Coolidge And Limited Government
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概要
Calvin Coolidge is usually remembered as “Silent Cal,” a pro-business placeholder in the Roaring Twenties, or a punchline about doing nothing. We don’t buy that version. With Dr. Sean Beienberg, we unpack the Calvin Coolidge who shows up in his words: a president with a real constitutional theory, a sharp concern about human nature and power, and a surprisingly direct way of teaching civics through major addresses.
We start with the backstory people miss: Coolidge’s rise from small-town New England politics, his belief that state governments should be active, and his conviction that the federal government must stay limited. From there, we dig into the rule of law theme that runs through his leadership, including his view that even flawed policies like Prohibition must be handled through constitutional processes rather than shortcuts. That thread leads straight into his first inaugural address and its focus on separation of powers, federalism, and fiscal restraint rooted in stewardship, not vibes.
Then we spend serious time on the 1925 Arlington Memorial Day speech, where Coolidge lays out one of the clearest presidential defenses of federalism you’ll hear. He even invokes The Federalist Papers and explains why federal spending and grants-in-aid can weaken state capacity by training citizens to look to Washington first. If you care about limited government, the 10th Amendment, constitutionalism, and how civic habits form over time, this conversation gives you a framework that still maps onto today’s debates.
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