A Jacksonian Party

Here is something I wrote in 2004, a very long time ago. I am less sanguine now than once about our ability to reform terror states -- almost successful in Iraq, but not; never close to successful in Afghanistan. Otherwise, I still think the ideas are basically sound.
If it comes to that, I will start a new party myself--I think we will call ourselves the Jacksonian Party. I mean, of course, James Jackson, and therefore a Jeffersonian party; but people who like Andrew Jackson will be welcome too. It's a big tent for American Classical Liberals, and ought to be able to pull from Republicans as well as Democrats. It will be founded on the real, and honorable, left of American culture: Jefferson's vision, which James Jackson shared, and for which he fought so valiantly.
It is that left which does not merely idolize the poor, but upholds them and finds ways to make them powerful. The support of unions is one way. Another is by supporting their right to bear arms, so that they do not rely upon a distant and disinterested state for their personal security or that of their families. Even in the city, the state is distant when the bandit is already in your home. Furthermore, and more importantly, an armed citizen is not merely more independent of the state. He is personally capable of defending the state, the lawful order, and the common peace, wherever he goes. Whether it is felons or terrorists who threaten that order and that peace, he is ready. The disarmed citizen is a ward of the state. The Armed citizen is its guardian. The state is his to uphold.

Another matter: we need a renewed focus on the rights and duties of the citizen, so that the poor will understand the power they already have by statute, but have forgotten how to wield. Consider jury nullification. Special interests may write the laws, but we have every right to make exceptions. The powerful and the rich do not sit in judgement over us: we judge ourselves.

Another matter: the defense and support of small businesses, who are the "Yeoman Farmers" of the city. No man is freer than he who employs himself, whether it is the owner of his own land, or the owner of his own shop. If we are going to fiddle with tax policy, let's fiddle with it in a way that encourages and supports small businesses and farmers.

Another matter: education culture. Private-sector unions are a defense for the poor, but public-sector unions are the enemy of everyone outside themselves. Private-sector unions encourage profit sharing, but there is no profit in the public sector--there is only tax money, which must be drawn from the poor as from the rich, and which is drawn at the point of a gun. Restraining public spending is a civil rights issue. The less money you must send to the government, the more you can use to build your own personal capital, and pull yourself up from poverty.

On the same topic, educators should themselves be educated. This should be a real education on the topic they intend to teach, not an education in "educational theory." No one needs that. By the time they are prepared to teach, they have had the most practical education in educating--they have attended twelve years of public school, four years of college, and have at some point had the practical apprenticeship of being an teacher's aide and a student teacher. They have seen education done for more than a decade, have a number of working models in mind, and have practiced the art themselves. What they need is to know their subject matter. We need historians teaching History, and mathematicians teaching math. A large majority of the public is being educated by people whose knowledge of a given subject is no greater than the textbooks they have been assigned. They can't enlarge upon the text, and they can't tell the students when the text goes wrong.

In foreign policy: we should recognize that international terrorist organizations actually are subject to an existing international law: the law of the sea. Precisely like the roving bands of brigands and pirates of the 1600s and 1700s, they are organized against civilization, travel through multiple jurisdictions and through lawless areas alike. They are not combatants of any state, and are protected therefore by neither the Geneva Conventions nor the rules of war. Like pirates, they are subject to summary execution by the officers of any nation that comes into control of them; or by interrogation and some more merciful response, if we prefer and at our discretion. This brutality on the part of civilized men is justified for the exact reason it was justified of old: the threat these bands pose to the transportation infrastructure is a dagger at the heart of civilization. We cannot maintain our cities, our populations, our ability to combat disease or famine, or our relative freedom from total war over resources, without the massive but fragile transportation capacity we have developed.

This is not idle or of small importance. A small increase in transport costs kills at the margins--for example, aid to Africa is reduced as it is more expensive to transport, but resources are fixed. A large increase threatens civilization itself. Our cities do not contain enough food to feed the populace for more than about three days. That is no problem; more food is coming. But if the ability to transport that food is severely harmed--starvation, and in many regions of the world, disease. A serious disruption could unleash a resource war by nations that see mass starvation if they don't capture food, oil, and other needful things. Such a disruption is possible if these terror groups continue their infiltration of the West, and come into possession of WMD.

For that reason, the reform of terror-sponsor states is paramount. So is the reform of failed states that are not necessarily terror-sponsors, but where terrorists are able to travel freely due to bribes of local officials or through outright lawlessness. So long as we can do so while maintaining an all-volunteer force, the United States ought to feel free to act on these places one by one. This has the practical matter, for a Jacksonian party, of bringing liberty and strength to the poor and unfree abroad exactly as we wish to do at home.

There are other matters, but this is enough for now.

