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- <text id=94TT1181>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Essay:Jones Beach-Liberalism Decline
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 82
- Jones Beach and the Decline of Liberalism
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> Take a drive out of Manhattan, first east, then south, and in
- about an hour you arrive at one of the most pleasing monuments
- to activist government to be found in America: Jones Beach,
- a magnificent ocean park built on a sandbar off the south shore
- of Long Island. Jones Beach opened 65 years ago, Governor Franklin
- Roosevelt of New York presiding. But the idea had erupted full
- blown from the mind of that public-works genius and master builder,
- Robert Moses. A few years earlier, arriving by boat on that
- desolate stretch of sand, he sketched on the back of an envelope
- the park you see today.
- </p>
- <p> The wonder of Jones Beach is the way it was meticulously designed
- to serve the crammed and harried working classes of New York
- City, offering them the kind of ocean playground that until
- then had been open only to the rich. At a time when public beaches
- meant meager toilets in shabby wooden shacks, notes biographer
- Robert Caro, Moses sketched two enormous bathhouses a mile apart,
- with canopied terraces, vast swimming pools and even diaper-changing
- rooms. And in place of the barkers and hot-dog vendors of Coney
- Island, he decreed a serene, pristine boardwalk offering shuffleboard
- and paddle tennis, all at nominal prices--no commerce allowed.
- </p>
- <p> It was an enormous success. By the hundreds of thousands, workmen
- and their families poured out of the sweaty city to this marvel
- of a beach. You can still see it today. True, gone are the legions
- of sailor-suited college students picking up trash. Gone too,
- in this age of tort, the archery range and roller rink. But
- the rest is there, a grand beach park for yet another generation
- of working-class New Yorkers, with Hispanics and blacks now
- joining the original beach population of white ethnics.
- </p>
- <p> At the time, writes Caro, designers and architects came from
- all over Europe to gaze at this wonder. An Englishman summed
- up their verdict: "The finest seashore playground ever given
- the public anywhere in the world."
- </p>
- <p> Moses went on to build many more monuments. F.D.R. went on to
- erect social programs as promiscuously as Moses built state
- parks. But the point of such activism was plain: government
- was to produce something tangible, visible, usa- ble for the
- ordinary working-class--now called middle-class--American
- family. That was the theory of the New Deal, with its unemployment
- insurance, old-age pensions and assorted public works. That
- was the animating vision that allowed American liberalism to
- dominate national politics for four decades.
- </p>
- <p> In recent years, faith in activist government has declined precipitously.
- The cause is not just Vietnam and Watergate but rather the fateful
- turn liberal activism took with Lyndon Johnson and the Great
- Society. Not content with the great middle-class programs like
- Medicare, Johnson launched a War on Poverty that has since poured
- trillions down a vast federal sinkhole, leaving little trace--indeed coinciding with a dramatic rise in crime, homelessness
- and deviancy of every sort.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton's genius in the 1992 campaign was understanding
- the abiding power of the idea of activist government--activism
- directed not, however, at the fringes of society but at the
- great middle that keeps it going. He campaigned for the "forgotten
- middle class." Forgotten, one might note, by modern liberalism.
- No matter. Clinton remembered.
- </p>
- <p> Hence his national-service program, an echo of the G.I. Bill,
- aimed at working kids, who would repay their schooling with
- community service. Hence the crime bill he fought desperately
- to save, a $30 billion potpourri of prisons and cops, of therapists
- and social workers turned loose on the ordinary American's No.
- 1 nightmare: crime. Hence the piece de resistance of Clinton's
- activist vision: health care "that cannot be taken away." It
- addresses the quintessential middle-class fear: losing what
- you've got.
- </p>
- <p> There is something valiant if archaic about Clinton's trying
- to resurrect activist government. Delivering the goods is far
- more difficult today. Government is broke. And the issue is
- not a bathhouse that can be built for a few hundred thousand
- dollars but a health-care entitlement that could cost trillions.
- </p>
- <p> It is easy to admire the energy and drive behind Clinton's activism.
- Those skeptical of government's doing social engineering rather
- than bathhouse construction register a mixture of wonder and
- alarm at a President so fixed in a belief that runs against
- the tide of public opinion and the fiscal capacities of modern
- government.
- </p>
- <p> But to succeed, Clinton must stick to his vision. The principal
- reason his ambitions for health care and crime met such resistance
- is that what started out as grand schemes to allay middle-class
- anxieties were increasingly seen as yet more remedial programs
- for the poor. Working people don't play midnight basketball.
- They go to Jones Beach. Build that, and activist government
- might once again become a going proposition.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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