The Lowdown on the Miscreant Who Got Us into this Mess: Woodrow Wilson | Spengler:
So utterly utopian was Wilson’s vision that it is unfair to characterize the internationalism of Bill Clinton or George W. Bush as “Wilsonian.” Clinton and Bush threw America’s weight around after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but they did not propose—as Wilson did—to replace America’s sovereign decision-making with a global council. Wilson’s League of Nations was closer to the conspiracy theorists’ notion of the United Nations. The commonplace belief that minor concessions on his part would have won ratification of the League of Nations treaty is untenable.
A definitive Wilson biography remains to be written. To make sense of his grand overreach in 1919, historians will need to give more attention to his rancor at the U.S. Constitution and his Southerner’s sense of aggrievement over the Civil War. His was a deep, abiding passion for the Lost Cause and a smoldering hatred for those who crushed it. Of the Confederacy, Wilson rhapsodized in his history of the United States:
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Before Wilson, taxes were required to be apportioned. With the passing of the 16th amendment, which most citizens had no idea was a really bad deal, income could be taxed without apportionment. The government used law to create a progressive tax, and the Progressive/Seditionist movement had a firm foothold in the United States.
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