David Sirota is a journalist fighting an imaginary war of “the left vs. the right” in understanding the Great Depression. In his imaginary war construct consisting of only two forces in the world, the left and the right, David Sirota succumbs to a force of nature called bias that has lead him to develop a strange strain of anti-intellectualism. David Sirota’s strain of anti-intellectualism shows “hostility towards intellectuals and intellectual pursuits that have arrived at conclusions that counter leftist/progressive understanding of the Great Depression”. This is what happens when an individual like David Sirota creates a strawman scenario to do battle in, such as his imaginary “left vs. right” war, so as to relieve oneself of the necessity to participate in reality. Well, times are tough these days for some, so I guess some will always look for an escape from reality.
David Sirota says of his recent appearance on FOX News:
Fox News is starting its campaign to stop Obama’s big spending plan by stating – as assumed fact – that “historians pretty much agree” that Franklin Roosevelt prolonged the Great Depression, and that therefore, Obama shouldn’t try another New Deal.
[...]If the right wants to try to stop a serious economic recovery package and financial regulations by trying to vilify one of the most popular presidents and popular policy programs in American history, then I’ll say what George Bush once said: Bring it on.
Then Sirota quotes Daniel Gross of the New York Times to help beat down the imaginary forces of the right:
The argument that the New Deal’s efforts “perhaps had prolonged, the Depression,” is a canard. One would be very hard-pressed to find a serious professional historian–I mean a serious historian, not a think-tank wanker, not an economist, not a journalist–who believes that the New Deal prolonged the Depression. (emphasis added)
David Sirota continues:
[...]these are not “normal people” – those making these arguments are right-wing automatons whose claim that we shouldn’t look at actual data, we should simply accept the truth of their claims because they insist “it’s in the books!” or they’ve supposedly seen “all kinds of studies and academic work” that proves their hysteria true.
Well, Madison WI individuals, here are those professional historians that Sirota and Gross say don’t exist. This list was provided here by David T. Beito, professor of history at the University of Alabama. They are professors with doctorates in history from top-ranked universities that according to Beito are “serious professional historians who would probably argue (and argue strongly) that the New Deal prolonged the Depression.”
- David T. Beito of University of Alabama
- Jonathan Bean of Southern Illinois University
- Brad Birzer of Hillsdale College
- Brad Thompson of Clemson College
- Jeffrey Hummel at San Jose State University
- Larry Schweikart of Dayton State University
- Michael Allen of the University of Washington of Tacoma
- Ralph Raico of Buffalo State College
- Burton Folsom of Hillsdale College
- David Mayer of Capital State University in Columbus
- John Moser of Ashland University in Ohio
- Paul Moreno of Hillsdale
And as regards an understanding of the Great Depression, there is no war of the “the left vs. the right“. David Sirota’s use of a bullshit left-right paradigm is a resort to the False Dilemma fallacy. I am an individual that is neither a Republican nor from the right (nor the left) but believes after much research that FDR’s New Deal prolonged the Depression. Sirota is saying that anyone who believes as I do is from the right and are just taking the right’s side in his fantasy “left vs. right” war. This is false. David Sirota is the poster child of Great Depression anti-intellectualism and promoter of a false dilemma between the “the left or the right” in understanding the Great Depression.
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Tags: amity shlaes, anti-intellectualism, brad birzer, brad delong, brad thompson, burton folsom, daniel gross, david mayer, david sirota, david t. beito, eric rauchway, false dilemma fallacy, fdr, fox news, great depression, jeffrey hummel, john moser, jonathan bean, larry schweikart, michael allen, monica crowley, new deal, new york times, paul krugman, paul moreno, ralph raico, republican, the left, the right