(Editors note: This is the second
segment in a new series. The first segment introduces readers to the fork in the road caused by the clash between proven
scientific principles with matters of the spirit which defy the rigid
limitations of scientific calculation ...)
In a land of plenty, something still appears to be missing? What is it?
Thomas Jefferson aims at
the pursuit of happiness, with virtue as its foundation. Alexander Hamilton, by contrast, envisions the
physical greatness of the state as being above the happiness of its
citizens. To the extent that the two are at odds, Hamilton would choose the former, and
happiness will follow. Resolving the
dispute among his two top cabinet members, President George Washington decides in Hamilton’s
favor. For better or worse, the
course is set. America is
constructed on this foundation.
But although physical
greatness does expand to levels unprecedented, the ordinary citizen’s “something
is missing from life” experience continues to gather its own inexorable
momentum. The elusive ingredient involves
a search for Truth. Scientists reject any
“new” principle which cannot be scientifically proven. Spirit guided intuition, on the other hand, allows
for the potential of a broader understanding and a higher trajectory.
In American History, a
study of Theodore Roosevelt’s political transformation typically flies under
the radar. But it neatly highlights the above
distinction. T.R. has spent a lifetime
of rejecting spiritual speculation, in favor of the body electric and the
physics of (military) power --- from the land prizes of the Spanish American
War --- to the construction of the Panama Canal
--- to re-building the US Navy, almost from scratch, to a military size
befitting the ability to successfully prosecute a two ocean war --- which he
foresees 40 years in advance. At the
dawn of the 20th century, his presidency cements his reputation as
the Republican heir to Abraham Lincoln’s grand old party and as the champion of
Progressive Era domestic reform.
But T.R., too, feels
the hunger pangs of the something that’s missing phenomenon. With his successor botching T..R.’s progressive agenda and becoming the
nation’s top reactionary, T.R. contemplates a return to political life as the
calendar turns to 1912. At the same time a political
transformation is taking place within him. He would begin to argue for wider recognition
of the spiritual qualities inherent in all materialistic pursuits, from science
to business to politics.
The roots of this
transformation can be traced to several sources. The first dates back to T.R.’s presidency (1901-1908), specifically the delivery of a
Special Message to Congress in January 1908, his last year in office. It argues for automatic compensation for
job-related (industrial) accidents and federal scrutiny of corporate boardroom
operations. It campaigns “against
privilege, part of the campaign to make the great class of property holders
realize that property has its duties no less than its rights.” It also campaigns against “predatory wealth
--- of the wealth accumulated on a giant scale by all forms of iniquity.” It is to be a war “against successful dishonesty.”
The issue T.R. raises
in this message, perhaps more than any other utterance in his career, convinces
Wall Street that
“Theodore the Sudden” is a dangerous man.
But T.R. scoffs
at this criticism, stating that it is “fundamentally an ethical movement:”
The opponents of the measures
we champion single out now one, and now another measure for especial attack,
and speak as if the movement in which we are engaged was purely economic. It has a large economic side, but it is
fundamentally an ethical movement. It is
not a movement to be completed in one year, or two or three years; it is a
movement which must be persevered in until the spirit which lies behind it
sinks deep into the heart and the conscience of the whole people.
Followed quickly on
its heels is the publication of Herbert Croly’s The
Promise of American Life, which becomes the bible of the new social
movement. The book argues the need for a
strong central government (Hamiltonian), calling for a war on indiscriminate
individualism (Jefferson) and unearned privilege (Jacksonian).
And it also calls for T.R. as the
only leader in America
capable of encompassing both aims.
But after completing
two presidential terms featuring a progressive agenda of activist reform,
T.R. upholds the tradition of
George Washington and declines to run for a third term. By 1909, T.R.
is now a former president --- still relatively young by historical
standards at age 51 --- but
nonetheless outside the political power structure looking in. With his spiritual evolution continuing, T.R.
begins to plot his future course.
(Editor’s note: To
be continued. The next segment (Part Three) will continue to explore
the underpinnings of T.R.’s political transformation to spiritual icon …)
-Michael
D’Angelo