Wednesday, December 28, 2022

"The Revolutionary Samuel Adams," Stacy Schiff

 


 

Sydney M. Williams

 

Burrowing into Books

“The Revolutionary Samuel Adams,” Stacy Schiff

December 28, 2022

 

“He set more store in ideas than institutions; he

encouraged an allegiance to principles over individuals.”

                                                                                                                Stacy Schiff (1961-)

                                                                                                                The Revolutionary Samuel Adams, 2022

 

Like a nova, Samuel Adams rose from obscurity, shone brightly in late colonial Boston, and then faded as the nation he helped create took form. Yet, as much as anyone, he was responsible for the revolution that begat the United States. In the early 1770s, he was Britain’s public enemy number one. In Ms. Schiff’s words: “From the imperial description, Adams can sound like Marx, Lenin, and Robespierre rolled into one…He distinguished himself as the most wanted man in the colonies…”

 

Yet, he is not well known. I knew he was from Boston and that he was a cousin of John Adams; and, like others, I have drunk the beer that bears his name. But until I read Stacy Schiff’s book, I could not have explained why George III considered Samuel Adams the most dangerous man in colonial America.

 

He was born in 1722 and graduated from Harvard in 1743. His father was a prosperous brewer. As to his young adulthood, Stacy Schiff quotes an earlier chronicler on Adams: “He read theology and abandoned the ministry, read law and abandoned the bar, entered business and lost a thousand pounds.” He was, we are told, “…a well-connected son of the establishment…loitering his way toward his future.”   

 

Neither fame nor prosperity interested Samuel Adams, but freedom did. It is the period from the end of the French and Indian War in 1763 to the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776 that concerns Ms. Schiff – a period that includes the Boston Massacre (March 5, 1770), the Boston Tea Party (December 16, 1773), Paul Revere’s ride (April 18, 1775), and the Battle of Bunker Hill (June 17, 1775). It was the cost of the French and Indian War, a war fought successfully by the British and their native American allies against France and their native American allies. The taxes imposed on colonists to pay for that war prompted resentment and gave rise to Samuel Adams’ fame. As Ms. Schiff tells us, most colonists considered themselves British subjects with the rights of free men. Parliament, though, imposed economic control. The colonies produced raw materials, but manufacturing was largely done in Britain; finished goods were then shipped back with duties imposed. 

 

It was as a polemicist that Samuel Adams found his calling. He was a master of fomenting dissent through the written word, inspiring his fellow colonists to rise up against royal governors and Parliament. He railed against the Sugar Act of 1764 and the Stamp Act of 1765. Ms. Schiff writes: “He seemed to exert an uncanny influence on men’s minds.” As well, Adams understood the need to involve the other colonies in any dispute Massachusetts might have: “No one understood better than Adams that for Massachusetts to take up arms without the support of her sister colonies was folly.”

 

In 327 pages, Stacy Schiff sets the stage and provides a portrait of this little-known revolutionary. Samuel Adams believed that men fight more ardently for liberty than anything else – something we are seeing now in Ukraine. After the surrender of Cornwallis in October 1781, Thomas Jefferson wrote to Adams: “Your principles have been tested in the crucible of time and have come out pure.”

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Monday, December 19, 2022

"Favorite Christmas Movies"

 


Sydney M. Williams

 

More Essays from Essex

“Favorite Christmas Movies”

December 19, 2022

 

“Oh, Christmas isn’t just a day; it’s a frame of mind.”

                                                                                                                Edmund Gwenn (1877-1959), as Kris Kringle

                                                                                                                Miracle on 34th Street, 1947

 

Among the many delights of the season are watching Christmas movies. Of the hundreds produced, we all have favorites. You have yours; I have mine. One could spend the entire fourth quarter of the year watching a different movie every night, and still not see the entire collection. 

 

Unsurprisingly, my favorites are older ones, when times were simpler, humor was subtler, sentimentality was ubiquitous, and when we believed in the miracle of Christmas. My favorite is the 1946 It’s a Wonderful Life, starring Jimmy Stewart as George Baily, Donna Reed as Mary Hatch Bailey, Lionel Barrymore as Mr. Potter, and with Henry Travers as the angel Clarence. World War II was over, and some American families were reunited for the first time in five years. The message: every individual affects the lives of thousands of people – family, friends, neighbors, business associates, community members, even strangers. George Bailey has the rare good fortune to have Clarence (AS 2 – angel, second class) let him view his family, friends, and town, as if he had never been born. It is a Christmas message that transcends race, religion, and gender; as we all, for good or for bad, affect everyone we encounter – so be good, for goodness sake!  

