Obama’s History Lesson / Future generations will laugh at us for taking him seriously (NATIONAL REVIEW) By Mark Steyn 03/17/12)
Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/293728/obama-s-history-lesson-mark-steyn
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Our lesson for today comes from George and Ira Gershwin:
They all laughed at Christopher Columbus
When he said the world was round
They all laughed when Edison recorded sound
They all laughed at Wilbur and his brother
When they said that man could fly
They told Marconi wireless was a phony . . .
Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers sang it in the film Shall We Dance?
(1937). Seventy-five years on, the president revived it to tap dance
around his rising gas prices and falling approval numbers. Delivering
his big speech on energy at Prince George’s Community College, he
insisted the American economy will be going gangbusters again just as
soon as we start running it on algae and windmills. He noted that, as
with Wilbur and his brother, there were those inclined to titter:
Let me tell you something. If some of these folks were around when
Columbus set sail — [Laughter] — they must have been founding members
of the Flat Earth Society. [Laughter.] They would not have believed
that the world was round. [Applause.] We’ve heard these folks in the
past. They probably would have agreed with one of the pioneers of the
radio who said, “Television won’t last. It’s a flash in the pan.”
[Laughter.] One of Henry Ford’s advisers was quoted as saying, “The
horse is here to stay but the automobile is only a fad.” [Laughter.]
The crowd loved it. But President Algy Solyndra wasn’t done:
There always have been folks who are the naysayers and don’t believe
in the future, and don’t believe in trying to do things differently.
One of my predecessors, Rutherford B. Hayes, reportedly said about
the telephone, “It’s a great invention, but who would ever want to
use one?” [Laughter.] That’s why he’s not on Mount Rushmore —
[laughter and applause] — because he’s looking backwards. He’s not
looking forwards. [Applause.] He’s explaining why we can’t do
something, instead of why we can do something.
It fell to Nan Card of the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center in
Ohio to inform the website Talking Points Memo that the quotation was
apocryphal. Hayes had the first telephone in the White House, and the
first typewriter, and Edison visited him to demonstrate the
phonograph.
But obviously Rutherford B. Hayes isn’t as “forward-looking” as a
21st-century president who believes in Jimmy Carter malaise, 1970s
Eurostatist industrial policy, 1940s British health-care reforms,
1930s New Deal–sized entitlements premised on mid-20th-century birth
rates and life expectancy, and all paid for by a budget with more
zeroes than anybody’s seen since the Weimar Republic. If that’s not a
shoo-in for Mount Rushmore, I don’t know what is.
I was interested in the rest of Obama’s yukfest of history’s biggest
idiots. Considering that he is (in the words of historian Michael
Beschloss) “the smartest guy ever to become president,” the entire
passage sounded as if it was plucked straight from one of those “Top
Twenty Useful Quotes for Forward-Looking Inspirational Speakers”
websites. And whaddayaknow? Rutherford B. Hayes, the TV flash in the
pan, the horse is here to stay — they’re all at the Wikiquote page
on “Incorrect Predictions.” Fancy that! You can also find his
selected examples at the web page “Some Really Really Bad Predictions
About the Future” and a bazillion others.
Given that the ol’ Hayes telephone sidesplitter turned out to be a
bust, I wondered about the others. The line about television being
a “flash in the pan” is generally attributed to “Mary Somerville,
pioneer of radio educational broadcasts, 1948.” She was a New Zealand–
born lass who while at Oxford wrote to the newly founded BBC with
some ideas on using radio in schools. By the Seventies, the
educational programming she had invented and developed was used in 90
percent of U.K. schools, and across the British Commonwealth from the
Caribbean to Africa to the Pacific. She apparently used the flash-in-
the-pan line in a private conversation recounted some years after her
death by her fellow BBC executive, Grace Wyndham Goldie, a lady I
knew very slightly. It was in the context of why she was pessimistic
about early attempts at educational television. Mary Somerville would
not have been surprised by American Idol or Desperate Housewives, but
she thought TV’s possibilities for scholarly study were limited. If
you remember Leonard Bernstein giving live illustrated music lectures
on Beethoven on CBS in the Fifties, and you’ve lived long enough to
see “quality public television” on PBS dwindle down to dreary boomer
nostalgia, lousy Brit sitcoms, Laurence Welk reruns, and therapeutic
infomercials, you might be inclined to agree that as an educational
tool TV certainly proved “a flash in the pan.” And that’s before your
grandkid gets home from school and complains he’s had to sit through
Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth again.
What was Obama’s other thigh slapper? Oh, yes. “The horse is here to
stay but the automobile is only a fad.” The line is generally
attributed to “the president of the Michigan Savings Bank” in 1903.
That would be George Peck, born in 1834 on a hardscrabble farm in
Connecticut. Due to a boyhood accident, he was unable to use one arm
and so was no good for agricultural labor. So at the age of 16 he
started as the lowest paid clerk in a Utica dry-goods store. From
this unpromising start, Peck built one of the largest dry-goods
businesses in Michigan. Was he, as the president said, one of those
men “who don’t believe in the future”? Not at all. He was president
of the Edison Illuminating Company, named for the guy who invented
that light bulb the United States government has banned. Henry Ford
was Peck’s chief engineer. Peck set his son and Ford up in a shop on
Park Place in Detroit to work on their prototype horseless carriages.
After Ford departed, the first porcelain spark plug was baked in
Peck’s shop.
Christopher Columbus? Once upon a time, your average well-informed
high-schooler, never mind the smartest president in history,
understood that Columbus was laughed at not because everyone believed
the world was round: Educated Europeans of his day accepted that the
earth was spherical and had done since Aristotle’s time. They laughed
because they thought he was taking the long way round to the East
Indies. Which he was.
So let’s see. The president sneers at the ignorance of 15th-century
Spaniards, when in fact he is the one entirely ignorant of them. A
man who has enjoyed a million dollars of elite education yet has
never created a dime of wealth in his life sneers at a crippled farm
boy with an eighth-grade schooling who establishes a successful
business and introduces electrical distribution across Michigan all
the way up to Sault Ste. Marie. A man who sneers at one of the
pioneering women in broadcasting, a lady who brought the voices of T.
S. Eliot, G. K. Chesterton, and others into the farthest-flung
classrooms and would surely have rejected Obama’s own dismal speech
as being too obviously reliant on “Half-a-Dozen Surefire Cheap Cracks
for Lazy Public Speakers.” A man whose own budget officials predict
the collapse of the entire U.S. economy by 2027 sneers at a solvent
predecessor for being insufficiently “forward-looking.”
A great nation needs successful self-made businessmen like George
Peck, and purveyors of scholarly excellence like Mary Somerville.
It’s not clear why it needs a smug over-credentialed President
Solyndra to recycle Crowd-Pleasing for Dummies as a keynote address.
They all laughed at Christopher Columbus, they all laughed at
Edison . . . How does that song continue? “They laughed at me . . . ”
At Prince George’s Community College they didn’t. But history will,
and they will laugh at us for ever taking him seriously.
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