Tuesday, December 11, 2018

An Independent Empire: Diplomacy & War in the Making of the United States

An Independent Empire:  Diplomacy & War in the Making of the United States
Michael S. Kochin and Michael Taylor, forthcoming January 2020 from University of Michigan Press.  Pre-order here.



You are alone. You are exhausted, bruised and battered. You have no real friends and you are surrounded by enemies. You have no money to pay your bills, and you have scarcely the means to defend yourself. You have no sure way put your house in order, but you have built this house in a vast wilderness of mountains, rivers, forests, jungle, and desert.
In 1781, at the moment of the British surrender at Yorktown, this was the position of the United States of America. Victory in the Revolutionary War did not guarantee lasting glory; freedom did not mean safety. One false step and this ambitious experiment in republican government would fail forever. So just how, not even fifty years later, had the United States become the undisputed master of North America and the self-proclaimed guardian of the western hemisphere? An Independent Empire tells that tale.
The transformation of a string of rebellious colonies along the eastern seaboard into a military superpower is the most remarkable story of modern political history. Yet this rapid ascension was not the manifest destiny of the United States.  there was nothing naturally ‘great’ about the new republic.
Time and time again, the early United States came close to disaster. What if Benjamin Franklin hadn’t brought the French into the Revolutionary War? What if the Federalists hadn’t forced through a constitution that could bind thirteen states – none of which especially liked each other – into a functioning union? What if ‘Mad’ Anthony Wayne had started a war with the British in Ohio in 1794? Or if the British had taken New Orleans in 1815?
The Founding Fathers and the generation after – Monroe, Adams, Clay, and Jackson – had no safety net. This was a time when Washington, Adams, Hamilton, and Jefferson played on the global stage. At every turn, they were faced with problems that spelled life-or-death for the United States.
Somehow, the Americans got it right. How did they do it? They asked the right questions about foreign affairs, the military, taxes, and trade. With skill, wisdom, experience, and no little luck, they found the right answers too. This is the story of what made American great, the first time round.

“Engagingly written, a real ‘page-turner,’ clipped and energetic in its narrative, confident in its opinions, and sensible in its conclusions. Its approach is refreshingly traditional—focusing on individual statesmen and telling political history, quite adroitly—but not insensitive to modern concerns, for example about slavery or about religious and ethnic minorities. It tells the story of American growth and expansion as neither inevitable nor horrible, but as a consequence of numerous choices, some wise and just, others ill-advised or nefarious.”
—James R Stoner, Louisiana State University“This is a fine account of American diplomacy and war in the first fifty years after independence for both undergraduates and a popular audience.”
—Kevin R C Gutzman, Western Connecticut State University

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

trollin' trollin' trollin'

trollin trollin trollin Though libs' heads explodin Keep those tweets a trollin Don't try to understand 'em Just tweet @POTUS - an' brand 'em Soon we'll be living high and wide My brain's calculatin My reelection will be waitin Be waitin at the end of my ride

Friday, June 1, 2018

Wisdom, Unwisdom, and Jordan Peterson

The contemporary university as a void at its center.  Jordan Peterson thinks he is the man to fill it, as I explain at American Greatness.

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

The Whipped-Cream Boys of Affirmative Action

In Mark Twain's "The Prince and the Pauper" young Prince Edward had a designated courtier to receive the beatings that his Highness was too good to receive for his misdeeds. As I argue in my latest at American Greatness, today's affirmative action policies have created a similar kind of injustice in that they advance the interests of a different class of people than they were intended to help.