FDR’s Commonwealth Club Address: Redefining Individualism, Adjudicating Greatness. By Davis W. Houck. Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Fall 2004.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Campaign Address on Progressive Government at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. By Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Campaign Address on Progressive Government at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, California, September 23,1932. By Franklin D. Roosevelt. The American Presidency Project. Also find it here and here.
FDR’s Commonwealth Club Address: Redefining Individualism, Adjudicating Greatness. By Davis W. Houck. Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Fall 2004.
Chrystia Freeland on FDR’s Commonwealth Club Address. Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else. New York: The Penguin Press, 2012, pp. 176-178.
Roosevelt:
So
began, in American political life, the new day, the day of the individual
against the system, the day in which individualism was made the great watchword
of American life. The happiest of economic conditions made that day long and
splendid. On the Western frontier, land was substantially free. No one, who did
not shirk the task of earning a living, was entirely without opportunity to do
so. Depressions could, and did, come and go; but they could not alter the
fundamental fact that most of the people lived partly by selling their labor
and partly by extracting their livelihood from the soil, so that starvation and
dislocation were practically impossible. At the very worst there was always the
possibility of climbing into a covered wagon and moving west where the untilled
prairies afforded a haven for men to whom the East did not provide a place. So
great were our natural resources that we could offer this relief not only to
our own people, but to the distressed of all the world; we could invite
immigration from Europe, and welcome it with open arms. Traditionally, when a
depression came a new section of land was opened in the west; and even our
temporary misfortune served our manifest destiny.
It was
in the middle of the nineteenth century that a new force was released and a new
dream created. The force was what is called the industrial revolution, the
advance of steam and machinery and the rise of the forerunners of the modern
industrial plant. The dream was the dream of an economic machine, able to raise
the standard of living for everyone; to bring luxury within the reach of the
humblest; to annihilate distance by steam power and later by electricity, and
to release everyone from the drudgery of the heaviest manual toil. It was to be
expected that this would necessarily affect Government. Heretofore, Government
had merely been called upon to produce conditions within which people could
live happily, labor peacefully, and rest secure. Now it was called upon to aid
in the consummation of this new dream. There was, however, a shadow over the
dream. To be made real, it required use of the talents of men of tremendous
will and tremendous ambition, since by no other force could the problems of
financing and engineering and new developments be brought to a consummation.
So
manifest were the advantages of the machine age, however, that the United
States fearlessly, cheerfully, and, I think, rightly, accepted the bitter with
the sweet. It was thought that no price was too high to pay for the advantages
which we could draw from a finished industrial system. This history of the last
half century is accordingly in large measure a history of a group of financial
Titans, whose methods were not scrutinized with too much care, and who were
honored in proportion as they produced the results, irrespective of the means they
used. The financiers who pushed the railroads to the Pacific were always
ruthless, often wasteful, and frequently corrupt; but they did build railroads,
and we have them today. It has been estimated that the American investor paid
for the American railway system more than three times over in the process; but
despite this fact the net advantage was to the United States. As long as we had
free land; as long as population was growing by leaps and bounds; as long as
our industrial plants were insufficient to supply our own needs, society chose
to give the ambitious man free play and unlimited reward provided only that he
produced the economic plant so much desired.
FDR’s Commonwealth Club Address: Redefining Individualism, Adjudicating Greatness. By Davis W. Houck. Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Fall 2004.