The Daily Signal - Victor Davis Hanson: America’s ‘Dead, Lost Generation’
Episode Date: February 22, 2025What was America like before rapid industrialization and suburbanization, which dramatically altered the way of life in the United States? Critical race theory and DEI proponents look down on this per...iod in American history, which stretched through much of the early to mid-20th century, saying it was an era marred by “white supremacy” and the “KKK.” That couldn’t be further from the truth, argues Victor Davis Hanson on this edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words. “But what I'm getting is, everybody got together, they were ethnically and racially diverse, there was no prejudice. Or if there was, it was incidental, not essential to farming. And all that world has been not only gone with the industrial age and corporate farming and the agrarianism that inculcated those values, but we have slurred those dead people, that dead lost generation. We've said that they were sexist, racist, homophobes, and they had it easy, they had privilege, they were supremacists. They weren't. They weren't. They had nothing. And they worked day to night. And they gave us a set of values: hard work, follow the law, listen more than you speak, don't shame your family, and don't treat people by their superficial appearance, or the color of their skin, or their accent, but the content of their character.” Don’t miss out on Victor’s latest videos by subscribing to The Daily Signal today. You’ll be notified every time a new piece of content drops: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHqkXbgqrDrDVInBMSoGQgQ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
At Desjardin, we speak business.
We speak equipment modernization.
We're fluent in data digitization and expansion into foreign markets.
And we can talk all day about streamlining manufacturing processes.
Because at Desjardin business, we speak the same language you do.
Business.
So join the more than 400,000 Canadian entrepreneurs who already count on us.
And contact Desjardin today.
We'd love to talk, business.
And I want to talk about a lost agrarian world and what it was like before the rapid industrialization and suburbanization of America and the values.
I want to do that because we have all of these misconceptions and all of this indoctrination and all this ideological bias about the past.
And all that world has been not only gone with the industrial age and corporate farming and the agrarianism that inculcated those values,
but we have slurred those dead people, that dead, lost generations.
We've said that they were sexist, racist, homophobes, and they had it easy, they had privilege, they were supremately.
They weren't.
They weren't.
Hello, this is Victor Davis-Hanson for the Daily Signal.
I'd like to do something a little bit different.
I want to talk about a lost agrarian world and what it was like before the rapid industrialization.
and suburbanization of America and the values.
I want to do that because we have all of these misconceptions
and all of this indoctrination
and all this ideological bias about the past.
I just like to get a personal take very quickly.
You know, we talk about this white monolithic racist society
that has to be overturned under DEI.
But let me go back to 1960.
I was born here where I'm speaking.
on 125, 30 acres of a family farm that had been in my family since 1870.
But my point is this, over where I'm pointing out,
there was a farm run by Harry Gasegian.
I shouldn't even mention his name was a wonderful family,
and they had escaped his family of the Armenian genocide in Turkey.
And he was very ethnic.
He was very strong proponent of Armenian culture.
over to myself was, I won't mention the other names, but he was a Japanese American. He had his farm
confiscated during the Earl Warren and McClatchy newspaper campaign and FDR. Remember, it was a liberal
enterprise to take Japanese off their property and put them in basically holding camps in the Sierra Nevada
high country. But the local farmers got together and farmed it and then kept the money that was the
income so he could have the money when he returned. Over to the west, there was a Punjabi
immigrant. Over to the north, there were two Armenian brothers. What I'm getting at, it was racially
and ethnically diverse. There was no, it was a natural diversity. And when everybody said,
privilege, privilege, we grew up in, I'm not trying to be singular or anything or a victim,
but we grew up in a very small, 1,100 square foot home. And my grandparents here,
My grandfather was the third generation here, but what I'm pointing out, they were just like all of you listening.
They didn't have it easy.
My mother lost a child, my sister, who died because my mother was pregnant with German measles.
My aunt, her sister, who lived in the house that I am, was crippled with polio, and they didn't really know how to treat it in 1920,
and she had a series of operations that made her bedridden for the rest of her life.
