99% Invisible - The Power Broker #03: David Sims

Episode Date: March 15, 2024

This is the third official episode, breaking down the 1974 Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Power Broker by our hero Robert Caro. Blank Check podcast co-host and The Atlantic movie critic David Sims ...is our book club guest.On today’s show, Elliott Kalan, Roman Mars, and David Sims will cover the first section of Part 4 of the book (Chapters 11 through the end of Chapter 15), discussing the major story beats and themes.The Power Broker #3: David SimsJoin the discussion on Discord and our Subreddit

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the 99% Invisible Breakdown of The Power Broker. I'm Roman Mars. And I'm Elliot Cailin. Today we'll be going through chapters 11 through 15. That's the first section of part four, The Use of Power. With us for this episode is David Sims, the movie critic for The Atlantic and also cohost of Blank Check with Griffin and David. Hey David.
Starting point is 00:00:21 Hello. Thank you for having me. Well, I'm so excited that you're here. It's so funny because I was like thinking about this show, like in the middle of the night, I wake up, it's like three o'clock in the morning and I was like, I bet David Sims has read The Power Broker and I wrote you and it like you wrote me about 20 minutes later because you're like an East Coast time and you said, I love this book. I have to assume that David Sims had woken up at the exact same moment, knowing
Starting point is 00:00:47 you were about to ask him about the power broker. Yeah. Is that right, David? That's of course I, I have a power broker, a Spidey sense, I guess. We can all, we can all find each other on the astral plane. Um, I, I was trying to remember if we had ever discussed it. No, Roman, but I guess we hadn't. You just sort of figured my sort of Venn diagram of interests would overlap here.
Starting point is 00:01:12 You often talk about on your show about movies, you reference reading very long books and being kind of a fan of the very long book, I think. And I don't know, I just had this, I just had this feeling and I just wondered how do you feel about being someone who, uh, somebody thinks about in the middle of the night and wonders if you've read the power broker is that it is identifying character. I feel, I feel great.
Starting point is 00:01:39 I do think that I mean, uh, in my sort of public persona, especially on my podcast, I do talk about my love of like, you know, city subways and urbanism and you know, things like, so maybe that's- That's true. That's put out. But I have a longer history with it. I mean, so, well, I don't know. Do you want my life story here?
Starting point is 00:01:59 Yes, I do, I do. It's not gonna be that long, but so I'm the child of two New York City journalists, reporters. Well, one reporter, one more of that long, but so I'm the child of two New York City Journalists reporters. Well one reporter one more of an editor, but still so I grew up with like, you know, New York City Journalism and history Sort of steeped in that a little bit And then when I moved to New York from college in 2008 the first job I got was at a newspaper called the chief I have no idea if either of you would know The Chief, anyone? Nope.
Starting point is 00:02:28 Anyone? Uh, it's a, it's a venerable weekly newspaper, uh, print, obviously paper in New York that's existed since the 1890s that is like, uh, focused on like municipal news, like civil service, unions, unions, news for city workers, right? And it's this kind of, I mean, God love it, this creaky old buttress in the sort of New York City media world. Back in the day when city reporting was robust,
Starting point is 00:03:01 you worked at the chief and then you would sort of jump up to a job at the post or the news or whatever, you know, you would, it was sort of part of the ladder. So I worked at the chief, I covered teachers and white collar workers and DC 37, a lot of unions and all that. And I covered the city budget. And so within weeks of the job, I had to call Robert Caro on the phone because my boss, Richie Steyer, who's this venerable municipal kind of expert genius, you know, I'm writing some story about the parks department and Richie is just like,
Starting point is 00:03:36 Hey, call, call Robert Caro. This is his phone number, like for background on, you know, Henry Stern on, on whatever, whatever, on some piece of history. And so I have Robert Caro on the phone and he immediately is basically like, well, if you could turn to this page in the Power Broker, and I was like, oh, I don't have that in front of me. And it got couriered to the office within a day.
Starting point is 00:04:00 He should have hung up on you immediately at that point. It was like, and I was still this baby. I think I sort of knew who he was and I knew about the book, but I was, you know, I was still like a wet-eared nobody, 22 year old trying to figure out how like collective bargaining in the city worked and things like that. And so I quickly sort of realized like, okay, well, a great way for me to steep myself in the kind of thing I have to worry about on this job, which is like how this levers of government work
Starting point is 00:04:35 and what goes on in these sort of agencies is to read The Power Broker. So I read it in my early 20s as this kind of, you know, Bible of New York history, which is what it is, among other things. And then later during COVID, I finally read all of the Lyndon Johnson books. So I'm a Robert Caro nerd, I would say, at this point. I've been very, very just adoringly listening
Starting point is 00:05:05 to the stuff you guys have put out so far. Oh, thank you so much. I mean, the book really is profound in this way. Like if you wanna understand this, and in fact, this is a part of like Elliot's origin story of this is like, is there somebody handing it to you and just like saying, it's like if you wanna understand anything about the city,
Starting point is 00:05:23 like this is the book. This is the way city, like this is, this is the book. This is the way to do it. Yeah. This is, this is the book and uh, it's the, when I was walking, walking around New York, I was handed two books, the power broker and Dianetics and I chose one and I never looked back. Still haven't read the other one. I think I made the right choice. We'll see. We'll see how life turns out. I mean, Dianetics has got a, got a big volcano on the cover. That's pretty exciting. I mean, the power broker has, it's a, it's a crumbling statue that towers over the ground around it.
Starting point is 00:05:51 It's, it's Ozymandias transposed to the, to the New York landscape, which is still a pretty great cover. But it was, it was very much a similar thing for me that I was a production assistant at the Daily Show at the time. And it was a similar sense of like, if you're gonna understand politics, then this is the book to read. And it served me in good stead for my years there, certainly. When you're handed it, you're like,
Starting point is 00:06:13 where does this book get off? It's so big. It's not just that it's 1,300 pages, but the fact that it's this sort of like Atlas sized object, you know, you're just sort of like, how could this be? But the same time you are kind of like, well, this must be a masterpiece, right? Like for it to dare exist in this form.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Yeah, exactly. And it's sort of, that's what it is. It truly is. So let's get to our recap. We're gonna sort of pick up where we left off at the end of chapter 10. It's 1924 and the New York State Legislature has just passed a bill written by Robert Moses,
Starting point is 00:06:50 giving him enormous like hidden power to appropriate and govern land to the new state council of parks that is run by Robert Moses. He wants to build a string of parks connected by parkways on Long Island with his biggest dream being Jones Beach, which he envisions as the greatest bathing beach in the world. And the part that we're going to be talking about today is the use of power where we find out where he gets things done.
Starting point is 00:07:14 So Elliot, tell me about the opening of this chapter. Oh, you got it. So as you said, this is the section where he's wanted power all this time. Now he finally has it and he's going to use it. And we start with chapter 11, the majesty of the law. This chapter opens with an epigram. I love a good epigram opening chapter. I didn't look up the original source of this one because after the Sophocles quote that starts the book, I was just like, I'm not going to find carol sources sometimes. But this is a quote from Cornelius Vanderbilt, credited here as Commodore Vanderbilt as he was known. He says, law, what do I care for law?
Starting point is 00:07:46 Haint, I got the power. And we're going to see this is going to increasingly become Robert Moses' way of seeing things. And I love the use of the word hate, which I'm sure is how it was said and written down. It's like, this is the way that people talk in the olden days, in the olden days. It doesn't say ain't I got the power. He says, hate, I got the power.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Uh, but we're going to see this, this transformation over the course of these chapters that we're talking about today, where Robert Moses really says goodbye to the idea of legality as a way of getting things done and embraces power over, over the law and kind of running roughshod over the law. So last time he wanted this $ million dollar bond to start building parks and parkways to make this Long Island dream a reality. It hasn't passed the legislature yet. Don't worry, Governor Al Smith, he always has Robert Moses back. He gives him $225,000 from the general state revenue to start work. Moses does the important things first, rents a big office a
Starting point is 00:08:40 couple blocks down from where he used to work and across the street from the tiny room we finished writing the government reorganization report he is in a very literal way showing his past how much power he now has by getting an office in the same area he gets himself a black Packard limousine the top-of-the-line car and a chauffeur he starts hiring people he's known for a long time he exempts them from the civil service exams the same civil service exams he was so crazy about when he was a younger person, that he just could not get enough of civil service regulation.
Starting point is 00:09:10 Now when he's hiring people, he's like, forget it. We're not gonna do that. And he buys them their own cars and their own fancy office furniture. He is ready to start spending money on his favorites. And almost immediately, he's using political favors to get things done. He's doing the kinds of things that I feel like conspiracy
Starting point is 00:09:26 theorists are always talking about where there's a classmate from Yale who knew him back when he was a student who's an assistant to Herbert Hoover, who's then the secretary of commerce. And he helps Moses get 600 acres of Fire Island Beach, that 600 new acres that wasn't even mapped yet because nobody knew it was there until he went there to see it. They're like, yeah, yeah, we'll give you that.
Starting point is 00:09:45 We went to Yale together, sure, that's fine. He has this land now just through his connections as part of the state government, but that's not gonna be enough. He's gonna have to go take land from other people. Is he willing to take land from other people? Yes, he's willing to take land from other people. Yes, very much so.
Starting point is 00:09:59 In a myriad of ways. He enjoys it, it seems. The chase is part of the fun for him, I think. I think that's true. It's the chase is part of the fun for him. I think that's true. It's the chase and the conquest. So he starts going out to, Long Island at the time is still kind of split up between farmland and rich people's estates.
Starting point is 00:10:15 And there's a little bit of housing developments. And he goes out to Long Island farmers in the evenings, when they're done with their work, he charms them into selling him the pieces of the fields that he needs for his parkway route. If they don't want to sell, the charm goes into selling him the pieces of the fields that he needs for his parkway route. If they don't want to sell, the charm goes away and he plays hardball. He condemns property.
Starting point is 00:10:29 We'll see a longer example of that later on in this episode. Long Island barons, they don't like this. The whole reason they got these big estates on Long Island and then bought the land around the big estates and then bought the land next to the big estates was to keep the wrong kind of people away from them. And now, Robert Moses is saying, I'm going to build parks and roads that'll bring those wrong people straight to you. And there's a specific man who decides it's going to stand up to Robert Moses.
Starting point is 00:10:53 His name is W Kingsland Macy, which is the names of people in the past were so on the nose. I just love it. Like if you were a wealthy guy in Long Island, you were W Kingsland Macy. Uh, if you were, if you're're gonna donate money to the Yale swim team, you were Ogden Reed Mills, I think I said, or Ogden Mills Reed, I can't remember anymore. But W Kingsland Macy, he starts a consortium
Starting point is 00:11:13 with a couple other wealthy people. And he's not the wealthiest of the barons, but he's a man with money. And they preemptively buy this land called the Taylor Estate that Moses is supposed to go take. And Moses calls Macy into a meeting and he goes, don't finish buying that land. I have the power to seize that land. The law says so.
Starting point is 00:11:29 If I want, I could go into your house and I could seize your house. I could kick you out of it. If you tried to go back into your house, I could have you arrested for trespassing. And then I would have the newspapers in New York harass you for trying to get back into your house. So don't buy that land. And W. Kingsland Macy is like, well, this isn't really the spirit of the law. I have rights as an American. And he buys that land. Moses immediately sends state troopers to take possession of it and starts working with it. And Moses is doing this with
Starting point is 00:11:56 other barons as well. And they have their expensive lawyers start researching what Moses' law means when it says appropriating land, which as we talked about last episode, it means something different than what most people think it means. And F. Truby Davison, the rookie state legislator who put the law through, he feels really bad about introducing that bill. Like, it just wasn't what he intended it to be. And Moses just appropriating land left and right. Is anyone going to stand up to him? Roman, David.
Starting point is 00:12:23 Is anyone going to stand up to Robert Moses at this point? If they are, they're only gonna supercharge him. That's true. There's one man who's gonna do it, W. Kingsland Macy. Yeah, well, it's Macy. But the thing is, what's so interesting here is like this type, you know, when he has this power and he sort of like, he begins to show his corrupt side.
Starting point is 00:12:45 And it's not even that corrupt. and he sort of like, he begins to show his corrupt side. And it's not even that corrupt. Like he gets a fancy car, he has a nice office, but none of it is like a crazy amount of stuff. And then he starts going after these parcels of land. And I always find myself in this section really flip-flopping on how I feel about Robert Moses because, because sometimes he's taken it from people. I'm like, yeah, sure. Go ahead and take that land from those people.
Starting point is 00:13:11 Literal land barons, essentially like modern, like who, and he, he does seem to be one of a few people who's looking at Long Island and is like, we should do something with this, right? Like which, which you sort of understand. I think what you're getting at is a, there's a thread running through this section especially of the power of the political argument of the people versus the powerful and how there is a certain, it's the thing that the framers, the constitution were worried about in terms of a demagogue who could come in, how there are certain times when it is very attractive
Starting point is 00:13:46 to take something from powerful people, rich people, and give it to poor people. And often that is a form of justice as well. There are times when that's the right thing to do, but it's easy to overstep that boundary. And the idea of one man standing up against the wealthy for the benefit of the poor, of the many, is a very powerful argument that gets used to support Moses in this section. And when Moses is using it to do something beautiful in a way, to create these parks and to make them available to regular people, it's easy to see that as a positive thing. But it's also easy, as Carol shows it, to see the seeds of what will
Starting point is 00:14:20 become the bad Moses later on. Moses is, he's taken from the rich, so why shouldn't he take from the poor as well if it's getting in the way of his schemes? And we'll see that later in the seeds that are being planted here. But it's easy to overlook it, because when you're reading this book for the first time, I know it's like, do it, Moses, do it. Take that land from those barons.
Starting point is 00:14:37 They don't need it. Give it to the people. And it's that kind of back and forth that is the devil of democratic government. And he's learning here that the fastest route to what he wants is not really going to be the most legal or the most compassionate route, right? It's going to be more brutal, sort of a mix of brutality and like, you know, charm, I guess, or, you know, something a little insidious. But look, what I love about this book and about the Johnson books is
Starting point is 00:15:12 what powers Caro's fascination, I think it's like, right, how much good these people did, but often the means were terrible and motivations were bad, and the results were often so, like, you know, like, but how do I measure that against, like, the great good being done? Like, that's what's so gripping about him arguing with farmers over the price of an acre where you're just like, you should be, you know, putting this book at the bottom of a gigantic pile out of total boredom when, you know, he's describing the long Island zoning to you, but you're not
Starting point is 00:15:49 it's so dramatic. He makes it so dramatic and so exciting. And it reminds me of the section reminds me of when I visited Versailles in, uh, in France, the only one time I went there and they were like, the cost of building Versailles was half the gross national product of the country. And I'm like, that's crazy. People are dying in the streets and he's building this enormous house.
Starting point is 00:16:08 But then I was like, you know what? Those hundreds of years ago, those people are gonna be gone by now anyway, but the house is still here. So like, was it a better investment? There was no way of me, I could enjoy those 18th century, 17th century Frenchmen, but I can enjoy this house still.
