Editor's note: This is Part II in a series. Part I can be found here.
"Often wrong but never in doubt" is a phrase that summarizes much of  what was done by Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, the  two giants of the Progressive era, a century ago.
Their legacy is very much alive today, both in their mindset --  including government picking winners and losers in the economy and  interventionism in foreign countries -- as well as specific institutions  created during the Progressive era, such as the income tax and the  Federal Reserve System.
Like so many Progressives today, Theodore Roosevelt felt no need to  study economics before intervening in the economy. He said of "economic  issues" that "I am not deeply interested in them, my problems are moral  problems." For example, he found it "unfair" that railroads charged  different rates to different shippers, reaching the moral conclusion  that these rates were discriminatory and should be forbidden "in every  shape and form."
It never seemed to occur to TR that there could be valid economic  reasons for the railroads to charge the Standard Oil Company lower rates  for shipping their oil. At a time when others shipped their oil in  barrels, Standard Oil shipped theirs in tank cars -- which required a  lot less work by the railroads than loading and unloading the same  amount of oil in barrels.
Theodore Roosevelt was also morally offended by the fact that Standard  Oil created "enormous fortunes" for its owners "at the expense of  business rivals." How a business can offer consumers lower prices  without taking customers away from businesses that charge higher prices  is a mystery still unsolved to the present day, when the very same  arguments are used against Wal-Mart.
The same preoccupation with being "fair" to high-cost producers who  were losing customers to low-cost producers has turned anti-trust law on  its head, for generations after the Progressive era. Although  anti-trust laws and policies have been rationalized as ways of keeping  monopolies from raising prices to consumers, the actual thrust of  anti-trust activity has more often been against businesses that charged  lower prices than their competitors.
Theodore Roosevelt's anti-trust attacks on low-price businesses in his  time were echoed in later "fair trade" laws, and in attacks against  "unfair" competition by the Federal Trade Commission, another agency  spawned in the Progressive era.
Woodrow Wilson's Progressivism was very much in the same mindset.  Government intervention in the economy was justified on grounds that  "society is the senior partner in all business."
The rhetorical transformation of government into "society" is a verbal  sleight-of-hand trick that endures to this day. So is the notion that  money earned in the form of profits requires politicians' benediction to  be legitimate, while money earned under other names apparently does  not.
Thus Woodrow Wilson declared: "If private profits are to be  legitimized, private fortunes made honorable, these great forces which  play upon the modern field must, both individually and collectively, be  accommodated to a common purpose."
And just who will decide what this common purpose is and how it is to  be achieved? "Politics," according to Wilson, "has to deal with and  harmonize" these various forces.
In other words, the government -- politicians, bureaucrats and judges  -- are to intervene, second-guess and pick winners and losers, in a  complex economic process of which they are often uninformed, if not  misinformed, and a process in which they pay no price for being wrong,  regardless of how high a price will be paid by the economy.
If this headstrong, busybody approach seems familiar because it is  similar to what is happening today, that is because it is based on  fundamentally the same vision, the same presumptions of superior wisdom,  and the same kind of lofty rhetoric we hear today about "fairness."  Wilson even used the phrase "social justice."
Woodrow Wilson also won a Nobel Prize for peace, like the current  president -- and it was just as undeserved. Wilson's "war to end wars"  in fact set the stage for an even bigger, bloodier and more devastating  Second World War.
But, then as now, those with noble-sounding rhetoric are seldom judged by what consequences actually follow.
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