dks_fs_upload_02_12_2026.timecode
Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language
Detected language: English
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[01:51.000 --> 02:18.000] As the clock strikes 13, it is Thursday, February 12th, Year of our Lord 2026.
[02:18.000 --> 02:22.000] And today we have a great rebroadcast for you.
[02:22.000 --> 02:25.000] Want to reassure all of you that everyone here in the family is fine.
[02:25.000 --> 02:29.000] We've just had a piece of gear go bad on us.
[02:29.000 --> 02:33.000] We're working on replacing it and we will have it back up and running.
[02:33.000 --> 02:36.000] And you will have a live show on Friday.
[02:36.000 --> 02:41.000] But today is a rebroadcast and we've picked out some great interviews for you.
[02:41.000 --> 02:45.000] So enjoy those and we will be back live on Friday.
[02:45.000 --> 02:47.000] That's a promise.
[02:47.000 --> 02:49.000] Have a great day.
[03:17.000 --> 03:19.000] See you next time.
[03:47.000 --> 03:53.000] And joining us now is James Bradley, who is the author of Flags of Our Fathers,
[03:53.000 --> 03:57.000] a great book and a great film that was done by Clint Eastwood.
[03:57.000 --> 03:59.000] And he's now got another book.
[03:59.000 --> 04:03.000] That was about Iwo Jima, of course, and World War II.
[04:03.000 --> 04:07.000] This one is a nonfiction book and it is about Vietnam.
[04:07.000 --> 04:09.000] It's called Precious Freedom.
[04:09.000 --> 04:14.000] And some of the reviews that are here, one person, Norman Solomon said,
[04:14.000 --> 04:17.000] for more than 60 years Americans have looked at Vietnam
[04:17.000 --> 04:20.000] through the wrong end of a telescope.
[04:20.000 --> 04:22.000] I think that's a great way of putting it.
[04:22.000 --> 04:26.000] He said, precious freedom turns it around and brings people into sharp focus
[04:26.000 --> 04:34.000] from Vietnamese people who lived there and died to the Pentagon's gun sites.
[04:34.000 --> 04:36.000] And so I think it's a very important story.
[04:36.000 --> 04:39.000] And he's spent a lot of time working on this story.
[04:39.000 --> 04:43.000] And this is a story that, for most of us, Vietnam is a very,
[04:43.000 --> 04:45.000] very important milestone in our life.
[04:45.000 --> 04:49.000] I think it shaped, as it has me, it shaped my view of government
[04:49.000 --> 04:51.000] and war in many different ways.
[04:51.000 --> 04:53.000] And I didn't even go.
[04:53.000 --> 04:55.000] I mean, I can only imagine the people that were there.
[04:55.000 --> 04:58.000] But I did know people that went that were slightly older than I was.
[04:58.000 --> 05:02.000] I had two older sisters and they knew a lot of people who had been involved
[05:02.000 --> 05:05.000] in going to Vietnam and that experience that happened.
[05:06.000 --> 05:10.000] And so this is a story that is told with characters from both sides,
[05:10.000 --> 05:13.000] Americans as well as Vietnamese.
[05:13.000 --> 05:15.000] Thank you for joining us, James.
[05:15.000 --> 05:16.000] Good to be here.
[05:16.000 --> 05:17.000] Thank you.
[05:17.000 --> 05:20.000] Now you spent a decade in Vietnam researching this.
[05:20.000 --> 05:23.000] Tell us a little bit about that and what Vietnam is like
[05:23.000 --> 05:27.000] and what that experience was like.
[05:27.000 --> 05:31.000] Well, I had written four books up to that point.
[05:31.000 --> 05:34.000] So I thought, you know, I wrote all about the Pacific War.
[05:34.000 --> 05:40.000] So I think my brother enlisted in the Marines in 1967.
[05:40.000 --> 05:45.000] So I was watching Walter Cronkite every night studying the Vietnam War.
[05:45.000 --> 05:48.000] And I thought, you know, I'll write a book about Vietnam.
[05:48.000 --> 05:50.000] I'll just spend three years here.
[05:50.000 --> 05:56.000] But it took me over 10 years because I had to unravel all the propaganda
[05:56.000 --> 06:03.000] baloney told to us by Walter Cronkite into Ken Burns right now.
[06:03.000 --> 06:08.000] It's just, you know, last night you talked about a little thing
[06:08.000 --> 06:15.000] that a few folks have fooled America about COVID, about the vaccine.
[06:15.000 --> 06:19.000] You know, I mean, Trump was a Russian spy.
[06:19.000 --> 06:24.000] And America, the American government did it the same with us,
[06:24.000 --> 06:27.000] with Lee Harvey Oswald and the Vietnam War.
[06:27.000 --> 06:29.000] Yes, absolutely right.
[06:29.000 --> 06:34.000] You know, it is, and when we look at Vietnam, I keep going back.
[06:34.000 --> 06:36.000] I haven't read your book yet.
[06:36.000 --> 06:39.000] But, you know, when you go back and you look at the Fog of War
[06:39.000 --> 06:42.000] that was done by Erroll Morris, I don't know if you ever saw that or not.
[06:42.000 --> 06:44.000] Well, five times.
[06:44.000 --> 06:46.000] Yeah, that's a good documentary.
[06:46.000 --> 06:51.000] And he just has this knack of getting people to confess to things
[06:51.000 --> 06:54.000] that normally you would not expect they'd confess to.
[06:54.000 --> 06:57.000] So he spent a lot of time talking to Robert McNamara
[06:57.000 --> 06:59.000] who was running this whole mess.
[06:59.000 --> 07:02.000] And McNamara said, he went back to Vietnam
[07:02.000 --> 07:06.000] and they banged the guy who was his counterpart at the time,
[07:06.000 --> 07:08.000] stood up and said, what does it matter with you?
[07:08.000 --> 07:10.000] Don't you know anything about history?
[07:10.000 --> 07:13.000] For a thousand years we opposed the Chinese.
[07:13.000 --> 07:16.000] And you're trying to tell everybody that we're Chinese puppets
[07:16.000 --> 07:19.000] and it's a domino theory and all the rest of the stuff.
[07:19.000 --> 07:22.000] McNamara said, yeah, you know, he was right.
[07:22.000 --> 07:24.000] What is Vietnam like today?
[07:24.000 --> 07:29.000] I mean, I've seen still some border conflicts between them and China.
[07:29.000 --> 07:31.000] And there's a lot of competition there,
[07:31.000 --> 07:35.000] but they've become highly industrialized, is that right?
[07:35.000 --> 07:40.000] Yeah, China is the forever enemy of Vietnam, you know,
[07:40.000 --> 07:44.000] after more than a thousand years of fighting each other.
[07:44.000 --> 07:48.000] And that's how the Vietnamese learn these techniques to repel the invader.
[07:48.000 --> 07:51.000] You know, Vietnam right now, if you include reserves,
[07:51.000 --> 07:54.000] has the largest army in the world.
[07:54.000 --> 07:55.000] This shocks people.
[07:55.000 --> 07:59.000] It's bigger than India, China, America, Russia.
[07:59.000 --> 08:01.000] They are watching their borders.
[08:01.000 --> 08:03.000] They're not invading anybody.
[08:03.000 --> 08:06.000] And, you know, they're protecting their borders.
[08:06.000 --> 08:08.000] Vietnam's for the Vietnamese.
[08:08.000 --> 08:12.000] And they are growing by 8% a year.
[08:12.000 --> 08:16.000] Vietnam is so successful right now.
[08:16.000 --> 08:19.000] And it would have been successful a long time ago
[08:19.000 --> 08:24.000] if the French and the Americans hadn't decided to bomb it for 80 years.
[08:24.000 --> 08:25.000] Yeah, yeah.
[08:25.000 --> 08:28.000] It's amazing to think that they could get it that wrong, you know,
[08:28.000 --> 08:33.000] that they think they portray Vietnam as a China puppet
[08:33.000 --> 08:39.000] when actually, you know, they were always opposed to them and opposition there.
[08:39.000 --> 08:43.000] Now, you did this as a fiction book.
[08:44.000 --> 08:46.000] You have done nonfiction before.
[08:46.000 --> 08:49.000] You talked about Iwo Jima and the Marines that were there in Flags of Our Father.
[08:49.000 --> 08:54.000] Why did you go to a nonfiction approach rather than a fiction approach?
[08:54.000 --> 09:00.000] You know, the book is really history as fiction.
[09:00.000 --> 09:02.000] Everything in the book is true.
[09:02.000 --> 09:06.000] But whereas Iwo Jima, you know, all the characters were concentrated
[09:06.000 --> 09:09.000] on a little tiny spit of land,
[09:09.000 --> 09:16.000] I had stories from all over Vietnam that I couldn't connect in a storyline.
[09:16.000 --> 09:19.000] So I just did it. I fictionalized it.
[09:19.000 --> 09:22.000] But, you know, so maybe I took a character.
[09:22.000 --> 09:26.000] When it comes to acquiring precious metals, you have options.
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[09:43.000 --> 09:47.000] With decades of experience, our experts understand market cycles,
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[09:58.000 --> 10:04.000] For gold, silver, platinum, or palladium, choose the firm built on value, experience, and trust.
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[10:52.000 --> 10:58.000] ...that I have fighting somewhere where they didn't, but everything is from interviews.
[10:58.000 --> 11:03.000] I did over ten years of living in Vietnam, interviewing the people.
[11:03.000 --> 11:05.000] And David, you'll be shocked.
[11:05.000 --> 11:12.000] I'm the first American author to go to Vietnam and say, how did you win?
[11:12.000 --> 11:17.000] I cattyed for Vince Lombardi when I was a kid. I'm a little older than you.
[11:17.000 --> 11:24.000] Bart Starr lived four doors down up at Bass Lake from the Bradleys.
[11:24.000 --> 11:27.000] And for anybody who doesn't know who Vince Lombardi is,
[11:27.000 --> 11:32.000] when you win the NFL trophy, I mean the Super Bowl trophy this year,
[11:32.000 --> 11:35.000] you will win the Vince Lombardi trophy.
[11:35.000 --> 11:39.000] So Vince studied when he lost a game.
[11:39.000 --> 11:42.000] If he won or lost, you know, we admitted it.
[11:42.000 --> 11:47.000] And we studied how we lost, and we figured out how the winners won.
[11:47.000 --> 11:53.000] And I'm the first author to go to Vietnam and say, you guys obviously won.
[11:53.000 --> 11:57.000] How did you do it? And the answers are this book, Precious Freedom.
[11:57.000 --> 11:59.000] Yes, yes.
[11:59.000 --> 12:03.000] There's actually a comment that you have from Oliver Stone who said,
[12:03.000 --> 12:07.000] James Bradley journeyed to Iwo Jima and returned with flags of our fathers,
[12:07.000 --> 12:11.000] now of interest to Vietnam and brings us precious freedom,
[12:11.000 --> 12:16.000] where he reveals that if we had known what happened in the 1960s in Vietnam,
[12:16.000 --> 12:21.000] American mothers would have never sent their children to Iraq and Afghanistan.
[12:21.000 --> 12:25.000] The truth is the best vaccination against great lies.
[12:25.000 --> 12:27.000] I think that's very important.
[12:27.000 --> 12:29.000] And so by going with a fictional thing,
[12:29.000 --> 12:34.000] you can cover a lot of different facets that are still very realistic at the same time.
[12:34.000 --> 12:37.000] And so tell us a little bit about some of the characters that are there.
[12:37.000 --> 12:42.000] You've got both American and Vietnamese characters in your book, right?
[12:42.000 --> 12:45.000] Yes, it's basically Chip and May.
[12:45.000 --> 12:52.000] Chip is a U.S. Marine and, you know, Pete Hegseth got it wrong.
[12:52.000 --> 12:57.000] They were in pretty good shape in the Vietnam era, you know, our Marines.
[12:57.000 --> 13:02.000] It wasn't the fatness. It was the fat heads in the Pentagon.
[13:02.000 --> 13:04.000] That's a good way to put it, yeah.
[13:04.000 --> 13:07.000] Chip goes into May's front yard.
[13:07.000 --> 13:11.000] May is 15 years old. Look at this little chick.
[13:12.000 --> 13:15.000] She's 15 years old, never thought about war.
[13:15.000 --> 13:18.000] Chip shoots her father in the head.
[13:18.000 --> 13:24.000] May sees this, and at 15, she says, I'm going to kill every American I ever see.
[13:24.000 --> 13:29.000] And conveniently, the Americans came in in helmets and uniforms.
[13:29.000 --> 13:32.000] And, you know, you could tell what an American was.
[13:32.000 --> 13:37.000] So this May went out and sniper to death five Marines.
[13:37.000 --> 13:40.000] Those are the kills she got medals for.
[13:40.000 --> 13:47.000] And what is untold about the Vietnam War is the role of women.
[13:47.000 --> 13:52.000] Here's a photo. This girl with the machine gun. Can you see it?
[13:52.000 --> 13:53.000] Yeah, yeah.
[13:53.000 --> 13:56.000] She killed 174 Americans.
[13:56.000 --> 13:57.000] Wow.
[13:57.000 --> 13:59.000] Look at, she's 22 years old.
[13:59.000 --> 14:00.000] Wow.
[14:00.000 --> 14:04.000] The number one Marine sniper killed 94.
[14:04.000 --> 14:06.000] We write books about him.
[14:06.000 --> 14:08.000] You know, we herald him.
[14:08.000 --> 14:15.000] But this is unknown that girls were out there killing Americans.
[14:15.000 --> 14:20.000] And it was because of that thousand years of fighting the Chinese.
[14:20.000 --> 14:23.000] And they went out and they had a plan.
[14:23.000 --> 14:28.000] We, we, you know, in America, the story is how did this happen?
[14:28.000 --> 14:34.000] You can watch 18 hours of Ken Burns and it's like, wow, this is still confusing.
[14:34.000 --> 14:40.000] But if you go to Vietnam, well, actually you can't get them to talk to you, but I did.
[14:40.000 --> 14:42.000] It took me six months of drinking tea.
[14:42.000 --> 14:49.000] And if they, if they part the veil and tell you they had a plan, they were teenagers,
[14:49.000 --> 14:52.000] but they knew how to seize the initiative.
[14:52.000 --> 14:57.000] This was not happenstance or accidental that Vietnam beat America.
[14:57.000 --> 14:58.000] They had a plan.
[14:58.000 --> 15:01.000] They knew they were going to do it and they executed the plan.
[15:02.000 --> 15:05.000] Well, it's also the fact that they're actually defending their home.
[15:05.000 --> 15:08.000] You know, that's a, that's an important thing.
[15:08.000 --> 15:13.000] You know, that's a, that's a big advantage for defenders when they're actually fighting for their lives
[15:13.000 --> 15:18.000] and fighting for their home, as opposed to people who are going because they've been told
[15:18.000 --> 15:24.000] that there's some kind of geopolitical thing, maybe that maybe exists or maybe doesn't exist.
[15:24.000 --> 15:25.000] I think that is a key thing.
[15:25.000 --> 15:31.000] I think that's a real big part of why we do so poorly in all these asymmetric wars everywhere.
[15:31.000 --> 15:32.000] Yes.
[15:32.000 --> 15:36.000] No, that, that's if Ho Chi Minh, I'm from Wisconsin.
[15:36.000 --> 15:40.000] If Ho Chi Minh invaded Wisconsin, that war would still be going on.
[15:40.000 --> 15:41.000] Yeah.
[15:41.000 --> 15:42.000] We would never give up.
[15:42.000 --> 15:43.000] That's right.
[15:43.000 --> 15:47.000] I mean, you know, me at 15 years old, I knew every alleyway.
[15:47.000 --> 15:51.000] I could run at night for five blocks, jump over fences.
[15:51.000 --> 15:53.000] I knew what doors were open.
[15:53.000 --> 15:56.000] You know, so they were defending their homeland.
[15:56.000 --> 15:57.000] That's the key.
[15:57.000 --> 15:59.000] And I've been to Afghanistan.
[15:59.000 --> 16:01.000] You know, I lived in Iran.
[16:01.000 --> 16:08.000] This bombing of Iran that we recently did in June, that united the Iranian people like never before.
[16:08.000 --> 16:09.000] Oh, yeah.
[16:09.000 --> 16:11.000] And we already support your leader.
[16:11.000 --> 16:17.000] If you, a Vietnamese guy told me, he said, you know, we were trying to recruit people in this valley,
[16:17.000 --> 16:19.000] this isolated valley.
[16:19.000 --> 16:21.000] And they said, what's an American?
[16:21.000 --> 16:22.000] What's the war?
[16:22.000 --> 16:24.000] What are you talking about?
[16:24.000 --> 16:27.000] And then an American jet came and dropped bombs.
[16:27.000 --> 16:30.000] And he said, we didn't have to, we didn't have to recruit anymore.
[16:30.000 --> 16:35.000] You Americans got everybody in line with just a few bombs.
[16:35.000 --> 16:38.000] You know, we've seen that in movie after movie as well, haven't we?
[16:38.000 --> 16:41.000] You know, movies about, you know, the American Revolution or whatever,
[16:41.000 --> 16:44.000] where somebody's like, I don't want to get involved with the Civil War or whatever.
[16:44.000 --> 16:50.000] I don't want to get involved until the war comes to them and they get attacked by one side unnecessarily.
[16:50.000 --> 16:52.000] Now they get galvanized and they're in it.
[16:52.000 --> 16:54.000] I think that's the key thing.
[16:54.000 --> 16:59.000] You know, we lose our wars before they even begin because we don't talk about why we should be there.
[16:59.000 --> 17:04.000] And if we go to war for an unjust cause, we are going to lose that war eventually
[17:04.000 --> 17:09.000] because the people who have a just cause in terms of defending themselves
[17:09.000 --> 17:12.000] are going to have the determination to finish it and whatever it takes.
[17:12.000 --> 17:15.000] That is the most important thing, I think, is that determination.
[17:16.000 --> 17:20.000] When we talk about the morality of whether we have a just war or not,
[17:20.000 --> 17:24.000] you know, have we been attacked and how are we going to fight this?
[17:24.000 --> 17:28.000] But when we ignore that and we start acting as the world's policeman,
[17:28.000 --> 17:34.000] then what we've done is we've sown the seeds of a shaky foundation
[17:34.000 --> 17:36.000] that isn't going to be able to sustain us.
[17:36.000 --> 17:41.000] And on the other side, they have a strong foundation to fight back.
[17:41.000 --> 17:44.000] As you pointed out, if they had invaded us, we would still be fighting them.
[17:44.000 --> 17:46.000] I think that's a key thing.
[17:46.000 --> 17:48.000] But David, can I interrupt here?
[17:48.000 --> 17:49.000] Sure.
[17:49.000 --> 17:52.000] I'd like to say to your viewers and listeners,
[17:52.000 --> 17:56.000] if you could just back up and listen again to what David just said,
[17:56.000 --> 17:59.000] that is the key to this book, Precious Freedom.
[17:59.000 --> 18:04.000] They were defending mom and dad, and they had a plan.
[18:04.000 --> 18:08.000] And the Americans went and they were fighting communists.
[18:08.000 --> 18:12.000] You know, how do you find a communist?
[18:12.000 --> 18:14.000] And what is a communist?
[18:14.000 --> 18:20.000] The Vietnamese I interviewed who were 15, 16, 17 years old back in the 1960s,
[18:20.000 --> 18:24.000] the one guy told me, he said, I didn't know democracy or communism.
[18:24.000 --> 18:28.000] He said they shot my mother and killed her.
[18:28.000 --> 18:30.000] He said that's all I had to know.
[18:30.000 --> 18:32.000] Yeah, that's right.
[18:32.000 --> 18:35.000] And that's how we lose these wars.
[18:35.000 --> 18:37.000] We don't understand what we're really fighting for.
[18:38.000 --> 18:44.000] So you talk about a distorted revisionism that we've seen here in the U.S.
[18:44.000 --> 18:48.000] When it comes to acquiring precious metals, you have options.
[18:48.000 --> 18:51.000] The question is, who should you trust?
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[19:02.000 --> 19:03.000] It's simple.
[19:03.000 --> 19:05.000] Lower fees mean higher returns.
[19:05.000 --> 19:09.000] With decades of experience, our experts understand market cycles,
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[19:26.000 --> 19:28.000] Orion Metal Exchange.
[19:28.000 --> 19:37.000] For our latest precious metals forecast, go to orionreports.com or call 888-343-4738.
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[20:14.000 --> 20:15.000] Define that a little bit.
[20:15.000 --> 20:18.000] When you talk about the Walter Cronkite version of the war,
[20:18.000 --> 20:21.000] when you talk about the Ken Burns version of the war,
[20:21.000 --> 20:24.000] how has your vision of the war changed?
[20:24.000 --> 20:27.000] It took you a while to come to terms with that.
[20:27.000 --> 20:30.000] Well, here is a real mind teaser.
[20:30.000 --> 20:33.000] And I hope you don't mind if I use visuals.
[20:33.000 --> 20:36.000] It'll save me blabbering on.
[20:36.000 --> 20:43.000] But the American view of the war, if you turn on Ken Burns, Walter Cronkite,
[20:43.000 --> 20:46.000] look at any documentary, starts with this.
[20:46.000 --> 20:50.000] There was a North Vietnam and a South Vietnam.
[20:50.000 --> 20:51.000] Can you see it?
[20:51.000 --> 20:52.000] Yeah, yeah.
[20:52.000 --> 20:56.000] And there was a border between two countries.
[20:56.000 --> 21:02.000] And we came to rescue South Vietnam against North Vietnam.
[21:02.000 --> 21:05.000] So I go into this 85-year-old guy's house.
[21:05.000 --> 21:09.000] And he said, Mr. Bradley, he said, this was all imaginary.
[21:09.000 --> 21:12.000] The New York Times drew a line across my country.
[21:12.000 --> 21:16.000] He said, I never thought I needed a visa to visit my uncle.
[21:16.000 --> 21:18.000] There was one Vietnam.
[21:18.000 --> 21:20.000] This is how they viewed it.
[21:20.000 --> 21:22.000] There was one Vietnam.
[21:22.000 --> 21:25.000] And we invaded the whole thing.
[21:25.000 --> 21:30.000] So my brother was told, you go train in the Marines.
[21:30.000 --> 21:32.000] You go to the South Vietnam.
[21:32.000 --> 21:36.000] And you fight for freedom against these terrible commies.
[21:36.000 --> 21:40.000] But the Vietnamese never saw it that way.
[21:40.000 --> 21:42.000] They saw one country.
[21:42.000 --> 21:46.000] And if you read the speeches everybody's giving, I mean, all the Vietnamese,
[21:47.000 --> 21:50.000] they start with, there's only one Vietnam.
[21:50.000 --> 21:52.000] There will only be one Vietnam.
[21:52.000 --> 21:54.000] And they were right.
[21:54.000 --> 21:58.000] If I drew a line across Texas, David, you know, I'm Canadian.
[21:58.000 --> 22:01.000] And I come down there with the Canadian Army.
[22:01.000 --> 22:04.000] And I say, there's a West Texas, East Texas.
[22:04.000 --> 22:05.000] There's a border.
[22:05.000 --> 22:07.000] You're bad on the West side.
[22:07.000 --> 22:09.000] The good is on the...
[22:09.000 --> 22:11.000] Like, what are you talking about?
[22:11.000 --> 22:12.000] We're Texan.
[22:12.000 --> 22:14.000] There's one Texas.
[22:14.000 --> 22:17.000] And you would, you know, down to your grandkids,
[22:17.000 --> 22:21.000] you would fight to have that reality come back.
[22:21.000 --> 22:25.000] What you said earlier about seven minutes ago,
[22:25.000 --> 22:27.000] the key was not our veterans.
[22:27.000 --> 22:29.000] They did a good job.
[22:29.000 --> 22:37.000] The key was our leaders set up a false situation right from the start.
[22:37.000 --> 22:41.000] We lost that war before we started.
[22:41.000 --> 22:42.000] What is...
[22:42.000 --> 22:46.000] Now, the politicians that were there, okay,
[22:46.000 --> 22:48.000] so you've got Ho Chi Minh in the North,
[22:48.000 --> 22:51.000] and you've got the South Vietnamese government.
[22:51.000 --> 22:54.000] Was that something that Americans created?