She lived in the living room in which I live now.
My grandfather, I remember him at 86, still going out and making very little money, but working all from four in the morning till six at night, shoveling, irrigating on his small farm.
And my grandmother had a ruptured appendix, and she stayed in bed for two years.
That was just the typical story of these pioneer families.
It was so wonderful growing up with them.
You got to hear the 19th century dialect.
Be careful when you go out yonder.
I'm going to give you the Dickens.
You got a glimpse of what life had been like before the modern era.
It was a shame culture.
At Capital One, we're more than just a credit card company.
We're people just like you who believe in the power of yes.
Yes to new opportunities.
Yes to second chances.
Yes to a fresh start.
That's why we've helped over four million Canadians get access to a credit card.
Because at Capital One, we say yes.
so you don't have to hear another no.
What will you do with your yes?
Get the yes you've been waiting for at Capital One.ca.ca.
Yes, terms and conditions apply.
Victor, now remember, you're a Hanson,
your Swedish relatives, and you're a Davis.
When you go into town, I don't want to see a cigarette hanging out of your mouth.
I don't want to have alcohol because if you get in trouble,
you represent all of us and you will shame us.
And we work hard to have a reputation where we pay our bills on time.
When my grandfather died, my task was to go to all the places and see if he'd paid the bill twice.
He was so worried about it.
And all of that has been erased out of DEI.
We've just had this victim-victimizer binary.
And the idea that people, largely farmers in the 19th century, came out with nothing.
And they worked until they died in obscurity.
And they created and conveyed a set of values of hard work, of fun.
follow the law. We had a constable. There were no sheriff. It was a Swedish American, the constable. And every
time he would come out, all I remember is a little boy when I was in 1950s. He had a snub-nosed 38,
but he never used it. And what did he, what did he investigate? Somebody's horse was loose or somebody
had thrown a bottle of whiskey on somebody's property. And he handled it. It was nobody had a key
to their home. We had one phone line. But what I'm getting is everybody,
got together, they were ethnically and racially diverse, there was no prejudice, or if there was,
it was incidental, not essential to farming. And all that world has been not only gone with the
industrial age and corporate farming and the agrarianism that inculcated those values, but we have
slurred those dead people, that dead lost generations. We've said that they were sexist, racist,
homophobes, and they had it easy, they had privilege, they were supremac. They weren't. They weren't.
They had nothing, and they worked day tonight, and they gave us a set of values, hard work, follow the law,
listen more than you speak, don't shame your family, and don't treat people by their superficial appearance or the color of their skin or their accent,
but their content of their character.
They really did, and how well they farmed.
My grandfather, before he died, said it's been an honor to be a neighbor of our Japanese because he taught me.
me so much about farming, just looking at his vineyard. It was so beautiful. And that was what
the barometer of character assessment was, what we did. And so I think all of us should just
take a deep breath and do not listen to the media, the academics of this generation, because
what have they given us but discord and mediocrity? They inherited the infrastructure, the
values, what makes this country, the beacon and the destination for millions of people.
And yet to slur them by a mediocre inferior generation, our generation, it's really shameful.
And it's a rewriting a trotskyization of history.
I think it's past time to just say these were wonderful people.
The agrarian world of the United States gave us much of the singular American character.
And we're not going to sit here anymore and listen to it being slandered and smeared by people who would not last one day behind a team of horses or on a John Deere tractor at a hundred.
108 degrees discing all day.
And that generation did, and it fed us, and we owe everything to them.
Thank you very much.
This is Victor Davis-Hansson for the Daily Signal.
Thank you for watching today's podcast.
And for more news like that, subscribe to the Daily Signal.
Maybe you can check out my own website at victorhansen.com for podcast, lectures,
Ultra Series behind a paywall, but more importantly, just daily columns that are accessible
and free to everyone.
Thank you very much.
