5/14/2020 12 - Victor Davis Hanson
Townhall.com
Seventy-five
years ago this month, Germany surrendered, ending the European theater of World
War II. At the war's beginning, no one believed Germany would utterly collapse
in May 1945.
On
the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, the day of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
German invaders were on the verge of capturing Moscow. Britain was isolated.
London had barely survived a terrible German bombing during the Blitz.
A
sleeping America was neutral, but it was beginning to realize it was weak and
mostly unarmed in a scary world.
But
by 1943, a booming U.S. economy was fielding vast military forces from Alaska
to the Sahara. Britain and America were bombing the German heartland. The
Soviet Red Army had trapped and destroyed a million-man German army at
Stalingrad.
How
did the Allies -- Britain, the Soviet Union and the U.S. -- turn around the
European war so quickly?
The
huge Red Army would suffer close to 11 million deaths in halting German
offensives. Britain would never give up despite terrible losses at home and at
sea from German bombers, rockets and submarines.
Yet
the key to victory was the U.S. economy. It would eventually outproduce all the
major economies on both sides of the war combined.
But
how did the U.S. arm so quickly, build such effective weapons so soon, and from
almost nothing field a military some 12 million strong?
Neo-socialist
President Franklin D. Roosevelt unleashed American business under the aegis of
successful entrepreneurs such as Henry Ford of the Ford Motor Company, William
Knudsen of General Motors, Henry Kaiser of Kaiser Shipyards and Charles Wilson
of General Electric.
They
were all given relatively free rein from New Deal strictures to work and profit
without burdensome government regulations. The result was a military juggernaut
that overwhelmed America's enemies.
Politics
went on, but in less partisan fashion. Republicans picked up seats in the House
and Senate in 1942, while Roosevelt won a fourth presidential term in 1944.
Roosevelt
was able to dodge charges of rank partisanship during the war by appointing
Republicans to key positions in his administration. Republican Henry Stimson
became secretary of war. Former Republican vice presidential candidate Frank
Knox was the all-important secretary of the Navy. Roosevelt stocked the War
Production Board with Republican capitalists.
The
media turned from either propagandizing the success of the New Deal or hyping
its failures to warning Americans of the looming existential threat that would
soon make their differences irrelevant.
Most
importantly, Americans lost their fears.
From
1929 to 1938, the U.S. economy was in ruins. FDR's New Deal could not restore
economic growth or consumer confidence. As late as 1938, economic growth had
sunk to negative 3.3 percent. Unemployment soared to an unsustainable 19
percent.
Only
the threat of war terrified Americans into taking a gamble -- to work
feverishly and to ramp up industry.
By
the end 1941, the early rearmament effort had spiked GDP growth to 17.7
percent.
Unemployment had fallen to about 10 percent and would soon fall to
about 2 percent.
Americans
began losing their dread that they could do nothing against a decade-long depression.
The less they feared the Axis powers, the more they restarted the economy and
began to produce a plethora of goods and services.
After
Pearl Harbor, Americans did not stay neutral, wait for government assistance or
expect other nations to protect them.
Does
World War II offer any lessons regarding our wrecked economy and staggering
unemployment from the lockdown reaction to the coronavirus?
Perhaps.
Government cannot restore prosperity. Only entrepreneurs and risk-takers can.
Americans must master their fears of the virus and dare to go back to work.
Otherwise,
locked-down states will continue to borrow to pay out public assistance without
creating wealth from labor, production and investment. Bankrupt states will beg
the federal government to print money that it doesn't have for bailouts to pay
those who are not working and not creating collective wealth.
The
media must stick to reporting on the virus and the ailing economy. Their often
petty obsessions with destroying President Trump are long past monotonous.
Trump
himself must keep working with any Democratic governors who realize they must
put their states back to work in order to have the money to pay for the fight
against the virus.
Interest
rates are low. Gas is as cheap as it's been in years. Inflation remains
moribund. People are tired of being housebound. They want to get back to work
to make and spend money.
All
that is missing is confidence -- or rather, the conviction that the coronavirus
is no more dangerous than were the Axis powers and can be beaten far more
quickly if we show the sort of will our grandparents had.
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