[22:54.000 --> 22:56.000] Was that a CIA creation, or was that something that...
[22:56.000 --> 22:58.000] Yes, sir.
[22:58.000 --> 22:59.000] So it didn't start with the French?
[22:59.000 --> 23:00.000] Yes, sir.
[23:00.000 --> 23:01.000] Yeah, so it was a CIA creation.
[23:01.000 --> 23:03.000] What happened, if I could...
[23:03.000 --> 23:06.000] You know, the French were there for 80 years.
[23:06.000 --> 23:09.000] Roman Catholic Church, by the way.
[23:09.000 --> 23:14.000] And, you know, for the church, the French went in, 1880s.
[23:14.000 --> 23:18.000] They couldn't control, just like us in Afghanistan,
[23:18.000 --> 23:21.000] they had the cities, they couldn't control the country.
[23:21.000 --> 23:26.000] Ho Chi Minh goes overseas to study the Western media for 30 years
[23:26.000 --> 23:30.000] and then figures out how to beat the Americans.
[23:30.000 --> 23:31.000] He comes back.
[23:31.000 --> 23:33.000] First, they push the French out.
[23:33.000 --> 23:37.000] Well, in 1954, when they pushed the French out,
[23:37.000 --> 23:43.000] they agreed, we'll have a temporary line at the 17th parallel, temporary.
[23:43.000 --> 23:45.000] And they wrote in the Geneva language,
[23:45.000 --> 23:49.000] this is not two countries, this is not a border.
[23:49.000 --> 23:51.000] The French have been here for 80 years,
[23:51.000 --> 23:54.000] and we're just going to let them withdraw to the South
[23:54.000 --> 23:58.000] and then, you know, to get the French on ships to let them go.
[23:58.000 --> 24:04.000] But Alan Dulles, the CIA, Dwight Eisenhower, Cardinal Spellman,
[24:04.000 --> 24:08.000] all pious came in and said, hocus pocus.
[24:08.000 --> 24:11.000] CBS, New York Times, make that out of border.
[24:11.000 --> 24:12.000] And hocus pocus.
[24:12.000 --> 24:16.000] Look it, there's this country, South Vietnam, North Vietnam.
[24:16.000 --> 24:18.000] Well, we weren't paying attention.
[24:18.000 --> 24:20.000] What was an endo-China?
[24:20.000 --> 24:24.000] So I grew up thinking there's a North Vietnam, South Vietnam.
[24:24.000 --> 24:26.000] I saw it every day.
[24:26.000 --> 24:28.000] Oh, me too, yeah.
[24:28.000 --> 24:32.000] You know, but we know people that think that there was a COVID thing
[24:32.000 --> 24:34.000] that hit the United States, right?
[24:34.000 --> 24:35.000] That's right.
[24:35.000 --> 24:37.000] And that there's a vaccine that makes you,
[24:37.000 --> 24:39.000] if you take poison, you get healthy.
[24:39.000 --> 24:40.000] Yeah.
[24:40.000 --> 24:45.000] So what they did with us, Lee Harvey Oswald killed JFK,
[24:45.000 --> 24:47.000] and there's these two countries.
[24:47.000 --> 24:52.000] But the Vietnamese, the people there, tens of millions, didn't,
[24:52.000 --> 24:55.000] you know, what are you talking about, two countries?
[24:55.000 --> 25:00.000] The South Vietnamese leaders had been in the French Air Force.
[25:00.000 --> 25:03.000] They were traitors to the country.
[25:03.000 --> 25:06.000] When McNamara stood with the South Vietnamese leaders,
[25:06.000 --> 25:09.000] the Vietnamese look at it and they're like, wow,
[25:09.000 --> 25:14.000] we beat the French and now here's the American enemy also.
[25:14.000 --> 25:17.000] So this is why it took me 10 years.
[25:17.000 --> 25:22.000] I had to unravel everything I knew about the Vietnam War.
[25:22.000 --> 25:25.000] Yeah, and of course that happened not that long, I guess,
[25:25.000 --> 25:29.000] after really maybe a decade or so after what we had done in Iran.
[25:29.000 --> 25:30.000] You know, that's the other thing.
[25:30.000 --> 25:35.000] Americans look at Iran and they remember the hostage situation in the Ayatollah.
[25:35.000 --> 25:40.000] Well, they don't remember what happened with the Shah that we put in power
[25:40.000 --> 25:43.000] and the Savak that the CIA trained.
[25:43.000 --> 25:45.000] And I've talked about that many times.
[25:45.000 --> 25:49.000] I was exposed to that because I had, in the engineering school,
[25:49.000 --> 25:54.000] there was a lot of Iranian students who came there and they were protesting
[25:54.000 --> 25:56.000] and I was asking them why they were wearing masks
[25:56.000 --> 26:00.000] and they started telling me about the Savak and it's like, what?
[26:00.000 --> 26:05.000] So our history and our perception is so distorted by media
[26:05.000 --> 26:09.000] and so distorted by a selective starting point in the narrative
[26:09.000 --> 26:11.000] that it is really hard to get to the truth.
[26:11.000 --> 26:16.000] That's why books like this are very important to open up people's minds
[26:16.000 --> 26:18.000] to understand how they've been controlled, I think.
[26:18.000 --> 26:23.000] So you really kind of see this as a David and Goliath story, right?
[26:23.000 --> 26:32.000] Well, I don't know David and Goliath, but it's a story of the Vietnamese.
[26:32.000 --> 26:38.000] If you poke a Japanese, they have a certain history.
[26:38.000 --> 26:40.000] They have no ability.
[26:40.000 --> 26:42.000] They've never been invaded.
[26:42.000 --> 26:46.000] They haven't practiced those arts.
[26:46.000 --> 26:52.000] If you talk to an American, our history is not how we were invaded by Mexico
[26:52.000 --> 26:56.000] and then the Germans invaded us and then we don't have those skills,
[26:56.000 --> 26:59.000] but the Vietnamese, that's their only history.
[26:59.000 --> 27:04.000] If you're Vietnamese, you grow up with that history of, you know,
[27:04.000 --> 27:07.000] great-grandfather fought the Chinese here
[27:07.000 --> 27:12.000] and then your great-great-grandfather fought the Mongols in that river.
[27:12.000 --> 27:18.000] I mean, I have a picture of a guy who was 16 years old, about this tall,
[27:18.000 --> 27:26.000] and he sunk five Navy ships on a river using techniques that were 1,000 years old,
[27:26.000 --> 27:31.000] the Battle of the Bac Dong River from 932.
[27:31.000 --> 27:38.000] And I said, you were 16 and you recreated a battle that was 1,000 years old?
[27:38.000 --> 27:42.000] And he said, yes, Vietnam has a proud military history.
[27:42.000 --> 27:44.000] So that's what they know.
[27:44.000 --> 27:48.000] So if you want to lose a war, invade Vietnam tomorrow.
[27:48.000 --> 27:50.000] Use nuclear arms.
[27:50.000 --> 27:52.000] Use whatever you want.
[27:52.000 --> 27:53.000] You're going to lose.
[27:53.000 --> 27:55.000] Yeah, that's amazing.
[27:55.000 --> 27:58.000] And I guess we probably could say the same thing about Afghanistan as well.
[27:58.000 --> 28:01.000] They have taken down one empire after the other,
[28:01.000 --> 28:03.000] taken them on and taken them down in their country.
[28:03.000 --> 28:07.000] So I guess they've got a long history of guerrilla warfare as well.
[28:07.000 --> 28:10.000] But David, why do we choose?
[28:10.000 --> 28:12.000] Because they wear sandals.
[28:12.000 --> 28:17.000] I mean, Pete Hegseth wants, you know, short hair and no beards.
[28:17.000 --> 28:21.000] Well, geez, you know, they call these girls.
[28:21.000 --> 28:23.000] I mean, look at this.
[28:23.000 --> 28:25.000] This is Ho Chi Minh.
[28:25.000 --> 28:29.000] OK, that's Ho Chi Minh with General Ziap.
[28:29.000 --> 28:33.000] Ho Chi Minh is the military genius of the Vietnam War.
[28:33.000 --> 28:36.000] Beat the French and the Americans.
[28:36.000 --> 28:39.000] Look at this tiny guy he's with, General Ziap.
[28:39.000 --> 28:44.000] General Ziap is the winningness general of the 20th century.
[28:44.000 --> 28:47.000] David, we talk about Eisenhower or MacArthur.
[28:47.000 --> 28:50.000] Ziap beat the French.
[28:50.000 --> 28:52.000] He beat the Japanese.
[28:52.000 --> 28:54.000] He beat the Americans.
[28:54.000 --> 28:56.000] He beat the Chinese.
[28:56.000 --> 29:02.000] Vietnam is the only country in the world to have defeated three members
[29:02.000 --> 29:05.000] of the United Nations Security Council.
[29:05.000 --> 29:07.000] That's their history.
[29:07.000 --> 29:10.000] How to get rid of the invader.
[29:10.000 --> 29:12.000] And we wouldn't listen to that.
[29:12.000 --> 29:14.000] But can I just say something?
[29:14.000 --> 29:19.000] That there was a United States Marine Commandant, General Shoup,
[29:19.000 --> 29:25.000] General David Shoup, Medal of Honor, Tarawa Medal of Honor,
[29:25.000 --> 29:27.000] one of the worst marine battles.
[29:27.000 --> 29:29.000] This guy knew battles.
[29:29.000 --> 29:32.000] And he resigned when Johnson wanted to go in Vietnam.
[29:32.000 --> 29:36.000] And General Shoup put on a suit and tie and crisscrossed the countries
[29:36.000 --> 29:40.000] in the 60s saying there's no way we can win.
[29:40.000 --> 29:43.000] Ho Chi Minh is the George Washington.
[29:43.000 --> 29:48.000] So there was a David Knight understanding that the media was,
[29:48.000 --> 29:53.000] you know, fooling the American public back in the 1960s.
[29:53.000 --> 29:59.000] And it was being broadcast by a United States Marine Commandant,
[29:59.000 --> 30:03.000] not some, you know, crazy pinko, you know, demonstrating,
[30:03.000 --> 30:08.000] but a commandant was saying the Vietnamese are never going to give up.
[30:08.000 --> 30:09.000] We're going to lose.
[30:09.000 --> 30:13.000] He said the Vietnam War is not worth one of our deaths.
[30:13.000 --> 30:16.000] This was coming from a military man.
[30:16.000 --> 30:18.000] And he was right.
[30:18.000 --> 30:21.000] But Washington wouldn't listen because Brown and Root,
[30:21.000 --> 30:28.000] which became Halliburton, Lockheed, you know, they made out.
[30:28.000 --> 30:30.000] Vietnam was a tragedy for them.
[30:30.000 --> 30:32.000] It was a profit center.
[30:32.000 --> 30:37.000] When I was looking at it as a young teen and then on into high school,
[30:37.000 --> 30:39.000] it looked to me like, you know,
[30:39.000 --> 30:44.000] the military industrial complex was using it to practice and develop weapons.
[30:44.000 --> 30:46.000] I mean, I could see that even when I was in high school.
[30:46.000 --> 30:48.000] These guys are making a killing from this stuff,
[30:48.000 --> 30:53.000] and they're using it as a testing ground for their military hardware
[30:53.000 --> 30:54.000] that they want to sell.
[30:54.000 --> 30:55.000] Yes, sir.
[30:55.000 --> 30:59.000] And that seemed like all it was to me, you know, when I looked at that.
[30:59.000 --> 31:02.000] It's absolutely insane how we have been manipulated,
[31:02.000 --> 31:08.000] controlled and misguided by these people who are the leaders that are there.
[31:08.000 --> 31:11.000] And they still keep doing the same thing over and over again.
[31:11.000 --> 31:13.000] Now, you've got a fictional character.
[31:13.000 --> 31:17.000] I think it's the mother of the main American character, the Marine.
[31:17.000 --> 31:22.000] And she kind of goes through this transformation that I think a lot of people in America did.
[31:22.000 --> 31:25.000] I remember when it first started, you know, my family's conservative.
[31:25.000 --> 31:27.000] So they would, yeah, this is, you know,
[31:27.000 --> 31:29.000] make the world safe for democracy type of thing.
[31:29.000 --> 31:32.000] And then gradually it started to understand what this war was really about.
[31:32.000 --> 31:36.000] And I think you've got a character that represents that in the mother.
[31:36.000 --> 31:38.000] Is that correct?
[31:38.000 --> 31:39.000] Betty.
[31:39.000 --> 31:41.000] Betty is the mother of Chip.
[31:41.000 --> 31:44.000] And she, you know, is college educated.
[31:44.000 --> 31:48.000] She's from Minnesota and a wonderful woman,
[31:48.000 --> 31:51.000] gives her son to the United States Marine Corps.
[31:51.000 --> 31:56.000] And then a guy, a funny guy by the name of Muhammad Ali says,
[31:56.000 --> 31:59.000] I'm not going to kill brown people.
[31:59.000 --> 32:01.000] You know, this is an immoral war.
[32:01.000 --> 32:06.000] And what she's shocked by is that the media doesn't report his words.
[32:06.000 --> 32:10.000] And she finds his words from a friend.
[32:10.000 --> 32:16.000] And she's like, why isn't Walter Cronkite saying why Muhammad Ali won't go?
[32:16.000 --> 32:19.000] And then a guy by the name of Dr.
[32:19.000 --> 32:25.000] Martin Luther King stands up in Riverside Church and says,
[32:25.000 --> 32:30.000] the United States government is the biggest purveyor of violence in the world.
[32:30.000 --> 32:33.000] This we are supporting a dictatorship.
[32:33.000 --> 32:36.000] Ho Chi Minh is the George Washington.
[32:36.000 --> 32:38.000] We cannot win.
[32:38.000 --> 32:43.000] One hundred and fifty three newspapers criticize Dr. King.
[32:44.000 --> 32:50.000] But the key is nobody read Dr. King's speech because the Washington Post,
[32:50.000 --> 32:54.000] New York Times, AP, nobody would reprint it because it was the truth.
[32:54.000 --> 32:55.000] And guess what?
[32:55.000 --> 32:58.000] Dr. King got a bullet in the head.
[32:58.000 --> 33:04.000] One year to the day of that anti-Vietnam speech.
[33:04.000 --> 33:08.000] They really don't, not too concerned about killing people, are they?
[33:08.000 --> 33:12.000] I mean, you can be one on one or it can be tens of thousands of people.
[33:13.000 --> 33:15.000] And this wakes Betty up.
[33:15.000 --> 33:21.000] And Betty slowly begins with a friend of hers who's a librarian to see that,
[33:21.000 --> 33:27.000] oh, my God, she's she's supporting this violence unconsciously.
[33:27.000 --> 33:32.000] She doesn't know that she gave her son to this wrong cause.
[33:32.000 --> 33:38.000] And of course, her son comes back damaged like so many of all of them.
[33:38.000 --> 33:42.000] You know, my father, he's a symbol of heroism.
[33:42.000 --> 33:47.000] Donald Trump has got my dad right behind him.
[33:47.000 --> 33:54.000] If you look at a shot of Trump in the Oval Office, the Iwo Jima statue is right behind him.
[33:54.000 --> 33:59.000] My father cried in his sleep for the first four years of his marriage.
[33:59.000 --> 34:04.000] I learned that after he died, my mom told me, you know, this is war.
[34:04.000 --> 34:12.000] We have got to stop talking about heroism and start to own up to if you want to go to war,
[34:12.000 --> 34:14.000] let's have the Trump kids go first.
[34:14.000 --> 34:15.000] That's right.
[34:15.000 --> 34:21.000] And then, you know, the grandkids of Marco Rubio and Pete Hagseth must have some.
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[35:52.000 --> 35:54.000] You know, send them all first.
[35:54.000 --> 35:58.000] My dad was on Iwo Jima and there were colonels in front of him.
[35:58.000 --> 36:02.000] There were colonels getting shot. Come on, boys.
[36:02.000 --> 36:04.000] They were leading from the front.
[36:04.000 --> 36:08.000] In Vietnam, the colonels were in helicopters and in the back.
[36:08.000 --> 36:10.000] Boys, you go out there.
[36:10.000 --> 36:17.000] The military changed after World War II and we still have not righted it.
[36:17.000 --> 36:25.000] You know, leading from the rear except that, you know, Trump put out that picture of him as the Robert Duvall character in Apocalypse Now.
[36:25.000 --> 36:30.000] It's like, if that isn't disturbing, I don't know what is.
[36:30.000 --> 36:37.000] If he sees himself that way, a guy who has never been to war and he's going to be the guy quarterbacking this from the back.
[36:37.000 --> 36:48.000] And when you look at just the disconnect that is there and the lack of depth as he talked to these generals that he summoned in there,
[36:48.000 --> 36:58.000] well, it truly is amazing and it really is something I think that people need to pull back and take a look at what a just war is.
[36:58.000 --> 37:02.000] And they need to look at our history of idiotic aggression.
[37:02.000 --> 37:05.000] I mean, we're about to do this again in several different places.
[37:05.000 --> 37:07.000] I mean, they want to go into Venezuela.
[37:07.000 --> 37:09.000] They would like to get involved, I think, in Iran.
[37:09.000 --> 37:17.000] Boy, you talk about a quagmire in Iran as large as that country is and the history that we've had with them,
[37:17.000 --> 37:25.000] a lot of pent-up anger because of what the CIA has done in Iran for a very long time.
[37:25.000 --> 37:31.000] We just don't seem to learn those lessons and it's a very important lesson to learn, isn't it?
[37:31.000 --> 37:34.000] Well, why can't we learn those lessons?
[37:34.000 --> 37:40.000] You know, you should be broadcast, you know, primetime, but you're telling the truth.
[37:40.000 --> 37:46.000] So, I mean, you know, what you say about Iran, I lived in Iran.
[37:46.000 --> 37:48.000] Iranians saved my life.
[37:48.000 --> 37:50.000] I learned that Iran is Persia.
[37:50.000 --> 37:55.000] Iran is not, you know, Iran is not in bombing Baltimore.
[37:55.000 --> 37:58.000] You know, China is not in San Francisco Bay.
[37:59.000 --> 38:04.000] I'm out here in Mauritius, in the middle of the Indian Ocean,
[38:04.000 --> 38:13.000] and at night I can almost hear all the billions of dollars of equipment that America is pre-positioning here to bomb Iran.
[38:13.000 --> 38:20.000] Like, why? Why? Let's stop it. Let's make Chicago great, you know,
[38:20.000 --> 38:27.000] put the money in St. Louis rather than out here in Diego Garcia, but this is what the book is about.
[38:27.000 --> 38:33.000] That's why Oliver Stone said, if we knew what I found out in Precious Freedom,
[38:33.000 --> 38:37.000] mothers would have never given their kids to go to Iraq and Afghanistan.
[38:37.000 --> 38:42.000] Yes. We need to be skeptical of what the government is telling us when it gets us into these wars.
[38:42.000 --> 38:47.000] And now I'm afraid they were probably going to say, and if, you know, people had known this,
[38:47.000 --> 38:54.000] we wouldn't have gotten involved in Venezuela and Iran and start, you know, a war with China and Ukraine
[38:54.000 --> 38:56.000] and all these other things that we're trying to escalate.
[38:56.000 --> 39:00.000] Look at how many different theaters we're in right now, and these are big fights.
[39:00.000 --> 39:06.000] And I think it was Colonel Douglas MacGregor said, we're really picking fights, you know,
[39:06.000 --> 39:09.000] we can't cash these checks, essentially, to paraphrase what he had to say.
[39:09.000 --> 39:16.000] We're still doing that everywhere. It's incredibly bad leadership that we have, civilian as well as military.
[39:17.000 --> 39:20.000] That's the story of Precious Freedom.
[39:20.000 --> 39:21.000] Yes.
[39:22.000 --> 39:29.000] The reason I'm talking about the book, and I'm so grateful that you're getting it out there,
[39:29.000 --> 39:33.000] is it's not just it's not a book about the Vietnam War.
[39:33.000 --> 39:42.000] It's a book about America, American media, how we're being fooled, military industrial complex, you know,
[39:42.000 --> 39:49.000] and how the world sees us and how we're taking our innocent sons and daughters
[39:49.000 --> 39:59.000] and whipping them into these froths of what we call patriotism and sending them over to situations that they cannot win in.
[39:59.000 --> 40:04.000] So, you know, but again, it took me 10 years to figure it out.
[40:04.000 --> 40:13.000] Vietnam, you know, I thought of Vietnam as some dark place, you know, the jungles and they're growing by 8% a year.
[40:13.000 --> 40:17.000] The Vietnamese are confident they will welcome you if you go there.
[40:17.000 --> 40:23.000] And I realized Vietnam War was a tragedy for them, but it was a victory.
[40:23.000 --> 40:27.000] They won. They have the confidence of winners.
[40:27.000 --> 40:32.000] And, you know, I tip my hat to all the American Vietnam veterans.
[40:32.000 --> 40:36.000] They did a they did what they were trained to do.
[40:36.000 --> 40:45.000] The problem was our leaders put them in a jar that was impossible to break out of a situation.
[40:45.000 --> 40:48.000] And we lied and lied and lied.
[40:48.000 --> 40:51.000] I believed all, you know, I'm 71 now.
[40:51.000 --> 40:58.000] I believed many of these lies till I was, you know, 53 and went to Vietnam.
[40:58.000 --> 41:01.000] Let me ask you about Walter Cronkite. Could you mention him a couple of times?
[41:01.000 --> 41:04.000] And, you know, Operation Mockingbird was very prevalent then.
[41:04.000 --> 41:09.000] We know that he was very friendly to the CIA narratives and stuff like that.
[41:09.000 --> 41:14.000] But at the same time, as that was happening, I heard criticism from the right saying, you know,
[41:14.000 --> 41:19.000] he's going to cause us to lose the war because he's reading the names of the men every night that are killed in this war.
[41:19.000 --> 41:25.000] What is your take on how that was that part of the propaganda, the Cronkite CBS?
[41:25.000 --> 41:31.000] Walter Cronkite, you know, it's just like all our prostitutes right now.
[41:31.000 --> 41:40.000] They successfully, you know, go down the line so that the CIA will keep them, you know, in the chair.
[41:40.000 --> 41:45.000] And they appear to be, you know, all this war, you know, people are dying.
[41:45.000 --> 41:49.000] Walter Cronkite was went to Vietnam a number of times.
[41:49.000 --> 41:54.000] He knew William Colby of the CIA who was running the CIA operations.
[41:54.000 --> 42:07.000] William Colby later admitted that the United States secretly, the CIA kidnapped 80,000 innocent civilians, tortured them, tortured them, killed them.
[42:07.000 --> 42:12.000] 80,000. He admitted this to Congress.
[42:12.000 --> 42:17.000] Walter Cronkite, David Alberson, all these guys knew what was happening.
[42:17.000 --> 42:22.000] It was a torture program. We had torture centers all over South Vietnam.
[42:22.000 --> 42:27.000] They know, you know, but they didn't admit that we bombed Laos.
[42:27.000 --> 42:33.000] There was an airport in Laos that was the busiest airport in the world in the middle 60s.
[42:33.000 --> 42:36.000] Where was Walter Cronkite?
[42:36.000 --> 42:37.000] Yeah.
[42:37.000 --> 42:53.000] William Westmoreland, General Westmoreland was probably the biggest opium dealer of the 1960s running opium through the Saigon Airport out to, that was the French connection, out to the Mediterranean washing the money in the Vatican Bank.
[42:53.000 --> 43:00.000] This was all William West. What happened to William Westmoreland after Johnson kicked him upstairs?
[43:00.000 --> 43:10.000] He went to be Chief of Staff of the Army and he started to work on Gladio in fighting the communists in Italy.
[43:10.000 --> 43:17.000] This was a worldwide opium network that started, you know, in the Golden Triangle.
[43:17.000 --> 43:22.000] They shipped it out of Vietnam because we controlled it militarily.
[43:22.000 --> 43:26.000] You're talking about billions of dollars of CIA money.
[43:26.000 --> 43:33.000] So Walter Cronkite didn't know this, our top newsman, morally safer, couldn't figure this out.
[43:33.000 --> 43:37.000] It wasn't on the script they were given.
