David T. Beitois a research fellow at the Independent Institute and professor emeritus at the University of Alabama. He received his PhD in history at the University of Wisconsin and is the author ofT.R.M. Howard: Doctor, Entrepreneur, and Civil Rights Pioneer(with Linda Royster Beito) andFrom Mutual Aid to the Welfare State: Fraternal Societies and Social Services, 1890-1967. He is also co-editor ofThe Voluntary City: Choice, Community and Civil Societyand the forthcomingRose Lane Says: Thoughts on Liberty and Equality, 1942-1945.
“This book is not mere history; it is an exposé. You won't know
which is more shocking: the lengths to which FDR and New Dealers
like Senators (and future Supreme Court justices) Hugo Black and
Sherman Minton went to suppress freedom of speech, privacy, and
civil rights; or the degree to which these efforts have been
concealed by pro-FDR and New Deal propagandists. While the
repressive measures taken by FDR and his New Dealers against their
political opponents resemble tactics favored by progressives today,
Beito shows that the ‘good old days’ were in some respects even
worse. But he also usefully reminds us that resistance to these
measures was bipartisan. This is a story that all Americans should
know--especially anyone who is headed to college or law school. I
will be strongly recommending it to the students in my class on
constitutional rights and liberties.” - Randy E. Barnett, Patrick
Hotung Professor of Constitutional Law, Georgetown University Law
Center; faculty director, Georgetown Center for the
Constitution
“All historians who have written about Franklin Roosevelt need to
read David Beito’s book and, in almost all cases, revise what they
said. The New Deal’s War on the Bill of Rights illuminates
Roosevelt’s desire for power and his efforts to punish those who
tried to thwart him.” - Burt Folsom, professor of history emeritus,
Hillsdale College; author of New Deal or Raw Deal?
“For all his accomplishments, Franklin Delano Roosevelt had little
tolerance for critics and not much respect for the Bill of Rights.
David T. Beito’s useful survey of the partially unknown dark side
of the New Deal reveals the surprising variety of repressive
measures that FDR and his supporters employed--not always
successfully--to quash those who opposed his administration. It’s a
sobering story that reminds us of how precarious our civil
liberties have always been.” - Ellen Schrecker, professor emerita,
Yeshiva University; author of Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in
America
“This book is exhaustively researched and often insightful, and it
has some timeless historical lessons for Americans who value civil
liberties and privacy. Beito reveals a dark side of the FDR
administration that historians have generally ignored.” - David
Boaz, distinguished senior fellow, Cato Institute; author of The
Libertarian Mind
“In this important book, David Beito shines new light on the civil
liberties record of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Beyond the
internment of Japanese Americans, Beito skillfully documents how
FDR undermined free speech through extensive state censorship and
surveillance. This well-written book not only clarifies the
historical record, but also offers crucial insights into the
foundations of contemporary government activities which continue to
threaten the civil liberties of Americans. Anyone interested in
civil liberties and government overreach should read this book!” -
Christopher Coyne, professor of economics, George Mason
University
“Long a critic of FDR, I was nonetheless stunned and riveted by
what David Beito reveals in this book. That an American president
would so callously shred the Bill of Rights is a damning
indictment--not just of FDR, but of his enablers in the media and
academia who covered it all up for decades. Hereafter, no
assessment of the 32nd president can be honest or thorough without
factoring in Beito’s indispensable contribution to the history of
the office.” - Lawrence W. Reed, president emeritus, Foundation for
Economic Education
“In an age when Americans are critically re-examining our history,
New Deal abuses of power and authority are still downplayed and
ignored by historians enamored with FDR and the rise of an activist
federal government. David Beito’s well-written, well-documented
book brings those abuses to light, showing that the rise of federal
power in the 1930s was accompanied by massive violations of
Americans’ civil liberties.” - David E. Bernstein, University
Professor, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University
“This is a tour de force capturing the all-encompassing threat
Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal posed to American freedoms.
Beito opens our eyes to the wiretapping of political enemies,
seizure of private telegrams, violation of tax return privacy,
congressional witch hunts, a purge of conservative radio spokesmen,
the internment of Japanese Americans, and much more. In eerie
parallels to the Left’s current obsession with banishing
‘disinformation,’ New Dealers also sought to criminalize ‘false
news.’ You will not view FDR and the New Deal in the same way after
finishing this important work.” - Jonathan Bean, professor of
history, Southern Illinois University; author of Race and Liberty
in America: The Essential Reader
“You wouldn’t guess it from the soaring rhetoric of his Four
Freedoms speech, but Franklin Roosevelt has a rotten record on
civil liberties. David Beito’s illuminating book explores the
censorship, the spying, and the internment camps of the FDR years,
as well as the uncomfortable intersection between the New Deal and
Jim Crow.” - Jesse Walker, books editor, Reason; author of Rebels
on the Air: An Alternative History of Radio in America and The
United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory
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