A sad loss! I loved his The Birth of the Modern: World Society 1815–1830 and Modern Times: A History of the World from the 20s to the 90s.
By Donald R. McClarey, JD
Historian Paul Johnson is dead at age 94. A Catholic, he began as a man of the Left and moved right in reaction to the Leftist excesses of the Sixties. A writer of the first order, his histories can be read with endless edification and enjoyment. My favorite are Modern Times (1983) and his Art: A New History (2993).
As President, Perón gave a classic demonstration, in the name of socialism and nationalism, of how to wreck an economy. He nationalised the Central Bank, railways, communications, gas, electricity, fishing, air-transport, steel and insurance. He set up a state marketing agency for exports. He created Big Government and a welfare state in one bound: spending on public services, as a percentage of GNP, rose from 19.5 to 29.5 per cent in five years. He had no system of priorities. He told the people they would get everything at once. In theory they did. The workers were given thirteen months’ pay for a year’s work; holidays with pay; social benefits at a Scandinavian level. He would track down a highly successful firm which spent lavishly on its workers and force all firms to copy its practices, regardless of their resources. At the same time he carried out a frontal assault on the agricultural sector, Argentina’s main source of internal capital. By 1951 he had exhausted the reserves and decapitalized the country, wrecked the balance of payments and built wage-inflation into the system. Next year drought struck the land and brought the crisis into the open. Seeing his support vanish, Perón turned from economic demagoguery to political tyranny. He destroyed the Supreme Court. He took over the radio station and La Prensa, the greatest newspaper in Latin America. He debauched the universities and fiddled with the constitution. Above all, he created public “enemies”: Britain, America, all foreigners, the Jockey Club, which his gangs burned down in 1953, destroying its library and art collection. Next year he turned on Catholicism, and in 1955 his labour mobs destroyed Argentina’s two finest churches, San Francisco and Santo Domingo, and many others. That was the last straw. The army turned him out. He fled on a Paraguayan gunboat. But his successors could never get back to the minimum government which had allowed Argentina to become wealthy. Too many vested interests had been created: a huge, parasitical state, over-powerful unions, a vast army of public employees. It is one of the dismal lessons of the twentieth century that, once a state is allowed to expand, it is almost impossible to contract it.
Paul Johnson, Modern Times
The man was a writing machine and I recommend each of his books, although he could have used better fact checkers on occasion when dealing with American history. (The Rangers who stormed ashore on D-Day were not Texas Rangers, and Confederate Generals Albert Sidney Johnston and Joe Johnston were two distinct men.)
He led a life almost as colorful as his histories and I shall miss him. One day I hope to read the history of Heaven he is no doubt now embarking on.
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