[43:37.000 --> 43:52.000] Yeah, when you look at Afghanistan and what's happened, what happened there with opium stuff, it's amazing that we keep seeing, you know, all of these different that how they've used the war on drugs to fund their military operations.
[43:52.000 --> 43:56.000] I'm thinking of Ron Contra and other things like that.
[43:56.000 --> 44:02.000] The CIA is a whole other story. Maybe you'll do a book on them one day as well.
[44:02.000 --> 44:20.000] So, you know, when we look at this moving forward, there's a lot of, a lot of different characters that you're able to, with the fiction thing, a lot of different people, stories that you're able to pull into a fictional account that'd be difficult, as you said, to do otherwise.
[44:20.000 --> 44:24.000] Tell us a bit more about the book and your approach to that.
[44:24.000 --> 44:30.000] Well, you know, Mr. Son was a 21 year old Viet Cong leader.
[44:30.000 --> 44:36.000] When I was 13 years old, I watched CBS News and they said, here we are on Route 9.
[44:36.000 --> 44:43.000] Route 9 is the key artery that cuts across the parallel to the DMZ.
[44:43.000 --> 44:45.000] And the Marines are out on Route 9.
[44:45.000 --> 44:50.000] And I looked and I thought, well, my brothers Marines control Route 9.
[44:50.000 --> 44:57.000] So I go out to Route 9 years later with Mr. Son and I said, oh, yeah, this is Route 9.
[44:57.000 --> 45:01.000] I remember seeing this in newsreels back when I was a kid.
[45:01.000 --> 45:03.000] He said, you didn't see us in those.
[45:03.000 --> 45:06.000] He said, you didn't see me in those newsreels.
[45:06.000 --> 45:09.000] And I said, what do you mean? Your nickname is the Tiger of Route 9.
[45:09.000 --> 45:11.000] Why didn't I see you?
[45:11.000 --> 45:15.000] He said, because Americans shot all the newsreels during the day.
[45:15.000 --> 45:18.000] He said, we were sleeping during the day.
[45:18.000 --> 45:21.000] Ho Chi Minh said, America has eyes in the sky.
[45:21.000 --> 45:23.000] Don't fight during the day.
[45:23.000 --> 45:25.000] He said, I didn't fight in the day. I fought at night.
[45:25.000 --> 45:28.000] It's easy to be courageous at night.
[45:28.000 --> 45:37.000] So what I didn't realize is America never dominated Vietnam for a 24 hour period.
[45:37.000 --> 45:38.000] I'll repeat that.
[45:38.000 --> 45:44.000] America was never winning, not even for 24 hours, because every day at 4 p.m.
[45:44.000 --> 45:46.000] What did the Marines do?
[45:46.000 --> 45:49.000] They retreated and they dug a hole.
[45:49.000 --> 45:51.000] They went back in.
[45:51.000 --> 45:53.000] They put wire around.
[45:53.000 --> 45:56.000] They put mines and they tried to get some sleep.
[45:56.000 --> 45:59.000] And that's when the Viet Cong came out.
[45:59.000 --> 46:06.000] They had specialists trained to walk like spiders through these minefields and disconnect them all.
[46:06.000 --> 46:08.000] And then attacked the Marines at night.
[46:08.000 --> 46:14.000] So after the sleepless Marines woke up, the survivors, they couldn't go out on Route 9.
[46:14.000 --> 46:16.000] They had to have minesweepers.
[46:16.000 --> 46:18.000] There are all sorts of mines out there.
[46:18.000 --> 46:21.000] The Vietnamese were fighting at night.
[46:21.000 --> 46:29.000] You need night goggles, night film to see the Vietnam War from the view of the Vietnamese.
[46:29.000 --> 46:37.000] And the other thing is, you know, President Obama told a group of Vietnam veterans, you won every battle.
[46:37.000 --> 46:41.000] Well, what are you talking about?
[46:41.000 --> 46:43.000] Ho Chi Minh trained his people.
[46:43.000 --> 46:46.000] He said, don't win a battle.
[46:46.000 --> 46:48.000] He said, we're just going to ambush.
[46:48.000 --> 46:52.000] If you knock off the pinky of a Marine, they'll report that home.
[46:52.000 --> 46:53.000] They'll be doctors.
[46:53.000 --> 46:55.000] They'll be, you know, tourniquets.
[46:55.000 --> 46:58.000] He said, you know, you just you ambush.
[46:58.000 --> 46:59.000] Quick in, quick out.
[46:59.000 --> 47:02.000] The three quicks and the one slow.
[47:02.000 --> 47:06.000] The three quicks, you know, get ready, attack, withdraw.
[47:06.000 --> 47:08.000] What's the one slow?
[47:08.000 --> 47:09.000] Prepare.
[47:09.000 --> 47:13.000] He said, never attack unless you have the advantage.
[47:13.000 --> 47:18.000] So if I was 15 in Wisconsin, David, I could figure that out.
[47:18.000 --> 47:22.000] I'm going to see this Canadian Army moving in a bunch with helmets.
[47:22.000 --> 47:24.000] I'm not going to attack them.
[47:24.000 --> 47:27.000] They could kill me, but I'm going to get them.
[47:27.000 --> 47:30.000] You know, when they turn the corner, they're not looking.
[47:30.000 --> 47:35.000] You know, slingshots, get them in the knee, run away, hide in the bush.
[47:35.000 --> 47:37.000] They were ambushing us.
[47:37.000 --> 47:41.000] We never controlled Vietnam for a 24-hour period.
[47:41.000 --> 47:42.000] Wow.
[47:42.000 --> 47:44.000] Yeah, that's very different from what I've heard.
[47:44.000 --> 47:47.000] I've always heard the line like you point out with Obama.
[47:47.000 --> 47:49.000] He's not the first or only one who said that.
[47:49.000 --> 47:50.000] I've heard that from a lot of people.
[47:50.000 --> 47:54.000] We won every battle, but then they would turn away and leave it, you know.
[47:54.000 --> 48:00.000] So that was their best case example of trying to explain what was happening there.
[48:00.000 --> 48:04.000] And even when they put that spin on it, it's like we had leadership.
[48:04.000 --> 48:06.000] They could win every battle and lose the war.
[48:06.000 --> 48:07.000] What's the matter with this?
[48:07.000 --> 48:12.000] But that puts a whole new spin on it, the fact that they're pulling back constantly.
[48:12.000 --> 48:16.000] And of course, the Vietnamese understood that they were fighting a war of attrition.
[48:17.000 --> 48:21.000] And, you know, that's because they understood America.
[48:21.000 --> 48:27.000] And he understood that, as you pointed out, because they had a lot of experience with other invaders,
[48:27.000 --> 48:29.000] it's that war of attrition.
[48:29.000 --> 48:32.000] And that's how we always lose these wars, these asymmetric wars.
[48:32.000 --> 48:37.000] We go in and try to occupy a country and turn it into what we want it to be.
[48:37.000 --> 48:40.000] Then it turns into a war of attrition.
[48:40.000 --> 48:43.000] And that truly is an amazing insight.
[48:43.000 --> 48:45.000] That's very different from what we heard.
[48:45.000 --> 48:48.000] That's why it's important for people to see this book, I think.
[48:48.000 --> 48:53.000] You know, and I'm a Wisconsinite talking to somebody in Texas.
[48:53.000 --> 48:58.000] If I could bring up, of course, the number one game in the history of football,
[48:58.000 --> 49:05.000] the Ice Bowl, 1967, Dallas Cowboys, Lambeau Field, Vince Lombardi, Bart Starr.
[49:05.000 --> 49:11.000] If you look at the stats, the Dallas Cowboys rushed for more yards.
[49:11.000 --> 49:12.000] They had more sacks.
[49:12.000 --> 49:16.000] You could look at the stats, and that's like the Vietnam War.
[49:16.000 --> 49:24.000] It's as if the Texas news media said, Hey, look, we won that game in Lambeau Field,
[49:24.000 --> 49:27.000] that Ice Bowl for the NFL Championship.
[49:27.000 --> 49:29.000] Look, we ran for more yards.
[49:29.000 --> 49:31.000] Look, we had more sacks.
[49:31.000 --> 49:32.000] Look at this stat.
[49:32.000 --> 49:33.000] Look at that stat.
[49:33.000 --> 49:38.000] But in the end, the Green Bay Packers, Bart Starr, Vince Lombardi won.
[49:39.000 --> 49:41.000] And Ho Chi Minh was the Vince Lombardi.
[49:41.000 --> 49:46.000] General Ziap was the winningest general of the 20th century.
[49:46.000 --> 49:49.000] And I'm not saying this to rub it in.
[49:49.000 --> 49:53.000] I'm saying it to, if we had realized these things,
[49:53.000 --> 49:59.000] and even if we would realize what happened in Vietnam, that's the source.
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[51:29.000 --> 51:32.000] You know, folks, there's a David Knight gold.
[51:32.000 --> 51:36.000] And David, you and I don't know each other. We didn't talk about this in advance.
[51:36.000 --> 51:44.000] I would, you know, recommend everybody right now take your dollars, go to David Knight Gold, get some gold.
[51:44.000 --> 51:46.000] Why am I saying that?
[51:46.000 --> 51:53.000] In 1966, the Prime Minister of Vietnam told the New York Times, you're going to go off the gold standard.
[51:53.000 --> 51:57.000] This war is going to ruin the dollar.
[51:57.000 --> 52:02.000] He told that to the Times. The Times readers in 66 couldn't figure it out.
[52:02.000 --> 52:06.000] 71, Nixon goes up. It's because of Vietnam.
[52:06.000 --> 52:13.000] The reason we lost in Iraq and Afghanistan is we didn't look at the lessons of Vietnam,
[52:13.000 --> 52:20.000] the economy, the debt, the riots that we have right now, the government line.
[52:20.000 --> 52:27.000] These are all stories that came, you know, the seed of them is in the Vietnam War,
[52:27.000 --> 52:30.000] and they're in this book, Precious Freedom.
[52:30.000 --> 52:33.000] Yes. We keep making those same types of decisions.
[52:33.000 --> 52:40.000] You know, when you talk about the general who went around telling everybody that Ho Chi Minh was like George Washington,
[52:40.000 --> 52:44.000] and that really is the way that they, we won the Revolutionary War.
[52:44.000 --> 52:48.000] Again, defending your home, and it wasn't like they won any battles.
[52:48.000 --> 52:52.000] I mean, they won Yorktown. That was like basically the first battle that they really won.
[52:52.000 --> 52:54.000] But they were all wars of attrition.
[52:54.000 --> 52:59.000] And it was like, you know, the British could say, yeah, we got those guns in Concord and Lexington,
[52:59.000 --> 53:02.000] but they got hammered the entire time they were coming back.
[53:02.000 --> 53:09.000] And we need to think in those terms, and we need to stop thinking like the world's policemen.
[53:09.000 --> 53:12.000] And we just can't get that through to people.
[53:13.000 --> 53:18.000] Maybe, you know, your book can get that into people's minds, that perspective,
[53:18.000 --> 53:22.000] and how we have just the wrong approach in terms of doing this.
[53:22.000 --> 53:28.000] But again, I think it comes back to the fact that, and things are only getting worse in this regard,
[53:28.000 --> 53:34.000] that we don't have the proper kind of determination whether we're going to get involved in a war.
[53:34.000 --> 53:38.000] I mean, you look at the wars that we've had since World War II,
[53:38.000 --> 53:43.000] and we've predominantly been because there hasn't been a real consideration or discussion of what's happened.
[53:43.000 --> 53:51.000] We've been lied into it and pushed into it by the executive branch in a supine Pentagon that is there.
[53:51.000 --> 53:56.000] It's interesting that you mentioned Westmoreland. I didn't know about his involvement with Gladio.
[53:56.000 --> 54:01.000] I mean, I've looked at Gladio quite a bit, but I didn't notice that he was there.
[54:01.000 --> 54:04.000] And we should think about that part of it as well.
[54:04.000 --> 54:08.000] NATO has got an unbelievable history when you go back and look at NATO,
[54:08.000 --> 54:12.000] not just the things that are happening in Eastern Europe,
[54:12.000 --> 54:16.000] but a long, long history of false flags and things like that.
[54:18.000 --> 54:24.000] The book is Precious Freedom, and I tell you, freedom is precious, and so is life.
[54:24.000 --> 54:30.000] And we have allowed our government to put them on a very low priority.
[54:30.000 --> 54:34.000] They've got a different priority. We need to start waking up as a people.
[54:34.000 --> 54:41.000] And I think the important thing is that we have to, and when you've got a fictional narrative like this,
[54:41.000 --> 54:49.000] it's very powerful because you can get into people's feelings in a way that's difficult to do in a nonfiction book.
[54:49.000 --> 54:59.000] And I think that that ability to tell a narrative story like that can really affect people's hearts and minds.
[54:59.000 --> 55:04.000] And that's what this is all truly about. That was something that was a big part of the Vietnamese –
[55:04.000 --> 55:08.000] the Vietnam War was the hearts and minds that they were losing.
[55:08.000 --> 55:13.000] And we need to make sure that they don't have control of our hearts and minds again.
[55:13.000 --> 55:18.000] And I think the best anecdote is to have the truth presented to them in a very effective way.
[55:18.000 --> 55:26.000] And I think your book is one of those ways that people can get that message out to people.
[55:26.000 --> 55:30.000] Thank you, David, and thank you for giving me the chance to talk about it.
[55:30.000 --> 55:33.000] Well, thank you for what you're doing. I think it's very important work.
[55:33.000 --> 55:38.000] And I think it's important for people to see this. And we all grew up in Vietnam.
[55:38.000 --> 55:44.000] And I think it's also important for people to go back and to question what they were told.
[55:44.000 --> 55:47.000] And once you do that, that's a real eye-opening experience.
[55:47.000 --> 55:52.000] And so many of us have had that experience with Vietnam.
[55:52.000 --> 55:56.000] I know a lot of people who went to Vietnam and they had that same kind of experience
[55:56.000 --> 56:01.000] and were severely harmed by that. But our country was severely harmed by the Vietnam War.
[56:01.000 --> 56:06.000] So again, the book is Precious Freedom. And people can find it on Amazon.
[56:06.000 --> 56:09.000] Is that the best place for people to find your book? Do you have a website that you're selling it?
[56:09.000 --> 56:18.000] Yeah. No, jump to Amazon. You'll get it delivered November 11th.
[56:18.000 --> 56:24.000] It's been officially published, but pre-orders really help a lot.
[56:24.000 --> 56:33.000] And this is going to have a lot of readership in Asia. Vietnam was not a small American story. It was global.
[56:33.000 --> 56:41.000] Yes. It should be made into a movie, like your other book was. I think it would probably be a great movie.
[56:41.000 --> 56:45.000] It's a story that really needs to be told. Who knows? Maybe Clint Eastwood will do it.
[56:45.000 --> 56:50.000] He's still game for doing movies. He's not giving up yet on that.
[56:50.000 --> 56:54.000] But maybe we'll find a good director if there's any left in Hollywood. I don't know.
[56:54.000 --> 56:58.000] But it would be a great movie, I'm sure. Thank you so much for joining us.
[56:58.000 --> 57:03.000] Thank you, James Bradley. And again, the book is Precious Freedom.
[57:15.000 --> 57:42.000] In the beginning it was the world
[57:42.000 --> 57:48.000] The world of God
[57:48.000 --> 57:55.000] The world was God
[57:55.000 --> 58:01.000] All things were made
[58:01.000 --> 58:09.000] May violence through him
[58:09.000 --> 58:23.000] Remembers of the light of God
[58:39.000 --> 59:03.000] In the beginning it was the world
[59:03.000 --> 59:07.000] The world with God
[59:07.000 --> 59:12.000] The world was God
[59:12.000 --> 59:16.000] All things were made
[59:16.000 --> 59:20.000] May violence through him
[59:20.000 --> 59:24.000] In him was life
[59:24.000 --> 59:29.000] The light of man
[59:29.000 --> 59:37.000] The true light came into the world
[59:37.000 --> 59:41.000] Though made by him
[59:41.000 --> 59:45.000] Is new, not here
[59:45.000 --> 59:51.000] The Father's only Son
[59:51.000 --> 59:55.000] We've seen
[59:55.000 --> 59:58.000] His glory
[59:58.000 --> 01:00:02.000] Seeing his grace
[01:00:25.000 --> 01:00:40.000] Though he was in
[01:00:40.000 --> 01:00:45.000] The world before was God
[01:00:45.000 --> 01:00:49.000] He kept the blood
[01:00:49.000 --> 01:00:53.000] Equality
[01:00:53.000 --> 01:00:56.000] But took the form
[01:00:56.000 --> 01:01:00.000] Of things long ago but flat
[01:01:00.000 --> 01:01:02.000] Made of him
[01:01:02.000 --> 01:01:05.000] He lived with us
[01:01:05.000 --> 01:01:12.000] To die for us
[01:01:23.000 --> 01:01:48.000] In human form
[01:01:48.000 --> 01:01:53.000] In human form
[01:01:53.000 --> 01:01:57.000] A humble kid
[01:01:57.000 --> 01:02:01.000] Who paid to death
[01:02:01.000 --> 01:02:05.000] Death on the cross
[01:02:05.000 --> 01:02:09.000] Now God has raised
[01:02:09.000 --> 01:02:14.000] His name on high
[01:02:14.000 --> 01:02:19.000] The name above
[01:02:19.000 --> 01:02:28.000] All other names
[01:02:28.000 --> 01:02:33.000] The name above
[01:02:33.000 --> 01:02:38.000] All other names
[01:02:38.000 --> 01:02:43.000] That at the name
[01:02:43.000 --> 01:02:47.000] Of each shall bow
[01:02:47.000 --> 01:02:51.000] In heaven and earth
[01:02:51.000 --> 01:02:56.000] Each tongue confess
[01:02:56.000 --> 01:03:00.000] That Jesus Christ
[01:03:00.000 --> 01:03:06.000] Is Lord
[01:03:06.000 --> 01:03:15.000] Of all
[01:03:26.000 --> 01:03:28.000] Our guest now is Jeffrey Rosen,
[01:03:28.000 --> 01:03:30.000] the book which just came out
[01:03:30.000 --> 01:03:32.000] about a week or so ago,
[01:03:32.000 --> 01:03:34.000] The Pursuit of Liberty,
[01:03:34.000 --> 01:03:36.000] How Hamilton v. Jefferson
[01:03:36.000 --> 01:03:38.000] ignited the lasting battle
[01:03:38.000 --> 01:03:40.000] over power in America.
[01:03:40.000 --> 01:03:42.000] And in his book,
[01:03:42.000 --> 01:03:44.000] he traces this over
[01:03:44.000 --> 01:03:46.000] different time periods,
[01:03:46.000 --> 01:03:48.000] a couple of decades,
[01:03:48.000 --> 01:03:50.000] each of these things,
[01:03:50.000 --> 01:03:52.000] and how people's viewpoints
[01:03:52.000 --> 01:03:54.000] and their views
[01:03:54.000 --> 01:03:56.000] of government has shifted
[01:03:56.000 --> 01:03:58.000] between these two polls,
[01:03:58.000 --> 01:04:00.000] I guess, in terms of
[01:04:00.000 --> 01:04:02.000] looking at how power
[01:04:02.000 --> 01:04:04.000] should be structured here
[01:04:04.000 --> 01:04:06.000] in the United States,
[01:04:06.000 --> 01:04:08.000] between Hamilton and Jefferson.
[01:04:08.000 --> 01:04:10.000] But you have an interesting
[01:04:10.000 --> 01:04:12.000] anecdote about Hamilton
[01:04:12.000 --> 01:04:14.000] and Jefferson and what happened,
[01:04:14.000 --> 01:04:16.000] what Jefferson did after
[01:04:16.000 --> 01:04:18.000] Hamilton died.
[01:04:18.000 --> 01:04:20.000] Tell us a little bit about that.
[01:04:20.000 --> 01:04:22.000] It's so moving that Hamilton
[01:04:22.000 --> 01:04:24.000] and Jefferson are early debates,
[01:04:24.000 --> 01:04:26.000] and in fact all debates ever since,
[01:04:26.000 --> 01:04:28.000] about national power
[01:04:28.000 --> 01:04:30.000] versus states' rights,
[01:04:30.000 --> 01:04:32.000] or a strong executive versus
[01:04:32.000 --> 01:04:34.000] a strong judiciary,
[01:04:34.000 --> 01:04:36.000] or liberal versus strict construction
[01:04:36.000 --> 01:04:38.000] of the Constitution.
[01:04:38.000 --> 01:04:40.000] And their battles over the bank
[01:04:40.000 --> 01:04:42.000] of the United States and the Alien
[01:04:42.000 --> 01:04:44.000] and Sedition Acts lead to the formation
[01:04:44.000 --> 01:04:46.000] of America's first political parties.
[01:04:46.000 --> 01:04:48.000] But despite all of those clashes,
[01:04:48.000 --> 01:04:50.000] at the end of his life,
[01:04:50.000 --> 01:04:52.000] he was united in believing that Aaron Burr
[01:04:52.000 --> 01:04:54.000] is a traitor who's trying to
[01:04:54.000 --> 01:04:56.000] raise an insurrection in Spanish Louisiana
[01:04:56.000 --> 01:04:58.000] and set himself up as a dictator.
[01:04:58.000 --> 01:05:00.000] After they both united against Burr,
[01:05:00.000 --> 01:05:02.000] Jefferson places a bust
[01:05:02.000 --> 01:05:04.000] of Hamilton across from his own
[01:05:04.000 --> 01:05:06.000] in the central entrance hall of Monticello.
[01:05:06.000 --> 01:05:08.000] You can see it there today, if you go there.
[01:05:08.000 --> 01:05:10.000] And when he passed it, Jefferson
[01:05:10.000 --> 01:05:12.000] would say, opposed in life
[01:05:12.000 --> 01:05:14.000] as in death. And he viewed
[01:05:14.000 --> 01:05:16.000] Hamilton not as a hated
[01:05:16.000 --> 01:05:18.000] enemy to be destroyed, but a respected
[01:05:18.000 --> 01:05:20.000] adversary to be engaged with.
[01:05:20.000 --> 01:05:22.000] And that spirit of civil dialogue
[01:05:22.000 --> 01:05:24.000] and learning how
[01:05:24.000 --> 01:05:26.000] to listen to the other side and disagreeing
[01:05:26.000 --> 01:05:28.000] without being disagreeable is one that
[01:05:28.000 --> 01:05:30.000] we've urgently got to get back today.
[01:05:30.000 --> 01:05:32.000] Oh, yes, we do. I talk about that
[01:05:32.000 --> 01:05:34.000] almost every day.
[01:05:34.000 --> 01:05:36.000] What has happened with that? Let's start with
[01:05:36.000 --> 01:05:38.000] the introduction.
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[01:07:08.000 --> 01:07:10.000] You say the greatest man that ever lived was
[01:07:10.000 --> 01:07:12.000] Julius Caesar, quote, unquote, and the
[01:07:12.000 --> 01:07:14.000] dinner party that defined America.
[01:07:14.000 --> 01:07:16.000] Tell us a little bit about what that is about.
[01:07:16.000 --> 01:07:18.000] What's that dinner party about?
[01:07:18.000 --> 01:07:20.000] It's amazing how relevant it is to our
[01:07:20.000 --> 01:07:22.000] current debates. So this is a dinner
[01:07:22.000 --> 01:07:24.000] party in the room where it happened,
[01:07:24.000 --> 01:07:26.000] not the one where they move
[01:07:26.000 --> 01:07:28.000] the capital from New
[01:07:28.000 --> 01:07:30.000] York to Washington, D.C. in exchange
[01:07:30.000 --> 01:07:32.000] for assuming the national death, the one in the
[01:07:32.000 --> 01:07:34.000] Hamilton musical. This is a year later.
[01:07:34.000 --> 01:07:36.000] And Washington's away. The whole cabinet
[01:07:36.000 --> 01:07:38.000] is gathered. At some point, Hamilton
[01:07:38.000 --> 01:07:40.000] says to Jefferson, who are those three guys
[01:07:40.000 --> 01:07:42.000] on the wall? And Jefferson says, those are
[01:07:42.000 --> 01:07:44.000] my three portraits of the three greatest men
[01:07:44.000 --> 01:07:46.000] in history, John Locke, Francis
[01:07:46.000 --> 01:07:48.000] Bacon, and Isaac Newton.