Starting point is 00:16:20 So it's a hard thing. History is a tough business. Anyway. Well, we should talk about, because this is a real key moment here that ends up being kind of the, we talk about Robert Moses' ability to draft bills as being one of his superpowers.
Starting point is 00:16:36 So he affords himself all this power through this law that he passed. He changes what the meaning of appropriating kind of means for most people. But it only really works when he begins to enact it that Al Smith agrees to it. Like, and this is a real key thing. He still is relying on Al Smith for that power.
Starting point is 00:16:56 Exactly, yeah. Because he could write that law and it doesn't matter. At the end of it, executing it requires the governor to buy into it. Yes. I mean, what's so fascinating about his partnership with Al Smith, who's such a fascinating figure, and I assume you guys talked about him a lot last time,
Starting point is 00:17:14 is just that Al Smith is this genuine populist, and Robert Moses doesn't seem like a populist at all, but everything he is doing here is like, like Ellie, like you're saying, is a form of populism, right? Like, yeah, this land will be for the people. Like, you know, we're gonna make Jones Beach and like, yes, insidious things will happen later to sort of make it for specific people maybe, but, and like, it's just such a funny match. And I don't know, like, would Moses have considered himself like politically aligned with Al Smith? Like probably not, right? I don't think so at all. I mean, Moses never, Al Smith is a Democrat.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Moses never loses his Republican affiliation. Even when he's the closest man working for the democratic governor, he is still registered as a Republican. And it's almost like Al Smith has no ideology, but he wants to help people. And so he will do whatever it takes to do that, even if it means being a little slimy. Robert Moses wants to control things and he wants to make things. And so he is willing to do nice things for people
Starting point is 00:18:15 if it means he gets to create things. You know, he had that idealistic bent at the beginning, but it was the entitled idealist. You know, it was the guy from above who feels like he knows better. Yeah. Right. Rather than the populist.
Starting point is 00:18:28 He doesn't, he wants to make things for people, but he does not want the people to have the power to have decisions over those things that he makes. And I feel like Al Smith is the opposite. He would rather have the people making decisions than powerful people, unless the powerful people are him and his best friend, Bob Moses, man, Al Smith rocks. Even though Al Smith is hugely flawed figure, then he eventually hated the new deal just anytime in this book when he's like, yeah, but I'm sticking up for the little guy.
Starting point is 00:18:52 I know he didn't sound like that. I just, I just kind of like, I love thinking about it. Probably did a little bit. Yeah. It did sound like that actually. I take it back. One of the other things that's kind of surprising about the power broker, considering it is so much about kind of the rules of power and how institutions
Starting point is 00:19:07 work is how much it is still in that world of the influence of personality on politics. Why does Al Smith hate the new deal? Because as we'll see, he hates FDR. He doesn't like FDR. And why does, uh, why is he doing these things for Bob Moses in a big sense? Because he likes Bob Moses, you know, and that the shape of a city can be so transformed by the personality of the person. And that's much of the Johnson books as well, is it's the effect of personality on history, which is not a popular way of looking at history right now, but it's undeniable that kind of
Starting point is 00:19:40 larger social forces and individual personalities mix to create, you know, the world we live in. It's all part of the beautiful tapestry of the power broker, but Al Smith is about to step into this Macy fight, as we'll see. W. Kingsland Macy's lawyers, he points out that the way Robert Moses took the Taylor estate wasn't even a fair according to the law that he wrote. He created a law to let him do whatever he wants, and he still oversteps that law. And he shouldn't have appropriated that land without attempting to buy it first, without having the money on hand to legally purchase it. And Moses needs Governor Smith to sign the documents
Starting point is 00:20:13 appropriating this land. And Smith is like, I don't know if this whole thing is legal. Let me meet with the barons so they can press their case. And the barons screw this up so badly, this meeting with Al Smith, because it's like a scene. It's so the way Carol presents it, and I have to believe that this is how it was told him,
Starting point is 00:20:29 it's so on the nose that the rich people are like, well, we don't want Long Island to be overrun with rabble from the city. And Al Smith gets mad and goes, rabble, that's me you're talking about. And he signs the form right in front of them because he's so mad in that moment. And it's again, personality and history. Maybe he wouldn't have been so eager to do it if those guys hadn't pissed him off in that moment in that specific way that he's so sensitive to. Yeah, yeah, it's amazing how Moses uses the political valence of like who is elite
Starting point is 00:20:56 and who isn't in these ways that really get what he wants in each of these situations. And what's funny to me is how much that resonates with today. When Trump talks about the elites in these weird situations is like gold toilet billionaire talks about elites. It really is just a matter of how you present that narrative and these lawyers really fucked up when it came to talking to Al Smith.
Starting point is 00:21:23 They really screwed it all up. And this court fight for the Taylor state, this is another time where we're going to watch something for a little bit. And then later we're going to skip back, you know, cause Caro is not doing everything on the same timeline. The fight for the Taylor state goes on for two years in the courts and W. Kingsland's Macy's partners, they're like, this isn't worth it, but Macy, he doesn't care about the money. It's the principle of the thing. And he's got to fight for the private property rights of Americans. And he's so old fashioned. A reporter is like, Hey, why don't you come take me to the land and show me,
Starting point is 00:21:51 show it to me. And he goes, no, that would, I couldn't influence your thinking on it. That would be unfair. Whereas Moses is like, yeah, I'll, I'll take whatever help I can get. And the New York times is putting out front page headlines, like a few rich golfers accused of blocking plans for state park, which is the yellowest of yellow journalism you know there's no I wish I wish that it's I whereas nowadays the Times would be like in a fight over land to competing narratives and that would be their headline you know they
Starting point is 00:22:15 make no judgments whatsoever but back then they weren't afraid to and the press most is using them to really portray himself as I am fighting for the benefit of regular people and rich people are trying to stop you from getting a park and a beach. And later on we'll bury it in the article in paragraph 24 or 25, that the appropriation of land was probably illegal. And in the court of public opinion, things are going well in the actual legal court, they're not going so well. Yeah, they're going poorly because there's two big problems. He, he, he's not allowed to appropriate land that he hasn't offered for purchase.
Starting point is 00:22:42 And he doesn't have the money to purchase it. And so they're not going to buy it. They're going to buy it. They're going to buy it. They're going poorly because there's two big problems. He, he, he's not allowed to appropriate land that he hasn't offered for purchase. And he doesn't have the money to purchase it. And so they, they need to rectify these two situations, like too sweet before, before, before the court, you know, rolls over them. And, and so, uh, Robert Moses is like, I need a legislature to appropriate this money for me. But the Republicans in the legislature are like, this is a great way to embarrass Al Smith
Starting point is 00:23:06 through his best buddy, Moses. But luckily, in the end, in terms of politics, the court of public opinion is more powerful in many ways than the court of court, court, the court of law. People love parks, and he has Al Smith. And so Moses can just use his lawyers to stall the court proceedings until Smith can bully the legislature into getting the money through so that it will appear somewhat legal. And Moses is like, Smith, hurry up. Oh, he says governor because he always calls him governor. Hurry up. Hurry up. And Governor Smith, who's the master politician, he says, wait, it's spring right now. Wait till the summer. Wait till New York gets hot. Wait till the voters are so sweaty.
Starting point is 00:23:43 They feel the need for a place to swim, that they feel the need for fresh air because they're so hemmed in. And so on June 10th, right as the heat is starting to build up in New York City, in the first speech ever carried on a statewide New York radio hookup, Al Smith talks for two and a half hours demonizing the opposition, the rich, calling for a special session of legislature to give the people parks. And it's not a question of the state overreaching its power. It's a question of whether the rich can stop the special session of legislature to give the people parks. And it's not a question of the state overreaching its power. It's a question of whether the rich can stop the state from giving the people what they need. He barely mentions Moses in the speech. It's all about the rich versus you.
Starting point is 00:24:13 And you're hot in your tiny apartment. You're sweating. It's terrible. And the Republicans have their own speech the next day about like, well, sacred property rights. But when you're hot, you don't care about that stuff. Like when you're a New York don't care about that stuff. When you're a New Yorker and it's summer in the city, the back of your neck's getting dirty and gritty, you don't care about that. You want a place to go.
Starting point is 00:24:33 And the people are so overwhelming in support of Moses and the governor's side. They flood the legislature with letters. The New York papers keep carrying stories of this fight. And it's something that you have to wonder, Roman, this is a question that you brought up when we were talking about this episode. If you're there at the time, not knowing how things will turn out, whose side are you going to take?
Starting point is 00:24:55 I'm all Al Smith on this one. I am like all Robert Moses, all Al Smith. Like he's making that speech and I'm like, hell yeah, let's storm the beaches. It's so rare that there's a fight over public parks. Like now that this fight is always over, we want to take your land to build an arena for a billionaire sports team that doesn't want to spend one red, one red cent building it. Like, you know, like it's always something like that where it's, it's
Starting point is 00:25:22 easy to understand why people get angry about the construction of, you know, whatever arena. Or it's we want to take this land and build low income housing in your neighborhood and people get angry about that because with, with parks, it's the thing where everyone can use them. Even if you're middle-class or if you're lower class, everyone can use them. And so there's less of a partisan fight except against the ultra wealthy who everyone hates already. I'm just amazed that this worked so well and it all has to do with the parks.
Starting point is 00:25:51 You know, like it just is like, I just wonder, you know, like with Moses's acumen for like all things law and politics, if he didn't have the parks as his thing, would he have gotten anywhere? Because it allowed him so much latitude to do horrible things, because he could always cloak it in the park fight. Yes, it was very lucky for him that the issue that he was kind of naturally interested in anyway,
Starting point is 00:26:23 but that he could stumble into, because it was not being exploited by anyone else at the moment was one that's so universally beloved and it's so hard to find a... It's hard to make an argument against a park. I can't really think of one. Oh, we should have a park here so that people can enjoy themselves and it can be natural and fun and relaxing. No, we need people. I mean, I guess you could have people saying like, any distraction from work hurts the ambition of the species.
Starting point is 00:26:51 We have to get into space or something like that. But that's a pretty out there argument. And it's not one they would have been making in the 20s. I think you're right that he had this powerful issue that gave him that latitude. I think he gets into it later in the book even more as well, just underlining how little public space there was available in the city especially.
Starting point is 00:27:10 Yes. And just like that there was like, yeah, one playground for every 150,000 kids or stuff like that where it was like, the need was really, really desperate. I guess what happens later is the people start saying like, well, we don't want a public park because we don't like what that means, what, who that'll bring or whatever. But I, in the 1920s,
Starting point is 00:27:30 I feel like Long Island is, it's not like empty, but it's, it's, it's a very quiet part of the state, right? Like comparatively, pre motor car or whatever. It's the dawn of motor cars. You'll read like nostalgic things where like, yeah, we used to play stick ball in the street. And it's like, well, you were playing in the street because there was nowhere else for you to play. The street is not a good place to play.
Starting point is 00:27:52 Like that's a bad place to play. Like why can't kids throw balls against stoops anymore? It's like, well, cause that's not a great place to be playing. You know, when a car could hit you or a horse could stove your head in. Horse hooves always stove things. Anyway, Carol takes a moment here to talk about some of the people who are behind the New York Times specifically, who are helping in the press. New York Times, even at the time, was the most powerful paper in New York. Now it's the most powerful paper
Starting point is 00:28:20 in the country. And the publisher, Adolf Ochs, was very close to Al Smith. His daughter, Iphigen, was this already an idealistic Parks activist. And as we'll see, she'll come to idolize Robert Moses. She will really kind of adore him and in a way worship him. And that support is going to be unquestioned for decades and will become hugely valuable to Robert Moses as he embarks on his projects. And there's all this lobbying behind the scenes. There's all this kind of backroom politics stuff. They decide to hold a conference of regional parks commissioners on the day that the legislature session opens.
Starting point is 00:28:53 They can all be there cheering when parks are brought up. Just kind of classic old fashioned political theater that works. And it doesn't work. The republics hold firm. They defeat Moses Park money bill. He doesn't have it. The purchase aren't there. He's losing land they could be buying worse now the taylor state appropriation
Starting point is 00:29:09 really is not legal they've got to get this money from somewhere so that they can make it look kind of legal that's when they turn to mrs muskowitz and she just says the name that i'm sure we've all been thinking up to this point august heckscher. And he is a millionaire, he's a famous millionaire. He agrees to give them the money in exchange for naming the park after him. And it still is, it's called Heckscher State Park. It's still there. He was zinc.
Starting point is 00:29:34 I always like looking up those guys where you're like, where'd they get the money? He's like, I don't know, zinc. The guy just had a ton of zinc. That was his thing. That was his racket. Robert Carrow describes him as a wee man who has little tufts of white hair
Starting point is 00:29:47 and when he sits in a chair, his feet don't touch the ground. Which is, which, the image that conjured in my mind was Mr. Mixleplick from the Superman comics, you know? Sure. It just sounds like that to me. You have to imagine when Moskowitz said his name, he just appeared in the air floating around them was like money for a parking need.
Starting point is 00:30:10 Oh, well, let me move 1000 tons of zinc. Powered by zinc. Yeah. Because they, they, they, they make this calculation that they can't go like what you'd normally do when you're fundraising for a thing is talk to a lot of people and try to get support and maybe collect it. They know that if people find out that they're asking for the money because they don't have the money, they're going to be in big trouble. So they have to ask one person who Belmosk with says, we'll say yes.
Starting point is 00:30:41 And that's August Hckscher, which is, uh, which is crazy. Yeah. And it's, it is the exact opposite of the theory of democratic politics and governance that it's like, Oh yeah, well, we couldn't get this money through the democratic process. So we'll go to one rich man in the, in this fight between the powerful and the poor. We're going to go to this one rich man to make it happen, but it's a, it's a complicated business politics court battles going badly. The judge rules against Moses. Meanwhile, these towns in Long Island that Moses needs the approval of to build
Starting point is 00:31:10 his Jones beach dream and his roads are turning against him. There's a public referendum to allow park development in Hempstead on Long Island. It gets voted down and Moses is like, I'm this is all slipping away. I'm not going to be able to build any of this. My, my land options are lapsing. The parkway land negotiations are halted. Developers are starting to buy up the land I need and they're building little houses on it, which is not what I wanted. And this is when the chapter ends with one of Caro's most beautiful kind of teased transitions.
Starting point is 00:31:36 He says, this is on page 206. It had been a year since Robert Moses had announced his revised and broadened park and parkway plan. Now, more than a year later, parks and parkways were still located nowhere but in the map of Moses' imagination. After all the talking, all the planning, all the fighting, they simply didn't exist. And at the end of 1925, there seemed little possibility that they would come into existence at any time in the foreseeable future. If one looked ahead a decade, even a generation, it seemed unlikely that any substantial part of the dream would be a reality. New paragraph indent.
Starting point is 00:32:08 Within three years, almost all of it would be reality. What? How did that happen? We gotta find out in the next chapter. It's because you counted him out, you fools. You thought he was dead. No one puts Moses in a corner. Nobody. Exactly. Him standing with his hands on his hips
Starting point is 00:32:23 on a beach or something. Oh, God. We could do a whole, like, at the end of this whole project, we could just do a whole episode on the last sentences of each of Robert Caro's chapters. They're so good. They're so good. He has incredible flair. He's really good at finding the dramatic core
Starting point is 00:32:47 of a moment, cutting through to what is the dramatic question that has to be answered. And guess what? In the next chapter, I'm gonna tell you how we answer it. And you're like, I gotta find out. But we'll get to that chapter after this break. Okay. This is the new chapter. It's chapter 12, Robert Moses and the creature of the machine.