 

Among other favorites: Miracle on 34th Street from 1947, starring Edmund Gwenn as Kris Kringle, eight-year-old Natalie Wood as Susan Walker, and Maureen O’Hara as her mother, Doris. Edmund Gwenn is the most believable Santa Claus I have seen. Here is Kris peaking to skeptics: “If you can’t accept anything on faith, then you’re doomed for a life dominated by doubt.” Another favorite is It Happened on Fifth Avenue, also from1947, starring Victor Moore as the homeless Aloysius T. McKeever; Don DeFore as a fellow homeless man; Charles Ruggles as Mike O’Connor, and his daughter Trudy played by Gale Storm. At dinner one night, in the Fifth Avenue mansion belonging to Mike O’Connor, McKeever addresses the assemblage (with both O’Connor’s present, but using false names): “And I would like to feel that you’re all my friends. For to be without friends is a serious form of poverty.” Christmas in Connecticut from 1945 is a romantic comedy with Barbara Stanwyck, as Elizabeth Lane, a single, New York food writer. She writes of dinners prepared, as though living in a Connecticut farmhouse with her husband and child; Sydney Greenstreet is Lane’s publisher, unaware of the charade she has played; and Dennis Morgan is returning war hero, Jefferson Jones. The cast includes a favorite actor of mine from that era, S.Z. Sakall who plays Lane’s “honorary” uncle, Felix Bassenak. One of his best lines: “Nobody needs a mink coat but the mink.” Like all good comedies, the plot is complicated, reminding the viewer of Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion: “Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.” Untangling this one is hilarious.

 

The Bishop’s Wife, also from 1947, is another favorite. It stars Loretta Young as Julia Brougham, David Niven as Bishop Henry Brougham, and Cary Grant as the angel Dudley; he has been sent to assist the Bishop. In discussing Julia’s concern with getting older, Dudley says: “The only people who grow old were born old to begin with” – a comforting message, as years pass me by. My favorite of the several versions of A Christmas Carol is the 1951 one, starring Alastair Sim as Scrooge. The story tells of the moral awakening of Scrooge. Following his ghost-assisted trips to past, present, and Christmases-yet-to-come, a redeemed Scrooge tells his nephew Fred’s wife, played by Olga Edwardes, “Can you forgive a pig-headed old fool with no eyes to see and no ears to hear all these years?” The Shop Around the Corner was produced in 1940, with Jimmy Stewart as Alfred Kralik and Margaret Sullavan as Klara Novak. The story reminds us not be too quick to judge people. Stewart’s character tells Sullavan’s: “There might be a lot we don’t know about each other. You know, people seldom go to the trouble of scratching the surface to find the inner truth.” The movie was based on a 1937 Hungarian play, and it spawned the delightful 1949 musical, In the Good Old Summertime, with Judy Garland and Van Johnson. There are many other great Christmas movies, like Remember the Night, with Barbara Stanwyck and Fred Mac Murray: and Holiday Affair, with Janet Leigh and Robert Mitchum.

 

I love Christmas musicals. My favorite is Holiday Inn (1942), with Bing Crosby as Jim Hardy, Fred Astaire as Ted Hanover, Marjorie Reynolds as Linda Mason, and Virginia Dale as Lila Dixon. Irving Berlin wrote a dozen songs for the production, including “White Christmas,” which received the 1943 Academy Award for best original song. Two lines capture the on-again, off-again competition between Hardy and Hanover. Ted Hanover: “We like it here with you and Linda.” Jim Hardy: “We love having you. When are you leaving?”  White Christmas, taking its title from Berlin’s song, was released in 1954. It is a comedy with Bing Crosby as Bob Wallace, Danny Kaye as Phil Davis, Rosemary Clooney as Betty Haynes, and Vera-Ellen as her sister Judy. Bing Crosby sings the title song. Danny Kaye does what he does best, utter complicated sentences, making audiences chuckle: “When what’s left of you gets around to what’s left to be gotten, what’s left to be gotten won’t be worth getting, whatever it is you’ve got left.”  Betty and Judy Haynes’ sisters’ act is hilariously copied by Wallace and Davis. In the 1944 musical Meet Me in St. Louis, Judy Garland, as Esther Smith, sings “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” Seven-year-old Margaret O’Brian, as Esther’s youngest sister “Tootie,” received the Juvenile Academy Award in 1945.