[01:07:48.000 --> 01:07:50.000] And Hamilton pauses for a long time, and then he
[01:07:50.000 --> 01:07:52.000] blurts out, the greatest man that ever
[01:07:52.000 --> 01:07:54.000] lived was Julius Caesar.
[01:07:54.000 --> 01:07:56.000] And he convinces Jefferson,
[01:07:56.000 --> 01:07:58.000] he writes in his diary, that
[01:07:58.000 --> 01:08:00.000] Hamilton is for a monarchy
[01:08:00.000 --> 01:08:02.000] bottomed on corruption.
[01:08:02.000 --> 01:08:04.000] And he proceeds to found the Democratic
[01:08:04.000 --> 01:08:06.000] Republican Party in order to resist
[01:08:06.000 --> 01:08:08.000] the alleged dictatorial ambitions of
[01:08:08.000 --> 01:08:10.000] Hamilton and the Federalists.
[01:08:10.000 --> 01:08:12.000] And Jefferson's convinced from his studies
[01:08:12.000 --> 01:08:14.000] of history that all elective
[01:08:14.000 --> 01:08:16.000] monarchies end with popular leaders like
[01:08:16.000 --> 01:08:18.000] Caesar converting themselves into
[01:08:18.000 --> 01:08:20.000] hereditary despots.
[01:08:20.000 --> 01:08:22.000] And that's why Jefferson wants
[01:08:22.000 --> 01:08:24.000] a one-year term limit for the
[01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:26.000] president. When he gets a copy of the Constitution,
[01:08:26.000 --> 01:08:28.000] he writes to Madison that a
[01:08:28.000 --> 01:08:30.000] future president might refuse to leave
[01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:32.000] office, so we need a one-year term
[01:08:32.000 --> 01:08:34.000] limit. Now the anecdote is so interesting
[01:08:34.000 --> 01:08:36.000] because as Ron Chernow, the great
[01:08:36.000 --> 01:08:38.000] Hamilton historian notes,
[01:08:38.000 --> 01:08:40.000] when Hamilton praised Julius Caesar,
[01:08:40.000 --> 01:08:42.000] he must have been joking. He insisted
[01:08:42.000 --> 01:08:44.000] throughout his career that the greatest threat
[01:08:44.000 --> 01:08:46.000] to America was an authoritarian
[01:08:46.000 --> 01:08:48.000] demagogue like Caesar who could
[01:08:48.000 --> 01:08:50.000] overthrow popular elections and consolidate
[01:08:50.000 --> 01:08:52.000] power in his own hands.
[01:08:52.000 --> 01:08:54.000] Hamilton's solution, amazingly,
[01:08:54.000 --> 01:08:56.000] is a life term for the president.
[01:08:56.000 --> 01:08:58.000] Basically, if the president's elected,
[01:08:58.000 --> 01:09:00.000] he says he won't be tempted to extend
[01:09:00.000 --> 01:09:02.000] his term. And that's too much of the
[01:09:02.000 --> 01:09:04.000] Constitutional Convention, but amazingly,
[01:09:04.000 --> 01:09:06.000] James Madison and
[01:09:06.000 --> 01:09:08.000] Gouverneur Morris at some
[01:09:08.000 --> 01:09:10.000] point support a version of a life term,
[01:09:10.000 --> 01:09:12.000] so Hamilton wasn't totally off on his own.
[01:09:12.000 --> 01:09:14.000] Nevertheless,
[01:09:14.000 --> 01:09:16.000] the Constitution chooses
[01:09:16.000 --> 01:09:18.000] no term limits, and then Jefferson
[01:09:18.000 --> 01:09:20.000] establishes the tradition
[01:09:20.000 --> 01:09:22.000] of stepping down after two
[01:09:22.000 --> 01:09:24.000] terms. Washington, of course, famously
[01:09:24.000 --> 01:09:26.000] gave up the office like Cincinnati
[01:09:26.000 --> 01:09:28.000] returning to his farm.
[01:09:28.000 --> 01:09:30.000] But it was Jefferson
[01:09:30.000 --> 01:09:32.000] who, by reaffirming that tradition,
[01:09:32.000 --> 01:09:34.000] establishes it. And, you know, I've just been
[01:09:34.000 --> 01:09:36.000] looking into it in light of the recent question
[01:09:36.000 --> 01:09:38.000] about whether or not President Trump can
[01:09:38.000 --> 01:09:40.000] run for a third term. That Jefferson
[01:09:40.000 --> 01:09:42.000] tradition holds until Grant,
[01:09:42.000 --> 01:09:44.000] who actually does want to run for a
[01:09:44.000 --> 01:09:46.000] third term, but Congress subjects
[01:09:46.000 --> 01:09:48.000] and he kind of pushes back. The
[01:09:48.000 --> 01:09:50.000] first president who's nominated
[01:09:50.000 --> 01:09:52.000] and runs for a third term, of course, is
[01:09:52.000 --> 01:09:54.000] Theodore Roosevelt on the third
[01:09:54.000 --> 01:09:56.000] party ticket. He promised not to run
[01:09:56.000 --> 01:09:58.000] again, and then he breaks that promise.
[01:09:58.000 --> 01:10:00.000] And then Franklin Roosevelt. And
[01:10:00.000 --> 01:10:02.000] NFTR is such a great example of the kind of
[01:10:02.000 --> 01:10:04.000] Julius Caesar, because he's
[01:10:04.000 --> 01:10:06.000] attacked throughout his term as
[01:10:06.000 --> 01:10:08.000] a would-be Caesar, and he dresses up
[01:10:08.000 --> 01:10:10.000] in 1934 like Caesar.
[01:10:10.000 --> 01:10:12.000] He has a Caesar-themed
[01:10:12.000 --> 01:10:14.000] birthday party, and Eleanor dresses
[01:10:14.000 --> 01:10:16.000] like a Roman matron.
[01:10:18.000 --> 01:10:20.000] But it's in the middle of World War II, so
[01:10:20.000 --> 01:10:22.000] he arranges to be drafted by the Democratic
[01:10:22.000 --> 01:10:24.000] Convention. He runs for
[01:10:24.000 --> 01:10:26.000] a third term, and then he wins
[01:10:26.000 --> 01:10:28.000] a fourth. He dies after 82 days
[01:10:28.000 --> 01:10:30.000] after his election as a fourth
[01:10:30.000 --> 01:10:32.000] term. And then Republicans in Congress
[01:10:32.000 --> 01:10:34.000] just think this cannot happen again,
[01:10:34.000 --> 01:10:36.000] a kind of president who
[01:10:36.000 --> 01:10:38.000] keeps running. So
[01:10:38.000 --> 01:10:40.000] in 1947,
[01:10:40.000 --> 01:10:42.000] Congress, which has been
[01:10:42.000 --> 01:10:44.000] retaken by the Republicans, proposes
[01:10:44.000 --> 01:10:46.000] the 22nd Amendment, which says you
[01:10:46.000 --> 01:10:48.000] can't be elected to the
[01:10:48.000 --> 01:10:50.000] office of president more than twice.
[01:10:50.000 --> 01:10:52.000] It's ratified in 1951.
[01:10:52.000 --> 01:10:54.000] And ever since then, that's pretty
[01:10:54.000 --> 01:10:56.000] well stuck. I mean, sometimes Ronald
[01:10:56.000 --> 01:10:58.000] Reagan wanted to repeal the
[01:10:58.000 --> 01:11:00.000] 22nd Amendment after he left office,
[01:11:00.000 --> 01:11:02.000] but there haven't been any real
[01:11:02.000 --> 01:11:04.000] efforts to do it. It's
[01:11:04.000 --> 01:11:06.000] relatively popular. And that brings it to
[01:11:06.000 --> 01:11:08.000] our current debates.
[01:11:08.000 --> 01:11:10.000] You know, President Trump had
[01:11:10.000 --> 01:11:12.000] noted that his staff had
[01:11:12.000 --> 01:11:14.000] discussed this potential loophole
[01:11:14.000 --> 01:11:16.000] where you could run
[01:11:16.000 --> 01:11:18.000] as a vice president, be elected, and then
[01:11:18.000 --> 01:11:20.000] the elected president could resign
[01:11:20.000 --> 01:11:22.000] and you could succeed that way.
[01:11:22.000 --> 01:11:24.000] President Trump called that probably too cute,
[01:11:24.000 --> 01:11:26.000] and I saw that just this morning
[01:11:26.000 --> 01:11:28.000] he seemed to acknowledge that the amendment
[01:11:28.000 --> 01:11:30.000] clearly forbids a third term.
[01:11:30.000 --> 01:11:32.000] I'd say if you read that, it's pretty clear I'm not
[01:11:32.000 --> 01:11:34.000] allowed to run. But the debate is so interesting
[01:11:34.000 --> 01:11:36.000] because it goes back to Hamilton and Jefferson,
[01:11:36.000 --> 01:11:38.000] to that dinner party that defined America.
[01:11:38.000 --> 01:11:40.000] And the point is that all of the framers
[01:11:40.000 --> 01:11:42.000] are very concerned about
[01:11:42.000 --> 01:11:44.000] presidents extending their power through
[01:11:44.000 --> 01:11:46.000] dictatorial means. All the ancient republics
[01:11:46.000 --> 01:11:48.000] of Greece and Rome had fallen
[01:11:48.000 --> 01:11:50.000] because the virtue
[01:11:50.000 --> 01:11:52.000] of the citizens hadn't led citizens to
[01:11:52.000 --> 01:11:54.000] protect liberty and had made them
[01:11:54.000 --> 01:11:56.000] succumb to these demagogic
[01:11:56.000 --> 01:11:58.000] leaders. And that's why although we've debated
[01:11:58.000 --> 01:12:00.000] exactly how to impose term limits, I think
[01:12:00.000 --> 01:12:02.000] Harry Truman put it best when he
[01:12:02.000 --> 01:12:04.000] in 1950 said
[01:12:04.000 --> 01:12:06.000] he said, I know I could be
[01:12:06.000 --> 01:12:08.000] elected and continue to break the old precedent,
[01:12:08.000 --> 01:12:10.000] but it shouldn't be done.
[01:12:10.000 --> 01:12:12.000] The president should continue
[01:12:12.000 --> 01:12:14.000] to be limited
[01:12:14.000 --> 01:12:16.000] by custom based on
[01:12:16.000 --> 01:12:18.000] the honor of the man in the office. And I think
[01:12:18.000 --> 01:12:20.000] that's a great way. I agree.
[01:12:20.000 --> 01:12:22.000] That's what is so dangerous about it.
[01:12:22.000 --> 01:12:24.000] That dinner, of course, certainly
[01:12:24.000 --> 01:12:26.000] at least in Jefferson's estimation
[01:12:26.000 --> 01:12:28.000] you had Hamilton crossing
[01:12:28.000 --> 01:12:30.000] the Rubicon. It's like, oh, that's it.
[01:12:30.000 --> 01:12:32.000] This guy wants a lifetime president and he
[01:12:32.000 --> 01:12:34.000] thinks Julius Caesar was it.
[01:12:34.000 --> 01:12:36.000] But it's something that has really bothered
[01:12:36.000 --> 01:12:38.000] me when people
[01:12:38.000 --> 01:12:40.000] talk about this guy being
[01:12:40.000 --> 01:12:42.000] the drug czar. I think it's William Bennett.
[01:12:42.000 --> 01:12:44.000] And he accepted that term.
[01:12:44.000 --> 01:12:46.000] And it's like, well, czar is Caesar, right?
[01:12:46.000 --> 01:12:48.000] It's the same thing. And we see this over
[01:12:48.000 --> 01:12:50.000] and over again. We got a czar for this and a czar
[01:12:50.000 --> 01:12:52.000] for that. So we have this trend
[01:12:52.000 --> 01:12:54.000] towards a kind of authoritarian
[01:12:54.000 --> 01:12:56.000] dictatorship leader,
[01:12:56.000 --> 01:12:58.000] strongman, whatever you want to call it.
[01:12:58.000 --> 01:13:00.000] I think it's a very dangerous trend.
[01:13:00.000 --> 01:13:02.000] And the thing that concerned me, as I said earlier
[01:13:02.000 --> 01:13:04.000] in the program, you know, if we don't
[01:13:04.000 --> 01:13:06.000] understand the history,
[01:13:06.000 --> 01:13:08.000] if we don't understand the Constitution
[01:13:08.000 --> 01:13:10.000] and how we got there, you know, we're still having
[01:13:10.000 --> 01:13:12.000] these same arguments, as you pointed out. This whole purpose
[01:13:12.000 --> 01:13:14.000] of your book is to point out how this
[01:13:14.000 --> 01:13:16.000] has gone back and forth. And we have these two
[01:13:16.000 --> 01:13:18.000] poles that we're drawn to.
[01:13:18.000 --> 01:13:20.000] And if we don't understand
[01:13:20.000 --> 01:13:22.000] history, we don't really see
[01:13:22.000 --> 01:13:24.000] human nature and how
[01:13:24.000 --> 01:13:26.000] human nature is continually going back to
[01:13:26.000 --> 01:13:28.000] these types of things over and over again.
[01:13:28.000 --> 01:13:30.000] So we don't have a context for it.
[01:13:30.000 --> 01:13:32.000] But I think that's what's really important
[01:13:32.000 --> 01:13:34.000] about your book and about studying
[01:13:34.000 --> 01:13:36.000] history and looking at
[01:13:36.000 --> 01:13:38.000] these different philosophies that are there
[01:13:38.000 --> 01:13:40.000] towards government. I think it's very
[01:13:40.000 --> 01:13:42.000] important. Now, so we have
[01:13:42.000 --> 01:13:44.000] that was the introduction to your book.
[01:13:44.000 --> 01:13:46.000] And then you're talking about how
[01:13:46.000 --> 01:13:48.000] the
[01:13:48.000 --> 01:13:50.000] will of the majority should always prevail.
[01:13:50.000 --> 01:13:52.000] Thomas Jefferson's declaration.
[01:13:52.000 --> 01:13:54.000] That was one of the things that Steve Bannon was saying.
[01:13:54.000 --> 01:13:56.000] He said, well, the will of the people is the Constitution.
[01:13:56.000 --> 01:13:58.000] And I'm like, well, no, I believe that
[01:13:58.000 --> 01:14:00.000] the Constitution is a
[01:14:00.000 --> 01:14:02.000] written document. And I think
[01:14:02.000 --> 01:14:04.000] it's very important to have an established
[01:14:04.000 --> 01:14:06.000] standard that is out there
[01:14:06.000 --> 01:14:08.000] that is external to the people.
[01:14:08.000 --> 01:14:10.000] I think you have to have some kind of external
[01:14:10.000 --> 01:14:12.000] standard so that
[01:14:12.000 --> 01:14:14.000] you don't wind up with a dictator or so
[01:14:14.000 --> 01:14:16.000] that you know that you've got a dictator if
[01:14:16.000 --> 01:14:18.000] they ignore that standard that's there.
[01:14:18.000 --> 01:14:20.000] As someone who is working with
[01:14:20.000 --> 01:14:22.000] the Constitutional
[01:14:22.000 --> 01:14:24.000] issues all the time with your
[01:14:24.000 --> 01:14:26.000] organization, what do you think about that?
[01:14:26.000 --> 01:14:28.000] Well, you're absolutely right that
[01:14:28.000 --> 01:14:30.000] that's a central debate that goes
[01:14:30.000 --> 01:14:32.000] back to the founding. The balance between
[01:14:32.000 --> 01:14:34.000] democracy and rule
[01:14:34.000 --> 01:14:36.000] by elites. How
[01:14:36.000 --> 01:14:38.000] can we empower majorities while resisting
[01:14:38.000 --> 01:14:40.000] the mob? And that's the central
[01:14:40.000 --> 01:14:42.000] reason the Constitutional Convention was called.
[01:14:42.000 --> 01:14:44.000] Hamilton and Madison and the other Federalists
[01:14:44.000 --> 01:14:46.000] are afraid of Shays' Rebellion in
[01:14:46.000 --> 01:14:48.000] Western Massachusetts where debtors are
[01:14:48.000 --> 01:14:50.000] mobbing the courthouses and
[01:14:50.000 --> 01:14:52.000] the federal armory. And Hamilton
[01:14:52.000 --> 01:14:54.000] says, imagine that Shays' Rebellion had been
[01:14:54.000 --> 01:14:56.000] led by a Caesar or a Catiline.
[01:14:56.000 --> 01:14:58.000] He would have begun a
[01:14:58.000 --> 01:15:00.000] demagogue and turned tyrant.
[01:15:00.000 --> 01:15:02.000] So much of the Constitution is designed
[01:15:02.000 --> 01:15:04.000] to slow down deliberation, to
[01:15:04.000 --> 01:15:06.000] prevent mobs from formalizing, to put
[01:15:06.000 --> 01:15:08.000] on checks on direct democracy.
[01:15:08.000 --> 01:15:10.000] At the same time, the will
[01:15:10.000 --> 01:15:12.000] of the people must ultimately
[01:15:12.000 --> 01:15:14.000] prevail. And that's why Jefferson's
[01:15:14.000 --> 01:15:16.000] great vision was that
[01:15:16.000 --> 01:15:18.000] the will of the majority should always ultimately
[01:15:18.000 --> 01:15:20.000] prevail. He wanted, believe it or not,
[01:15:20.000 --> 01:15:22.000] a Constitutional Convention every 19
[01:15:22.000 --> 01:15:24.000] years so that the people could decide whether
[01:15:24.000 --> 01:15:26.000] they still supported it. Hamilton thought
[01:15:26.000 --> 01:15:28.000] that was a disastrous idea because
[01:15:28.000 --> 01:15:30.000] it was a miracle the first convention
[01:15:30.000 --> 01:15:32.000] had succeeded. But that balance
[01:15:32.000 --> 01:15:34.000] between democracy and rule by
[01:15:34.000 --> 01:15:36.000] elites is central. FDR is
[01:15:36.000 --> 01:15:38.000] really amazing here, and you're so right about
[01:15:38.000 --> 01:15:40.000] the importance, the urgent importance
[01:15:40.000 --> 01:15:42.000] of studying history. I was so
[01:15:42.000 --> 01:15:44.000] struck by how presidents throughout
[01:15:44.000 --> 01:15:46.000] history have actually invoked the Hamilton and Jefferson
[01:15:46.000 --> 01:15:48.000] debate to structure our understanding
[01:15:48.000 --> 01:15:50.000] of history. I was inspired to write the book
[01:15:50.000 --> 01:15:52.000] when I saw that John Quincy Adams
[01:15:52.000 --> 01:15:54.000] traced the entire development of America's
[01:15:54.000 --> 01:15:56.000] political parties back to
[01:15:56.000 --> 01:15:58.000] the initial debate between Hamilton and Jefferson
[01:15:58.000 --> 01:16:00.000] about democracy versus
[01:16:00.000 --> 01:16:02.000] aristocracy, which is the question we're talking
[01:16:02.000 --> 01:16:04.000] about now. Hamilton and Jefferson
[01:16:04.000 --> 01:16:06.000] go up and down throughout the
[01:16:06.000 --> 01:16:08.000] 19th and 20th century,
[01:16:08.000 --> 01:16:10.000] and Lincoln says that he's
[01:16:10.000 --> 01:16:12.000] a Jeffersonian even as he's extending
[01:16:12.000 --> 01:16:14.000] the powers of Congress
[01:16:14.000 --> 01:16:16.000] dramatically during the Civil War.
[01:16:16.000 --> 01:16:18.000] Theodore Roosevelt leads
[01:16:18.000 --> 01:16:20.000] a Hamiltonian revival
[01:16:20.000 --> 01:16:22.000] when a historian called Herbert Crowley
[01:16:22.000 --> 01:16:24.000] calls on him to deploy Hamiltonian
[01:16:24.000 --> 01:16:26.000] means for Jeffersonian ends.
[01:16:26.000 --> 01:16:28.000] In other words, the Hamiltonian means of strong
[01:16:28.000 --> 01:16:30.000] federal power for the Jeffersonian
[01:16:30.000 --> 01:16:32.000] ends of democracy and curbing
[01:16:32.000 --> 01:16:34.000] the corporations. But the most amazing
[01:16:34.000 --> 01:16:36.000] turn, Hamilton's stock crashes after
[01:16:36.000 --> 01:16:38.000] the stock market crash in 1929.
[01:16:38.000 --> 01:16:40.000] No one likes Hamilton.
[01:16:40.000 --> 01:16:42.000] Franklin Roosevelt in 1932
[01:16:42.000 --> 01:16:44.000] reinvents the Democratic
[01:16:44.000 --> 01:16:46.000] Party as the party of Jeffersonian
[01:16:46.000 --> 01:16:48.000] democracy rather than limited
[01:16:48.000 --> 01:16:50.000] government, and he makes Jefferson
[01:16:50.000 --> 01:16:52.000] the patron saint of the New Deal.
[01:16:52.000 --> 01:16:54.000] Now this takes incredible chutzpah.
[01:16:54.000 --> 01:16:56.000] Franklin Roosevelt is expanding government
[01:16:56.000 --> 01:16:58.000] more than any other president in history,
[01:16:58.000 --> 01:17:00.000] but he puts Jefferson on the nickel and he
[01:17:00.000 --> 01:17:02.000] builds the Jefferson Memorial and he reinvents
[01:17:02.000 --> 01:17:04.000] himself as the patron saint
[01:17:04.000 --> 01:17:06.000] of Jeffersonian democracy.
[01:17:06.000 --> 01:17:08.000] So this just shows how
[01:17:08.000 --> 01:17:10.000] protean, how malleable Hamilton and Jefferson
[01:17:10.000 --> 01:17:12.000] are, both sides are often invoking them
[01:17:12.000 --> 01:17:14.000] for both purposes. But then to
[01:17:14.000 --> 01:17:16.000] close this part of the story, Ronald
[01:17:16.000 --> 01:17:18.000] Reagan said that he left the Democratic Party
[01:17:18.000 --> 01:17:20.000] in 1960 because it had abandoned
[01:17:20.000 --> 01:17:22.000] the principles of Jefferson and limited government
[01:17:22.000 --> 01:17:24.000] and he proposed to reinvent the Republican
[01:17:24.000 --> 01:17:26.000] Party as the libertarian Jefferson
[01:17:26.000 --> 01:17:28.000] rather than the Jefferson
[01:17:28.000 --> 01:17:30.000] who hated the
[01:17:30.000 --> 01:17:32.000] banks and
[01:17:32.000 --> 01:17:34.000] the patron saint of the New Deal.
[01:17:34.000 --> 01:17:36.000] And that
[01:17:36.000 --> 01:17:38.000] really does bring us to today where
[01:17:38.000 --> 01:17:40.000] as you suggested, the sides
[01:17:40.000 --> 01:17:42.000] are so scrambled, and in some sense
[01:17:42.000 --> 01:17:44.000] both sides will still
[01:17:44.000 --> 01:17:46.000] invoke both folks.
[01:17:46.000 --> 01:17:48.000] President Trump said that he was running
[01:17:48.000 --> 01:17:50.000] for office in 2020 because
[01:17:50.000 --> 01:17:52.000] Democrats wanted to take down statues
[01:17:52.000 --> 01:17:54.000] of Thomas Jefferson and he was
[01:17:54.000 --> 01:17:56.000] defending the founding ideals,
[01:17:56.000 --> 01:17:58.000] although he's certainly using executive
[01:17:58.000 --> 01:18:00.000] power in ways that Jefferson would have
[01:18:00.000 --> 01:18:02.000] questioned, whereas Joe Biden
[01:18:02.000 --> 01:18:04.000] and the Democrats,
[01:18:04.000 --> 01:18:06.000] everyone's a Hamiltonian after
[01:18:06.000 --> 01:18:08.000] the musical and President Obama
[01:18:08.000 --> 01:18:10.000] at the White House and stuff,
[01:18:10.000 --> 01:18:12.000] but they're hardly fans of
[01:18:12.000 --> 01:18:14.000] Hamilton's fiscal
[01:18:14.000 --> 01:18:16.000] responsibility or his principles
[01:18:16.000 --> 01:18:18.000] of capitalism
[01:18:18.000 --> 01:18:20.000] and the free market.