Starting point is 00:33:15 Where are we now? So this is a one where at right, you've just said one of the coolest titles, I think in any chapter in any book that, uh, uh, the creature of the machine. Don't get your hopes up. We haven't gotten to the curator of cauliflower yet. So that's true. That's true. Last chapter in this section, this episode was the curator of cauliflower and the first chapter of next episode is going to be the feather duster, which, which shouldn't sound cool, but it does. So Robert Moses and the creature
Starting point is 00:33:37 of the machine, which again, it sounds like he used a machine to build a creature, which is fantastic, but that's not what he does. This is, it's 1925 going into 1926. And at this point, Caro takes a moment to stop us and to say, let's talk about the political power of parkways, of roads that open up new areas. They're a potential source of enormous wealth for politicians. Parkways mean that the government has to buy a lot of real estate. It means the government has to hire a lot of workers and contractors. It means that a lot of businesses that were isolated before are now reachable by road. Land that was not valuable because it was too distant is now valuable because it's within close distance.
Starting point is 00:34:16 And if politicians are aware of where these roads are going, they can buy land along those routes. They can get contracts to the people that are connected to them. They can give tip offs to people in exchange for money. They can make a lot of money. If they own businesses in those areas, those businesses will now be worth more. There's a lot of ways to make money off of a new road. If you know where the road is going and in previously Robert Moses, the idealist, the democratic purist, is he going to play that game of getting votes by telling them where they should buy land ahead of time?
Starting point is 00:34:42 Roman. No, sir. No, sir. That is against the spirit of democracy or whatever. He refuses. In 1924, he announces park plan. They say, where's the roads going to go? We want to make some money. And he says, no, I refuse. And in 1925, there was that Hempstead referendum. He still is refusing to give inside knowledge to the guy who can sway that.
Starting point is 00:35:01 NASA County GOP boss, G Wilbur Doughty, but his dreams are falling apart. So in 1925, that's gonna change. He's not gonna stand by that anymore. And Caro says, look, there's no record of a deal on paper. I cannot prove that there was an agreement by the standards of Robert Caro, which means it has to be written down on paper or he has to be told it by someone who either was there or talked to witness. But he goes, here's what happens. Moses says, oh, I'm going to work on this parkway with a commission led by a crony of G. Wilbur Doughty, who Moses has previously called this crony the creature of the machine. That's where the title comes from.
Starting point is 00:35:37 He was so disgusted by this guy being a creature of the machine. But not long after that, there's a politically connected lawyer who starts a corporation whose only business as a corporation is purely to buy 265 acres of seemingly worthless land, lands that nobody has any use for, which happen to be needed for the right of way for the Meadowbrook Causeway, which is part of the Parkway that's being built. Contracts to build the causeways, maybe by coincidence, they go to a contractor that's owned by Doughty's brother-in-law. And then Doughty throws his supportin-law, and then Doughty throws his support behind Moses Parkway plan and he tells Moses,
Starting point is 00:36:10 rewrite the referendum, resubmit it. Let's see what happens. And the referendum that lost by a three-to-one margin in 1925 suddenly wins by a three-to-one margin in 1926, giving the Long Island Park Commission, essentially, control of Jones Beach. Now, can you prove a crud pro quo? Carow says you can't, but I mean, it's basically, it seems unlikely that there was not one there. He's doing the thing he needs to do. He's getting his hands dirty in order to make his dream a reality. And it's the only way he can do it, it seems. There's some election year wrangling in Albany that we don't need to get into it.
Starting point is 00:36:42 As much as I love getting into the details of this book, we don't need to. But as a result of it, Al Smith and the Republicans in legislature, they agree that in exchange for the Northern State Parkway not being built until Moses has a route agreed to by the Long Island Barons and has built enough of the Southern State Parkway to reach Jones Beach. There's a lot of names, a lot of details. They'll give him all the money for the parks in 1926 so that Moses can begin building his projects. Basically, the agreement is he can't start this other road until he finishes the first road. He can't start the northern state until he's a certain way along the southern state and they end the Taylor state fight. Moses gets that land. Macy has realized that his allies in the legislature have betrayed him, which is a
Starting point is 00:37:25 lesson he will, he will take with him for the rest of his life, as we'll see. And the Republicans say it's going to take him so long to build the Southern state parkway, the Northern state parkway. We don't even have to think about it. This parkway that's going to go through the land of our political patrons, the Barons, we don't have to worry about that. It took 14 years to build the Bronx river parkway, which is the same length. This is way in the future.
Starting point is 00:37:44 We don't have to deal with this. It's going to take Moses so long just to get the Bronx River Parkway, which is the same length. This is way in the future. We don't have to deal with this. It's going to take Moses so long just to get the rights to the lands he needs for the Southern State Parkway. They don't know that Moses has been out scheming him and playing with the local Long Island bosses. So suddenly the Nassau County Board of Supervisors gives him miles of land as a gift and combined with the lands that New York City already owns, Moses suddenly has all the right of way land he needs
Starting point is 00:38:05 for the Southern State Parkway. And the legislature's like, well, what? I have to assume that they're eating soup at the time and they just spit soup all over themselves when they get the news. And the Republicans are like, oh yeah, but we're gonna give him all this money. But the appropriations until it's available,
Starting point is 00:38:20 until that bond is passed, we're gonna keep them small. So he can't do any actual work. And then they look outside their windows, I guess. There's engineers and surveyors already out there working because it says in Moses law that the Department of Public Works can use its money and its workers to work on parks projects. And there's kind of classic, I always imagine that this is the way it would work in a movie is they're investigating and there are parks workers working on park stuff and they're like, what's this all about? And they're like, oh yeah, we're from the tree nursery. This is the tree nursery program of the conservation department. It's fine. There could be trees here someday. Well, you're developing this beach for a parkway. Oh no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:38:57 This is oyster culturing. We're doing oyster culturing with this money. There could be oysters here someday. It's all this money that's earmarked for other stuff is going to park and road building. And Caro personifies the Republicans in the form of Ways and Means Committee Chairman Eberly Hutchinson and Finance Committee Chairman Charles J. Hewitt. And Hewitt and Hutchinson are just gonna be continually stymied by how fast Moses working
Starting point is 00:39:20 and how Moses out-thought them in this. And they go to the governor and they protest. And the governor's like, well, let's talk about it. Come over to my hotel room. And he just gets them drunk and they most of thought them out thought them in this and they go to the governor and they protest and the governor's like well let's talk about it come over to my hotel room and he just gets them drunk and they kind of listen to music all night and he puts them to bed and the next morning makes them breakfast really early and they're all hung over it's such a again personalities and politics you know it's how are we gonna deal with this problem and just send them over to me and well I'll just drink with them all night and
Starting point is 00:39:41 I'll get them hung over and they'll be they won't be able to argue anymore it does seem like the Al Smith treatment, right? Like if the Lyndon Johnson treatment was that he like screamed in your face until you just wanted to kill yourself. Like Al Smith is just like, roll in like a barrel of bourbon. We'll just, we'll sort this out. I'll tell you about the Fulton Fish Market
Starting point is 00:39:59 until you just, you're just like fine Al, whatever, he can have the money. Put a record on the gramophone, put Sidewalks of New York on, that's my song, we'll listen to that, that'll be great, come on, sing with me, boys, east side, west side. But there's sort of a swage by this chummy, old school, very slow working politics of Al Smith,
Starting point is 00:40:19 but coming up right, drafting up behind him, is this person who will, while like go to sleep at night, will have built an entire foundation on your land for something like, and then, and then he's gonna go, what, what? Were you gonna tear it up? What? You know, like, you know, it's like, it's crazy.
Starting point is 00:40:38 Like the two of them really work as this incredible team because Al Smith kind of lulls a lot of these old school politicians into thinking that this road will take 14 years and our Moses knows it's going to take six months. You know, it's a real, it's like slow cop, fast cop the way they deal with things. So now it's we're in may 1926. They're still stalling that Taylor state trial at the same time that they are
Starting point is 00:41:02 literally in court stalling a decision about whether they own this land or not. Moses sending out crews to start turning buildings that are already on the land into park facilities. And by mid May, the Deer Range State Park, as it's called, is open. And when the trial finally begins in June, the judge is like, we're going to find against you. Like he finds that Moses and the, and the other park commissioners, he hits them each with $22,000 fines. And this is one of my favorite details in the whole book is that Moses' mother reads this in the newspaper and says, oh, he never earned a dollar in his life and now we'll have
Starting point is 00:41:32 to pay this. And I just love that that Carol knows that she said that. Talk to the right person who delivered that newspaper to her and knows it. Moses appeals to a new trial. Al Smith testifies in his favor and has lunch with the judge. And the judge ultimately decides in this retrial, the law was broken, but the land belongs to the Long Island park commission now. Like they've already done it. They've already built on it. He's not going to tell them to tear down the park buildings. And he advises the jury to fix damages owed to Kingsland Macy at six cents.
Starting point is 00:42:01 So insult to injury, by the way, the law was broken but I'm rude as hell anyway and you don't get any money. That's awful. It's so mean. It really seems like, I mean I'm sure Moses loved it, and that's the twist ending of the movie The Sixth Sense is that Moses should have lost the trial but he didn't. You did that one on blank check, right? We did, we did, long ago, yes. Yeah, and I believe it was about a land battle in the Long Island courts. The whole time you're like,
Starting point is 00:42:29 this Willis doesn't own this land. And the judge at the end is like, he doesn't, but he gets to keep it. He doesn't, what's the matter with you? Let the people have a beach, six cents, get out of here, bang, bang, bang. And all the people in the audience, they go, oh, that's what that title meant.
Starting point is 00:42:43 Makes sense. This is the adage of possession is nine tenths of the law. This is what this sort of refers to, this type of thing. It's like, if you're there and you're squatting on it and you're doing the thing, judges are, you know, you think that judges are kind of conservative in the way of like, you know, like resting someone's land away from them,
Starting point is 00:43:04 stopping that as a conservative point of view. But in a way, they're kind of mostly conservative in the sense of like, well, if it's going to cause so much trouble, like already these parks are here, we can't just undo all this stuff. They're really low to just cause something to stop or be dug up or do something different. They really want to keep what is the most ultimate common sense piece in this situation.
Starting point is 00:43:28 And at this point, people are already going to this park. So it just makes no sense. Yeah. There's a great passage here where, where Carol says, basically that he goes, by the time the higher courts came to rule on the question of whether the Taylor estate was a park, it was a park. What was the judge to do? Tell the state to tear up the roads and tear down the buildings to destroy what hundreds of thousands of dollars of the public's money had been spent to build? Tell the people who had visited the Taylor estate that they could visit it no more? In theory, of course, judges should not be influenced by such considerations, but judges are human, and their susceptibility to such considerations was undoubtedly increased by Moses's willingness
Starting point is 00:44:02 to attack publicly those of them who ruled against him. And so it's like they're people, you know? And like Roman, like you're saying, a judge is not going to be like, okay, well, the law says no one can use this park ever again. So I guess no parks. And at the same time, Tara talks about a real imbalance between a lawsuit between a private individual and a government agency because the government agency has so much money, they can just keep stalling and keep appealing.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Whereas an individual will run out of money. And that's what happens with Kingsland Macy eventually. He can no longer afford to keep this lawsuit going. The park has already been built. But ironically, he becomes so inspired by this fight that he decides to go into politics and he becomes the most ruthless machine boss that Suffolk County, Long Island
Starting point is 00:44:45 has ever seen. And they call him the little king of Suffolk County. He rules with an iron fist. He goes, sends himself to Congress. He and Moses start working together. And when Macy dies in 1962, Caro says, the only person outside of Macy's family that he wants to see before he dies is Robert Moses. And it feels like, I don't know that there are any books about Debbie Kingsland Macy,
Starting point is 00:45:05 but it feels like there's a whole book in this guy who lost this battle to Robert Moses. And instead of taking the lesson, we've got to do more to regulate this government. He takes it like, well, if you can't beat them, join them. I guess I'll be a corrupt political boss too. And becomes so good at it.
Starting point is 00:45:20 That he just takes over this one area and rules it like a king. That's a real comic book narrative right there. That's a real like Batman shows up in Gotham and then creates the Joker time and stuff. Yes, right, anyone who does battle with him is just like, well, I guess there's only one way to succeed. It is crazy that he asked for Robert Moses
Starting point is 00:45:39 on his deathbed though. Is there more on that later in the book? I do not remember. No. I would love to know. It's the last time you hear about Macy. It's a big book, David. We can't talk about every person
Starting point is 00:45:47 Robert Moses touched along the way, you know? I don't know. The book kind of has the vibe of it. Yes, we can. It has the potential, you know? That's true. That's true. There's a lot of pages to fill.
Starting point is 00:45:56 You might think that Macy shows up. I feel like once they mention when a character dies, you usually don't hear about them again. Usually, Caro's like, I'm saying that now because you say goodbye to him. Karo is actually, you're right, he's outstanding at keeping information streamlined in a colossal book like this.
Starting point is 00:46:14 You're not going 400 pages later and seeing a last name and being like, who the hell is this? Is this guy, it's not like that at all. Yeah, because he closes the book on Macy at this moment when he in fact lives another 30, 40 years. And he's just like, you can put Macy aside and that's it. He's not slavishly devoted to chronology when it comes to doing this type of biography,
Starting point is 00:46:39 which is a fascinating choice. I mean, I find it actually kind of, sometimes it'll draw me a little bit, but mostly I love it, you know, because he's really much more about the ideas and the drama than being like this relentless march of time. Right. Yeah, he's organizing the book mainly through
Starting point is 00:46:55 Moses's development as a person, from idealist to monster, and anything along the way. If it makes sense to talk about this thing now, he'll talk about it. There's a whole chapter we'll get to much later when we're talking. That's just most his relationship with different mayors of New York, where it's almost as if Carol was like, we're going to step out of the timeline of the
Starting point is 00:47:13 book for a moment so I can talk about this stuff, and then we're going to step back into the stream of events. Uh, but he's, he organized it really well. It is confusing sometimes, but just a lot of stuff to keep in your head. And it's astounding to me that Carol was able to keep it in his head and organize it in this way over such a long thing. It amazes me to no end actually. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Caro, at this point, he enumerates some lessons that Moses has learned from this. Number one, the simplest way to get what he wants done is to use every source of power he has. He can't hold himself back because of his ideals. What difference does it make if a few politicians profit off of a public work? If they do, the work gets done. If they don't, it doesn't. You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs, which becomes one of Moses's big slogans. Also, in the eyes of the public, the ends may not justify the means, but if the ends are loved enough, the means don't matter. They're unimportant. They don't
Starting point is 00:47:59 have to be justified because no one cares. People love parks. They don't care how parks get built. Another lesson, people love parks. If you're fighting for parks, you're a hero. Doesn't matter what you do. He's like, Oh, this is great. Yeah. He gets undone later by forgetting that. And instead being like, do people love highways in the middle of Manhattan?
