Damon W. Root | October 13, 2008
In
Saturday's Wall Street Journal, Terry Teachout reviewed
the intriguing new CD Debate '08: Taft and Bryan Campaign on
the Edison Phonograph, a collection of 22 speeches recorded in
1908 by presidential candidates William Howard Taft and William
Jennings Bryan. As Teachout notes,
Bryan and Taft were the first political candidates to make commercially recorded campaign speeches on their own behalf, and the records they made were frequently played in alternation at public meetings in order to create the illusion of an actual debate. One enterprising nickelodeon operator in New York City even set up wax dummies of the candidates standing behind a pair of flag-draped podiums that flanked the door to his store.
There's also this bit of timeliness:
Most of what they have to say is now of purely academic interest, though once in a while their comments make you sit up and take notice. It's startling, for instance, to hear Taft, who at the time was Theodore Roosevelt's secretary of war, state unapologetically that "Christianity and the spread of Christianity are the only basis for hope of modern civilization in the growth of popular self-government," or to listen to Bryan, the Great Commoner, castigate the evils of American imperialism: "Instead of profit it has brought loss. Instead of strength it has brought weakness. Instead of glory it has brought humiliation. It has more than doubled our standing army, and there is talk of further increase."
Read the rest here, complete with audio clips from both candidates.
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That's pretty interesting that Taft said that considering he was
not a Christian.
"I do not believe in the divinity of Christ, and there are many
other of the postulates of the orthodox creed to which I cannot
subscribe."
I believe he turned down the Presidency of Yale, which was
religiously affiliated at the time, partially because of his
belifs.
That's pretty interesting that Taft said that considering he was not a Christian.
In other words, he was sucking up to his audience. Imagine
that.
To be fair to William Howard Taft, he was a
Unitarian at a time when Unitarians claimed to be Christian. By
1908, the Unitarians had not yet become explicitly post-Christian
(and hadn't yet merged with the post-Christian
Universalists).
In its early phases, the Unitarians claimed to be the true version
of Christianity. They acknowledged the existence of God, and even
allowed as how Jesus Christ had been sent on a special mission from
God.
According to his own lights, Taft thought there was no
contradiction between being a Christian and denying the divinity of
Christ.
Isn't it interesting that H&R posters have better insight into
the *true* implications of Christianity than did Taft?
"Christianity and the spread of Christianity are the only
basis for hope of modern civilization in the growth of popular
self-government,"
That's pretty interesting that Taft said that considering he was
not a Christian.
In other words, he was sucking up to his audience. Imagine
that.
I am not a Christian but one would have to be blind to not see how
many Christian nations are Liberal Democracies and how many
non-christian states are not liberal democracies.
The only good example of a functioning liberal democracy that is
not christian would be japan....and they were nuked into submission
and occupied by a christian liberal democracy and forced at gun
point to become a liberal democracy.
Libertarians can bash Christians all day long but to not
acknowledge the play ground Christians have given us to play in one
would have to be intentionally deluding oneself.
Russia and Eastern Europe were Christian, and have strong authoritarian tendencies, Joshua. Particularly Russia. I don't think Christianity is the link there.
I am not a Christian but one would have to be blind to not
see how many Christian nations are Liberal Democracies and how many
non-christian states are not liberal democracies.
Liberal democracies didn't become that way until the church got the
hell out of the government.
India, too. You know, the world's largest. It's Hindu with a
large Muslim minority.
Seriously, this reminds me of the B.S. argument from not too long
ago that Roman Catholic nations were automatically authoritarian
ones.
You don't hear much about that theory lately, do you?
Can't listen to the cylinder at the moment, but fwiw I was told
that Williams Jennings Bryan was found upon autopsy to have lacked
bass vocal chords, which made his famous oratorical delivery so
penetrating.
(Julius Caesar emailed me that, db.)
I think joshua corning is right about the historical connection to Christianity. All of the counter examples cited are post WWII and many had direct involvement from majority Christian nations. This does not mean Christian nations must be democratic, so Russia or fascist Spain are not counter examples. I think there is room to argue that the secular space tolerated within certain Christian countries that was decisive to the development of liberal democracies.
The way corning phrased it it's a weak argument, but liberal democracy definitely emerged from Christian thought. It took centuries, but the Judeo-Christian component of Western culture (and not the Greco-Roman) introduced the idea of universal rights and a social contract into our civilization. It also contributed a lot to our understanding of individuality.
India, too.
And just where did Gandhi learn all his liberal democratic
[Western] values? I do say ol' chap, it wasn't in the Punjab, was
it?
