Calvin Coolidge's Political Views

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Calvin Coolidge was the 30th president of the United States. Calvin spent time with his father as a young boy and this I believe had a profound effect on Coolidge and his political views. From his father’s experience, Coolidge later wrote, “ I came to have a good working knowledge of the practical side of government. Understood that it consisted of restraints which the people had imposed upon themselves in order to promote the common welfare”(1). The stories that survive from Coolidge his upbringing paint a picture of a spry and clever lad with the core profound seriousness.(2) He is the only president to be born on the Fourth of July. This is no coincidence, for in the sense he embodied true dedication to the principles that established America. …show more content…

Coolidge was totally against these “philosophers.” I admire Coolidge because he was so rooted in what he believed in that he was ready to fight these claims. In a Fourth of July speech that eloquently counter at the purported claim of the new worldview, Coolidge said: “It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which of given us a great advance of the people that day, and that we may therefore very will discard their conclusions for something more modern” (5). I really related to the sentence in his speech because often in our society we forget our history or what we said for. If the principles of our Declaration are lermanent, like human nature, there’s no moving forward but only …show more content…

In 1921, the unemployment rate was 11.7%. In response to this, Coolidge did not blame his predecessor, Woodrow Wilson, for the disaster they inherited. Coolidge simply put the principles he valued into practice and turned the economy around. The country also went through spending reductions. The purpose of reducing the money they spent was to protect the property rights of citizens. “A government which leaves taxes on the people not required by urgent necessity... is not a protector of liberty, but an instrument of tyranny it condemns the citizen to servitude” (6). Coolidge was able to prove that by using the principles of the founding The country could turn back to