Starting point is 00:48:16 People like, no. And he's like, are you sure? I really want to make one. Like, let me put one right here. We have this dumb park, but there could be a big clover leaf exchange. That's a really good point. Like, let me put one right here. We have this dumb park, but there could be a big cloverleaf exchange. No, no. That's a really good point. That really is, because yeah, he loses touch
Starting point is 00:48:31 of this secret sort of well of goodwill he can tap into when he's trying to do all these ruthless things. It's so crucial. Right, that's like when he pivots to the car shit, you know, sorry for swearing, I'm not sure. But if I'm allowed to do that. You can. No, no, this is an all audiences
Starting point is 00:48:51 family power broker podcast, because the kids really want to hear about it. Power broker of course is rated G. No, but like, and the other thing about Moses is when you look around the city and you see the parks that he made, you're like, you know, these endure these endure like yes maybe they had some problem but like they and all of his roads like stink because they're parkways that are
Starting point is 00:49:12 made for you know cars that go 40 miles an hour and like you're supposed to look at trees while you go by and now you're like on the Jackie in like an insane traffic jam you're like who built this stinking road like it's Robert Moses yeah like he you know roads are just not the way to go. Anyway, I'm sorry. That's my road rant over. But I think that's really smart. I mean, it's not just all the like time moving on
Starting point is 00:49:35 and people getting savvier to his ways. I mean, like if he doesn't have this as this battery source of power, the goodwill of parks, like he really falls down and becomes like more and more people, maybe not the New York Times, but more and more people, you know, consider him a villain. And it's really, really intriguing. And in addition to sort of like this moment where he's learning like all these lessons that he has to let go of his morals and his ideals of how politics works, he's learning really key things about like what it means
Starting point is 00:50:05 to be like a developer and constructor of things. Like if you drive down stakes and you pour concrete, it is really hard for people to stop you. And that's a really important lesson he uses like constantly. And then the other thing is that is really important to lie about how much everything costs. Yes. Because he knows that none of this stuff will work
Starting point is 00:50:29 even for like the, whatever, that $225,000 allotment that he got, barely got him a limousine and stuff. Like he just, but he just begins to work on stuff and knows that if he spends a lot of money, but not all the money needed and does a part of a thing that, you know, people might be mad at him for like underestimating the costs, but then he can just say, yeah, but you know, you're the one who gave me this money and if you're so smart, you should have known better that it's not going to cost this
Starting point is 00:51:00 much. I mean, like he's really devious when it comes to this stuff. Um, I also liked that, that like his, his tactic in this is to not like build. You know, a couple of things or like spread the money out and start a lots of things. Like he likes to get really far along with one thing. So then they just cannot help, but you know, just like, okay, I guess we gotta put this building up or we have to do this thing because, um, it's already. You know, it's already so far along that it's really hard to say no. And people are really subject to a sunk cost fallacy when it comes to this stuff.
Starting point is 00:51:30 He's got kind of a two pincer strategy. You're right. He's going to use this again and again and again, which is I'm going to spend enough money to make sure that there's visible work done. And are you going to tell people you wasted that money instead of finishing it? And then I'm going to finish it so that people see it and see how great it is. And they will want me to do more of it. The voters will want me to do more of it.
Starting point is 00:51:50 Once I finished this, these buildings on Jones beach, they'll let me do whatever I want, cause they'll see how amazing they are, you know, once I finished this park, but also as we'll see in this section, I'm going to use all the money you gave me to build this building, to lay the foundation for this building. And then I'm going to say, are you really going to just leave a naked foundation on this beach and tell people that that's what you did? No, you're going to give me the rest of the money. And the ultimate lesson, he broke the law.
Starting point is 00:52:15 He got everything he wanted. He was fined six cents for it. So it's one of those things where it's like, you got what you wanted, but was it worth it? And he's like, yeah, it was worth it. It was worth six cents to do that. And he's insulated from the law because he has contracts and money to dispense. He has access to lawyers who can delay it. Carus says on page 220, if there was one law for the poor who have neither money nor influence and another law for the rich who have both, there is still a third law
Starting point is 00:52:38 for the public official with real power who has more of both. And he's learned that he has the power to defy the law and the only way that he can make that he has the power to defy the law. And the only way that he can make his dreams a reality is to defy the law. So he has $1 million available to him immediately from this $15 million for the entire Parks and Parksway system. He uses it to buy up so much land so he can start developing them. By the end of 1926, some of them are open for public use so he can show people, look what we're doing. And on August 29th 1926 my wedding anniversary But many years later
Starting point is 00:53:08 He digs the first bit of soil of his first road construction the section of the southern state parkway That's gonna loop around the Hempstead Lake State Park reservoir. He's been planning roads since 1914 in his mind and I think the reason David that I think he goes to roads eventually rather than parks as his big Thing is what he really loves is he likes drawing lines on maps in his mind. And I think the reason, David, that I think he goes to roads eventually rather than parks, as his big thing is, what he really loves is he likes drawing lines on maps. He likes taking a pencil and drawing a line on a map. And you could do that with roads even more than with parks. It's just what Caro said on this podcast, right?
Starting point is 00:53:34 That he drew all these lines on a map, basically when he was a teenager, and then he built them all when he was an adult with very little change. He did exactly what he always wanted to do. Right. Like 12 years later what he always wanted to do. Right. Like 12 years later, he's finally building these roads and Hutchinson and Hewitt, they're so mad Moses is finding more money than they intended and doing more
Starting point is 00:53:53 worth than they intended. And he starts planning Jones beach. They say, Oh, you're making a bathing beach. Okay. You'll have a few, you know, kind of cheap dressing areas so that the boys can't watch the girls getting changed. You'll have like a boardwalk or something with some hot dog stands. And most is like, no, I don't want that. I'm going to get a bunch of star architects together. I want enormous bath houses big enough for 10,000 lockers.
Starting point is 00:54:14 I want swimming pools big enough for hundreds of people. There's going to be terraces with restaurants. There's going to be diaper changing stations. It's all going to look fanciful and whimsical. I want it to look like a fairy tale. I want two parking lots big enough to hold 10,000 cars each. I want bandstands. I want outdoor sporting areas.
Starting point is 00:54:29 And the architects are with him standing on an empty, totally nothing sandbar. There's nothing there. And he's like, I want this entire recreation complex. You're going to make it. And they start bringing him designs and they're very utilitarian. They're the kind of stuff you would expect for a government, you know, bathing station and Moses like, no, I want, I want one, one of these buildings to look like a castle.
Starting point is 00:54:48 I want another to look like a Moorish temple. I want this to look like a campanile from Venice, this water tower. And they, he's demanding, I want the most, I want these beautiful building materials. I want it faced in the most expensive stone I can get. And, uh, their, his architects are like, it's going to cost a million dollars to build this. And Hutchinson Hewitt says,
Starting point is 00:55:06 well, we'll only give you $150,000, assuming that he's gonna scale down his plans. No, he just used all that money to lay the foundations. And they're like, what? That's all you did? Smith, fire this man. And Smith says, no, I'm not gonna do it. And Moses just sees the situation so clearly.
Starting point is 00:55:20 Like we've said, are Hutchinson Hewitt gonna go back to their voters and say, this guy lied to us and we wasted $,000 dollars on two cement foundations on a random sandbar in the middle of nowhere in Long Island that you can't even get to because there's no roads to get there or you can even give me some money you can give us more money and I'm going to finish this yeah and they they're like well we'll get revenge on you we'll only give you some of the money you want and he's like I'm going to take money from the other departments it's fine like I'm I have so much more the other departments, it's fine.
Starting point is 00:55:45 Like I have so much more control over this. And that's how the chapter ends with Hutchinson and Hewitt fuming on Jones Beach at these foundations, just going, oh, Moses, he got us again. That's the end of chapter 12. This commitment to having this is again, where I get kind of like on Moses' side a little bit,
Starting point is 00:56:04 where I'm just like, yeah, get that Ohio limestone. What are you gonna, you can't build, you can get it. You know, like it's, you know, everyone who like does any sort of like remodeling or construction knows that like a building is, a building costs what a building costs, but like 90% of what the building cost is in the end is that a quarter inch of surface, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:56:27 Like is it bamboo, is it stone, is it marble? You know, it's that little bit. And he's picking the most expensive materials like in the United States to do this stuff. And he has this real eye for this stuff. And people talk about this, that he has a real designer's eye. Like he'll go like, yeah, but those bricks will really bounce off the sand and sea.
Starting point is 00:56:52 You know, like it'll really, the colors will really sparkle. And I totally appreciate that. Like, I think that's amazing. Yeah, he has a real aesthetic sense. He wants these things to look beautiful. And there's also, there's such an undeniable fun in seeing him out smart and out with these guys. There's a real Bugs Bunny kind of coyote element to Robert Moses outwitting
Starting point is 00:57:13 these, these guys who are trying to keep things, trying to basically do their job of not overspending on a, on a public beach. Those bath houses are still incredible. They're, you know, a lot of them are being spruced up to this day or whatever. Like they are impressive and enduring. Like they, he was right on a lot of those calls, which again is weird when he seems to abandon aesthetics,
Starting point is 00:57:39 like, you know, as he goes on. On his roles. Well, like any artist, his style changes over time and somebody It's easy. It's his earlier more popular stuff. It's easier to understand his later more, you know, you know brutal or pollution era yeah Someday maybe we'll be kind of high-minded enough to understand what he was getting at with those words Oh, yeah, yeah, but it's so true that the enduring quality of just how nice Jones Beach is.
Starting point is 00:58:09 Like you could take the most ardent anti-sprawl, anti-car, anti-Moses person, but they'll go to you, yeah, Jones Beach is pretty nice. You know, like it really is, it really works in his favor. This vision, in a way, it's interesting that this is his crown jewel, and it's done so early in this process.
Starting point is 00:58:35 But you could say, because it's so beautiful, because it's so accomplished, it gives him a blank check for his later work. Hey. Hey. I mean, he definitely wrote himself blank checks, right? It's true, yeah. It's not the traditional blank check of the government being whatever you want.
Starting point is 00:58:53 The government's just kinda like, how are you paying for this? And he's like, don't worry about it. I got nickels coming from so many bridges, you don't even need to write me a check. Yeah. But in blank check parlance, this is the guarantor. Like Don't Speech, it's success.
Starting point is 00:59:07 Is the guarantor for like- All of his work with Al Smith is the guarantor for later, like now you can't get rid of me. Because I'm one, one because I've created popular things and two because I have like planted roots in every agency and you cannot get rid of me. Like, you know, even if you try, I'm already over there. So it doesn't matter if you've gotten me out of here or whatever.
Starting point is 00:59:29 It's like Voldemort. You know what? Yes. It's like, I hate to do. I know everyone compares everything to Harry Potter, but when you were talking with Carol, I was like, yes, it's like Horcruxes. He's like, you can't destroy me because I have a job in that agency. So even if you obliterate this one, I live eternally. It's ridiculous. Yes. We've got to take a break when we come back. Chapter 13. Let's move to the next chapter, Chapter 13. It's called driving. And this is a chapter title that
Starting point is 01:00:05 Carol's going to use again. And I love it as a title because it's got two or three big meanings. Moses is driving himself and his men to work as hard and fast as possible in this, so people can do driving in their cars later. And it reminds you of that irony that Moses himself almost never drives a car, never really learns how to drive. There's a scene in here where he's practicing in case he wants to learn someday, and I think he just decided he doesn't want to. But Moses' success in the bathhouse battle, the Battle of the Bathhouses, shows him how much he needs Al Smith's support. Al Smith is the one who is, he is the guarantor right now that can back him up against the legislature, but he's not gonna have Al Smith
Starting point is 01:00:42 for long. Al Smith is planning to run for president in 1928. And so Moses is like, I've got to get as much done as possible on these projects so people can see how great they are. And then people will provide pressure on the government to get my other projects completed. And so Moses' staff in a lot of this chapter is about how hard he pushes them. They're working from 9 a.m. to midnight on many days. If someone isn't giving Moses what he wants, he yells at them or even worse, shuts them out of his presence, just cold shoulders them completely.
Starting point is 01:01:09 And at the same time, Moses is still overseeing a lot of non-Parks projects for Al Smith because he's still Al Smith's go-to guy for getting things done. And so Carol talks about the schedule where Moses, he gets on the 6 a.m. train to Albany, which is a four hour ride on Monday mornings. He goes to Al Smith. train to Albany, which is a four-hour ride on Monday mornings. He goes to Al Smith. He says, can you give me a state-owned car and a chauffeur to take me back
Starting point is 01:01:30 so that I'm because I know I'm going to miss the midnight train back home. And if you give me a car back, then I can start work tomorrow morning on Tuesday on park stuff. And he has spent at least three days a week in New York City for the State Council of Parks. He's shuttling between regional parks to check in on them. His park employees at the Long Island office in the old Belmont mansion, they say he never seems tired. He's working late into the night. He keeps them there until late in the night. The only person who can get him to leave the office is his wife, Mary. So sometimes the employees will sneak out and call her privately so that she will come to the office and tell him to come home. But then when he goes home, he does more work there. There's always a manila envelope full of new instructions for his employees
Starting point is 01:02:06 the next morning in his house. And his family is always around the office and the people at the office talk about how they're working hard. Their boss is kind of a tyrant, but there's a sense of excitement. And there's a sense of a fun, informal atmosphere, especially for the 1920s. They don't have to wear their suit jackets while they're working and things like that. Their boss dresses like a slob and is wearing, always wearing an old beaten up
Starting point is 01:02:26 hat. It is the excitement of a startup essentially that they are, they're working in, in this parks department. And this is the 1920s. Things are super basic. Moses is like, uh, I want the areas around my parkways to zone to certain ways. They can't be turned into houses and the towns, long Island are like, we don't have any zoning laws.
Starting point is 01:02:43 We don't have those. So Moses workers have to draft laws and then work with local town councils to get them put in place. There's so much work that has to be done, even beyond the designing of things. And the designing of things has to be incredibly effortful because Moses wants his work to be as elegant and beautiful as possible. If you're designing a guardrail, if you're designing a light pole, if you're designing the sign that points to the bathroom, he's saying, how do we make this pleasant to look at? How do we make this something that people will enjoy looking at and remember?
Starting point is 01:03:11 And his workers are very inspired by that, as I imagine anyone would be by someone who's pushing them to do their best, not just to work hard because we've got to make money for the company, but to do the best work that they can do as designers. Yeah, yeah. This is the part where I feel like the cult of personality makes the most sense to me when it comes to Robert Moses. Like sometimes when he's like shouting at people,
Starting point is 01:03:31 I'm always like, I would just walk away from this fucking idiot, you know what I mean? But like this vibe, this is very like, put out the school paper, you know, public radio, everyone's get paid like $15,000 a year. And you know, like, but we're still going to put out something amazing. We're going to work all the time. Like this, this really feels that I can get into the spirit of this moment.