[01:18:20.000 --> 01:18:22.000] So we're very much, as always,
[01:18:22.000 --> 01:18:24.000] debating the legacy of these men,
[01:18:24.000 --> 01:18:26.000] but that basic tension you just identified
[01:18:26.000 --> 01:18:28.000] between democracy and rule
[01:18:28.000 --> 01:18:30.000] by elites is central in American history.
[01:18:30.000 --> 01:18:32.000] And of course Jefferson was
[01:18:32.000 --> 01:18:34.000] really well loved by the people. He was so
[01:18:34.000 --> 01:18:36.000] linked to liberty, as you're talking about
[01:18:36.000 --> 01:18:38.000] the libertarian streak of it, but he was
[01:18:38.000 --> 01:18:40.000] linked to liberty in the
[01:18:40.000 --> 01:18:42.000] minds of the American people. We've got
[01:18:42.000 --> 01:18:44.000] towns and counties all
[01:18:44.000 --> 01:18:46.000] across America that are named after Jefferson.
[01:18:46.000 --> 01:18:48.000] Everybody wants to claim
[01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:50.000] that he is with them on their political
[01:18:50.000 --> 01:18:52.000] journey. Of course the Democrats
[01:18:52.000 --> 01:18:54.000] for the longest time had the Jefferson
[01:18:54.000 --> 01:18:56.000] Jackson dinners that they had there,
[01:18:56.000 --> 01:18:58.000] and yet
[01:18:58.000 --> 01:19:00.000] they're pushing for a central bank, which
[01:19:00.000 --> 01:19:02.000] none of them liked.
[01:19:02.000 --> 01:19:04.000] So it's kind of interesting
[01:19:04.000 --> 01:19:06.000] to me, like I said, we have this
[01:19:06.000 --> 01:19:08.000] increasingly centralized
[01:19:08.000 --> 01:19:10.000] all-powerful
[01:19:10.000 --> 01:19:12.000] government like Hamilton
[01:19:12.000 --> 01:19:14.000] wanted to have, and yet everybody
[01:19:14.000 --> 01:19:16.000] wants to pretend that they're Jefferson
[01:19:16.000 --> 01:19:18.000] at the same time. That's this
[01:19:18.000 --> 01:19:20.000] veneer of Jefferson that's there.
[01:19:20.000 --> 01:19:22.000] Maybe with this musical, Hamilton, they're
[01:19:22.000 --> 01:19:24.000] going to change that and finally
[01:19:24.000 --> 01:19:26.000] own what is really there.
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[01:20:56.000 --> 01:20:58.000] By the time you get to the third
[01:20:58.000 --> 01:21:00.000] chapter, you're talking
[01:21:00.000 --> 01:21:02.000] about the struggle of the
[01:21:02.000 --> 01:21:04.000] bank. Let's talk a little bit about that
[01:21:04.000 --> 01:21:06.000] because both of them are on different sides
[01:21:06.000 --> 01:21:08.000] in terms of the bank. The central
[01:21:08.000 --> 01:21:10.000] bank likes Hamilton. They put him on the $10
[01:21:10.000 --> 01:21:12.000] bill, but Jefferson,
[01:21:12.000 --> 01:21:14.000] they put him on a short-lived $2 bill.
[01:21:14.000 --> 01:21:16.000] But talk a little bit
[01:21:16.000 --> 01:21:18.000] about the struggle over the central bank
[01:21:18.000 --> 01:21:20.000] and the national bank.
[01:21:20.000 --> 01:21:22.000] It's amazing. This is the central debate
[01:21:22.000 --> 01:21:24.000] in American constitutional history, and
[01:21:24.000 --> 01:21:26.000] it resonates for the next 200 years.
[01:21:26.000 --> 01:21:28.000] The question is whether
[01:21:28.000 --> 01:21:30.000] Congress can set up a bank.
[01:21:30.000 --> 01:21:32.000] It's the centerpiece of Hamilton's financial plan.
[01:21:32.000 --> 01:21:34.000] He wants to assume the state debts and
[01:21:34.000 --> 01:21:36.000] create reliable credit.
[01:21:36.000 --> 01:21:38.000] But the problem is that Jefferson says
[01:21:38.000 --> 01:21:40.000] it's unconstitutional. So Washington
[01:21:40.000 --> 01:21:42.000] asks for memos from Jefferson
[01:21:42.000 --> 01:21:44.000] and Hamilton, and these become some of the most important
[01:21:44.000 --> 01:21:46.000] constitutional memos in American history.
[01:21:46.000 --> 01:21:48.000] Jefferson says that it's unconstitutional
[01:21:48.000 --> 01:21:50.000] to create a bank because the
[01:21:50.000 --> 01:21:52.000] Constitution allows Congress to create
[01:21:52.000 --> 01:21:54.000] all means necessary and proper
[01:21:54.000 --> 01:21:56.000] for promoting its enumerated
[01:21:56.000 --> 01:21:58.000] ends, and although Congress has
[01:21:58.000 --> 01:22:00.000] the power to tax and
[01:22:00.000 --> 01:22:02.000] to promote the general welfare, creating
[01:22:02.000 --> 01:22:04.000] a bank isn't absolutely or
[01:22:04.000 --> 01:22:06.000] indispensably necessary to
[01:22:06.000 --> 01:22:08.000] promoting the general welfare or raising taxes.
[01:22:08.000 --> 01:22:10.000] Hamilton responds, and he
[01:22:10.000 --> 01:22:12.000] pulls an all-nighter, he writes 14,000
[01:22:12.000 --> 01:22:14.000] words, and he says
[01:22:14.000 --> 01:22:16.000] you should interpret the necessary and
[01:22:16.000 --> 01:22:18.000] proper clause liberally rather than
[01:22:18.000 --> 01:22:20.000] strictly, and as long as a chosen
[01:22:20.000 --> 01:22:22.000] means is conducive
[01:22:22.000 --> 01:22:24.000] or appropriate
[01:22:24.000 --> 01:22:26.000] or useful for
[01:22:26.000 --> 01:22:28.000] carrying out an enumerated end,
[01:22:28.000 --> 01:22:30.000] then it's consistent with the Constitution, and since
[01:22:30.000 --> 01:22:32.000] it might be useful to have a bank, because that would
[01:22:32.000 --> 01:22:34.000] promote credit, then the bank should be
[01:22:34.000 --> 01:22:36.000] permissible. Washington
[01:22:36.000 --> 01:22:38.000] sides with Hamilton rather than Jefferson.
[01:22:38.000 --> 01:22:40.000] Then it goes up to the Supreme Court a few years
[01:22:40.000 --> 01:22:42.000] later, and John Marshall, in one
[01:22:42.000 --> 01:22:44.000] of the most important Supreme Court opinions ever
[01:22:44.000 --> 01:22:46.000] called McCullough versus Maryland,
[01:22:46.000 --> 01:22:48.000] sides with Hamilton over
[01:22:48.000 --> 01:22:50.000] Jefferson. Marshall
[01:22:50.000 --> 01:22:52.000] views himself as Hamilton's successor.
[01:22:52.000 --> 01:22:54.000] He's writing Washington's biography,
[01:22:54.000 --> 01:22:56.000] he has next to his desk
[01:22:56.000 --> 01:22:58.000] Washington's papers given him by
[01:22:58.000 --> 01:23:00.000] Bushrod Washington, who's Washington's nephew,
[01:23:00.000 --> 01:23:02.000] and he reads in Washington papers Hamilton's
[01:23:02.000 --> 01:23:04.000] memo about the bank. He paraphrases
[01:23:04.000 --> 01:23:06.000] it almost word for word in McCullough versus Maryland,
[01:23:06.000 --> 01:23:08.000] and in one of the most famous sentences
[01:23:08.000 --> 01:23:10.000] in constitutional history, Marshall
[01:23:10.000 --> 01:23:12.000] says, let the end be legitimate if
[01:23:12.000 --> 01:23:14.000] the means are appropriate, then it's consistent with
[01:23:14.000 --> 01:23:16.000] the Constitution, almost a direct paraphrase
[01:23:16.000 --> 01:23:18.000] of Hamilton. And then
[01:23:18.000 --> 01:23:20.000] for the next
[01:23:20.000 --> 01:23:22.000] hundred years, the constitutionality
[01:23:22.000 --> 01:23:24.000] of the bank is still alive.
[01:23:24.000 --> 01:23:26.000] Andrew Jackson resolves to kill
[01:23:26.000 --> 01:23:28.000] the bank. He seizes Martin Van
[01:23:28.000 --> 01:23:30.000] Buren's hand and says, the bank
[01:23:30.000 --> 01:23:32.000] is trying to kill me, but I will kill it.
[01:23:32.000 --> 01:23:34.000] He
[01:23:34.000 --> 01:23:36.000] lets it expire. James Madison
[01:23:36.000 --> 01:23:38.000] eventually, having initially thought the
[01:23:38.000 --> 01:23:40.000] bank was unconstitutional, changes his mind
[01:23:40.000 --> 01:23:42.000] because he thinks the people have come to accept it,
[01:23:42.000 --> 01:23:44.000] showing that he has a kind
[01:23:44.000 --> 01:23:46.000] of evolving version of the Constitution.
[01:23:46.000 --> 01:23:48.000] And this question of the
[01:23:48.000 --> 01:23:50.000] ability of Congress to print paper
[01:23:50.000 --> 01:23:52.000] money is central in the Civil War, and
[01:23:52.000 --> 01:23:54.000] Lincoln actually appoints Supreme Court justices
[01:23:54.000 --> 01:23:56.000] to try to uphold his power to
[01:23:56.000 --> 01:23:58.000] print paper money. And then
[01:23:58.000 --> 01:24:00.000] I won't take you through the rest of American
[01:24:00.000 --> 01:24:02.000] history right now, but when you think about
[01:24:02.000 --> 01:24:04.000] the biggest disputes in American
[01:24:04.000 --> 01:24:06.000] constitutional history,
[01:24:06.000 --> 01:24:08.000] including the constitutionality
[01:24:08.000 --> 01:24:10.000] of the Missouri Compromise, which led to the Civil
[01:24:10.000 --> 01:24:12.000] War, the constitutionality of the
[01:24:12.000 --> 01:24:14.000] Post-Reconstruction Civil
[01:24:14.000 --> 01:24:16.000] Rights Act, all the way up to the constitutionality
[01:24:16.000 --> 01:24:18.000] of health care reform, it all
[01:24:18.000 --> 01:24:20.000] goes back to liberal versus strict construction,
[01:24:20.000 --> 01:24:22.000] what's necessary, what's conducive,
[01:24:22.000 --> 01:24:24.000] what's appropriate. And just last
[01:24:24.000 --> 01:24:26.000] week or so, the Supreme Court is debating
[01:24:26.000 --> 01:24:28.000] the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act,
[01:24:28.000 --> 01:24:30.000] and it all goes back to that same debate.
[01:24:30.000 --> 01:24:32.000] So I was really struck how central
[01:24:32.000 --> 01:24:34.000] this is, and the main debate
[01:24:34.000 --> 01:24:36.000] in constitutional history is not
[01:24:36.000 --> 01:24:38.000] between originalism and
[01:24:38.000 --> 01:24:40.000] non-originalism, it's between liberal
[01:24:40.000 --> 01:24:42.000] and strict construction of the Constitution.
[01:24:42.000 --> 01:24:44.000] Yes, whether or not we take
[01:24:44.000 --> 01:24:46.000] the Tenth
[01:24:46.000 --> 01:24:48.000] Amendment very literally to say, well,
[01:24:48.000 --> 01:24:50.000] if you don't have it listed there,
[01:24:50.000 --> 01:24:52.000] you don't have those powers.
[01:24:52.000 --> 01:24:54.000] But they want to always infer it in terms
[01:24:54.000 --> 01:24:56.000] of the Supremacy Clause,
[01:24:56.000 --> 01:24:58.000] or the General Welfare Clause,
[01:24:58.000 --> 01:25:00.000] or the Commerce Clause, or something like that.
[01:25:00.000 --> 01:25:02.000] Now, you know,
[01:25:02.000 --> 01:25:04.000] that chapter, you've got
[01:25:04.000 --> 01:25:06.000] dates on many of these things as well.
[01:25:06.000 --> 01:25:08.000] That was the debate in 1790,
[01:25:08.000 --> 01:25:10.000] 1791, and then we move on to
[01:25:10.000 --> 01:25:12.000] the Nullification
[01:25:12.000 --> 01:25:14.000] Debate, and whether or not that
[01:25:14.000 --> 01:25:16.000] is the rightful remedy.
[01:25:16.000 --> 01:25:18.000] You've got that date as 1792
[01:25:18.000 --> 01:25:20.000] to 1780.
[01:25:20.000 --> 01:25:22.000] Let's talk a little bit about that, because
[01:25:22.000 --> 01:25:24.000] of course, Nullification comes back in
[01:25:24.000 --> 01:25:26.000] in the 1830s,
[01:25:26.000 --> 01:25:28.000] and we nearly had a
[01:25:28.000 --> 01:25:30.000] secession, and
[01:25:30.000 --> 01:25:32.000] during the Nullification Crisis, and
[01:25:32.000 --> 01:25:34.000] the tariffs of abomination that
[01:25:34.000 --> 01:25:36.000] happened, I've talked about that many
[01:25:36.000 --> 01:25:38.000] times, because
[01:25:38.000 --> 01:25:40.000] kind of the situation where
[01:25:40.000 --> 01:25:42.000] they reached a compromise, and they were able
[01:25:42.000 --> 01:25:44.000] to defuse it without having
[01:25:44.000 --> 01:25:46.000] a full-blown secession, which happened like
[01:25:46.000 --> 01:25:48.000] 30 years later. And I've looked
[01:25:48.000 --> 01:25:50.000] at it kind of from the standpoint of the
[01:25:50.000 --> 01:25:52.000] Fourth Turning Thesis
[01:25:52.000 --> 01:25:54.000] of Strauss and Howe,
[01:25:54.000 --> 01:25:56.000] and how they're looking at about
[01:25:56.000 --> 01:25:58.000] every 80 years, you have this major restructuring.
[01:25:58.000 --> 01:26:00.000] I said, yeah, it was like the
[01:26:00.000 --> 01:26:02.000] society wasn't really primed
[01:26:02.000 --> 01:26:04.000] for it at that point, but the timing
[01:26:04.000 --> 01:26:06.000] was right 30 years later. But
[01:26:06.000 --> 01:26:08.000] Nullification was always a
[01:26:08.000 --> 01:26:10.000] big issue. Talk a little bit about that back
[01:26:10.000 --> 01:26:12.000] in 1792 to 1780,
[01:26:12.000 --> 01:26:14.000] what was going on with Nullification
[01:26:14.000 --> 01:26:16.000] at that point in time.
[01:26:16.000 --> 01:26:18.000] Absolutely. You really well described the debate,
[01:26:18.000 --> 01:26:20.000] and it goes right back to Hamilton and Jefferson's
[01:26:20.000 --> 01:26:22.000] debate over the Alien and Sedition
[01:26:22.000 --> 01:26:24.000] Acts. So in 1798,
[01:26:24.000 --> 01:26:26.000] the Federalists, led by John Adams,
[01:26:26.000 --> 01:26:28.000] passed this law, and it's the
[01:26:28.000 --> 01:26:30.000] greatest assault on free speech in American
[01:26:30.000 --> 01:26:32.000] history. It makes it a crime to criticize
[01:26:32.000 --> 01:26:34.000] the Federalist president, John Adams,
[01:26:34.000 --> 01:26:36.000] but not the Republican vice president,
[01:26:36.000 --> 01:26:38.000] Thomas Jefferson. It's a pure political
[01:26:38.000 --> 01:26:40.000] hatchet job, basically.
[01:26:40.000 --> 01:26:42.000] So Jefferson
[01:26:42.000 --> 01:26:44.000] and Madison object, and
[01:26:44.000 --> 01:26:46.000] they write the Virginia and Kentucky
[01:26:46.000 --> 01:26:48.000] resolutions claiming
[01:26:48.000 --> 01:26:50.000] that these laws are unconstitutional.
[01:26:50.000 --> 01:26:52.000] Madison
[01:26:52.000 --> 01:26:54.000] always takes a moderate
[01:26:54.000 --> 01:26:56.000] and middle position between
[01:26:56.000 --> 01:26:58.000] Hamilton and Jefferson. Sometimes it's so complicated
[01:26:58.000 --> 01:27:00.000] that only he can understand it.
[01:27:00.000 --> 01:27:02.000] If states don't
[01:27:02.000 --> 01:27:04.000] think that a law is constitutional, they
[01:27:04.000 --> 01:27:06.000] can interpose an objection.
[01:27:06.000 --> 01:27:08.000] No one knows what this means, except maybe like sending
[01:27:08.000 --> 01:27:10.000] a stern letter saying that they don't like it.
[01:27:10.000 --> 01:27:12.000] But Jefferson goes further,
[01:27:12.000 --> 01:27:14.000] and in the Kentucky resolution, he says if a state
[01:27:14.000 --> 01:27:16.000] doesn't think that a federal law is
[01:27:16.000 --> 01:27:18.000] unconstitutional, it can nullify or
[01:27:18.000 --> 01:27:20.000] refuse to obey it.
[01:27:20.000 --> 01:27:22.000] That's too much for Madison. He thinks that
[01:27:22.000 --> 01:27:24.000] would lead to secession, and indeed
[01:27:24.000 --> 01:27:26.000] it does. As the Civil War
[01:27:26.000 --> 01:27:28.000] approaches, southern
[01:27:28.000 --> 01:27:30.000] opponents of federal power
[01:27:30.000 --> 01:27:32.000] invoke Jefferson's Kentucky
[01:27:32.000 --> 01:27:34.000] resolution for the principle that states
[01:27:34.000 --> 01:27:36.000] can refuse to carry out federal
[01:27:36.000 --> 01:27:38.000] laws that they disagree with.
[01:27:38.000 --> 01:27:40.000] And it comes to a head first, as you said,
[01:27:40.000 --> 01:27:42.000] in the nullification controversy
[01:27:42.000 --> 01:27:44.000] arising out of the tariff of
[01:27:44.000 --> 01:27:46.000] abominations in 1828 when South
[01:27:46.000 --> 01:27:48.000] Carolina objects that
[01:27:48.000 --> 01:27:50.000] this northern tariff is going to hurt
[01:27:50.000 --> 01:27:52.000] its commerce, and
[01:27:52.000 --> 01:27:54.000] John Calhoun, who's
[01:27:54.000 --> 01:27:56.000] Andrew Jackson's vice president,
[01:27:56.000 --> 01:27:58.000] says that South Carolina can refuse
[01:27:58.000 --> 01:28:00.000] to carry out the tariff.
[01:28:00.000 --> 01:28:02.000] It's an incredible moment of testing for
[01:28:02.000 --> 01:28:04.000] Andrew Jackson. After all, he's a
[01:28:04.000 --> 01:28:06.000] Jeffersonian who generally likes limited government,
[01:28:06.000 --> 01:28:08.000] but in this noble
[01:28:08.000 --> 01:28:10.000] decision to favor union
[01:28:10.000 --> 01:28:12.000] over secession, Jackson
[01:28:12.000 --> 01:28:14.000] gives a toast. He says liberty and union,
[01:28:14.000 --> 01:28:16.000] they must be preserved, and he
[01:28:16.000 --> 01:28:18.000] insists on enforcing
[01:28:18.000 --> 01:28:20.000] federal law and not allow South Carolina
[01:28:20.000 --> 01:28:22.000] to nullify.
[01:28:22.000 --> 01:28:24.000] That is the first great
[01:28:24.000 --> 01:28:26.000] statement of nationalism in
[01:28:26.000 --> 01:28:28.000] this period, but nevertheless
[01:28:28.000 --> 01:28:30.000] Calhoun and the southern secessionists
[01:28:30.000 --> 01:28:32.000] continue to invoke Jefferson, and
[01:28:32.000 --> 01:28:34.000] finally, right before the Civil War,
[01:28:34.000 --> 01:28:36.000] they claim that the South can secede
[01:28:36.000 --> 01:28:38.000] from the union because we are
[01:28:38.000 --> 01:28:40.000] a compact of states, and
[01:28:40.000 --> 01:28:42.000] federal law is not supreme. Once again,
[01:28:42.000 --> 01:28:44.000] Madison disagrees with that.
[01:28:44.000 --> 01:28:46.000] He thinks that once states agreed to
[01:28:46.000 --> 01:28:48.000] form the union, they can't unilaterally secede.
[01:28:48.000 --> 01:28:50.000] Abraham Lincoln cites
[01:28:50.000 --> 01:28:52.000] Madison and
[01:28:52.000 --> 01:28:54.000] John Marshall and
[01:28:54.000 --> 01:28:56.000] James Wilson, all nationalists,
[01:28:56.000 --> 01:28:58.000] when he denies the South's power
[01:28:58.000 --> 01:29:00.000] to secede, and that's one of the
[01:29:00.000 --> 01:29:02.000] precipitants of the Civil War, the constitutionality
[01:29:02.000 --> 01:29:04.000] of secession, and it takes
[01:29:04.000 --> 01:29:06.000] the Civil War, and
[01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:08.000] the war came, as Lincoln said, and all the
[01:29:08.000 --> 01:29:10.000] blood and tragic loss
[01:29:10.000 --> 01:29:12.000] that resulted from that, to establish
[01:29:12.000 --> 01:29:14.000] the proposition that
[01:29:14.000 --> 01:29:16.000] we, the people of the United States,
[01:29:16.000 --> 01:29:18.000] are sovereign, that states can't
[01:29:18.000 --> 01:29:20.000] unilaterally secede from the union,
[01:29:20.000 --> 01:29:22.000] and that nullification is unconstitutional.
[01:29:22.000 --> 01:29:24.000] And of course, Jefferson, in terms
[01:29:24.000 --> 01:29:26.000] of his point, he wanted to have frequent
[01:29:26.000 --> 01:29:28.000] constitutional conventions
[01:29:28.000 --> 01:29:30.000] because he was so heavily
[01:29:30.000 --> 01:29:32.000] involved in the idea of
[01:29:32.000 --> 01:29:34.000] self-governance, and that people would be
[01:29:34.000 --> 01:29:36.000] able to make that determination, and the nation
[01:29:36.000 --> 01:29:38.000] had been born by declaring
[01:29:38.000 --> 01:29:40.000] its independence from Great Britain.
[01:29:40.000 --> 01:29:42.000] And so, in a sense,
[01:29:42.000 --> 01:29:44.000] as the writer of the Declaration of
[01:29:44.000 --> 01:29:46.000] Independence, he's looking at
[01:29:46.000 --> 01:29:48.000] this and saying, you know, we were born out of
[01:29:48.000 --> 01:29:50.000] secession, and we have the right of
[01:29:50.000 --> 01:29:52.000] self-determination to determine where we're going to be.
[01:29:52.000 --> 01:29:54.000] It's interesting that today, of course,
[01:29:54.000 --> 01:29:56.000] we're still seeing echoes of this,
[01:29:56.000 --> 01:29:58.000] especially with what's happening
[01:29:58.000 --> 01:30:00.000] with immigration and other issues.
[01:30:00.000 --> 01:30:02.000] And we've had
[01:30:02.000 --> 01:30:04.000] another aspect of this that's been added,
[01:30:04.000 --> 01:30:06.000] which, of course, is the noncommandeering
[01:30:06.000 --> 01:30:08.000] thing, saying that you can't
[01:30:08.000 --> 01:30:10.000] force a
[01:30:10.000 --> 01:30:12.000] state to work along with
[01:30:12.000 --> 01:30:14.000] the
[01:30:14.000 --> 01:30:16.000] federal government on its agenda if the state doesn't
[01:30:16.000 --> 01:30:18.000] agree with it. I think one of the things that's
[01:30:18.000 --> 01:30:20.000] kind of been
[01:30:20.000 --> 01:30:22.000] the
[01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:24.000] way that they have moved to have
[01:30:24.000 --> 01:30:26.000] a direct confrontation is
[01:30:26.000 --> 01:30:28.000] kind of the oblique method of
[01:30:28.000 --> 01:30:30.000] saying, well, we will
[01:30:30.000 --> 01:30:32.000] pay you money or we'll withhold funds
[01:30:32.000 --> 01:30:34.000] depending on whether or not you do what we
[01:30:34.000 --> 01:30:36.000] tell you to do from the federal government.
