The Teddy Roosevelt Presidential Library Shows How Deeply The Left Captured Our Cultural Imagination
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The Teddy Roosevelt Presidential Library Shows How Deeply The Left Captured Our Cultural Imagination
The library of a Republican president refers without an apparent second thought to the need to reconstruct society through government intervention in order to defeat “class interests.”
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All voices become one voice. All ideas become one idea. Every cultural expression produces the same conclusions in the same vernacular.
Opening a couple weeks behind another presidential library that isn’t a library, with the actual records of the president parked somewhere else, the privately organized Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library hasn’t drawn nearly as much attention as the other one. From a distance, it looked extremely promising, designed to blend in with a magnificent American landscape in what appeared to be a declaration of moral modesty and ideological restraint: a promise to focus on America.
When you actually get to the thing, the building still seems to celebrate place, which means that it seems to celebrate the country. Unlike a certain remarkably ugly tower in Chicago that signals narcissism and an adolescent aesthetic sensibility, the Roosevelt library merges into the North Dakota badlands, with a roof designed to be a garden…
… and a path from the buildings that sends visitors out into the land, looking at this:
That’s AMERICA, right there. In triple-digit heat this weekend, not many people went out to admire that path and what it........