Starting point is 01:03:55 There's a number of times in the book, this is one of them. And earlier when most is starting to work for Al Smith, that really resonate for me with my years at the Daily Show with Jon Stewart. We didn't get yelled at at the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, but there was a very hectic pace. We had to work really hard. We were putting out TV shows four nights a week that had a lot of substance in them. But you felt like this exact feeling of I'm being pushed to do my best and I'm doing something
Starting point is 01:04:19 that feels important and I want to do it as well as possible and I want to make it as funny as possible while also saying something. And there's something very exciting about that. And especially when you're young and a lot of the people working for him are relatively young men. There's an excitement to doing that, especially when you have the energy to do it. Later on, as we'll see coming up soon, people with families also have to work this hard and it is not as easy. But I see why some of these guys who are working for him here go on to work for him for decades and will defend him
Starting point is 01:04:45 to Cairo throughout So they got to do work on Jones Beach. It's the winter. We're gonna wait till the winter is over to survey this beach, right? No, we're not gonna do that. You have to go out. We have to get it done. Go out there Well, sometimes the water freezes and we can't get off the beach So bring rations with you so you can live there at one point point, the bay freezes for 10 days and most surveyors have just trapped there and they just eat nothing but pancakes because that's all they brought with them is pancake fix and they can never eat pancakes again because they spent 10 days eating pancakes. The beach level, it's too low to keep the ocean from rising above the road at times. So they're going to have to fill this beach with 40 million
Starting point is 01:05:21 cubic yards of sand fill taken from the bottom of the bay. It has to be dredged up and spread over 17 miles. It's the winter. The crew is living on the ships in the winter of 1927 to 1928, working all day to get it done. The bay bottom sand, it's too fine to stay down when it gets windy. It blows in your face. Now we've got to plant millions of clumps of beach grass by hand to hold it down. We've got to do in the winter. So you've got guys by hand kneeling in the sand, digging holes to plant beach grass as wind is buffeting them and it's freezing. They're just doing it because Moses knows We got to do in the winter. So you've got guys by hand kneeling in the sand, digging holes to plant beach grass as wind is buffeting them and it's freezing. They're just doing it because Moses knows
Starting point is 01:05:48 they have to get it done enough before Smith gets out of office. The contractor was building the causeway. He's like, look, I'm out of money. I can't meet my payroll. So if we don't get another $20,000, we're not gonna do it. Moses can't get the government to pay it to him. So as he always has done, he turns to his mom
Starting point is 01:06:04 and borrows that money from his mother, which again, it is bonkers to him. So as he always has done, he turns to his mom and borrows that money from his mother, which again, it is bonkers to me. The idea where it's like, well, this is a government project, but we gotta get it done. So mom, can you give me $20,000 so I can pay these guys to build a highway? It's so funny. He's ignoring legal injunctions to stop working.
Starting point is 01:06:20 Like he's still working and he is building Jones Beach. And he's getting closer and closer to the point where the landscape stops being his and starts belonging to Babylon Township. He needs that land before he can build the roads that are gonna reach his beach and reach other places that make that land valuable. And he doesn't want someone to see
Starting point is 01:06:39 that the road is going there, buy it up and build crappy, gaudy beach stuff. He wants it for himself because he needs to someday be able to build his bridge that goes from there to Fire Island. He has so many plans he needs this land for. He tries threatening the Babylon town board. It doesn't work. He's unpopular there. He's living there at the time. So when his wife goes to the stores to get to buy things, she's getting dirty looks from the people in town. One day he's practicing driving in case he ever does it. He's never going to.
Starting point is 01:07:05 He meets an old man and the old man is like, hey, my father was a judge in the county. And he and another judge, they had to resolve a case about who owns the bay bottom, this sacred bay bottom that Babylon Township has been leasing out to fishermen. It's there. It's the thing they've been protecting for generations. Hey, why don't you go talk to this other old man who dealt with the case? He has something interesting to tell you and this other even older man tells Moses That when they were looking at this who knows how many years back They discovered that there was there were two laws that were gonna be passed in the mid 19th century Giving half the Bay bottom to Nassau County and half to Suffolk County the Nassau County half passed the Suffolk County half
Starting point is 01:07:42 They never got around to it They never passed it. So that Bay bottom that Babylon treats as sacred and they lease out and they don't want anyone ever to impinge on it, they don't own it. They don't actually own it. No, it belongs to New York State. They forgot that they don't own it.
Starting point is 01:07:55 And Moses uses that information and he calls it blackjacking, that he blackjacks the town council, but it's blackmail. I don't know why you would say blackjack instead of blackmail, because I guess it sounds cooler. It's like he hit the town council over but it's blackmail. I don't know why you would say blackjack instead of blackmail. Cause I guess it sounds cooler. It's like he hit the town council over the head with this information. He says, if you don't give me the Jones beach land in exchange for the city, finally giving you this Bay bottom.
Starting point is 01:08:13 I'll reveal to your citizens that you have spent 70 years leasing it out to fishermen when you don't even own it because you never bothered to finish the job of getting legal control over it. And they go, okay, okay. well, we'll hold a referendum. How about that? We'll hold a referendum about whether you'll get this land. And Moses says, that's fine. And you know what?
Starting point is 01:08:31 This referendum voting shouldn't just be open to taxpayers here. It should be open to anyone who lives in town, including the employees of my projects that are living here temporarily. And you know what? We're going to hold it on the day of primary, but the primary hours voting is going to be open till nine o'clock. The referendum hours, the voting is going to end at six. And so they're bringing in by car state employees from out of town to vote. There's no clear voter registration rules. They can't tell people not to vote.
Starting point is 01:08:58 People show up to vote after six and find that they cannot vote in the referendum on the primary. Even with all that, the referendum ends, Moses wins by seven votes. And so with all of that, and he barely gets it, but now he finally has that land. And I just love, I love that it feels again, like a movie where it's like, if only I had some special information I could use to get this land and an old man says, well, you might, you might look back here. Where'd this old man come from? Look, these were the days when there was,
Starting point is 01:09:26 if you want information, you had to find an old man. So he could tell you, they didn't have the internet. There weren't a lot of encyclopedias. You had to get an old man to give you some information. Yeah, yeah. And this is another instance of Robert Moses kind of using the sort of like, the inept practices of his opponents against them.
Starting point is 01:09:44 Yes. It's like, I'm going to embarrass you with how bad you are at this. If you don't just give me what I want. And it works a lot. I mean, Bel Moskowitz kind of taught him this stuff. We talked about in the last episode with the dancing halls, when she cleaned those up, where she said,
Starting point is 01:10:02 I could reveal that you are running these places of predation, or we can just, we can register them and no one has to know about it. And he, he's using those lessons he learned from Bell that instead of a frontal attack often you can get around the back and make an agreement with your enemies that they won't like, but you'll get what you want. And he's not in it. Look, he's like a reality show contestant. He's not here to make friends. He's here to win. You know, he's, he's, he's all about parks. He's not here to make friends. He's here to win, you know, he's, he's, he's all about parks.
Starting point is 01:10:25 He's not here to make friends with the Babylon town council, but he's running out of time Smith's governorship is almost up. There's a law that says you cannot run for president and governor at the same time in New York state and Smith wants to be president so badly. And so Moses is working fast in less than three years. He's got all the land he needs for the Southern state parkway. He has 21 miles of it in various stages of work. In that time, he's also expanded Long Island's state park space. It's gone from
Starting point is 01:10:48 200 acres to 9,700 acres across 14 parks. He's acquired that land for about a million dollars, even though the land value at the time was more than 15 times that. Through picking up land the government already owns, making deals with people, trading things, he started building facilities in those parks. Bathhouses, baseball fields, picnic areas, playgrounds, diving boards, hiking paths, roads. Jones Beach in 1926 is nothing but sand. Now it's got these two enormous, these beautiful bathhouses. And here's another passage that I'd love to read to you, just about the immediate effect of this, after this hurry, this frenzy of work. During the summer of 1928, park-seeking families heading out of New York City
Starting point is 01:11:28 began to feel Long Island open up to them. Week by week, words spread. At the beginning of the summer, the bathhouse at Valley Stream State Park contained a thousand lockers. For a few weekends, these were sufficient. Then they were not. Another thousand lockers were added. Then another thousand. And even so, by the end of the summer, thousands of would-be bathers were being turned away every weekend. by the end of the summer, thousands of would-be bathers were being turned away every weekend. By the end of the summer, attendance at Long Island State
Starting point is 01:11:49 parks had passed half a million. So there was this need. People do love these parks. They're already using them. And there's also a foreshadowing here of what's going to happen when Moses builds roads. Later on, he's going to build expressways and bridges to cut down on traffic only for more and more cars
Starting point is 01:12:03 to fill up these roads. And he's seeing that happen with people. But here there's something kind of joyous about it because it's like, yeah, people are using the parks. This is amazing. This is great. He's already making this dream happen in reality. And the press loves him. They give Moses all the credit. He's becoming a popular hero in New York. And Robert Caro has an interesting comparison here where he's like,
Starting point is 01:12:21 Moses was getting far more New York headlines than Einstein's new theory of relativity. Einstein had a new version of the theory of relativity that was coming out the same time. And yeah, it's an interesting way to measure relative popularity. Totally. Because it's not like there's newsies on the street corner going, extra, extra, read all about it. Time slows down as you approach the speed of light. Extra, extra, read all about it. Time slows down as you approach the speed of light. But it's a, I guess it shows you how big a name Moses is. Even the most famous scientist in the world, you know,
Starting point is 01:12:52 is getting less press. One funny thing is they keep giving him middle initials in the press, even though he doesn't have ones. They're making up middle initials for his name. He's like Robert A. Moses or Robert T. Moses. And the legend is being built. Here's this public servant. He doesn't care about making money.
Starting point is 01:13:06 He makes very little money, but he wants to build parks. And now his Long Island dream is pretty much safe. But he's actually accomplished even more than it seems, because while he's been building all this Long Island stuff, he's been buying up land and preserving parks upstate in New York also. There's all this land around Lake George, and almost none of it is owned by the state, and it's been opened up to development and logging. And he persuades some of the rich old men there to give him 11,000 acres of land for the bargain basement price of $75,000.
Starting point is 01:13:34 And he's preserving Revolutionary War battlefields at Fort Stanton and at Saratoga, over 10,000 acres of Whiteface Mountain. And he's absorbed 70 parks that were kind of already there but not run on a professional basis for another 125,000 acres. He's buying up land in the Adirondacks and the Catskills, or at least obtaining it, and he's building facilities in these places. But since the people upstate don't care about Long Island parks, they don't use those. And the people in New York City, they don't care about the upstate parks. Nobody but Moses really seems to have a total understanding of just how much land he's now made into public parks and how much land is now under his personal control.
Starting point is 01:14:07 Yeah. And they don't really understand how much all of the success has changed him. Yes. And Carol ends this chapter talking about how amazing it is. The most remarkable thing maybe is that these parks and parkways, they're so close to the plans that he first presented in the early 1920s. He has, in this short amount of time, he has made his dream, either reality or about to become a reality purely through the power of.
Starting point is 01:14:33 Political sliminess and pushing people really hard and lying to people and just doing them to oblivion, not showing up to his own depositions, things like that. Yeah, that's there's, we, we skipped over that, but there's a part during the lawsuit that Macy has against him where he's not showing up to his own depositions, you know, things like that, yeah. We skipped over that, but there's a part during the lawsuit that Macy has against him where he's not showing up because he's too busy. And then also his lawyer just stays away for one day. He says, I'm too busy, I can't show up at court. And then when the court reconvenes, he's like,
Starting point is 01:14:55 well, certainly we can't, I wasn't even here yet last time. We can't do anything now. And... What kind of a court is this, having the trial without me even present? I wasn't even here. This is outrageous. All right, moving on, the next chapter is chapter 14, changing.
Starting point is 01:15:12 Elliot, what is Carrow referring to when he says changing here? Well, everyone knows that ch-ch-ch-ch-change is time may change you, but you can't change time. In this case, power can also change you, but you can't change time. And in this case, power can also change you, but you can't change power, I guess. Robert Moses is, before our very eyes, through Caro's eyes, is changing as a result of suddenly having power. All the negative traits he had before have become enlarged and kind of enhanced because people can't say no to him. So the arrogance, the impatience, the condescension, his refusal to compromise. Those were all there in his character. Again, he was Bela Coen's son.
Starting point is 01:15:46 He has her qualities, but now he also has the power that means he doesn't have to hide those qualities. He doesn't have to temper them. And his earlier idealism is giving away to the easier way to do things, the more effective way to do things. He no longer has as much of a positive path set before him to follow. He has power now, and he's determined to do things his own way, no matter what. And so he starts lashing out at people who disagree with them. If you're on the phone with him and you disagree with him, he'll just hang up on you. He doesn't care who you are. He ignores the press.
Starting point is 01:16:14 He insults legislators to their faces. There's one particular, there's a particular passage here that I'd love Roman, if you and I could, could talk about when a particular legislator named Jeremiah F. Toomey, the Senate Finance Committee chairman, he represents Brooklyn, he stops by to talk to Moses about a bill that Moses has that might provide some patronage. And it was reported to Caro as happening this way. Roman, would you prefer to be Mr. Moses or Mr. Toomey? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:16:43 I don't know. Let me do Bob Moses. Let me do Bob Moses. Okay, you'll take the plum part. That's Mr. Toomy? I don't know. I don't know. Let me, let me, let me, let me do Bob Moses. Let me do Bob Moses. Okay. You'll take the plum part. That's fine. You're the, you're the boss. That's okay.
Starting point is 01:16:50 A very Moses move to do that. So, uh, this is how apparently Toomy told the story. Toomy says, Bob, it looks like there'll be a lot of jobs out there. And I was wondering if we could get a couple. Well, what did you have in mind, Jerry? Jerry mentions one job and Moses says very softly, very politely. Do you have anything else in mind Jerry? Jerry completely taken in, thinking that for once this fellow is going to be reasonable,
Starting point is 01:17:10 mentions a couple of other jobs and Moses says, Do you have anything else in your mind Jerry? Jerry says, Well, that's about all. And Moses says, Jerry, you can take that bill and stick it up your ass. Perfectly done. So that's the way he talks to the legislators that he's working with. He's just, he's like, yeah, yeah, sure.
Starting point is 01:17:29 Yeah, okay, yeah, of course. Anything else you want? Well, get the hell out of my office. Like it's, I love that not just that he yelled at him, but that he led him along, that took him down the garden path, you know, to get there. I think that he projects such invincibility. It's, you guys are asking Kara about this.
Starting point is 01:17:45 Like, why didn't people just fire him or accept his resignations eventually? Like, it's his psychic armor is only like growing more powerful. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that's how Moses is dealing with his ostensible opponents. These are like the Republicans in the legislature,
Starting point is 01:18:00 but he's also dealing with his ostensible allies that way. One of the ways he was able to get his bill passed that gave him all this power was because he had the support of the people who would become the members of the state parks council, these older men, their pillars of their community is all over the state and they run little parks and they don't like how fast he's moving. They see that this land, when we change it, we can never go back. We can never undo these changes.
Starting point is 01:18:24 So let's take our time with it. They don't like his methods for taking land. They don't want to lose control of their own individual parks. And he had promised them this state parks council, this is an advisory council. This is not a supervisory council. And they soon learn that's not the case anymore. Now that he doesn't need their support, he starts refusing their budget requests. He's rude to them. And they, they, they everybody, finally read the law that they helped him pass and they go, oh, that's not what they wanted.