I should perhaps say "universal citizenship" rather than "universal rights" to be more precise.
One positive thing Christianity did was eliminate the worship of the leader of the state as a god. But any monotheism would have done that.
but the Judeo-Christian component of Western culture (and
not the Greco-Roman)
Christianity IS Greco-Judaic; the notion of 'citizenship' is pretty
much Roman. Mash it all up (and spice it with the Reformation and
the Englightenment) and there you are.
It isn't that the Church created liberal democratic govt, but that
the overall culture, of which Christianity was a part, did.
"I am not a Christian but one would have to be blind to not see
how many Christian nations are Liberal Democracies and how many
non-christian states are not liberal democracies."
I agree, and there is not a single example of a Christian nation
that is not a democracy.
Wow, quite a difference to 2008, where there have been mass
debates.
Sorry, I had to do it.
"Christianity IS Greco-Judaic; the notion of 'citizenship' is
pretty much Roman. Mash it all up (and spice it with the
Reformation and the Enlightenment) and there you are."
The important part of this mash up is the Enlightenment. Before the
Enlightenment Christianity was almost as brutal as the Taliban. You
could be burned at the stake for being a Which or even having a
variant interpretation of the Bible. If I spoke out against
Christianity in Europe before the enlightenment I would not live
long. To the degree that Christianity has spread freedom it is not
because of Christianity qua Christianity but because the memes of
freedom have (thankfully) been linked with Christianity for so very
long.
"You could be burned at the stake for being a Which"
They burned my grammar at the steak too, I caught that, we cross-posted. This is one disadvantage to not being able to go back and edit.
one disadvantage to not being able to go back and
edit
You can say that again.
Anyway, what stake?
I think joshua corning is right about the historical
connection to Christianity. All of the counter examples cited are
post WWII and many had direct involvement from majority Christian
nations.
That's because democracy started in the Christian West, so it was
spread by the originators. Though looking at the past few decades,
free markets have done a much better job spreading democracy than
Christianity.
"You could be burned at the stake for being a Which"
Dr. Seuss, Grand Inquisitor.
I think there is room to argue that the secular space
tolerated within certain Christian countries that was decisive to
the development of liberal democracies.
Although secular freedom was a largely unintended consequence of
various religious folks working to put an end to official state
religions. Perhaps with those religious parties manipulated a bit
by more or less in-the-closet non-believers.
Pope Benedict XVI | October 13, 2008, 6:59pm | #
"I am not a Christian but one would have to be blind to not see how many Christian nations are Liberal Democracies and how many non-christian states are not liberal democracies."
I agree, and there is not a single example of a Christian nation that is not a democracy.
The popes of Rome are just as democratically elected as Bush or
Mugabe. It's just that the franchise is rather drastically limited
in that particular nation.
"The popes of Rome are just as democratically elected as Bush or
Mugabe. It's just that the franchise is rather drastically limited
in that particular nation."
I was also democratically elected. It's just that the franchise is
rather drastically limited in my particular nation.
Bryan was a famous orator, and doesn't come across too badly on
these recordings. Taft has a pleasant speaking voice, and might
have made a good radio newscaster. I was reminded a bit of Edward
R. Murrow.
I agree with Bryan; we should most definitely give the Philippines
independence. And why are we trying to push Christianity onto a
Catholic country? (Except for the Muslims in the south, that
is.)
@Syd:
They probably meant Protestantism. Anti-catholic sentiment ran high
back then.
matt,
Back then, Catholics (at least Irish Catholics) were in general
assumed to be Democrats. Not all of them, of course, but the
Republicans lost New York (and hence the Presidency) in 1884 when
an incautious Protestant minister, trying to boost the Republicans,
called the Democrats the party of "Rum, Romanism and
Rebellion."
The Republicans tended to attract the middle-class Protestant
do-gooders, treating them with a bit more respect that the
contemporary Republican party treats its evangelical Protestant
"base."
"The Republicans tended to attract the middle-class Protestant
do-gooders, treating them with a bit more respect that the
contemporary Republican party treats its evangelical Protestant
"base.""
One of the few good things I can say about McCain is that he called
the Salafi Christian wacos "agents of intolerance", which they
are.
Let's see... The "cross of gold" speech, the Scopes trial...
What other examples are there of Bryan being dead wrong?
-jcr
"the Salafi Christian wacos"
Waco? I thought it was the feds who were the agents of intolerance
in that confrontation.
One of the few good things I can say about McCain is that he called the Salafi Christian wacos "agents of intolerance", which they are.
That was in double ought. In ought eight they're his base.
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