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Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
"Teddy" and Time
by Thomas Sowell
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Monopolies are much harder to find in the real world than in the world of political rhetoric. Monopolies raise prices but, in the big industries supposedly dominated by monopolies -- oil, steel, railroads -- prices were falling for years before Theodore Roosevelt entered the White House and started saving the country from "monopoly."

The average price of steel rails fell from $68 to $32 before TR became president. Standard Oil, the most hated of the "monopolies," had in fact innumerable competitors and its oil prices were not only lower than those of most of its competitors, but was also falling over the years. It was much the same story in other industries called "monopolies."

The anti-trust laws which Theodore Roosevelt so fiercely applied did not protect consumers from high prices. They protected high-cost producers from being driven out of business by lower cost producers. That has largely remained true in the many years since TR was president.

The long list of low-price businesses targeted by anti-trust laws range from Sears department stores and the A&P grocery chain in the 20th century to Microsoft today, prosecuted not for raising the price of Windows but for including new features without raising prices. Much of the rhetoric of anti-trust remains the opposite of the reality.

Jim Powell's soon to be published book, "Bully Boy," goes in detail into the specifics of President Theodore Roosevelt's many crusades and their often disastrous consequences. But who cares about consequences these days?

TR was a "progressive" and denounced "malefactors of great wealth." What more could the intelligentsia and the media want?

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Something is forgotten.
One thing I never hear mentioned is the way "Teddy" double crossed the Buffalo Soldiers after the Spanish American War. The Ninth Cavalry were black soldiers whose contribution to the development of the West, and to the victory in Cuba were deliberately surpressed.


I remember reading about an American officer who observed in his diary that prior to his service in Cuba he had a very low opinion of the abilities of blacks to perform in combat. He was not alone in this view, in spite of the significant achievement of black troopers during the Civi War and the Indian Wars.


This officer stated that he would never again entertain that notion. He commented on their bravery, and mentioned them fighting back to back with the white troops during bloody hand to hand combat in the trenches.


Roosevelt was asked whether he would comment on the bravery of the black soldiers when he returned to America. He said that he would. He lied. After he got home he decided that it was not a wise thing to do politically. He was as much a politician as he was a soldier.


That does not mean that he was not a great man. I have no problem with his face being on Mount Rushmore. I also take no issue with Thomas Soell's observations regarding Roosevelt. The man had his failings, just as we all do. I have a problem judging all historical figures today. That doesn't mean I feel anything but revulsion for Hitler, Stalin, Mao and Castro.

Of course that doesn't mean that Teddy's double cross wans't reprehensible. It angers me to think about it. There is much about my countries history that I don't like. I do understand that it is history. One of the most damaging things to America today is the inability to look forward instead of backward.


That is the reason I have such contempt for the left. They are invested in hatred for America because of historical injustice. They seem ready to destroy the country today because of that pathological resentment over what happened so long ago.


Best thing about teddy is the bear
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