Starting point is 01:18:48 And they cannot stop him from putting his own projects through, he controls enough votes on the council. They can't stop him from being elected as chairman of the council. And some of this is genuine philosophical differences about how land should be used, whether it should be conservation or recreation, but other is just about power. And there's one story in particular that Carroll tells that we'll go over quickly,
Starting point is 01:19:08 where the treatment of two members of the Niagara State Park Commission, the elderly Judge Clearwater and the also elderly Ansley Wilcox. Judge Clearwater is a former political power in New York State, and he was semi-retired, but he went to lobby in Moses' behalf during the Ataylor State fight. Ansley Wilcox, Carol presents him as almost single-handedly responsible for making Niagara State Park a thing, that when he was a young man, he surveyed it on his own and then lobbied to get it made a park and has care taken it for years. And they also want to develop the park. They're not disagreeing with Moses about developing the park in some way. Wilcox is dying of cancer. He wants to see this park finished and used before he dies. So they agree with Moses' plans on the
Starting point is 01:19:48 most part, but they want to control it. This is their park. They've been running it for a long time now. They don't agree with all of Moses' individual decisions, and they don't really care about this larger parkway system that Moses sees as a piece of. They're not part of that. They just like this Niagara park. They've arranged for the Niagara Power Company to buy a little bit of land that the park needs for its roads and to donate that land to the park. And Moses uses this, you know, benevolent thing that they've done in order to start rumors that Wilcox and Clearwater, who at this point also Carol relays it on, are very sick old men. Like they're both sick. They can't even go to all the meetings. Moses
Starting point is 01:20:22 uses that to create, start rumors that they are colluding with the power company for profit. And there's a bunch of machinations. There's an investigative hearing where during the hearing, they refuse to admit that there are charges they're investigating. And then they release, then a report gets written that says there's no problem here and the report doesn't get released.
Starting point is 01:20:37 But Wilcox keeps saying, can you send me the report so I can clear my name? And Moses sends around a letter that's meant as a reply to Wilcox without sending Wilcox's letter where it's like, I don't know why you sent this insulting letter to us. I don't know why you had to take this abusive tone. And Wilcox is in such bad health that it takes him five days to dictate
Starting point is 01:20:54 this 10-page letter laying out the facts of what happened, accusing Moses of abusing his power. And at the end of the letter, he says, you know, few will read this letter and fewer still will understand it. and Cairo says, he was right. And on page 254 he goes, the old man was right. His letter lay unread in an unopened folder in a dusty Albany warehouse for 42 years. And although in the 43rd year the folder was opened, parentheses, by the author, and the letter was read, and although it provided the first detailed account of the changes
Starting point is 01:21:23 wrought in Robert Moses by his hunger for power, it could not write the worst of all the injustices, Moses perpetrated by Ansley Wilcox, and he says that Moses has removed all the plaques from the park that mention Wilcox's name and replaced them with plaques that mention Moses's name, and the parkway that gets built there is the Robert Moses Parkway. The dam that will someday be built there, this huge power dam, will be the Robert Moses Dam. He has erased Wilcox's memory from the park he created. And it's like, what, come on, there's, why are you doing that?
Starting point is 01:21:50 What are you doing that to this old man for? Yeah, I mean, he presents, there's a kind of cruelty to it that is really present here, that it's hard to get over. Yes, and Robert Carroll has a habit in his books of kind of lionizing and sanctifying old men who represent a previous way of doing things and whose passing symbolizes the passing of the old way and the rise of the main character's way of doing things. He's been criticized for the
Starting point is 01:22:17 way he handled Coke Stevenson, who was running against Lyndon Johnson for the Senate in the book Means of Ascent. But here it's kind of hard to see what the what the negative side is of these two guys and it just shows how unnecessarily cruel Moses's treatment of them is, how what little threat they were to his plans and how he had to do this. And Carrow, I love that Carrow gets in that little bit of like Indiana Jones hero action by being like, I'm the one who found that that letter in that dusty folder in the in the warehouse. It's so good.
Starting point is 01:22:45 I like when he reveals a little bit of his process and it comes through. And there's no other way to really talk about it. You know, like he does this in the Lyndon Johnson books too, which was like, he gets the notebook of the guy who fixed all the ballots, you know, when he won his first Senate seat, you know, it has the same thing.
Starting point is 01:23:03 And I do, you know, it's it has the same thing and I do, I, you know, the, it's the, what really turns your stomach is the Kafkaesque trial quality to this, that they get accused of something, but then they're saying they're not really accused so they can't really fight it. And then they get stuck in this just weird vague accusations that they're colluding with someone in this weird way. And for this public servant or or, you know, whatever, this guy committed to a mission, which is a pretty noble mission.
Starting point is 01:23:31 And it's just sort of gross how someone with a mission can just totally just like undermine someone who has, you know, been acting in good faith most of his life. Yes. It also, it emphasizes what Moses thinks matters, which is having your name on a place, right? Like, you know, it's like, I'll take that away from him. That'll be the sort of ultimate punishment.
Starting point is 01:23:54 Amazing that it took this many people to figure out there should be a park where Niagara Falls is. I'm just realizing this guy is like, you know, we should put a park here. These waterfalls are very pretty. Lovely, we could have a place to stand to look at them. Yeah. It's a, it shows you how much they took for granted.
Starting point is 01:24:14 These things will always be around and always be here. And I think it isn't until Niagara Falls becomes a tourist spot and gets really kind of gross. I don't know if you've been to Niagara Falls, but it's- It's a little gross. I mean, the falls are nice. Aside from Falls, but it's, it's, it's, it's a little gross. I mean, aside from the falls, it's kind of, I mean, maybe it's different. When I was a kid, I remember it was like, there's Niagara Falls and there's Ripley's auditorium.
Starting point is 01:24:33 Like where they have like the sideshow animals. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. But it is funny that they're like, well, wait a minute, wait a minute. You know, this is nice land. Maybe it should be a park here. Um, but every idea has got to start with someone. And the other old men of the parks Commission, they're like, Governor Smith, fire Moses. And the legislators are like, fire Moses. And Smith refuses. First, parks are good vote getters. Second, Smith is all about loyalty. He's loyal to me, I'm loyal to him. And third, nobody works harder for Al Smith than Robert Moses. And Al Smith can see the work
Starting point is 01:25:04 that Moses is doing. He can see those parks. And this is last episode, I talked about my slogan, noticeably improve people's lives, nipple. This is nipple in action. Moses is all about nipple. And Smith recognizes that nipple. And it's possible that Smith is not aware of some of Moses' worst methods,
Starting point is 01:25:22 but he knows Moses is a fighter. He likes that he's a fighter. And no matter how Moses treats everyone else, he always shows respect to Al Smith. He calls him governor, and he refers to nobody else ever as governor. No other governor he works with. He calls them all by his first name. But as Carol says, for Robert Moses, there would always be only one governor. And again, this is personalities.
Starting point is 01:25:41 Al Smith just likes Robert Moses. They hang out together. He likes singing with him. Like it's hard to overstate in any industry, business or organization, how much you can let someone get away with when you like them and you're like, but I like being around that person and how much you can get away with when people like to be around you. There are so few bosses I have sung with in my life.
Starting point is 01:26:04 I must say, you know, that there's an intimacy too. like to be around you. There are so few bosses I have sung with in my life. I must say, you know, that there's an intimacy too. We sing together. Uh... Uh... Uh... And now we're getting to the most strange section of the book, which is Robert Moses' dalliance with boxing.
Starting point is 01:26:21 We're gonna... We're gonna handle that after the break. So the next chapter we're covering and the last chapter we're covering today is chapter 15, The Curator of Cauliflower, which is a cryptic name to say the least, but we will explain it as we get there. Not if you're a boxing fan, not if you're a fan of the sweet science, you know. It's a, but the, by 1928, okay.
Starting point is 01:26:54 Everything in Moses's 1919 state government reorganization plan has basically become law. The governor still doesn't have a four year term, that happens in 1932 eventually, but he has drastically reshaped the government of the state. He's been a big part of fighting to get it passed. And finally the governor of New York has real executive power and Smith has been using that to push through labor reforms, welfare reforms. He's made the state more
Starting point is 01:27:17 responsive to needs of voters. He's cut taxes. He's done a lot of good work for the people of New York. Yeah and he streamlined what we used to be like 150 departments into eight departments. It's really something. And when people talk about, you know, maybe people who are not really thinking about the things that Robert Moses built, but if we were to sort of put some of that stuff aside, all the nipple things, you could- If you can take your eyes off the nipples for a moment. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:27:50 You could argue that this moment of state governance reform that, which is, which is, you know, like repeated all across the nation is maybe one of the biggest significant acts of Robert Moses life. Yes. The same type of work he's doing in the physical world. He has done in the world of institutional organization, which doesn't sound as exciting maybe to most people, but it does to me, just that the functioning of government, the mechanics of government has now been also molded in the way he thinks it should be done. And just as with his parks and roads, we're still living with that
Starting point is 01:28:17 effect, you know, for better or ill in different ways. I mean, mostly this is for good. I mean, this is really one of those ones where I don't know if there's a real downside to any of this stuff. The downside is now it's harder for an Al Smith to get into that place because like we were talking about with Jamal last time, you need kind of technical knowledge of government that maybe you didn't have before you can get elected to office, uh, and there's, there's plenty of clowns in Congress who don't have,
Starting point is 01:28:42 don't have the knowledge of what they're doing. But to get things done now, it's no longer a matter of being in touch with people at the local level and to make those decisions. You need to know the systems. But in most ways, it works much better. I mean, the days of you need to pay someone off to get something done in the United States are, for the most part, not around anymore. You know, the idea that to get and to get a job, you no longer need to pay your reward boss a certain amount or kick back part of your salary. Those things as a big as a big result of this organization are not an issue anymore, which is it is hard to say that there's a bad side to that.
Starting point is 01:29:19 Yeah, but there's a bit all this stuff that comes with this sort of like better labor relations, better welfare reforms, all this sort of like better labor relations, better welfare reforms, all this sort of stuff happens when the professionalization of the government at this sort of level was quite good, you know? Right. Right. This is good. And it's this kind of moment is the kind of the golden moment of this.
Starting point is 01:29:41 Like there's enough professionalization to knock out the sloppiness and the sort of basic level corruption on the street. But there's still kind of that idea of a little bit of patronage, a little bit of earmarks, a little bit of horse trading so that you can sort of swallow a pill of something that you don't necessarily agree with if it's going to just, you know, mostly like make your life better or maybe the people in your district better. know, mostly like make your life better or maybe the people in your district better. I think that push and pull is like when government is probably acting at it, at
Starting point is 01:30:10 its, um, uh, most powerful, you know, is to have a little bit of all this stuff. Yeah. When, when there's, there's a system that's tempered by a kind of almost folk culture of politics and there's ideologies that are tempered by realistic practicalities. Like that's, yeah, that's that sweet spot. Al Smith is sitting right in that sweet spot. And one of the changes that reorganization is that Secretary of State is now in an appointed position, not an elected position. Who is Al Smith going to appoint into that job?
Starting point is 01:30:38 There's no other option. It's got to be the guy who fights the hardest for him and does the most, Robert Moses. And the Department of State that he now oversees, it handles everything that kind of doesn't fit into other departments. If you're filing incorporation papers, you gotta file with the Department of State. If you're compiling the results of an election, it's the Department of State. If you're an auctioneer and you need a license
Starting point is 01:30:57 or you're a private detective and you need a license, it's the Department of State. And also, very importantly for this chapter and the title thereof, but also kind of random because Secretary of State is apparently the most random job in New York State. The Secretary of State also had control over New York's Athletic Commission which oversaw boxing in the state and this means the Secretary of State controls a lot of patronage. There's all those people who want private detective licenses and they're gonna have to you know they get those
Starting point is 01:31:22 jobs to license them and Smith wants this to be the person who coordinates all of the state's construction and also coordinates the state's cabinet. So it's a hugely powerful position. And Albany does not want Robert Moses to have that power. They hate him, but Smith is too popular. The newspapers are too eager to present this as the fat cats versus the Parks man for them to actually vote against Moses' appointment. And now the big repercussion of this, the big immediate consequence, Moses finally has a job that pays a decent living. He's finally making $12,000 a year and his mom is like, at last, at last, he's going to start earning a living. Like this is all of his mother's work for decades
Starting point is 01:32:02 has finally led to this moment that she doesn't care that he's powerful. He can finally support himself and his wife, which is, which is, it must be amazing to be reading the newspapers about your son who is building these structures all over the state. And then he's like, mom, can you help me pay the rent? And she's like, yeah, I guess I'll do that. And Moses presents himself to the press. He's going to be the crusading secretary. He goes personally to strip the licenses from unscrupulous business operators and detectives, but he goes too far. He tries to regulate the corrupt ticket sales involved in boxing matches. He really doesn't understand the boxing industry.
Starting point is 01:32:35 At one point he says that if the judges at a boxing match can't decide, he will step in and make the decision, which is a bonkers thing to do. And, uh, secretary of state, you- It'll go on to the secretary of state. It'll like we call it the secretary of state and see who wins. Which of you men enjoy the beach more? All right, you're the winner. And his reign as the curator of cauliflowers,
Starting point is 01:32:57 as the press calls him, is quickly over. It's, it's promersively brief. I wish that when we said, when we said he was getting into boxing, I know everyone thought that he was gonna get in the ring, but no, that's the extent of it it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, average Joe can buy tickets. And it turns out that the ticket box office can't handle all the people buying tickets. And so like these boxing matches are like one third full because people are standing outside still trying to get in. And then he realizes for the first time, I think, and maybe the only time in this book that he's just in over his
Starting point is 01:33:39 head and he just like, I don't want to deal with this. And he probably just doesn't care enough. Like he's like, you know what? He does the calculus. He's like, people care about parks. That's a source of power. People don't really care that much about whether the boxing industry is slimy or not. I think they kind of accept.
Starting point is 01:33:54 And at a certain point, you have to think he's like, they could punch me if I keep pushing this. I'm dealing with people who punch other men for a living. And so for our younger listeners, and I mean listeners under the age of 80, what does cauliflower mean when it comes to boxing? So I should have done research on this. My assumption always since I read it is that they're talking about cauliflower ears. Like boxers, they get their ears would become deformed. And it's just the, it's a sign of the times in the 20s that they would they're like, hmm
Starting point is 01:34:25 Your ears are becoming malformed from being hit in the face as part of your job. Let's give it a cute name Let's call it a cauliflower ear. That's kind of what it looks like It's like a little cauliflower Yeah, it does At no point are they like the curator of cauliflowers should stop people from having their ears ruined from boxing We'll just give them a nickname that's based on it, you know, they just kind of understood it So that's why it was not actual literal cauliflowers. He was not running a museum of vegetables and curating the cauliflower department.
Starting point is 01:34:51 But that's, that's one of those times, again, Robert Carow's writing this in the 70s. He doesn't feel the need, I think, to define it, does he? I don't think he goes out of his way. No, it's one of those ones where it's like, again, it's like, it feels like a non sequitur to us 50 years later. It is a complete sequitur in 1974. So this reign of, of being the curator of Cauliflower's is, is, is sort of quickly over, but he's still doing a bunch of other stuff as secretary of state.