[01:30:36.000 --> 01:30:38.000] And so that method of
[01:30:38.000 --> 01:30:40.000] I call it bribery or blackmail
[01:30:40.000 --> 01:30:42.000] financially,
[01:30:42.000 --> 01:30:44.000] that has kind of kept this issue from
[01:30:44.000 --> 01:30:46.000] coming to a head up to this point.
[01:30:46.000 --> 01:30:48.000] And we still see aspects of it
[01:30:48.000 --> 01:30:50.000] when California wants
[01:30:50.000 --> 01:30:52.000] to go their own way on immigration, they
[01:30:52.000 --> 01:30:54.000] threaten them with removing funds just
[01:30:54.000 --> 01:30:56.000] as they do on issues about
[01:30:56.000 --> 01:30:58.000] bathrooms and gender and things like
[01:30:58.000 --> 01:31:00.000] that. You're so
[01:31:00.000 --> 01:31:02.000] right that the central question of the
[01:31:02.000 --> 01:31:04.000] residual power of states' rights
[01:31:04.000 --> 01:31:06.000] under the Tenth Amendment remains
[01:31:06.000 --> 01:31:08.000] one of America's central
[01:31:08.000 --> 01:31:10.000] constitutional questions.
[01:31:10.000 --> 01:31:12.000] The constitutionality of
[01:31:12.000 --> 01:31:14.000] secession turned on who was sovereign,
[01:31:14.000 --> 01:31:16.000] the people of the United States, the people of each
[01:31:16.000 --> 01:31:18.000] state. And as you say, there are still
[01:31:18.000 --> 01:31:20.000] some states, and now some of them are blue rather
[01:31:20.000 --> 01:31:22.000] than red, that are claiming there should
[01:31:22.000 --> 01:31:24.000] be a residual right to secede.
[01:31:24.000 --> 01:31:26.000] And more broadly,
[01:31:26.000 --> 01:31:28.000] this question of when the federal government
[01:31:28.000 --> 01:31:30.000] can commandeer the states and what
[01:31:30.000 --> 01:31:32.000] the residual state sovereignty
[01:31:32.000 --> 01:31:34.000] is remains
[01:31:34.000 --> 01:31:36.000] crucial. Barry
[01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:38.000] Goldwater, when he
[01:31:38.000 --> 01:31:40.000] began to foment the conservative revolution
[01:31:40.000 --> 01:31:42.000] in response to the New Deal,
[01:31:42.000 --> 01:31:44.000] said that the Tenth Amendment was central.
[01:31:44.000 --> 01:31:46.000] And on the current Supreme Court, many
[01:31:46.000 --> 01:31:48.000] of the justices
[01:31:48.000 --> 01:31:50.000] invoked the Tenth Amendment in arguing that
[01:31:50.000 --> 01:31:52.000] the Obama health care mandate
[01:31:52.000 --> 01:31:54.000] was unconstitutional
[01:31:54.000 --> 01:31:56.000] and that you can't commandeer the states.
[01:31:56.000 --> 01:31:58.000] Justice Anthony Kennedy was a big
[01:31:58.000 --> 01:32:00.000] fan of federalism and
[01:32:00.000 --> 01:32:02.000] insisted that
[01:32:02.000 --> 01:32:04.000] federal and state power had to be
[01:32:04.000 --> 01:32:06.000] kept within their appointed spheres. He said
[01:32:06.000 --> 01:32:08.000] the founders split the atom of
[01:32:08.000 --> 01:32:10.000] sovereignty. It all goes
[01:32:10.000 --> 01:32:12.000] back to that initial Hamilton-Jefferson
[01:32:12.000 --> 01:32:14.000] debate, and the truth is
[01:32:14.000 --> 01:32:16.000] we're not entirely...
[01:32:16.000 --> 01:32:18.000] There's disagreement. There's not consensus on the
[01:32:18.000 --> 01:32:20.000] question of whether the nation is totally
[01:32:20.000 --> 01:32:22.000] sovereign, as Hamilton said, whether the states
[01:32:22.000 --> 01:32:24.000] are sovereign, as Jefferson said, or
[01:32:24.000 --> 01:32:26.000] whether there's a kind of dual sovereignty, as
[01:32:26.000 --> 01:32:28.000] Madison said, which I think is the best reading
[01:32:28.000 --> 01:32:30.000] of the Constitution,
[01:32:30.000 --> 01:32:32.000] which part, where we the people are
[01:32:32.000 --> 01:32:34.000] sovereign, but we parcel out some
[01:32:34.000 --> 01:32:36.000] sovereignty to the states and to the federal
[01:32:36.000 --> 01:32:38.000] government, and we've got to keep the balance
[01:32:38.000 --> 01:32:40.000] between them. Yeah, so that's basically what he
[01:32:40.000 --> 01:32:42.000] put in the Tenth Amendment. These powers have been
[01:32:42.000 --> 01:32:44.000] delegated by the people in
[01:32:44.000 --> 01:32:46.000] the states.
[01:32:46.000 --> 01:32:48.000] So these debates,
[01:32:48.000 --> 01:32:50.000] this is why your book is so important, because
[01:32:50.000 --> 01:32:52.000] the debates that we're faced with on all
[01:32:52.000 --> 01:32:54.000] these core and divisive issues
[01:32:54.000 --> 01:32:56.000] that are there, these have been
[01:32:56.000 --> 01:32:58.000] debated from the very beginning, again,
[01:32:58.000 --> 01:33:00.000] between these two poles of Jefferson
[01:33:00.000 --> 01:33:02.000] and Hamilton.
[01:33:02.000 --> 01:33:04.000] Your next chapter here is
[01:33:04.000 --> 01:33:06.000] 1800-1826, and
[01:33:06.000 --> 01:33:08.000] this is President Jefferson,
[01:33:08.000 --> 01:33:10.000] Chief Justice Marshall, and
[01:33:10.000 --> 01:33:12.000] Aaron Burr in court.
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[01:34:42.000 --> 01:34:44.000] Tell us a little bit about that.
[01:34:44.000 --> 01:34:46.000] Well, first, I have to say
[01:34:46.000 --> 01:34:48.000] what a villain
[01:34:48.000 --> 01:34:50.000] Aaron Burr was.
[01:34:50.000 --> 01:34:52.000] The historian had been
[01:34:52.000 --> 01:34:54.000] wishy-washy about his degree.
[01:34:54.000 --> 01:34:56.000] When I was in North Carolina, we had a descendant of his
[01:34:56.000 --> 01:34:58.000] who became a senator.
[01:34:58.000 --> 01:35:00.000] Oh, I'm sure the descendant was better than
[01:35:00.000 --> 01:35:02.000] he was. He was
[01:35:02.000 --> 01:35:04.000] charming and, you know, rogue
[01:35:04.000 --> 01:35:06.000] and very pleasant to be, to have drinks
[01:35:06.000 --> 01:35:08.000] with, but the guy was dead to rights.
[01:35:08.000 --> 01:35:10.000] Henry Adams, the historian, found in the archives
[01:35:10.000 --> 01:35:12.000] of the British ambassador a letter
[01:35:12.000 --> 01:35:14.000] where Aaron Burr offered his service to the
[01:35:14.000 --> 01:35:16.000] British in exchange for their supporting
[01:35:16.000 --> 01:35:18.000] his efforts to lead a secessionist movement
[01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:20.000] in Spanish Louisiana and sent himself
[01:35:20.000 --> 01:35:22.000] up as dictator of Mexico.
[01:35:22.000 --> 01:35:24.000] So he may not have been technically
[01:35:24.000 --> 01:35:26.000] guilty of treason, because as John Marshall
[01:35:26.000 --> 01:35:28.000] said after Jefferson prosecuted him,
[01:35:28.000 --> 01:35:30.000] the Constitution sets a very high bar. You need
[01:35:30.000 --> 01:35:32.000] two witnesses and an overt act.
[01:35:32.000 --> 01:35:34.000] But there's no question that he was conspiring
[01:35:34.000 --> 01:35:36.000] to secede from
[01:35:36.000 --> 01:35:38.000] the Union. Another Benedict Arnold.
[01:35:38.000 --> 01:35:40.000] He was totally a Benedict Arnold.
[01:35:40.000 --> 01:35:42.000] And that's why
[01:35:42.000 --> 01:35:44.000] Hamilton died. Remember, Hamilton
[01:35:44.000 --> 01:35:46.000] really distrusts Jefferson, of
[01:35:46.000 --> 01:35:48.000] course, but he thinks Jefferson
[01:35:48.000 --> 01:35:50.000] is a patriot, and he thinks Burr is
[01:35:50.000 --> 01:35:52.000] a traitor, and that's why he calls Burr
[01:35:52.000 --> 01:35:54.000] a traitor, and that's why Burr challenges him to a duel.
[01:35:54.000 --> 01:35:56.000] And he sacrifices his life because of
[01:35:56.000 --> 01:35:58.000] his devotion to the Union, and Jefferson joins him
[01:35:58.000 --> 01:36:00.000] in this. So after Hamilton dies,
[01:36:00.000 --> 01:36:02.000] Jefferson decides to prosecute Burr
[01:36:02.000 --> 01:36:04.000] for treason, and this precipitates
[01:36:04.000 --> 01:36:06.000] the huge clash between Jefferson
[01:36:06.000 --> 01:36:08.000] and John Marshall in the Supreme Court.
[01:36:08.000 --> 01:36:10.000] John Marshall is a
[01:36:10.000 --> 01:36:12.000] Federalist redoubt after
[01:36:12.000 --> 01:36:14.000] the Federalists have lost the election.
[01:36:14.000 --> 01:36:16.000] They appoint all these
[01:36:16.000 --> 01:36:18.000] Federalist justices to pack the courts.
[01:36:18.000 --> 01:36:20.000] John Adams smuggled in Marshall as
[01:36:20.000 --> 01:36:22.000] Chief Justice during the waning days of his administration.
[01:36:22.000 --> 01:36:24.000] And Marshall sets out to defend
[01:36:24.000 --> 01:36:26.000] Hamiltonian values, namely property
[01:36:26.000 --> 01:36:28.000] rights and national commerce
[01:36:28.000 --> 01:36:30.000] over states' rights
[01:36:30.000 --> 01:36:32.000] and too
[01:36:32.000 --> 01:36:34.000] much democracy.
[01:36:34.000 --> 01:36:36.000] And Marshall
[01:36:36.000 --> 01:36:38.000] has these huge clashes with Jefferson.
[01:36:38.000 --> 01:36:40.000] The most famous one, Marbury versus
[01:36:40.000 --> 01:36:42.000] Madison, involves can he order
[01:36:42.000 --> 01:36:44.000] Jefferson to turn over
[01:36:44.000 --> 01:36:46.000] a commission that Adams
[01:36:46.000 --> 01:36:48.000] had made to a judge?
[01:36:48.000 --> 01:36:50.000] And Marshall doesn't want to issue
[01:36:50.000 --> 01:36:52.000] an order that he knows will be defied
[01:36:52.000 --> 01:36:54.000] because it'll expose the court as
[01:36:54.000 --> 01:36:56.000] weak. The same question we're having
[01:36:56.000 --> 01:36:58.000] today, is the president going to defy the
[01:36:58.000 --> 01:37:00.000] Supreme Court?
[01:37:00.000 --> 01:37:02.000] Marshall dodges the question by saying
[01:37:02.000 --> 01:37:04.000] the court has the power to order the subpoena, but
[01:37:04.000 --> 01:37:06.000] he's not going to do it now because the act
[01:37:06.000 --> 01:37:08.000] authorizing the subpoena to be turned over
[01:37:08.000 --> 01:37:10.000] is unconstitutional. Even to state this
[01:37:10.000 --> 01:37:12.000] shows he was such a master of
[01:37:12.000 --> 01:37:14.000] what Jefferson called twistifications.
[01:37:14.000 --> 01:37:16.000] He would come up with these very complicated legal
[01:37:16.000 --> 01:37:18.000] compromises. I like that word, twistifications.
[01:37:18.000 --> 01:37:20.000] We need to bring that back, yeah.
[01:37:20.000 --> 01:37:22.000] Jefferson also said to Marshall
[01:37:22.000 --> 01:37:24.000] that he's so untrustworthy
[01:37:24.000 --> 01:37:26.000] that if you ask me the time of day, I'll say
[01:37:26.000 --> 01:37:28.000] I don't know because I'll twist my words
[01:37:28.000 --> 01:37:30.000] against me. They really disliked each
[01:37:30.000 --> 01:37:32.000] other. They were distant cousins and I think
[01:37:32.000 --> 01:37:34.000] Marshall's... Jefferson had
[01:37:34.000 --> 01:37:36.000] courted the lady who became
[01:37:36.000 --> 01:37:38.000] Marshall's aunt
[01:37:38.000 --> 01:37:40.000] or something like that, so they
[01:37:40.000 --> 01:37:42.000] had bad blood in the family.
[01:37:42.000 --> 01:37:44.000] The point is it's a huge clash. Basically
[01:37:44.000 --> 01:37:46.000] the clash between Jefferson and John Marshall
[01:37:46.000 --> 01:37:48.000] is the clash between Jefferson and Hamilton
[01:37:48.000 --> 01:37:50.000] continued after Hamilton's death because John Marshall
[01:37:50.000 --> 01:37:52.000] abused himself as Hamilton's
[01:37:52.000 --> 01:37:54.000] successor. In the
[01:37:54.000 --> 01:37:56.000] end, in the Burr trial,
[01:37:56.000 --> 01:37:58.000] Marshall does
[01:37:58.000 --> 01:38:00.000] order Jefferson to turn over papers
[01:38:00.000 --> 01:38:02.000] related to Burr. This
[01:38:02.000 --> 01:38:04.000] faces Jefferson with a question, and he
[01:38:04.000 --> 01:38:06.000] briefly considers not obeying
[01:38:06.000 --> 01:38:08.000] or abiding by the decision.
[01:38:08.000 --> 01:38:10.000] He does decide to turn over the papers
[01:38:10.000 --> 01:38:12.000] establishing the precedent that the president can
[01:38:12.000 --> 01:38:14.000] be subpoenaed.
[01:38:14.000 --> 01:38:16.000] But Jefferson, in his response to Marshall,
[01:38:16.000 --> 01:38:18.000] declares that the president has an ability
[01:38:18.000 --> 01:38:20.000] to interpret
[01:38:20.000 --> 01:38:22.000] the Constitution differently than the Supreme
[01:38:22.000 --> 01:38:24.000] Court and to follow his own conclusions.
[01:38:24.000 --> 01:38:26.000] This is a principle that
[01:38:26.000 --> 01:38:28.000] becomes known as departmentalism,
[01:38:28.000 --> 01:38:30.000] where each department can reach its own judgment
[01:38:30.000 --> 01:38:32.000] and carry to its extreme
[01:38:32.000 --> 01:38:34.000] it would allow the president
[01:38:34.000 --> 01:38:36.000] to defy the Supreme Court when he
[01:38:36.000 --> 01:38:38.000] disagreed with it. Interestingly, no
[01:38:38.000 --> 01:38:40.000] president has taken
[01:38:40.000 --> 01:38:42.000] that radical position and openly defied
[01:38:42.000 --> 01:38:44.000] the Supreme Court. Lincoln briefly
[01:38:44.000 --> 01:38:46.000] defied Roger Taney for
[01:38:46.000 --> 01:38:48.000] two weeks during the Civil War
[01:38:48.000 --> 01:38:50.000] when Taney ordered him to free
[01:38:50.000 --> 01:38:52.000] a Confederate prisoner and
[01:38:52.000 --> 01:38:54.000] said that he'd unconstitutionally suspended habeas
[01:38:54.000 --> 01:38:56.000] corpus. Lincoln
[01:38:56.000 --> 01:38:58.000] didn't do that for two weeks, then he did comply,
[01:38:58.000 --> 01:39:00.000] but Taney was acting
[01:39:00.000 --> 01:39:02.000] as a district court judge, not sitting
[01:39:02.000 --> 01:39:04.000] for the whole Supreme Court, so no president
[01:39:04.000 --> 01:39:06.000] has ever openly defied the full Supreme
[01:39:06.000 --> 01:39:08.000] Court. But the point of that chapter,
[01:39:08.000 --> 01:39:10.000] the clashes between Marshall
[01:39:10.000 --> 01:39:12.000] and Jefferson, are that
[01:39:12.000 --> 01:39:14.000] they also establish the constitutional
[01:39:14.000 --> 01:39:16.000] battles that we're still
[01:39:16.000 --> 01:39:18.000] facing today between liberal and strict
[01:39:18.000 --> 01:39:20.000] construction of the Constitution. And remember,
[01:39:20.000 --> 01:39:22.000] Marshall's approach, which he
[01:39:22.000 --> 01:39:24.000] calls liberal or fair construction,
[01:39:24.000 --> 01:39:26.000] which he gets from Hamilton, is
[01:39:26.000 --> 01:39:28.000] to at least construe federal power
[01:39:28.000 --> 01:39:30.000] fairly,
[01:39:30.000 --> 01:39:32.000] not to be unlimited, but
[01:39:32.000 --> 01:39:34.000] broadly, consistently with its spirit.
[01:39:34.000 --> 01:39:36.000] And Jefferson, as you said,
[01:39:36.000 --> 01:39:38.000] if the power isn't explicitly enumerated,
[01:39:38.000 --> 01:39:40.000] then you shouldn't construe it to
[01:39:40.000 --> 01:39:42.000] be present, and you should also
[01:39:42.000 --> 01:39:44.000] carry yourself back to the spirit in which
[01:39:44.000 --> 01:39:46.000] the amendment was passed,
[01:39:46.000 --> 01:39:48.000] its strict construction.
[01:39:48.000 --> 01:39:50.000] And that debate
[01:39:50.000 --> 01:39:52.000] is won by Marshall
[01:39:52.000 --> 01:39:54.000] temporarily, but then, just to finish
[01:39:54.000 --> 01:39:56.000] this part of the
[01:39:56.000 --> 01:39:58.000] story,
[01:39:58.000 --> 01:40:00.000] Marshall is succeeded by
[01:40:00.000 --> 01:40:02.000] Roger Taney, and Andrew
[01:40:02.000 --> 01:40:04.000] Jackson wants Roger Taney to constrict
[01:40:04.000 --> 01:40:06.000] federal power and to prevent
[01:40:06.000 --> 01:40:08.000] Congress from chartering a bank.
[01:40:08.000 --> 01:40:10.000] And Taney gets in, and he comes
[01:40:10.000 --> 01:40:12.000] up with a more Jeffersonian approach on the Supreme
[01:40:12.000 --> 01:40:14.000] Court, and it culminates in
[01:40:14.000 --> 01:40:16.000] the debate over the Missouri Compromise,
[01:40:16.000 --> 01:40:18.000] which leads to the Civil War.
[01:40:18.000 --> 01:40:20.000] Yes, it is amazing to see these
[01:40:20.000 --> 01:40:22.000] same strains being
[01:40:22.000 --> 01:40:24.000] pulled back and forth as we go
[01:40:24.000 --> 01:40:26.000] through history. I love the way your book is set up.
[01:40:26.000 --> 01:40:28.000] It's very interesting. Of course, with
[01:40:28.000 --> 01:40:30.000] Marbury versus Madison,
[01:40:30.000 --> 01:40:32.000] if I remember correctly, Jefferson
[01:40:32.000 --> 01:40:34.000] said, well, that's the end of the Constitution if we're
[01:40:34.000 --> 01:40:36.000] going to have the Supreme Court
[01:40:36.000 --> 01:40:38.000] be able to decide and have the final
[01:40:38.000 --> 01:40:40.000] say as to whether or not something
[01:40:40.000 --> 01:40:42.000] is constitutional.
[01:40:42.000 --> 01:40:44.000] I'm kind of paraphrasing him here. Maybe you know the quote.
[01:40:46.000 --> 01:40:48.000] That's absolutely right. He said
[01:40:48.000 --> 01:40:50.000] Marshall would make a
[01:40:50.000 --> 01:40:52.000] thing of wax out of the Constitution
[01:40:52.000 --> 01:40:54.000] if he instrued it so liberally
[01:40:54.000 --> 01:40:56.000] as to eliminate all powers.
[01:40:56.000 --> 01:40:58.000] And that's why he wants strict construction to prevent
[01:40:58.000 --> 01:41:00.000] Marshall from turning the Constitution into a thing
[01:41:00.000 --> 01:41:02.000] of wax. Yes. That's a great
[01:41:02.000 --> 01:41:04.000] way to put it. Today they talk about being a
[01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:06.000] living document, but I like the
[01:41:06.000 --> 01:41:08.000] idea of it being a thing of
[01:41:08.000 --> 01:41:10.000] wax. That's great.
[01:41:10.000 --> 01:41:12.000] And then you have the period from
[01:41:12.000 --> 01:41:14.000] 1826 to 1861.
[01:41:14.000 --> 01:41:16.000] You say, all honor
[01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:18.000] to Jefferson.
[01:41:18.000 --> 01:41:20.000] And so up until the point
[01:41:20.000 --> 01:41:22.000] of the Civil War,
[01:41:22.000 --> 01:41:24.000] we have a
[01:41:24.000 --> 01:41:26.000] everybody again, Jefferson
[01:41:26.000 --> 01:41:28.000] who spoke so eloquently about
[01:41:28.000 --> 01:41:30.000] liberty captured everyone's imagination
[01:41:30.000 --> 01:41:32.000] in America and he is the one
[01:41:32.000 --> 01:41:34.000] that everybody wants to be seen
[01:41:34.000 --> 01:41:36.000] as. Talk a little bit about
[01:41:36.000 --> 01:41:38.000] that period in history there.
[01:41:38.000 --> 01:41:40.000] Because there we're going through the nullification
[01:41:40.000 --> 01:41:42.000] crisis and many other things.
[01:41:42.000 --> 01:41:44.000] Absolutely. And
[01:41:44.000 --> 01:41:46.000] culminating in the debate over the
[01:41:46.000 --> 01:41:48.000] constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise,
[01:41:48.000 --> 01:41:50.000] which is the central compromise
[01:41:50.000 --> 01:41:52.000] over slavery in the early republic.
[01:41:52.000 --> 01:41:54.000] The basic question is, does Congress have
[01:41:54.000 --> 01:41:56.000] the power to ban slavery in
[01:41:56.000 --> 01:41:58.000] the newly acquired territories
[01:41:58.000 --> 01:42:00.000] and in new states?
[01:42:00.000 --> 01:42:02.000] And Jefferson initially
[01:42:02.000 --> 01:42:04.000] said yes. He in
[01:42:04.000 --> 01:42:06.000] 17... When it comes to acquiring
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[01:43:34.000 --> 01:43:36.000] Spin84 sponsored a provision
[01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:38.000] called the Jefferson Proviso, which
[01:43:38.000 --> 01:43:40.000] would have allowed Congress to ban slavery in the
[01:43:40.000 --> 01:43:42.000] territories. But then he
[01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:44.000] becomes president. First of all, he
[01:43:44.000 --> 01:43:46.000] doubles the size of the U.S. by buying
[01:43:46.000 --> 01:43:48.000] Louisiana, even though it's
[01:43:48.000 --> 01:43:50.000] unconstitutional. But he
[01:43:50.000 --> 01:43:52.000] swallows his doubts because he's more interested
[01:43:52.000 --> 01:43:54.000] in, you know, the obvious
[01:43:54.000 --> 01:43:56.000] benefits of doubling the size of the U.S.
[01:43:56.000 --> 01:43:58.000] But then he
[01:43:58.000 --> 01:44:00.000] really is afraid that the Missouri compromise
[01:44:00.000 --> 01:44:02.000] is going to lead to civil war. So he
[01:44:02.000 --> 01:44:04.000] argues that it's unconstitutional
[01:44:04.000 --> 01:44:06.000] embracing the same
[01:44:06.000 --> 01:44:08.000] narrow construction of the
[01:44:08.000 --> 01:44:10.000] Territories Clause that he'd
[01:44:10.000 --> 01:44:12.000] rejected in buying Louisiana.