After another nearly two decades of public education, it may be that there are no longer enough Americans who have any idea what the old values were -- let alone who value them. Yet that does not make those values wrong. It simply reinforces what we already know, i.e., our education systems have failed this country comprehensively.

7 comments:

Tom said...

There are a number of James Jacksons in early American history. Which one would this be? And why him, particularly?

Grim said...

From 2003:

https://grimbeorn.blogspot.com/2003/10/james-jacksonit-is-again-time-to.html

Tom said...

So this fellow at Wikipedia, then.

I like the overall concept. I'll have to think about it a bit.

Anonymous said...

We are not the policeman of the world.
We should be freinds of all.
WAR should be off of the menu.
The States need to totally neuter the Federal Government
MANY Arrogant self serving jerks in gov't should be fired, and prosecuted for crimes, be convicted and lose their big FAT pensions as an example to rest
There should be no public unions as they are monopolies and add expense.
Schools should be local...meaning break up county schools and make them no bigger than small towns. Make that power very local.


- Greg

and Let Trumpism do the rest......(next part stolen from Dad29)

.......Bring jobs and industries back to America. End our reliance on Communist China and build American supply chains instead of “global supply chains.” Buy American and hire American....

Forget free-trade dogma—defend American workers and businesses against the predations of a global corporate oligarchy. Do what’s good for American citizens rather than what’s good for “the global economy.”

America’s voters believe in countries and national sovereignty, not in submission to the alphabet soup of transnational authorities such as the WTO, WHO, G20, OECD, and so on.

They chose to restrict immigration to end the downward pressure on American wages.

They believe in rule by elected representatives rather than by a permanent state bureaucracy and judges accountable to no one.

They chose to end the military adventurism of endless wars that drains our blood and treasure and destroys tradition and cultures here and abroad. Make our allies pay their fair share for their defense. They recognized “America’s leadership role in the world” is fancy talk for making America the “policeman of the world,” and said, “No thanks.”

They know we must rebuild America rather than embark on nation-building projects around the world.

They feel in their gut we must break up the monopolies that control our media, technology, and economy and have an undue influence over our society and government.

They rejected the neo-Marxist ideology of race and gender identity and stood up for American national identity, Western civilization, Judeo-Christian culture, and traditional values of God, personal responsibility, and inalienable rights such as freedom of speech granted by our Creator, not the government....

Anonymous said...

the other thing I listened to today that made a lot of sense was the economic outlook give by Peter Navarro at Steve Bannon's War Room.

We are in for a huge correction with Stagflation and a recession, and the Federal Employees absolutly must feel this pain as much as the Amercan people will when it comes as they are as dumb as a box of rocks.

The Federal Government does not work for the American People any more and many of us feel it can not continue.

Listen to him, he gets it.

Greg

https://rumble.com/viwwpp-2021-is-going-to-be-the-year-of-the-big-short.html

Joel Leggett said...

I like the idea. Where do I sign up?

Tom said...

A few first thoughts on form:

I wouldn't name it after a person. It is too easy today for critics to attack the party by attacking the historical figure and ignoring what the party today stands for. Yes, that's ad hominem, but ad hominem has become quite normal, is effective, and will remain effective for the foreseeable future. It would be better to have a name that pushes people to deal with what the party stands for.

I would go further and have a small pantheon of inspirational people for the party. There's no reason James Jackson can't be the main inspiration, but who else could join him? You would want some variety so people could find someone to identify with. Plus, no one is perfect, but with a group of inspiring people they can make up for each other's flaws.

First thoughts on content:

As I understand it, the platform laid out would be:

1. Empower the poor
- Pro union in the private sector
- Against public sector unions
- Pro right to bear arms
- Focus on the rights and duties of citizens
- Pro small business, whether rural, urban, sub-urban as a way of supporting a yeoman farmer / yeoman shopkeeper (to coin a phrase, I think) ideal; pro self-employment

2. Education reform: Teachers should be proficient in their subject area, meaning they should get a degree in it, not in education.

3. Foreign policy: The US (and other nations) has the right to intervene in lawless areas to maintain essential transportation routes for commerce.

Is that about right?

You mention that there are other matters, and I can imagine some of them, I think, having read this blog for some time now. I'd like to bring some of those out now.

A. Return to federalism
- This will require constitutional amendments, so basically endorsing the Convention of States project is what I see as a good goal here.
- The point is to limit the federal government to the enumerated powers in the Constitution.
- Additionally, I would add stopping the federal government from bribing states to do what the feds want. A lot of bad education policy is enacted in the states because the feds offer grants to the states for doing it.

B. Sound fiscal policy - some short-term debt may be necessary from time to time, but there should be limits on how much, for what purposes, and how long.

Finally, some questions -- What about ...:

i. immigration

ii. big tech's ability to control/censor speech

That's my brain's first pass through the topic. I'm interested to see where the discussion goes.