Starting point is 01:35:17 Yes. He is in charge of making the construction of new prisons and mental hospitals goes faster. Uh, the, and at times he's going to do park building work and the governor will literally send state troopers to get him and force him to go to the nearest telephone so that the governor can make him do more things. And he is essentially co-running the government at this point for Al Smith. And he has no time for personal life.
Starting point is 01:35:39 It's at this point, Carol says, Moses, he doesn't do sports except for swimming at night. He has no hobbies. He has no socializing. He can't go out to buy his own clothes. His wife has to do that. He can't go to the barber. The barbers have to come to his apartment to cut his hair. And he's always done a little bit of work in the back of his limousine. Now he is literally turning the back of his car into an office.
Starting point is 01:35:57 It has extra seats. He has his secretary, Hazel Tappen, riding with him, taking dictation in the car. He holds meetings in the car and there's another chauffeured car that's always following his car so that when he's done telling the secretary what to do, she can get out, get in that car and be driven immediately back to the office with those new orders. And both cars are staffed with three drivers each working in eight hour shifts. So they have 24 hour driving coverage. He is always working and he's always on the move.
Starting point is 01:36:24 He replaces his office phone with a single line that just goes to his secretary. The phone has no buttons on it. He cannot call out from it. It can only come in and only when a secretary lets someone through. And if you are not governor Smith, if you call, you're going to wait until he's ready for you. He will not just interrupt things to pick up the phone. Every governor after Smith and every mayor of New York has to wait. Moses will not drop anything New York has to wait.
Starting point is 01:36:45 Moses will not drop anything. They have to wait for Moses to take their call. He installs this buzzer system in his desk that connects to each of his executive's offices so he can call them individually right away. And as soon as he pushes the button, they know they have to drop whatever they're doing and go right to his office right away.
Starting point is 01:37:00 Like he is, it is such a, it's the 20s, but it feels like it is the parody of like a 1950s boss office, you know, where it's just like this special phone line. I mean, only Commissioner Gordon really has a special phone like that usually, right? Like it's the president's hotline to Russia and it's Commissioner Gordon's hotline to Batman. He refuses to have a desk. He just has a table because he doesn't want work shoved into drawers and forgotten about.
Starting point is 01:37:21 He wants that table cleared off of work at the end of every day. And he's just constantly working and just reading this part stresses me out so badly. I don't know if you had the same feeling. Except he has his daily swimming routine, which David, I know you have the same thing. I do. Well, I swim laps in a gym pool. I don't like what I feel like what he does is he like drives to the beach and just runs into it every morning. Like the crack of dawn, I have to assume. Like it's kind of amazing. It says he changes in his car, right?
Starting point is 01:37:53 And then he just like jumps out of his car. Yeah. I remember that. So tell me as a sort of an equally powerful man, you know, dedicated to swimming every day, what do you think if you could put us in the mind of Robert Moses, what is the swimming doing for him? Well, if you are unable to listen to podcasts,
Starting point is 01:38:12 I currently listen to podcasts while I swim. I don't think Robert Moses had that technology available to him. So you do, like you zone out, my joke is that you think of death, but like in a fun way, right? You just sort of start meditating on the universe as you're kind of just like back and forth, back and forth, counting the laps. I find swimming to be incredibly pleasant, but I don't swim in the ocean, which is very cold and has powerful waves and currents, uh, every morning. Maybe I should,
Starting point is 01:38:46 maybe I should do that. Yeah. And he swims at night too. It talks about how sometimes on the way home, he'll tell the driver to take him to Jones beach so he can run into the water and just swim out into the darkness. He's, he loves swimming. He's more fish than man at times. Now he's like Namor. Right. Aren't there stories where people are like, is he dead? And then he finally like returns like he's gone in the ocean for so long that they're like, should we call the god of Coast Guard? Like, where is Robert? These are the parts that are like mythic and the swimming is not enough to stop the strain. He's starting for the first time to really show the strain of all this work.
Starting point is 01:39:20 And there's a section here just about his temper that's starting up here. It says, the fuse always short that ignited his temper had been chopped down to a nub. The broad smile with which he greeted underlings could disappear in an instant if the reports displeased him. The hard mask that replaced it would turn pale, almost white, as his rage mounted. And then a wave of deep red, almost purple, would seep up out of his collar and over his face. The palm of his big right hand would begin to smack down on the table as he talked. And his secretaries, listening outside the closed door to his office, trying to smile at each other, would hear his voice begin to rise.
Starting point is 01:39:48 Lunging out of his chair, he would stride around the room, bellowing, his eyes wild, and sometimes as he walked, he pounded his clenched fist into the walls so hard the skin was ripped from his knuckles. Oblivious to the pain, he would sit back down at his desk and grab the next batch of papers with bleeding hands." And it's like, this is written, the stuff with the colors and everything, I'm like, I bet Robert Caro saw some of this while he was interviewing him.
Starting point is 01:40:09 I bet he saw him get mad and saw this, because it's so specific and so detailed, but it really makes me, it's like, if you're in a room with that guy, it's frightening. I'm sure you'll do whatever he says, to get out of that room. And the people who work under him, they talk about like, because of this intercom system,
Starting point is 01:40:25 they eat at their desks and they'll put anything away to go deal with him. It's not that he's calling on them all the time. He just has so complete control over them that they can't do anything else because they're waiting for him to call on them. You know, like there's no leaving, there's no that. There's like, if someone's having a barbecue,
Starting point is 01:40:43 it's like, when can you be there? I'll be there in 45 minutes and he's there in 40. You know, like that is just, they're always on call. And I can't imagine the stress of that. It's incredibly stressful. And some of the Moses men, as they're called, they start being called Moses men and they call him RM. They start to crack under the strain.
Starting point is 01:41:00 Caro talks about more than one becomes an alcoholic, some that have nervous breakdowns, some that have marital problems. There's at least one suicide, although Caro does not mention that person by name. In the notes in the back, he says that he's kept that man's identity private out of sensitivity to the man's mother, which is also a very kind of old-fashioned way to do something in a book. But for all the people who are inspired by Moses and are being pushed to their best work and being molded by him and to men they want to be, there are workers for him who are cracking under this strain because it is, like you're saying, so overwhelming.
Starting point is 01:41:31 And exactly, not because they are on call all the time. So even when they're not being talked to by him, they know that at any moment he might need them and they're going to be expected to drop everything and go right towards them. But at the same time, there are some perks to working in the Moses man. Yes. Yes. Yes. Cause you have all this land and you have all these people who can build things. And so he's just starts building houses for them. Yeah. He'll use parks department resources to build houses for them on park land. The parks come, the department pays for the utilities for the houses. If he feels like someone is not making enough money, but the civil service regulations mean he can't give them a raise, he'll put their wives on the payroll so that they have a little bit of extra cash.
Starting point is 01:42:09 It's a real carrot and stick thing. He's really taking care of them in some ways and brutalizing them in others. And he also really trusts his people. Like he, he, when he finds people that he can delegate to, he will let them do the job and that's why he's able to get so much done so quickly because there's whole parts of his like empire building that he can't possibly be present for every moment of it, but they handle it for him. Yes.
Starting point is 01:42:34 He has a real eye for talent and he's good at picking people and saying, you can do this. Now you do it. And then leaving it up to them. I mean, it's how like Henry Stern, who ran the parks department for years was one of like his sort of little protege's and he ran things that way too. And like you would hear that about Bloomberg when I, who I covered as the mayor for a long
Starting point is 01:42:53 time of like, if he delegated to you, you got to do whatever you want. You know, like he would, he would sort of invest incredible and which, which could be good or bad, obviously, depending on how you felt about the power being delegated, which is probably true here too. But I think it's classic municipal stuff, right? Yeah, you can't pull every lever yourself. Yes. And at this point, Moses has become the second most powerful person in the government and there's newspaper articles about it. He can do whatever he wants basically, and Smith has his back. And Robert Caro takes a moment to quote two speeches that Moses gave in 1927 to associations
Starting point is 01:43:26 of Long Island real estate brokers, where he seems to very kind of blatantly lay out his, his feelings about things. And he says, the future of Long Island is as a recreational community for New Yorkers. You can't go any farther East around here because you hit the ocean. You can only go West to the city. So that's, that's where you have to look to for your future That's gonna require a lot of zoning and development your local government's they're not equipped to handle it So we're gonna do it for you. And if you're opposed to what we're gonna do
Starting point is 01:43:54 we're gonna defeat you because your opposition is stupid because This all the things we're doing mean a lot of money going into your places And if you don't like it, the money will go somewhere else. It doesn't have to go to Long Island. And so if you're opposing me, you're opposing money coming to you. And if some people get hurt along the way, he can't make an omelet without breaking eggs and he says, he's like, people who don't like the things we're doing, they can always go West.
Starting point is 01:44:17 They can move to the Rockies if they want to, which is such a, such a mean, but also funny way to look at things. Like you don't like this new park, this new parkway in Long Island, go to the Rocky Mountains. No one's developing that area. And in this second speech, he talks about how sometimes to do the right thing, you have to do other things that might technically overstep the law. And he's becoming more and more comfortable with that and not only comfortable with doing
Starting point is 01:44:40 it, but comfortable with pushing back aggressively against anyone who tries to stop him. And Carol quotes Frances Perkins, who we remember has known Moses for years now. They were young reformers together. She's working in the state government and she says, she calls him and says, Moses, you're using non-union labor to build these bath houses on Long Island. By law, you're only supposed to use union labor. You're being naughty. I think she uses the word naughty in it. And, and she's acting as a public official. She's calling him on breaking the law as part of her job. And he instantly becomes abusive and is like, I'm going to build these bath houses and no one's going to stop me. These are for the people. And she says,
Starting point is 01:45:17 we had known each other for years informally. And he's talking to me this way. And by the time he is eventually rebuked by a court for using non-union labor, again, as we said, it doesn't matter. The bathhouses are being used. You can tear them down. People are already in there changing, you know, that would, you just, people would see them changing if you tore those bathhouses down while they're still inside. And he's becoming more, he's becoming kind of like a bully.
Starting point is 01:45:38 When he drives around Long Island, his car is speeding over the speed limit. He has motorcycle troopers around his car that push other cars off the road so that he can get where he's going and he's now using his power to make life easier for him because in his mind, it all counts towards this end goal of getting this stuff done. But there are times when one power meets a greater power.
Starting point is 01:45:59 Oh yeah. When an unmovable force. You know, it's a positive right. Exactly. When an unstoppable force builder meets an unmovable force, you know, it's an impossible right. Exactly, when an unstoppable force builder meets an immovable land's baron. Yeah, and in this case, like, he does something that we don't see a lot, is that he compromises because of his,
Starting point is 01:46:19 probably his familial association with Otto Kahn. Yes, he's had to make deals with Long Island barons about the roots of his parkways. Usually it's like, hey, instead of running a road right next to my house, can you put it like on the edge of my estate? And he's like, that's fine. Can you make sure there's not an exit
Starting point is 01:46:36 on the road near my property? Yeah, we could do that. But there's one instance particularly, Otto Kahn, who is married to one of Moses's cousins. And Otto Kahn is one of these people who I know of as a rich person, but again, I don't know what they, what his money came from. What is it David? Is it zinc? Is it what? Let's find out how did Otto Kahn get his money. Let's see. He was known as the King of New York, pretty good title to get, I would say. It's that old classic banking. The man had banks. I think he did a lot of railroad stuff with his money, it seems. He was the ablest reorganizer of railroads.
Starting point is 01:47:16 What does that mean? I guess, oh, I guess he would like, he would take over failing railroads and he would, he was the Mitt Romney of his day, right? Totally, totally. Except he would probably just be like, crush these workers! I mean, I don't mean to impugn him. I don't know if he said to crush workers. Probably.
Starting point is 01:47:36 Assuming, yes. I assume he did. But he was also a patron of the Metropolitan Opera. So, you know, let's give him that. It's the same way that, is it David Koch, who's like, I'm evil, but I love the ballet, so I will keep the new ballet running. Yes.
Starting point is 01:47:49 He does love the dang ballet, and as a devoted viewer of The Gilded Age, yes, now have learned that the Metropolitan Opera was basically a Netflix-style deficit spending scheme founded by new money, because they didn't like their box seats at the old opera the Academy Which was wonderful to learn I'm looking at this picture of Otto Kahn on on Wikipedia and he looks like a child with a fake mustache on he has
Starting point is 01:48:19 Triangular mustache I have ever seen It's a real whisk broom of a mustache. It's like curling up on the sides, but he looks like he has a real richy rich kind of vibe. And then this big black mustache on his face. I always look at these guys and I think like, God, they had so much money, they controlled so much land. They didn't have like air conditioning though. How good was life for an auto con?
Starting point is 01:48:42 I totally agree. They didn't have air conditioning and they didn't have like- They didn't have like Tylenol. Exactly. No painkillers. And it's like when you read about rich people hundreds of years ago
Starting point is 01:48:50 and they're still complaining about bed bugs and it's like, yeah, I guess you knew you were gonna eat. That was the basic benefit of being rich. Right. To be clear, there were benefits. It was good. When somebody asked like Gore Vidal, like this sort of noted historian
Starting point is 01:49:05 and writer of history books, what is the time that you've written about that you would want to live in? And he's like, now. I'll tell you one word. Count me out. Anesthetic, anesthetic is like, that's enough of a reason to live now
Starting point is 01:49:22 and not any other time in history. He's like, that's enough of a reason to live now and not any other time in history. Yeah. So Otto Kahn, you know, finally, he has this golf course, I guess, right? He's the golf course guy? Yes, he has a golf course in Long Island and the Northern State Parkway is gonna go through it.
Starting point is 01:49:36 And he says to Moses, I'll give you $10,000 to fund surveys for the land if you don't cross my golf course. And Moses goes, sure, I'll do it. And that means shifting the route a little farther south, which goes through the estates of two other rich, powerful men. And they say, we don't want that.
Starting point is 01:49:50 And he goes, okay. And he shifts it further south through the estates of other powerful men. I cannot begin to tell you how much of Long Island was owned by rich, powerful men at this time. And he shifts it further south and outruns the land of a farmer named James Roth. And Roth and his wife, they had bought this land in 1922.
Starting point is 01:50:04 They cleared it of trees and rocks themselves themselves they haven't even owned it that long by now it's 1927 they've been working for five years non-stop the farm is just beginning to pay off they can support themselves on the farm when a parks official goes to tell Roth the parkway is going to go through your land and he says can you move it 400 feet south so that it'll go through the less fertile part of my fields? It'll still go through my fields, but not the part that I need to farm. And he's told that's impossible. This road has been laid out on the basis of engineering considerations. This is where it has to go. And we said Moses
Starting point is 01:50:36 will shift the road over three miles for the rich and the wealthy, but for a farmer he will not shift it 400 feet. The road is built. It cuts the farm in two. And now just to plant his fields and harvest his fields, he will not shift it 400 feet. The road is built, it cuts the farm in two. And now just to plant his fields and harvest his fields, he has to make a 50 minute both ways round trip across the road to get to the other part of his field. And the farm is no longer profitable. They can't even sell it because instead of one big field,
Starting point is 01:50:58 it's now two small fields. And the only consolation that he and these other farmers that this happened to have are that at least we know the road couldn't have gone anywhere else. It was the only place they could have built this road. And Carro again inserts himself and says, not until the author talked to them and the other farmers 40 years later, did they think at any point that it could have gone through the rich estates instead of their own fields.