 

I have not mentioned newer Christmas movies, some of which I like, especially slapstick comedies: Trading Places from 1983, the 1989 National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, and Home Alone from 1990. I enjoy Polar Express, narrated by Tom Hanks, which came out in 2004, perfect timing for our ten grandchildren.

 

Whether it is the Smith’s decision to stay in St. Louis or Aloysius being invited to come through the front door next winter, Christmas movies have happy endings. No matter how old we get, Christmas is always magical. I hope it always remains that way. Like Jesus’ birth, which we celebrate on the 25th, there will always be unexplainable events. With Kris Kringle on trial, the actor John Payne, in the role of defense attorney Fred Gailey, speaks to the jury: “Faith is believing in things when common sense tells you not to. Don’t you see? It’s not just Kris that is on trial, it’s everything he stands for.”

 

“And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless Us, Every One.”[1] Amen, and may your holidays be merry and blessed, and may the New Year be full of positive surprises.

Monday, December 12, 2022

"Do Ends Justify Means?"

The attached I expect to be my last TOTD of 2022. It is my 34th of the year (along with 12 More Essays from Essex and 11 book reviews). Keeping busy, for a retiree, is like aging for cheese and wine; it brings out the best…or so I hope, at least in my essays.

 

As I grow older, my mind wanders back, unsurprising for an octogenarian, as the past is far larger than the future. However, with ten grandchildren I care deeply about the kind of world they will inherit, not that there is much I can do about it. At heart. I am an optimist, but as a realist as well, I know we will never achieve perfection and that events beyond our control can overwhelm. I sometimes think of those born around 1890 who faced the trenches of World War I and then, twenty years later, sent their sons into the jaws of World War II. What a time to have been born! I think of Gandalf’s advice to Frodo: “All we have to decide is what to do with the time given us.” (J.R.R. Tolkien was born in 1892.)

 

I believe that freedom is the natural state of mankind – free to think, speak, write, and pray as one chooses. But I also believe in community, especially of the family, but also that, individually, we are but one cog in the machinery that comprises our towns, cities, states, and nation – that we should all get along, obedient to our laws, diligent in our work, respectful of our differences, and joyful in our similarities.

 

May the year ahead bring peace to all people.

 

Sydney M. Williams

www.swtotd.blogspot.com

 

Thought of the Day

“Do Ends Justify Means?”

December 12, 2022

 

“The principle that the end justifies the means is in individual ethics regarded as the

denial of all morals. In collectivist ethics it becomes necessarily the supreme rule.”

                                                                                                                                The Road to Serfdom, 1944

                                                                                                                                Friedrich von Hayek (1899-1992)

 

 

In a 1928 dissenting opinion, in Olmstead v. the United States, Justice Louis D. Brandeis wrote: “Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites everyman to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means – to declare that the government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal – would bring terrible retributions.”

 

In 1928, Roy Olmstead was a suspected bootlegger. Without judicial approval, federal agents wiretapped his home. He was convicted based on those wiretaps. In 2016, Donald Trump was a successful real estate investor and entertainer. Politically, he was a novice. He was disruptive to establishment politicians, and to federal bureaucrats whose careers depend upon an ever-expanding government. Following his election, but before his inauguration, Senator Chuck Schumer spoke about Mr. Trump’s taunting the intelligence agencies: “He’s being really dumb…Let me tell you, you take on the intelligence community and they have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.” A truth Mr. Trump was to discover. Those who used unlawful means to marginalize Mr. Trump did so because they felt that the end – the destruction of his political career – justified any means employed. However, as Theodore Roosevelt said in a speech in Chicago on April 10, 1899: “No man is justified in doing evil on the grounds of expediency.” 

 

Over six years have elapsed since Mr. Trump won the Presidency. And we now know that senior executives in the FBI and the Justice Department were culpable in the “Russian collusion” story, as well as four years later being responsible for suppressing the authenticity of what was found on Hunter Biden’s laptop. Ten years ago, Lois Lerner, then IRS Director, Exempt Organizations, singled out conservative organizations. These federal bureaucrats used illicit means to achieve a preferred political end. What they did was despicable. Will they be punished? Probably not, as long as mainstream media sees their role as propagandizers, rather than seekers of truth and disseminators of news.

 

It is true that in times of crises, our government adopted undemocratic means toward what it felt was a noble and necessary end: During the Civil War, Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus, to silence dissenters and rebels. The Sedition Act of 1918 curtailed free speech during World War I. Franklin Roosevelt interned Japanese Americans in camps. Were any of those actions justifiable? I suspect not.

