays for a world war? I missed that in my lecture class.


Hagelin
"Liberals love to argue that it is government – not the spirit or will or hard work or free markets and free citizens – that can cure economic ills. The libs love to point to FDR and his “alphabet soup” of government programs, hatched as an effort to pull America out of the Great Depression, as the defining, magical moment for “big government”. In fact, Michael shows, the “New Deal” did precious little to help get America out of its economic doldrums. It took a world war to do that."

This paragraph is so silly, and written
apparently with a huge lack of thought.
No room to go into depth here, but try this on
for size:" it is government who can protect
us from those who would do us harm" and
who do you think pays for a world war - the
government! Why do the FDR naysayers always
love to make the assumption that a depression
can be corrected overnight. That would
require a miracle.
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