[01:44:12.000 --> 01:44:14.000] So it gets up to the Supreme Court and it all
[01:44:14.000 --> 01:44:16.000] comes back to that same question,
[01:44:16.000 --> 01:44:18.000] liberal versus strict construction, of the single
[01:44:18.000 --> 01:44:20.000] word territories. And Chief Justice
[01:44:20.000 --> 01:44:22.000] Roger Taney, channeling
[01:44:22.000 --> 01:44:24.000] the late but not the earlier Jefferson,
[01:44:24.000 --> 01:44:26.000] says, because the Constitution allows
[01:44:26.000 --> 01:44:28.000] you to pass regulations for the
[01:44:28.000 --> 01:44:30.000] federal,
[01:44:30.000 --> 01:44:32.000] for governing land in the federal territory
[01:44:32.000 --> 01:44:34.000] singular, it only covers the territory
[01:44:34.000 --> 01:44:36.000] that was held by the U.S.
[01:44:36.000 --> 01:44:38.000] at the time of the founding, not
[01:44:38.000 --> 01:44:40.000] future acquired territories,
[01:44:40.000 --> 01:44:42.000] plural. It all depends on what the meaning
[01:44:42.000 --> 01:44:44.000] of the word is. It's incredibly
[01:44:44.000 --> 01:44:46.000] legalistic.
[01:44:46.000 --> 01:44:48.000] And the point here is that, you know,
[01:44:48.000 --> 01:44:50.000] Jefferson had flipped on this question,
[01:44:50.000 --> 01:44:52.000] and it's the central constitutional question
[01:44:52.000 --> 01:44:54.000] of the antebellum period.
[01:44:54.000 --> 01:44:56.000] The entire Republican Party is founded
[01:44:56.000 --> 01:44:58.000] by Lincoln and others in 1857
[01:44:58.000 --> 01:45:00.000] on the
[01:45:00.000 --> 01:45:02.000] proposition that Congress does have the power
[01:45:02.000 --> 01:45:04.000] to ban slavery in the territories.
[01:45:04.000 --> 01:45:06.000] So Taney is imposing a contested
[01:45:06.000 --> 01:45:08.000] interpretation of the Constitution
[01:45:08.000 --> 01:45:10.000] above the consensus
[01:45:10.000 --> 01:45:12.000] of the
[01:45:12.000 --> 01:45:14.000] Republican Party, as well as
[01:45:14.000 --> 01:45:16.000] many other pro-popular
[01:45:16.000 --> 01:45:18.000] sovereignty Democrats, and his
[01:45:18.000 --> 01:45:20.000] opinion has the effect
[01:45:20.000 --> 01:45:22.000] of helping to precipitate the Civil War.
[01:45:22.000 --> 01:45:24.000] Taney wrongly thinks that this will
[01:45:24.000 --> 01:45:26.000] end the divisions over slavery, but
[01:45:26.000 --> 01:45:28.000] as usual, when the court tries to
[01:45:28.000 --> 01:45:30.000] solve a contested question without
[01:45:30.000 --> 01:45:32.000] clear constitutional answers, it made
[01:45:32.000 --> 01:45:34.000] things worse, and
[01:45:34.000 --> 01:45:36.000] Lincoln says that he will not
[01:45:36.000 --> 01:45:38.000] follow the Dred Scott decision, except
[01:45:38.000 --> 01:45:40.000] with regard to the parties in the case, but
[01:45:40.000 --> 01:45:42.000] otherwise doesn't view it as part of the Constitution,
[01:45:42.000 --> 01:45:44.000] interestingly embracing a kind of Jeffersonian
[01:45:44.000 --> 01:45:46.000] view of the president's power to
[01:45:46.000 --> 01:45:48.000] interpret the Constitution separately from
[01:45:48.000 --> 01:45:50.000] the court. That's when Lincoln stands
[01:45:50.000 --> 01:45:52.000] in front of Independence Hall in 1861,
[01:45:52.000 --> 01:45:54.000] and he says, I've never had
[01:45:54.000 --> 01:45:56.000] a thought politically that doesn't stem
[01:45:56.000 --> 01:45:58.000] from Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence.
[01:45:58.000 --> 01:46:00.000] I'd rather be assassinated on
[01:46:00.000 --> 01:46:02.000] this spot than abandon the principles
[01:46:02.000 --> 01:46:04.000] of Jefferson. It's incredibly powerful,
[01:46:04.000 --> 01:46:06.000] stapled by the great emancipator.
[01:46:06.000 --> 01:46:08.000] Why is Lincoln a
[01:46:08.000 --> 01:46:10.000] Jeffersonian? After all, he's embracing
[01:46:10.000 --> 01:46:12.000] a version of federal power that really
[01:46:12.000 --> 01:46:14.000] wants to expand the
[01:46:14.000 --> 01:46:16.000] government in ways that are consistent with
[01:46:16.000 --> 01:46:18.000] Hamilton's views, basically
[01:46:18.000 --> 01:46:20.000] because, you know, Hamilton's name
[01:46:20.000 --> 01:46:22.000] is Mudd, and he's viewed as
[01:46:22.000 --> 01:46:24.000] an aristocrat, and the Federalist Party
[01:46:24.000 --> 01:46:26.000] is dead, and Lincoln's mentor,
[01:46:26.000 --> 01:46:28.000] Henry Clay, the founder of the Whig Party,
[01:46:28.000 --> 01:46:30.000] studied with Thomas Jefferson's
[01:46:30.000 --> 01:46:32.000] law tutor, George Wythe, and
[01:46:32.000 --> 01:46:34.000] views himself as a Jeffersonian
[01:46:34.000 --> 01:46:36.000] nationalist, so that's why. Plus,
[01:46:36.000 --> 01:46:38.000] Lincoln wants to win, and everyone loves
[01:46:38.000 --> 01:46:40.000] Jefferson, so that's why he embraces
[01:46:40.000 --> 01:46:42.000] Jefferson before the Civil War.
[01:46:42.000 --> 01:46:44.000] But the great
[01:46:44.000 --> 01:46:46.000] constitutional achievement of
[01:46:46.000 --> 01:46:48.000] Abraham Lincoln is
[01:46:48.000 --> 01:46:50.000] to inscribe into the Constitution
[01:46:50.000 --> 01:46:52.000] the principle of liberty
[01:46:52.000 --> 01:46:54.000] for all, and by
[01:46:54.000 --> 01:46:56.000] talking about the goals of the Declaration
[01:46:56.000 --> 01:46:58.000] and the Constitution, in the phrase
[01:46:58.000 --> 01:47:00.000] liberty for all, he's inspired
[01:47:00.000 --> 01:47:02.000] by Jefferson, and
[01:47:02.000 --> 01:47:04.000] that's what leads to the post-Civil
[01:47:04.000 --> 01:47:06.000] War amendments to the Constitution.
[01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:08.000] It's just an amazing
[01:47:08.000 --> 01:47:10.000] reminder of how central that old
[01:47:10.000 --> 01:47:12.000] Hamilton-Jefferson debate was
[01:47:12.000 --> 01:47:14.000] in leading the court to strike down the Missouri
[01:47:14.000 --> 01:47:16.000] Compromise and helping to cause the
[01:47:16.000 --> 01:47:18.000] Civil War. And as you say
[01:47:18.000 --> 01:47:20.000] in the next chapter, you know, post
[01:47:20.000 --> 01:47:22.000] this, well, from 1861 on,
[01:47:22.000 --> 01:47:24.000] Hamilton is
[01:47:24.000 --> 01:47:26.000] waxing. In other words, Hamilton is
[01:47:26.000 --> 01:47:28.000] growing, and it's becoming more and more
[01:47:28.000 --> 01:47:30.000] concentrated and
[01:47:30.000 --> 01:47:32.000] centralized. As many people pointed out,
[01:47:32.000 --> 01:47:34.000] they would say the United
[01:47:34.000 --> 01:47:36.000] States are before the Civil War,
[01:47:36.000 --> 01:47:38.000] but after that they say the United States is. And so we
[01:47:38.000 --> 01:47:40.000] have this tremendous consolidation
[01:47:40.000 --> 01:47:42.000] that happens because
[01:47:42.000 --> 01:47:44.000] of the Civil War. Speak to that.
[01:47:44.000 --> 01:47:46.000] It's
[01:47:46.000 --> 01:47:48.000] so striking, isn't it?
[01:47:48.000 --> 01:47:50.000] Jackson was the first, well,
[01:47:50.000 --> 01:47:52.000] James Wilson and Gouverneur
[01:47:52.000 --> 01:47:54.000] Morris, who wrote the preamble to the Constitution,
[01:47:54.000 --> 01:47:56.000] talked about the United States are, Jackson
[01:47:56.000 --> 01:47:58.000] picked it up, and then the Civil War
[01:47:58.000 --> 01:48:00.000] establishes that we're a plural union. I
[01:48:00.000 --> 01:48:02.000] think it's so inspiring that James Garfield
[01:48:02.000 --> 01:48:04.000] led a Hamilton revival
[01:48:04.000 --> 01:48:06.000] after the Civil War when he read the collected
[01:48:06.000 --> 01:48:08.000] works of Hamilton in the library.
[01:48:08.000 --> 01:48:10.000] Hamilton's son, James, published
[01:48:10.000 --> 01:48:12.000] them, and Garfield
[01:48:12.000 --> 01:48:14.000] read them and said, I want to make him
[01:48:14.000 --> 01:48:16.000] the patron saint of Reconstruction.
[01:48:16.000 --> 01:48:18.000] Then Reconstruction Congress people like
[01:48:18.000 --> 01:48:20.000] John Bingham, who's an incredible
[01:48:20.000 --> 01:48:22.000] admirer of John Marshall,
[01:48:22.000 --> 01:48:24.000] cite Marshall and Hamilton
[01:48:24.000 --> 01:48:26.000] when they propose the
[01:48:26.000 --> 01:48:28.000] 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments.
[01:48:28.000 --> 01:48:30.000] And the 14th Amendment
[01:48:30.000 --> 01:48:32.000] in Section 5 gives Congress the power
[01:48:32.000 --> 01:48:34.000] to enforce this article by appropriate
[01:48:34.000 --> 01:48:36.000] legislation. Bingham is trying to empower
[01:48:36.000 --> 01:48:38.000] Congress in ways that Hamilton
[01:48:38.000 --> 01:48:40.000] would have wanted. And the first draft of the 14th
[01:48:40.000 --> 01:48:42.000] Amendment says Congress shall have all power
[01:48:42.000 --> 01:48:44.000] to make laws necessary and proper
[01:48:44.000 --> 01:48:46.000] to enforce equal protection. He's taking
[01:48:46.000 --> 01:48:48.000] that liberal construction of that
[01:48:48.000 --> 01:48:50.000] necessary and proper clause, all channeled
[01:48:50.000 --> 01:48:52.000] by Hamilton. These guys are such good lawyers, but
[01:48:52.000 --> 01:48:54.000] more importantly, they're great historians. They
[01:48:54.000 --> 01:48:56.000] studied history as kids. They were inspired
[01:48:56.000 --> 01:48:58.000] by their heroes, and they
[01:48:58.000 --> 01:49:00.000] want to make Hamilton and Marshall
[01:49:00.000 --> 01:49:02.000] central. And then the great
[01:49:02.000 --> 01:49:04.000] debates over Reconstruction, and
[01:49:04.000 --> 01:49:06.000] it's such a tragic period because
[01:49:06.000 --> 01:49:08.000] Congress passes these laws, and
[01:49:08.000 --> 01:49:10.000] then there's a violent reaction,
[01:49:10.000 --> 01:49:12.000] and black civil rights are subverted,
[01:49:12.000 --> 01:49:14.000] and black people are lynched and murdered.
[01:49:14.000 --> 01:49:16.000] And then the Supreme
[01:49:16.000 --> 01:49:18.000] Court goes on to strike down a lot
[01:49:18.000 --> 01:49:20.000] of the pillars of Reconstruction, including
[01:49:20.000 --> 01:49:22.000] the Civil Rights Act of 1875,
[01:49:22.000 --> 01:49:24.000] which forbids discrimination and public
[01:49:24.000 --> 01:49:26.000] accommodations, and also the Ku Klux
[01:49:26.000 --> 01:49:28.000] Klan Act of 1877, which
[01:49:28.000 --> 01:49:30.000] allows the punishment of
[01:49:30.000 --> 01:49:32.000] racially motivated violence.
[01:49:32.000 --> 01:49:34.000] And in striking those acts
[01:49:34.000 --> 01:49:36.000] down, they invoke Jefferson's
[01:49:36.000 --> 01:49:38.000] reconstruction of the necessary
[01:49:38.000 --> 01:49:40.000] and proper clause, and they ignore
[01:49:40.000 --> 01:49:42.000] the fact that Hamilton had the opposite
[01:49:42.000 --> 01:49:44.000] view. And
[01:49:44.000 --> 01:49:46.000] Justice Bradley
[01:49:46.000 --> 01:49:48.000] is kind of the villain
[01:49:48.000 --> 01:49:50.000] of my book because he really
[01:49:50.000 --> 01:49:52.000] does a number on Reconstruction and strikes
[01:49:52.000 --> 01:49:54.000] all those acts down. And the hero of this part
[01:49:54.000 --> 01:49:56.000] is John Marshall Harlan,
[01:49:56.000 --> 01:49:58.000] a great justice named
[01:49:58.000 --> 01:50:00.000] after John Marshall because his father admires
[01:50:00.000 --> 01:50:02.000] Marshall so much.
[01:50:02.000 --> 01:50:04.000] Harlan is the president of the
[01:50:04.000 --> 01:50:06.000] Alexander Hamilton Memorial
[01:50:06.000 --> 01:50:08.000] Society, and he writes the only
[01:50:08.000 --> 01:50:10.000] dissenting opinions, both in the Civil Rights
[01:50:10.000 --> 01:50:12.000] cases, which strike down the Civil Rights Act,
[01:50:12.000 --> 01:50:14.000] and in Plessy versus Ferguson, the infamous
[01:50:14.000 --> 01:50:16.000] case which upholds segregation
[01:50:16.000 --> 01:50:18.000] in railroads. And Harlan
[01:50:18.000 --> 01:50:20.000] nobly says the Constitution is
[01:50:20.000 --> 01:50:22.000] colorblind and neither knows nor tolerates
[01:50:22.000 --> 01:50:24.000] classes among citizens.
[01:50:24.000 --> 01:50:26.000] And he explicitly notes
[01:50:26.000 --> 01:50:28.000] Hamilton's broad construction of
[01:50:28.000 --> 01:50:30.000] congressional power. It takes another hundred years
[01:50:30.000 --> 01:50:32.000] for Thurgood Marshall to read
[01:50:32.000 --> 01:50:34.000] Harlan's opinion aloud before he argues
[01:50:34.000 --> 01:50:36.000] Brown versus Board of Education.
[01:50:36.000 --> 01:50:38.000] Today, Justice Neil Gorsuch has a
[01:50:38.000 --> 01:50:40.000] portrait of Harlan in his
[01:50:40.000 --> 01:50:42.000] chambers showing that Harlan has been embraced
[01:50:42.000 --> 01:50:44.000] by strict constructionist
[01:50:44.000 --> 01:50:46.000] conservatives
[01:50:46.000 --> 01:50:48.000] as well as liberals alike.
[01:50:48.000 --> 01:50:50.000] But it all goes back to the
[01:50:50.000 --> 01:50:52.000] Hamilton revival when Bingham
[01:50:52.000 --> 01:50:54.000] wants to make Hamilton
[01:50:54.000 --> 01:50:56.000] rather than Jefferson the patron saint
[01:50:56.000 --> 01:50:58.000] of Reconstruction.
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[01:52:28.000 --> 01:52:30.000] Interesting, and as we look at reconstruction
[01:52:30.000 --> 01:52:32.000] and the idea that we had a standing army
[01:52:32.000 --> 01:52:34.000] that was a part of that,
[01:52:34.000 --> 01:52:36.000] Posse Comitatus, which is now back
[01:52:36.000 --> 01:52:38.000] in the
[01:52:38.000 --> 01:52:40.000] current events because
[01:52:40.000 --> 01:52:42.000] of the actions of ICE and
[01:52:42.000 --> 01:52:44.000] the Trump administration,
[01:52:44.000 --> 01:52:46.000] that was a kind of
[01:52:46.000 --> 01:52:48.000] a capstone to reconstruction
[01:52:48.000 --> 01:52:50.000] and some of the abuses that
[01:52:50.000 --> 01:52:52.000] were happening with a
[01:52:52.000 --> 01:52:54.000] standing army at that point in time. So
[01:52:54.000 --> 01:52:56.000] all these things keep coming back, don't
[01:52:56.000 --> 01:52:58.000] they? They really do.
[01:52:58.000 --> 01:53:00.000] And, to make things even better for the Hamilton
[01:53:00.000 --> 01:53:02.000] Jefferson narrative, although not for the country,
[01:53:02.000 --> 01:53:04.000] the debate over Posse Comitatus
[01:53:04.000 --> 01:53:06.000] is part of this long-standing
[01:53:06.000 --> 01:53:08.000] debate about the president's
[01:53:08.000 --> 01:53:10.000] power to call up the militia
[01:53:10.000 --> 01:53:12.000] to enforce federal
[01:53:12.000 --> 01:53:14.000] law, which goes back to
[01:53:14.000 --> 01:53:16.000] the Insurrection Act of 1807,
[01:53:16.000 --> 01:53:18.000] sponsored by Thomas Jefferson. It's amazing
[01:53:18.000 --> 01:53:20.000] that Jefferson is the guy who before
[01:53:20.000 --> 01:53:22.000] the founding says, oh, we should
[01:53:22.000 --> 01:53:24.000] a little rebellion every now and then is a good thing
[01:53:24.000 --> 01:53:26.000] and we should pardon those whiskey rebels
[01:53:26.000 --> 01:53:28.000] and we've got to moisten the blood of tyrants
[01:53:28.000 --> 01:53:30.000] with revolution. I mean, he like endorses
[01:53:30.000 --> 01:53:32.000] a revolution, but then he becomes president
[01:53:32.000 --> 01:53:34.000] and totally switches his tune
[01:53:34.000 --> 01:53:36.000] when Vermont rebels
[01:53:36.000 --> 01:53:38.000] against his hated embargo. Jefferson
[01:53:38.000 --> 01:53:40.000] has this disastrous economic policy
[01:53:40.000 --> 01:53:42.000] where cutting off all trade with the
[01:53:42.000 --> 01:53:44.000] rest of the world.
[01:53:44.000 --> 01:53:46.000] That sounds familiar too, but go ahead,
[01:53:46.000 --> 01:53:48.000] I'm sorry.
[01:53:48.000 --> 01:53:50.000] Everything goes back to those days.
[01:53:50.000 --> 01:53:52.000] Well, New England then as now, actually,
[01:53:52.000 --> 01:53:54.000] rebels and
[01:53:54.000 --> 01:53:56.000] Jefferson writes to Madison, do I have the power
[01:53:56.000 --> 01:53:58.000] to send out the troops to stop these
[01:53:58.000 --> 01:54:00.000] guys? Madison says, I don't think so. So they
[01:54:00.000 --> 01:54:02.000] pass the Insurrection Act, which is
[01:54:02.000 --> 01:54:04.000] the same one that has been invoked throughout
[01:54:04.000 --> 01:54:06.000] American history. And President Jackson
[01:54:06.000 --> 01:54:08.000] invokes it to put down
[01:54:08.000 --> 01:54:10.000] a rebellion. Lincoln invokes it to
[01:54:10.000 --> 01:54:12.000] put down secession. Grant
[01:54:12.000 --> 01:54:14.000] invokes it after the Civil War
[01:54:14.000 --> 01:54:16.000] to try to put down some of that
[01:54:16.000 --> 01:54:18.000] mob violence.
[01:54:18.000 --> 01:54:20.000] And it goes all the way up today.
[01:54:20.000 --> 01:54:22.000] And the last time it was invoked
[01:54:22.000 --> 01:54:24.000] was during the Civil Rights Movement.
[01:54:24.000 --> 01:54:26.000] And then
[01:54:26.000 --> 01:54:28.000] George H.W.
[01:54:28.000 --> 01:54:30.000] Bush involved it to put down
[01:54:30.000 --> 01:54:32.000] the Rodney King riots. That was the last
[01:54:32.000 --> 01:54:34.000] time. But this question,
[01:54:34.000 --> 01:54:36.000] which is obviously central
[01:54:36.000 --> 01:54:38.000] now, both with the Posse Comitatus Act
[01:54:38.000 --> 01:54:40.000] and also the question, can President Trump
[01:54:40.000 --> 01:54:42.000] send guards from
[01:54:42.000 --> 01:54:44.000] one state into another, goes
[01:54:44.000 --> 01:54:46.000] back to that initial Hamilton-Jefferson
[01:54:46.000 --> 01:54:48.000] debate. And I, having
[01:54:48.000 --> 01:54:50.000] read the Insurrection Act
[01:54:50.000 --> 01:54:52.000] as it was amended over the years, it
[01:54:52.000 --> 01:54:54.000] does seem to give the president pretty
[01:54:54.000 --> 01:54:56.000] broad authority to send
[01:54:56.000 --> 01:54:58.000] the troops even for domestic law
[01:54:58.000 --> 01:55:00.000] enforcement. Although Jefferson
[01:55:00.000 --> 01:55:02.000] and Hamilton initially thought
[01:55:02.000 --> 01:55:04.000] that you couldn't federalize the
[01:55:04.000 --> 01:55:06.000] troops for domestic law enforcement only to put down
[01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:08.000] insurrection or serious external
[01:55:08.000 --> 01:55:10.000] threats. But because
[01:55:10.000 --> 01:55:12.000] Congress has exceeded in the expansion of
[01:55:12.000 --> 01:55:14.000] executive authority over the years,
[01:55:14.000 --> 01:55:16.000] the president's authority may be
[01:55:16.000 --> 01:55:18.000] unconstrained. Yeah, that's very
[01:55:18.000 --> 01:55:20.000] interesting debate that we have there. And then
[01:55:20.000 --> 01:55:22.000] we go to the period of the early 1900s.
[01:55:22.000 --> 01:55:24.000] You have this
[01:55:24.000 --> 01:55:26.000] titled as Hamiltonian Means
[01:55:26.000 --> 01:55:28.000] to Achieve Jefferson
[01:55:28.000 --> 01:55:30.000] Ends? So we've got
[01:55:30.000 --> 01:55:32.000] the time of Theodore
[01:55:32.000 --> 01:55:34.000] Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson,
[01:55:34.000 --> 01:55:36.000] and the new nationalism,
[01:55:36.000 --> 01:55:38.000] Henry Cabot Lodge, Calvin Coolidge.
[01:55:38.000 --> 01:55:40.000] Talk a little bit about that.
[01:55:40.000 --> 01:55:42.000] I was partly inspired to write
[01:55:42.000 --> 01:55:44.000] this book when I read this
[01:55:44.000 --> 01:55:46.000] historian from the progressive era,
[01:55:46.000 --> 01:55:48.000] Robert Crowley, calling on Theodore
[01:55:48.000 --> 01:55:50.000] Roosevelt to deploy Hamiltonian means for
[01:55:50.000 --> 01:55:52.000] Jeffersonian ends. Crowley was the
[01:55:52.000 --> 01:55:54.000] founder of the New Republic magazine. As it
[01:55:54.000 --> 01:55:56.000] happens, I spent almost two decades there as the
[01:55:56.000 --> 01:55:58.000] legal affairs editor a while ago. And I just
[01:55:58.000 --> 01:56:00.000] thought that was an interesting phrase. And I was so struck
[01:56:00.000 --> 01:56:02.000] that Roosevelt used it and quoted
[01:56:02.000 --> 01:56:04.000] it word for word when he said, I am
[01:56:04.000 --> 01:56:06.000] a Hamiltonian with regard to my views of federal
[01:56:06.000 --> 01:56:08.000] power and a Jeffersonian in my
[01:56:08.000 --> 01:56:10.000] views about democracy. So obviously
[01:56:10.000 --> 01:56:12.000] the categories were getting
[01:56:12.000 --> 01:56:14.000] scrambled. And this is the period
[01:56:14.000 --> 01:56:16.000] when Theodore Roosevelt
[01:56:16.000 --> 01:56:18.000] makes Hamilton the
[01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:20.000] hero of the progressive era. And then
[01:56:20.000 --> 01:56:22.000] Coolidge and
[01:56:22.000 --> 01:56:24.000] Harding make Hamilton the
[01:56:24.000 --> 01:56:26.000] hero of the Gilded Age. Coolidge
[01:56:26.000 --> 01:56:28.000] really admires Hamilton
[01:56:28.000 --> 01:56:30.000] who he studies in Amherst College.