 

One consequence of this illiberal behavior has been a decline in the public’s confidence in government. A Pew Research Center survey reported on June 6, 2022: “Only two-in-ten Americans say they trust the government in Washington to do what is right ‘just about always’ (2%), or ‘most of the time’ (19%). In 1958, three-quarters of the American public trusted government to do what was right, always or most of the time. The decline has been steady, except for a bump during the Reagan years and in the immediate aftermath of 9/11. There are many factors that have led to this decline, including the quality of candidates, political corruption, and an abundance of politicians and bureaucrats interested in using public office as a stepping-stone to private wealth. 

 

Are there times when an end justifies any means? Yes. Henry David Thoreau wrote of civil disobedience – the disruption of custom and law for an honorable cause. Martin Luther King, in advocating for civil rights, violated existing, though unjust, laws. He was assassinated for his beliefs. Anti-war protestors in the late 1960s were jailed, but their efforts helped bring an end to the Vietnam War.  In all cases, individuals were willing to suffer the consequences of doing what they thought was right. Those who fought for freedom in late 1760s and early 1770s Boston used means that were illegal under British rule. A few Germans, with the goal of ending Nazi rule, engaged in activities in the 1930s that were forbidden by the Third Reich. In both cases – the eventual success of the American Revolution and the ultimate defeat of the Nazis – the perpetrators put themselves at personal risk. Had the United States failed in its bid for independence, its leaders would have been hung as traitors. Most of those who tried to sabotage Hitler’s Nazis were tortured and shot. On the other hand, government bureaucrats who worked to derail Mr. Trump’s Presidential campaign (unsuccessively in 2016 and successively in 2020) did not take personal risk. Most operated anonymously. Many of those exposed have left government service and have, for the most part, retired with full pension benefits, paid for by taxpayers.

 

This is not written in support of Donald Trump, whose well-publicized character flaws have magnified since he left office. While I voted for him twice, I could not vote for him now. This is written because of my fear of non-elected bureaucrats, convinced of their superior knowledge, who assume extralegal powers. They are not, as one would expect in a democracy, kept in check by the media. The powers of the state are awesome and must be thwarted. History tells of democracies degrading into autocracies. Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, in an interview with German novelist Georg Klein on December 10, 2004, compared Nazism to Communism, that in both their philosophies “the end justifies the means.” That cannot happen to us.

 

As many have written, from both sides of the political divide, democracy is fragile. The French author Georges Bernanos (1888-1948) is quoted in his posthumous book Why Freedom?: “The first sign of corruption, in a society that is still alive, is that the end justifies the means.” Once shredded, democracy is not easily repaired. The means government uses to accomplish its goals must be forthright; they must reflect respect for the individual and the standards of civil behavior. Regardless of one’s political leanings, I trust the issue of accountability and integrity in government is something about which we all remain vigilant.

 

……………………………………………………………………..

 

In the meantime, I thank you for your patience with my rantings over the past year; I wish for all the happiest of holidays and the healthiest of New Years. 

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Monday, December 5, 2022

"Etymological Curiosities"

 


 

Sydney M. Williams 

 

Thought of the Day

“Etymological Curiosities”

December 5, 2022

 

“Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind.”

                                                                                                                           Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936

                                                                                                                    Speech Royal College of Surgeons, 1923

                                                                                                                    London

                                                                                                                

Each year, lexicographers at Merriam-Webster, Britain-based Collins Dictionary, the Oxford English Dictionary, and others, select a “word of the year,” often a neologism, but not always. Gaslighting[1] (a form of psychological abuse) was the choice at M-W, while Collins chose permacrisis. The former was chosen because of the increase in lookups (up 1,740%), while the latter was selected, as it was applicable to a year that saw the first war in Europe in seventy-seven years, China’s increased aggression, and world-wide inflation. The OED selected three words, including my favorite – more a phrase than a word – goblin mode, which was also cited by Ben Zimmer in a recent op-ed in The Wall Street Journal. It refers to behavior that is “unapologetically lazy, slovenly, greedy, typically in a way that rejects social norms.” It is often assigned to those who spend inordinate amounts of time on social media, as in my grandchild is in goblin mode.

 

I have been thinking of words and phrases – their origins, meanings, and appropriation by political opportunists, often leaving their opponents with the etymological dregs. Over the past few years, we have created a political alphabet soup: CRT, DEI, ESG, and BLM, reminding one of Roosevelt’s “alphabet soup agencies’ from the 1930s. But, unlike FDR’s agencies which actually put people to work, today’s alphabet soups have more in common with Humpty Dumpty: “When I use a word it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more nor less.”