Starting point is 01:51:19 And it's just it's Moses again, he is willing to do whatever it takes to get his projects done. And if that means crushing farmers so that he can accommodate the wealthy, then he will do that. Crush, crush, crush. Yeah, and so against the old Moses that we used to know. And it's hard in this part because he's still doing this ostensibly
Starting point is 01:51:37 for like a good thing, right? Like it's still for the parks and getting to the parks, right? Road, I mean. Well, you gotta get. Less so. You do have to get there. But it is, one of these things that he uses
Starting point is 01:51:50 kind of expertise and engineering and science as this cudgel to get through what he wants because he'll often rest on this, just like somebody will say, well, why can't you build it over here? Why can't you do this? And he'll just like, engineers, man, like they told us this has to where it has to be,
Starting point is 01:52:08 which is almost never the case, you know? But he really does use that for people who won't stand against them. That's a really powerful argument of just like, I guess this is the way the world works. But rich people know that that's not the way the world works. You know, like that you can pay enough money to build around a thing if you want to.
Starting point is 01:52:31 But these farmers, they don't have a concept of this and they really suffer because of that. And it's a foreshadowing, again, there's so much foreshadowing because Moses' life lives in cycles. It's a foreshadowing of what's going to happen later on with his larger projects within New York City, and especially what he does to the East Tremont neighborhood of the Bronx much later
Starting point is 01:52:52 to build the Cross Bronx Expressway. One thing that's also notable about this AutoCon moment is the moment where Robert Carrow talks about interviewing Robert Moses, and he mentions the name AutoCon, and Robert Moses is like, this interview is over. Yes. Because he knows immediately. That's when he sniffs it out, right?
Starting point is 01:53:10 When he's like, oh, wait a second. You're not just writing about how great I am? Yeah, after hours and hours of Carol sitting there while Moses regales him with tales of his amazing projects and shouldn't there be a road over there? There should be. Yeah, you're right. This is the name that Carol mentions and Moses says, our time is over. You got to like this. The music's playing. You're going to have to leave now.
Starting point is 01:53:32 And it's interesting because it's kind of such a minor transgression on his part, like taking $10,000 to kind of move this compared to so many other things that he does that is so awful. But I think it has a kind of taint of corruption that Robert Moses is really allergic to. You know, I think that's the nature of it. Like he doesn't sort of, he'll say stuff like, oh, you know, like the rabble got upset when I was gonna move 500,000 of them, you know,
Starting point is 01:54:05 out of their neighborhood, but we just ignored them. And he has no compunction when it comes to that sort of thing. But this little payoff really sort of gets under his skin, I think. I wonder if there's, this is me armchair, psychological, even though I'm sitting in an office chair, not an armchair. I wish I was sitting in an armchair, it'd be more comfortable than this swivel chairman. I wonder if this is a moment that he looked back on as, this is the beginning of when I really changed for myself.
Starting point is 01:54:33 Before I could say, I am breaking the law, but I'm doing it to keep the rich from stopping me from building things for regular people. And this is the moment where it is, no, I'm hurting regular people to help the rich, something that I had not really done before. And I wonder if, I wonder then if it, if it had some kind of like psychological importance for him as, as a, you know, kind of like an original sin that he cannot, he can't explain it away or, or rationalize it the way he could his other stuff. Maybe. Yeah. I mean, I like that explanation for it. It's, I mean, this is what a book club is for. It's to sort of like figure out like what you think of these meanings, you know, I like that explanation for it. I mean, this is what a book club is for, is to sort of like figure out, like, what you think of these meanings, you know?
Starting point is 01:55:06 But that makes sense to me because it strikes me as, you know, just like surprisingly mild for all the things that he has done, for this to be the thing that where Robert Moses really is like, oh, I don't want to talk to this Robert Carragher guy anymore because he brought up this one transaction is really something.
Starting point is 01:55:24 No, I mean, he just must think of it as like a time he didn't lose per se, but he, you know, he couldn't just run roughshod and yeah, maybe it still irked him. It's also possible that he saw that as the thread that the one loose thread that Carroll could pull that he's like, oh, if you know about that, you must know about all this other stuff. We cannot talk anymore. Totally. 100%. If you know about the auto-cut, it's like, if you, there's. You must've found the Wilcox letter.
Starting point is 01:55:49 Yeah. Who told you that someone ever defied me? Wait a second. That's supposed to be top secret. Robert Moses is, he's a sconce. He has power and he has something that Caro doesn't get into here, but which I was kind of reading the underlying subtext of it is
Starting point is 01:56:06 this moment where Robert Moses almost gets access to even greater power because it's 1928 June Al Smith wins the Democratic nomination for president and Moses is there with him in Belmosk which they're celebrating the news Moses isn't involved with a campaign because Al Smith has basically said you are governor while I'm running for president. Right. And Al Smith, for people who are not familiar with his life story, does not win the presidency in a very large part because he would have been the first Catholic president. And there is still this intense anti-Catholic prejudice. You know, 32 years later, when John F. Kennedy is running for president, he still has to
Starting point is 01:56:41 deal with the fact that a lot of the Americans do not trust Catholics. And Al Smith for the rest of his life is kind of bitter about he was denied this thing because of who he was. And Carol doesn't talk about it, but if he was president, you have to imagine he might have tried to get Moses to come with him. That, you know, Jamel was saying last episode, you get into office and you bring the people that you trust with you and get them jobs. And I wonder if Moses ever wondered about what he might have been if the man who trusted him more than anything else and who he always relied on him, he could always rely on became the president of
Starting point is 01:57:13 the United States of America. Especially because as we'll see, one of his diehard enemies does become president later and it doesn't stop him that much, but it annoys him quite a bit. Right. It stops things for him, right? There are certain things. Certain things, small, yeah, some things. We'll get into those details. But Moses is like, there's still so much left to do. I'm the acting governor right now, but there's still so much left to do.
Starting point is 01:57:35 I've got to finish the Southern State Parkway before the next governor comes in so that people can see how great it is. And the new governor won't be able to stop me from doing more. And I got to complete this road to Jones beach so people can see how great that is. And as 1928 ends, he's still sending out workers this furious pace. He's got to do more work on these roads. And the chapter ends thusly on page 282. Those close to Robert Moses knew that there was justification for his urgency, a
Starting point is 01:57:57 reason for the desperation, which now seemed to underlie his haste. Without his loyalty to me, Moses was to say about Al Smith, I could have done nothing. He had had Al Smith and his loyalty for 10 years, but now he was to have Al Smith no more. And the man who was to follow Moses' greatest friend into the governor's chair was Moses' deadliest enemy. End of chapter 15. Dun, dun, dun.
Starting point is 01:58:17 So New York elected Skeletor, correct? Yes, exactly. In 1928. That was the, New York was really ahead of the rest of the country because the rest of the country wouldn't elect a Catholic, and New York would elect an evil the rest of the country, because the rest of the country wouldn't elect a Catholic, and New York would elect an evil skeleton warlock from Atternia, not even born in the United States.
Starting point is 01:58:30 Oh, God. It's just so funny that, like, Caro is doing this like, bum, bum, bum, about like a, you know, a genteel politician in many ways, although a very powerful one, obviously. A very powerful one, because, so the next episode of the power broker breaking down power broker breakdown breakdown show, uh, we're going to find out who is Moses's deadliest enemy.
Starting point is 01:58:50 I'll give you a hint. His initials are FDR and then what else is going to happen? Moses is going to take Manhattan and he's going to have such a more lasting impact than the Muppets had when they took Manhattan. We're finally going to get to see more of Jimmy Walker, the, uh, the, you know, slimy dandy politician. He's mayor now and he's got his own casino in Central Park. We're finally going to get into the genuine accusations of racism that Carol has for Moses and Al Smith after his governorship. He's going to get his
Starting point is 01:59:15 own key to the Central Park Zoo in what is, I find to be such a beautiful and touching moment. It doesn't make up for the accusations of racism that Moses has, but Moses does to keep taking care of the governor. That's going to be all that and so much more. Roman, what pages are we covering in the next episode? We'll be covering pages 283 to 401 from chapter 16, the feather duster, to chapter 21 year. And that's the next episode of the 99% invisible breakdown of the power broker. David Sims, it was such
Starting point is 01:59:45 a pleasure to have you here. It's been delightful and thank you for making me crack this book open for the first time in like 15 years. I'm going to be reading along with you eagerly for the rest of this series and I'm honored to be, you know, considered. The way this works is that I'm considered an equal of Robert Caro. Yeah, I think that's exactly how that works. Yeah, you gotta say that. You, Jamell, Conan, O'Brien, you're all on the same,
Starting point is 02:00:10 you're all on the same level. We're peers. You're colleagues. That's right, that's right. Can I ask you, while we have you, you watch a lot of movies, you're a movie critic. There's been numerous attempts, or at least people have optioned the rights to this book
Starting point is 02:00:25 and have tried to tell the story of Robert Moses in different ways. What do you think it would take for this to be a good piece of filmed entertainment? I mean, I don't know that it's possible. And I also would fear that, of course, it would be turned into a sort of sludgy, 10-episode prestige streaming drama.
Starting point is 02:00:44 Not that that would be necessarily bad, obviously, turned into a sort of sludgy 10 episode prestige streaming drama. Not that that would be necessarily bad, obviously, given that it's like a large sort of story to tell when you think of like the Clint Eastwood, J. Edgar Hoover movie, right? Like J. Edgar Hoover is sort of very similar figure to Robert Caro in American. Robert Moses, Robert Moses, not Robert Carrow. J. Edgar Hoover and Robert Carrow have very little in common. I want to be clear about that. You know the investigators, they find secret information.
Starting point is 02:01:12 Like, you know, I read G-Man, which was this big biography of Hoover a couple of years ago. And like, it's another, he's another guy where it's sort of at a certain point, people are like, how do you know everything and know everyone and I can't get rid of you. And every subsequent president has to kiss his hand versus the other way around. Like, why does it work this way? And, uh,
Starting point is 02:01:32 like Clint Eastwood's movie just tries to do like, okay, well, uh, Jager Hoover was a young man and he aged into an old man. And we're just going to rush through it. I would probably try to do more of a, like, let's, uh, let's concentrate on Moses at the end in the sixties when he's like, I don't think there should be Shakespeare in the park. You know, when he's like, you know, finally turned into an actual cartoon villain and, and you know,
Starting point is 02:01:53 parallel it with this time in his life, right? With, with the, with the accumulation of power in the twenties and you know, the ways in which he's maybe started out somewhat idealistically and figured out the best ways to get things done was not very idealistic. I don't know. That's probably the approach, but it's a really hard story to tell in less than 1300 pages, which is what Robert Caro, that's his name, I got it right, learned when he wrote this book.
Starting point is 02:02:21 It's so hard to get across the scope and those details while boiling it down. And this is something I only thought about until just now. So tell me if I'm off my rocker with this, the only movie I can think of that gets across this same kind of feeling is there's a section of the Russian movie, Andrey Rublev. It's a Tarkovsky movie from 1966, where this young guy is put in charge of making an enormous bell for his town's church. And to get it done, he is pushing the workers so hard and he becomes a tyrant. And they're like, this isn't how your dad who we were for used to do it. And he's like, this is how I do it now.
Starting point is 02:02:58 And he is in such tension hoping that the bell doesn't fail when it's finished, because that's the end of his life if this bell doesn't fail when it, when it's finished, because that's the end of his life, if this bell doesn't work. And it, I feel like that movie was the only time I've seen something that gets across the idea of someone who is so invested in a construction building project, that they're giving up everything and they're pushing people to their limits and it becomes their entire life and their whole being and all they're focused on is the end point and they don't care how they get there. I mean, there's other movies that do that,
Starting point is 02:03:25 but I feel like it does it in a very concentrated way. And it's, you don't have to watch the rest of the movie. If you don't want to, you just skip ahead to that part. It's in chapters, but I feel like that, that gets it across. So maybe the last chapter for when I remember. Right. So maybe if we get, if we can bring Andre Tarkovsky back to life, he died in 1986, maybe bring him back. Maybe he can do it. I don't know. That would be great. I would love Tarkovsky back to life. He died in 1986. Maybe bring him back. Maybe he can do it. I don't know. That would be great.
Starting point is 02:03:47 I would love Tarkovsky to be revived, told all about Robert Moses, who he might not know too much about, and then set to work. Yes, on recreating his life. Can I see my family? Can I see how they turned out? No, get to work on the movie.
Starting point is 02:03:59 How's Russia doing? Don't worry about it, Andrei. We need you to read this book. Oh boy. Again, David, it was a pleasure. Can you tell people where they can find your work and find you? Yes, of course.
Starting point is 02:04:14 I'm a film critic at the Atlantic where you can read my reviews of films and such. And I host the podcast, Blank Check, with Griffin and David, with my cohost Griffin Newman, where we tackle directors filmographies movie by movie, directors who have gotten a Moses-esque blank check to make a crazy passion project at some point in their life. And Roman and Elliot have both been on
Starting point is 02:04:38 and both should return. I would love to, I love your show. It is my favorite good movie podcast. Good save. Good save, Roman. Of course. Of course. I saw you about to say favorite movie podcast and you caught yourself and you saw me glaring at you. But again, it was great to have you here.
Starting point is 02:05:00 Thank you so much. Thank you guys, seriously. That's it for this episode. Again, next month we'll be covering chapters 16 through 20. That's the middle chunk of part four, the use of power. And remember to join our Discord server. You'll be able to connect with other Power Broker fans and keep the discussion going. The link is on our website or you can go to discord.gg slash 99PI. We did an AMA there a couple couple weeks ago and it was so fun.
Starting point is 02:05:26 So keep an eye out for other events. And as always, you can check me out on my other podcast, The Flophouse, which I must assume is Roman's favorite bad movie podcast. It absolutely is my favorite bad movie podcast. The 99% invisible breakdown of The Power Broker is produced by Isabel Angel, edited by committee, music by Swan Real, mix by Dara Hirsch.
Starting point is 02:05:46 99PI's executive producer is Cathy Tu, our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kurt Kolstad is the digital director, the rest of the team includes Sarah Bake, Chris Berube, Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Gabriella Gladney, Martin Gonzalez, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Ley, Lash Madon, Jacob Maldonado-Medina, Kelly Prime, as well as our Discord server, the aforementioned Uptown, Oakland, California. You can find us on all the normal social media sites, as well as our Discord server, the aforementioned Discord server, which is our favorite place to hang out right now. You can find a link to that and every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org. That's too bad you picked the one fictional universe I don't know well enough to talk in.
Starting point is 02:06:44 I mean, if we want to talk about it in terms of the Dune world, we could talk about it that way, you know. But anyway. Okay, you well, I mean, no, no, sorry, go on. So he's like the melange spice that you need for navigation, you know. Hahaha!

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