[01:56:30.000 --> 01:56:32.000] He reveres the founding, in particular
[01:56:32.000 --> 01:56:34.000] the Puritan basis of
[01:56:34.000 --> 01:56:36.000] the founding. And he sees Hamilton
[01:56:36.000 --> 01:56:38.000] as a patron saint both of free enterprise
[01:56:38.000 --> 01:56:40.000] and of limited
[01:56:40.000 --> 01:56:42.000] government. It's so striking
[01:56:42.000 --> 01:56:44.000] and there's a huge change
[01:56:44.000 --> 01:56:46.000] in the understanding of executive power in the election
[01:56:46.000 --> 01:56:48.000] of 1912. You have to pick a
[01:56:48.000 --> 01:56:50.000] single moment for the growth
[01:56:50.000 --> 01:56:52.000] of the modern imperial presidency.
[01:56:52.000 --> 01:56:54.000] It would be 1912 when both Theodore
[01:56:54.000 --> 01:56:56.000] Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, the progressive
[01:56:56.000 --> 01:56:58.000] and democratic candidate, say
[01:56:58.000 --> 01:57:00.000] that the president is a steward of the
[01:57:00.000 --> 01:57:02.000] people who should directly channel popular
[01:57:02.000 --> 01:57:04.000] will. And William Howard Taft,
[01:57:04.000 --> 01:57:06.000] the old constitutionalist, thinks that they're
[01:57:06.000 --> 01:57:08.000] both demagogues and that the founders
[01:57:08.000 --> 01:57:10.000] thought that the president should be a chief
[01:57:10.000 --> 01:57:12.000] magistrate who enforces
[01:57:12.000 --> 01:57:14.000] the laws of Congress but
[01:57:14.000 --> 01:57:16.000] doesn't communicate directly with the people.
[01:57:16.000 --> 01:57:18.000] Interestingly, all three of them
[01:57:18.000 --> 01:57:20.000] are historians who love Hamilton.
[01:57:20.000 --> 01:57:22.000] And Theodore Roosevelt
[01:57:22.000 --> 01:57:24.000] isn't it? I thought this was so cool. Theodore
[01:57:24.000 --> 01:57:26.000] Roosevelt wrote a biography of Gouverneur Morris
[01:57:26.000 --> 01:57:28.000] who is a big Hamiltonian. He's a
[01:57:28.000 --> 01:57:30.000] great historian as well as a great leader.
[01:57:30.000 --> 01:57:32.000] Woodrow Wilson is the only
[01:57:32.000 --> 01:57:34.000] president who ever got a PhD in history
[01:57:34.000 --> 01:57:36.000] or in anything. And he
[01:57:36.000 --> 01:57:38.000] he admires Hamilton, although he also
[01:57:38.000 --> 01:57:40.000] admires Hegel, the German
[01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:42.000] philosopher, and criticizes
[01:57:42.000 --> 01:57:44.000] the natural law, separation of powers
[01:57:44.000 --> 01:57:46.000] basis of the Declaration of Independence.
[01:57:46.000 --> 01:57:48.000] And William Howard Taft thinks that Hamilton and
[01:57:48.000 --> 01:57:50.000] Marshall are the greatest Americans ever
[01:57:50.000 --> 01:57:52.000] and writes a book on presidential power.
[01:57:52.000 --> 01:57:54.000] So George Will once told me that
[01:57:54.000 --> 01:57:56.000] you can tell what kind of conservative someone is
[01:57:56.000 --> 01:57:58.000] today based on where they would have
[01:57:58.000 --> 01:58:00.000] stood in the election of 1912.
[01:58:00.000 --> 01:58:02.000] If you're a kind of
[01:58:02.000 --> 01:58:04.000] populist conservative, then you
[01:58:04.000 --> 01:58:06.000] love Wilson or Roosevelt.
[01:58:06.000 --> 01:58:08.000] And if you're a constitutionalist conservative, you like
[01:58:08.000 --> 01:58:10.000] William Howard Taft. Yeah, I would have gone
[01:58:10.000 --> 01:58:12.000] for Taft, I think.
[01:58:12.000 --> 01:58:14.000] No doubt about it.
[01:58:14.000 --> 01:58:16.000] I have to just briefly say, as
[01:58:16.000 --> 01:58:18.000] it happens, I wrote a short biography of
[01:58:18.000 --> 01:58:20.000] William Howard Taft for the American President series
[01:58:20.000 --> 01:58:22.000] a while ago. I didn't know much about him until I got the assignment.
[01:58:22.000 --> 01:58:24.000] But I really came to admire him
[01:58:24.000 --> 01:58:26.000] as our last constitutionalist president.
[01:58:26.000 --> 01:58:28.000] Wow. He's a great man.
[01:58:28.000 --> 01:58:30.000] Not just by his size, but
[01:58:30.000 --> 01:58:32.000] he was an outsized character
[01:58:32.000 --> 01:58:34.000] in history as well. And
[01:58:34.000 --> 01:58:36.000] so at this point in time, this is also
[01:58:36.000 --> 01:58:38.000] when we have a major restructuring
[01:58:38.000 --> 01:58:40.000] of our country with the
[01:58:40.000 --> 01:58:42.000] bank, with the Federal Reserve.
[01:58:42.000 --> 01:58:44.000] You talk about these guys being fans
[01:58:44.000 --> 01:58:46.000] of Alexander Hamilton.
[01:58:46.000 --> 01:58:48.000] Well, we can certainly see that with the Federal Reserve
[01:58:48.000 --> 01:58:50.000] Act that happens at that point in time.
[01:58:50.000 --> 01:58:52.000] And then we have 1932
[01:58:52.000 --> 01:58:54.000] to 68. So
[01:58:54.000 --> 01:58:56.000] New Dealism, FDR,
[01:58:56.000 --> 01:58:58.000] and other things.
[01:58:58.000 --> 01:59:00.000] The economic Hamiltonianism
[01:59:00.000 --> 01:59:02.000] has become political
[01:59:02.000 --> 01:59:04.000] for Jeffersonians.
[01:59:04.000 --> 01:59:06.000] Talk a little bit about that.
[01:59:06.000 --> 01:59:08.000] Another example
[01:59:08.000 --> 01:59:10.000] of a time when best-selling
[01:59:10.000 --> 01:59:12.000] books are changing Hamilton
[01:59:12.000 --> 01:59:14.000] and Jefferson, going up and down.
[01:59:14.000 --> 01:59:16.000] Theodore Roosevelt is inspired to embrace
[01:59:16.000 --> 01:59:18.000] Hamilton when he reads a bestseller by
[01:59:18.000 --> 01:59:20.000] a woman called Gertrude Averton,
[01:59:20.000 --> 01:59:22.000] The Conqueror, being the true
[01:59:22.000 --> 01:59:24.000] and romantic tale of Hamilton. It's the
[01:59:24.000 --> 01:59:26.000] Hamilton musical of its day, and
[01:59:26.000 --> 01:59:28.000] it makes Hamilton the star of the moment.
[01:59:28.000 --> 01:59:30.000] But FDR is inspired
[01:59:30.000 --> 01:59:32.000] to resurrect Jefferson after reading a book by
[01:59:32.000 --> 01:59:34.000] a guy called Claude Bowers called
[01:59:34.000 --> 01:59:36.000] Jefferson versus Hamilton, the struggle for
[01:59:36.000 --> 01:59:38.000] democracy over aristocracy.
[01:59:38.000 --> 01:59:40.000] And FDR invites Bowers to speak
[01:59:40.000 --> 01:59:42.000] to the Democratic Convention of 1928,
[01:59:42.000 --> 01:59:44.000] and he's a huge success.
[01:59:44.000 --> 01:59:46.000] And then he reinvents himself as the
[01:59:46.000 --> 01:59:48.000] second coming of Thomas Jefferson
[01:59:48.000 --> 01:59:50.000] based on his reading of this book.
[01:59:50.000 --> 01:59:52.000] FDR is a Hudson Valley
[01:59:52.000 --> 01:59:54.000] aristocrat
[01:59:54.000 --> 01:59:56.000] who, you know,
[01:59:56.000 --> 01:59:58.000] you'd think his grandfather
[01:59:58.000 --> 02:00:00.000] had actually been an ally of Hamilton,
[02:00:00.000 --> 02:00:02.000] but he just...
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[02:01:28.000 --> 02:01:30.000] This identifies with Jefferson,
[02:01:30.000 --> 02:01:32.000] the democratic aristocrat, you know,
[02:01:32.000 --> 02:01:34.000] he's collecting stamps and tracing
[02:01:34.000 --> 02:01:36.000] his ancestry back to the founding and
[02:01:36.000 --> 02:01:38.000] decides to make himself the second
[02:01:38.000 --> 02:01:40.000] coming of Thomas Jefferson. But this
[02:01:40.000 --> 02:01:42.000] raises the question of the limits
[02:01:42.000 --> 02:01:44.000] on the New Deal administrative state.
[02:01:44.000 --> 02:01:46.000] As you said, independent
[02:01:46.000 --> 02:01:48.000] agencies were created during the progressive
[02:01:48.000 --> 02:01:50.000] era by Woodrow Wilson and
[02:01:50.000 --> 02:01:52.000] Louis Brandeis, who's another
[02:01:52.000 --> 02:01:54.000] hero of mine, actually. Brandeis was a great
[02:01:54.000 --> 02:01:56.000] Jeffersonian. He admired Jefferson more than
[02:01:56.000 --> 02:01:58.000] anyone. And in constructing agencies
[02:01:58.000 --> 02:02:00.000] like the Fed and the
[02:02:00.000 --> 02:02:02.000] Federal Trade Commission, he viewed them as
[02:02:02.000 --> 02:02:04.000] a combination of public and private control
[02:02:04.000 --> 02:02:06.000] that would prevent too much centralization
[02:02:06.000 --> 02:02:08.000] in the federal government. And Brandeis
[02:02:08.000 --> 02:02:10.000] upheld the constitutionality of the independent
[02:02:10.000 --> 02:02:12.000] agencies in the 1930s
[02:02:12.000 --> 02:02:14.000] in a case called Humphrey's
[02:02:14.000 --> 02:02:16.000] Executor. That was a unanimous
[02:02:16.000 --> 02:02:18.000] Supreme Court decision. That's the central
[02:02:18.000 --> 02:02:20.000] question in the Supreme Court's gonna
[02:02:20.000 --> 02:02:22.000] hear in a couple of weeks. Are independent
[02:02:22.000 --> 02:02:24.000] agencies constitutional today? And lots
[02:02:24.000 --> 02:02:26.000] of folks think they're gonna overturn that
[02:02:26.000 --> 02:02:28.000] Humphrey's Executor decision and strike down
[02:02:28.000 --> 02:02:30.000] the agencies on the so-called
[02:02:30.000 --> 02:02:32.000] unitary executive theory,
[02:02:32.000 --> 02:02:34.000] which says that the president can fire anyone
[02:02:34.000 --> 02:02:36.000] he appoints. Who's the patron
[02:02:36.000 --> 02:02:38.000] saint of the unitary executive theory?
[02:02:38.000 --> 02:02:40.000] Alexander Hamilton! He came up with the
[02:02:40.000 --> 02:02:42.000] idea of it in his Pacificus
[02:02:42.000 --> 02:02:44.000] letters, and Reagan administration
[02:02:44.000 --> 02:02:46.000] lawyers invoked it when they first
[02:02:46.000 --> 02:02:48.000] came up with the unitary executive theory.
[02:02:48.000 --> 02:02:50.000] And who's the patron saint
[02:02:50.000 --> 02:02:52.000] of the constitutionality
[02:02:52.000 --> 02:02:54.000] of the independent agencies?
[02:02:54.000 --> 02:02:56.000] Thomas Jefferson, who Brandeis
[02:02:56.000 --> 02:02:58.000] invoked in the Humphrey's Executor case.
[02:02:58.000 --> 02:03:00.000] So once again, I think you got the
[02:03:00.000 --> 02:03:02.000] thesis of the book now. It all
[02:03:02.000 --> 02:03:04.000] goes back to that initial
[02:03:04.000 --> 02:03:06.000] clash. It's so
[02:03:06.000 --> 02:03:08.000] interesting. And of course, what we've seen
[02:03:08.000 --> 02:03:10.000] is everybody wanted to
[02:03:10.000 --> 02:03:12.000] embrace the image
[02:03:12.000 --> 02:03:14.000] and the reputation of Jefferson
[02:03:14.000 --> 02:03:16.000] and identify themselves as Jeffersonian
[02:03:16.000 --> 02:03:18.000] as men. Again, I think it was because
[02:03:18.000 --> 02:03:20.000] Jefferson was so linked
[02:03:20.000 --> 02:03:22.000] with the idea of liberty, you know, as
[02:03:22.000 --> 02:03:24.000] the author of the Declaration of Independence and all the rest
[02:03:24.000 --> 02:03:26.000] of this stuff. But now, lately,
[02:03:26.000 --> 02:03:28.000] there's been this effort in modern
[02:03:28.000 --> 02:03:30.000] times to link him to slavery.
[02:03:30.000 --> 02:03:32.000] And so I think he has
[02:03:32.000 --> 02:03:34.000] his reputation has been tarnished now.
[02:03:34.000 --> 02:03:36.000] We've got Hamilton with his own musical,
[02:03:36.000 --> 02:03:38.000] and we have Jefferson who
[02:03:38.000 --> 02:03:40.000] is now decried
[02:03:40.000 --> 02:03:42.000] as someone who had slaves.
[02:03:42.000 --> 02:03:44.000] And so there's been a reversal of that.
[02:03:44.000 --> 02:03:46.000] And I think that that's kind of a
[02:03:46.000 --> 02:03:48.000] key thing for who we are right now,
[02:03:48.000 --> 02:03:50.000] because, again, people would have this veneer
[02:03:50.000 --> 02:03:52.000] of Jefferson there,
[02:03:52.000 --> 02:03:54.000] but they really were
[02:03:54.000 --> 02:03:56.000] consolidating power, because that's just
[02:03:56.000 --> 02:03:58.000] the nature of
[02:03:58.000 --> 02:04:00.000] politicians and politics is that you
[02:04:00.000 --> 02:04:02.000] would have a consolidation of powers, Acton
[02:04:02.000 --> 02:04:04.000] said. But
[02:04:04.000 --> 02:04:06.000] speak a little bit about that and where we are, because we're
[02:04:06.000 --> 02:04:08.000] nearly out of time. Let's
[02:04:08.000 --> 02:04:10.000] give some closing
[02:04:10.000 --> 02:04:12.000] statements here as to where you see us
[02:04:12.000 --> 02:04:14.000] right now in terms of this being pulled
[02:04:14.000 --> 02:04:16.000] from one pole to the other, Jefferson
[02:04:16.000 --> 02:04:18.000] and Hamilton.
[02:04:18.000 --> 02:04:20.000] Well, these are
[02:04:20.000 --> 02:04:22.000] challenging times for the
[02:04:22.000 --> 02:04:24.000] American Republic, as we all know, and
[02:04:24.000 --> 02:04:26.000] we are more polarized than at any
[02:04:26.000 --> 02:04:28.000] time since the Civil War. And there
[02:04:28.000 --> 02:04:30.000] is talk
[02:04:30.000 --> 02:04:32.000] once again in the land of
[02:04:32.000 --> 02:04:34.000] secession and
[02:04:34.000 --> 02:04:36.000] Julius Caesar and
[02:04:36.000 --> 02:04:38.000] the question of whether the Republic will
[02:04:38.000 --> 02:04:40.000] survive. It's so
[02:04:40.000 --> 02:04:42.000] striking that Hamilton and Jefferson
[02:04:42.000 --> 02:04:44.000] embraced
[02:04:44.000 --> 02:04:46.000] the basic principles of the American
[02:04:46.000 --> 02:04:48.000] idea as embodied in the Declaration and the
[02:04:48.000 --> 02:04:50.000] Constitution, liberty, equality, and government
[02:04:50.000 --> 02:04:52.000] by consent. They disagreed
[02:04:52.000 --> 02:04:54.000] about how to apply those values in practice
[02:04:54.000 --> 02:04:56.000] and they had fierce debates over
[02:04:56.000 --> 02:04:58.000] the proper balance between liberty and
[02:04:58.000 --> 02:05:00.000] power, with Jefferson thinking every
[02:05:00.000 --> 02:05:02.000] increase in power threatened liberty and
[02:05:02.000 --> 02:05:04.000] Hamilton thinking that increases
[02:05:04.000 --> 02:05:06.000] in centralized power could secure
[02:05:06.000 --> 02:05:08.000] liberty. The point of the
[02:05:08.000 --> 02:05:10.000] Constitution is not agreement,
[02:05:10.000 --> 02:05:12.000] but debate.
[02:05:12.000 --> 02:05:14.000] The Constitution is made for
[02:05:14.000 --> 02:05:16.000] people of fundamentally differing points of
[02:05:16.000 --> 02:05:18.000] view, as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said,
[02:05:18.000 --> 02:05:20.000] and disagreement is not a
[02:05:20.000 --> 02:05:22.000] bug in the system, it's a feature. But
[02:05:22.000 --> 02:05:24.000] the debate has to involve listening to
[02:05:24.000 --> 02:05:26.000] the other side. It cannot involve
[02:05:26.000 --> 02:05:28.000] viewing the other side
[02:05:28.000 --> 02:05:30.000] as enemies, owning the libs and
[02:05:30.000 --> 02:05:32.000] owning the conservatives. We've got to be
[02:05:32.000 --> 02:05:34.000] committed to the process of deliberation
[02:05:34.000 --> 02:05:36.000] itself, and that's why the Hamilton
[02:05:36.000 --> 02:05:38.000] and Jefferson debate is so
[02:05:38.000 --> 02:05:40.000] inspiring. As long as we
[02:05:40.000 --> 02:05:42.000] maintain it, we will keep the Republic
[02:05:42.000 --> 02:05:44.000] and it's only when we reject the debate
[02:05:44.000 --> 02:05:46.000] itself that the shooting begins.
[02:05:46.000 --> 02:05:48.000] Oh, I absolutely agree with that.
[02:05:48.000 --> 02:05:50.000] Yes, when we look at the fact that, as
[02:05:50.000 --> 02:05:52.000] you point out, both people on the left and
[02:05:52.000 --> 02:05:54.000] people on the right want
[02:05:54.000 --> 02:05:56.000] to shut down the other side, censor
[02:05:56.000 --> 02:05:58.000] them, punish them,
[02:05:58.000 --> 02:06:00.000] take away licenses, whatever.
[02:06:00.000 --> 02:06:02.000] We have to have that debate, and
[02:06:02.000 --> 02:06:04.000] that was one thing on which both these
[02:06:04.000 --> 02:06:06.000] two poles agreed. That is the
[02:06:06.000 --> 02:06:08.000] quintessential American thing, is that
[02:06:08.000 --> 02:06:10.000] we have to have a debate on
[02:06:10.000 --> 02:06:12.000] these different issues. Thank you so much. Again, the
[02:06:12.000 --> 02:06:14.000] book is
[02:06:14.000 --> 02:06:16.000] the, let me get the title again here,
[02:06:16.000 --> 02:06:18.000] it is The Pursuit of Liberty, How
[02:06:18.000 --> 02:06:20.000] Hamilton vs. Jefferson Ignited
[02:06:20.000 --> 02:06:22.000] the Lasting Battle over Power in
[02:06:22.000 --> 02:06:24.000] America by Jeffrey Rosen,
[02:06:24.000 --> 02:06:26.000] CEO of the National
[02:06:26.000 --> 02:06:28.000] Constitution Center. And where's the best place for
[02:06:28.000 --> 02:06:30.000] people to find this? Do you sell this directly or
[02:06:30.000 --> 02:06:32.000] on Amazon?
[02:06:32.000 --> 02:06:34.000] The book's on Amazon and in bookstores near you.
[02:06:34.000 --> 02:06:36.000] Okay, that's the best place for people to find it.
[02:06:36.000 --> 02:06:38.000] Looks like a fascinating book.
[02:06:38.000 --> 02:06:40.000] It's been a fascinating conversation. Thank you so much,
[02:06:40.000 --> 02:06:42.000] Mr. Rosen. It's a real
[02:06:42.000 --> 02:06:44.000] great insight that you have there. Thank you.
[02:06:44.000 --> 02:06:46.000] And everyone, have a
[02:06:46.000 --> 02:06:48.000] great day today, and thank you, Scott Helmer.
[02:06:48.000 --> 02:06:50.000] Thank you very much for the tip. I appreciate that.
[02:06:50.000 --> 02:06:52.000] And we'll talk about
[02:06:52.000 --> 02:06:54.000] that tomorrow. Again,
[02:06:54.000 --> 02:06:56.000] scothelmer.com.news,
[02:06:56.000 --> 02:06:58.000] an anthem for a divided world.
[02:06:58.000 --> 02:07:00.000] Scott Helmer's
[02:07:00.000 --> 02:07:02.000] website there.
[02:07:02.000 --> 02:07:04.000] The latest single that he,
[02:07:04.000 --> 02:07:06.000] of course, he is a recording artist.
[02:07:06.000 --> 02:07:08.000] The latest single speaks to...
[02:07:12.000 --> 02:07:14.000] It does, yes. Please share that.
[02:07:14.000 --> 02:07:16.000] scothelmer.com
[02:07:16.000 --> 02:07:18.000] and you can see at his website
[02:07:18.000 --> 02:07:20.000] he's got a new
[02:07:20.000 --> 02:07:22.000] single that is there. Thank you so much, Scott.
[02:07:22.000 --> 02:07:24.000] And thank you to all of you. Have a great day.
[02:07:30.000 --> 02:07:32.000] The Common Man
[02:07:34.000 --> 02:07:36.000] The Common Man
[02:07:38.000 --> 02:07:40.000] They created Common Core
[02:07:40.000 --> 02:07:42.000] to dumb down our children.
[02:07:42.000 --> 02:07:44.000] They created Common Pass to track and control us.
[02:07:44.000 --> 02:07:46.000] Their commons project
[02:07:46.000 --> 02:07:48.000] to make sure the commoners own
[02:07:48.000 --> 02:07:50.000] nothing
[02:07:50.000 --> 02:07:52.000] and the communist future.
[02:07:52.000 --> 02:07:54.000] They see the Common Man
[02:07:54.000 --> 02:07:56.000] as simple, unsophisticated,
[02:07:56.000 --> 02:07:58.000] ordinary. But each
[02:07:58.000 --> 02:08:00.000] of us has worth and dignity
[02:08:00.000 --> 02:08:02.000] created in the image of God.
[02:08:04.000 --> 02:08:06.000] That is what we have in common.
[02:08:06.000 --> 02:08:08.000] That is what they want to take away.
[02:08:08.000 --> 02:08:10.000] Their most powerful weapons
[02:08:10.000 --> 02:08:12.000] are isolation, deception,
[02:08:12.000 --> 02:08:14.000] intimidation.
[02:08:14.000 --> 02:08:16.000] They desire to know everything about us
[02:08:16.000 --> 02:08:18.000] while they hide everything from
[02:08:18.000 --> 02:08:20.000] us. It's time to
[02:08:20.000 --> 02:08:22.000] turn that around and expose
[02:08:22.000 --> 02:08:24.000] what they want to hide.
[02:08:24.000 --> 02:08:26.000] Please share the information and links
[02:08:26.000 --> 02:08:28.000] you'll find at TheDavidNightShow.com.
[02:08:28.000 --> 02:08:30.000] Thank you for listening.
[02:08:30.000 --> 02:08:32.000] Thank you for sharing.
[02:08:36.000 --> 02:08:38.000] If you can't support us financially,
[02:08:38.000 --> 02:08:40.000] please keep us in your prayers.
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