 

Words have assumed new meanings. Yesterday’s environmentalists have become today’s climate warriors. Information to some is misinformation to others. Should it be the state that decides what is accurate and what is not? Is it too much to ask Twitter users to be personally wary of conspiracy theories and to look out for offensive language – offensive to some but not to others? And what, for example, does the European Union means when it tells Twitter that it must apply “content moderation” to the posts it allows?

 

When I read of Larry Fink pontificating as to being socially responsible, I picture a greedy John Bull with a smirk on his face and a halo above his head. And the scam artist Samuel Bankman-Fried, a promoter of progressive fads, bills himself as an effective altruist. Is not an altruist already effective? Certainly, his investors and depositors who lost millions of dollars do not see him as altruistic.

 

The definition of the word liberal has changed. In 1828, Noah Webster defined the word as “of a free heart; free to give or bestow, generous.” The 1995 edition of Webster’s college dictionary defined the word: “favorable to progress or reform…advocating progressive philosophies.” However, the OED defines liberal as an individual “willing to accept or respect behavior or opinions of others…[a} social philosophy that promotes individual rights.” Such broad and varying definitions allow almost anyone to claim to be a liberal. Other words creep into cultural use. Woke comes from African American vernacular English of the 1930s; it became a popular internet meme after the shooting of Michael Brown and is now largely used by whites, signaling, like naughty Little Jack Horner, their virtue. 

 

Consider two of my favorite etymological bêtes noires: progressive and conservative. The former makes us think of the future, the latter of the past. They were the subject of a fascinating op-ed by Professor Hyrum Lewis of Brigham Young University in the November 26 edition of The Wall Street Journal. He wrote: “Republicans have a narrative problem that originates with the idea of ‘conservativism’ itself.” He referred to William Buckley’s observation that a conservative is someone who stands athwart history and yells, stop. Progress, in contrast, is defined as a forward movement toward a better end. Which sounds more appealing?

 

Conservatives want to conserve the good of the past – the Constitution, classical education, etiquette, personal responsibility and accountability, the value of work – but they are as interested in progress as are progressives. The difference is that conservatives emphasize the role played by curious, aspirant, diligent, and talented individuals, while progressives cite the state as the principal impetus for progress. There is truth to both claims. While technological, scientific, and industrial progress has been largely due to the efforts of individuals – Alexander Graham Bell, Wilbur and Orville Wright, Steve Jobs and Elon Musk – the Department of Defense and federally funded programs, like NASA, have also produced consumer products. And while legislated social progress – emancipation, the right of women to vote, the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and 1965 – is a consequence of government, individuals played crucial roles in their adoption. 

 

DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion), the phrase has been hijacked by virtue signalers, to distinguish them from what they claim are culturally offensive conservative bigots But, just because the initials are not tattooed on our arms, is that fair? I know of no true conservative who does not support diversity of opinions, equality of all people before the law, and inclusion of all people in public institutions. Social organizations, fraternities, sororities, private clubs select members based on common preferences, which may be based on gender or race, but may also be based on similar social preferences, regardless of race or gender. Is that so terrible? In a decision reminiscent of Nazi Germany, the Brearley School, an exclusive school for girls in New York City, recently required a signed pledge by teachers and parents that they support the school’s commitment to anti-racism and inclusion, and that they agree “to participate in required anti-racist training and ongoing reflection.” As a private institution, they have a right to act as they wish, but both teachers and parents should be conscious of what is being demanded – a request for blind loyalty. 

 

But is it words or beliefs that separate our two political parties? In broad, general terms, the main difference between Democrats and Republicans is not that one favors progress and the other favors regression. It is the emphasis each puts on the role government plays in our lives. Democrats, in general, favor more government and Republicans, less.  Resistance, for example, was legitimate when exercised by Democrats following the election of Donald Trump in 2016 – remember the pink “pussy hats” of solidarity? – but resistance to the 2020 election was deemed undemocratic.[2] In essence, the difference between the two Parties reminds one of the Chinese saying: Is it better to teach a man to fish, or to give him a fish? Americans do not to march to a single drummer, so ideologies are scattered along a broad spectrum of political thought. Republicans, if they want to become the dominant political power, must do a better job of describing their beliefs. Granted, it is easier to argue what you want government to do than what you would like it not to do. So, Republicans should highlight the individual, stress the importance of education, aspiration, diligence, and effort in ascending the economic ladder, a ladder to whom all should have access, a ladder whose first rung is education, where emphasis, above all else, should be on the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic. “Words,” as Kipling told the College of Surgeons ninety-nine years ago, are “the most powerful drug used by mankind."

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