Robert Opyd (baghdad-bob)

July 30, 2010

I got this from a co-worker/friend… Required reading in these troubling Liberal Times.

Filed under: Personal business areas,Politics and Opinions — baghdad-bob @ 09:55

Highlighting and bold type is mine – Join the Ballot Box Rebellion this fall – VOTE for the USA you want to live in and pass on to your children!

George Will is a Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper columnist, a Newsweek

columnist, a regular panelist on ABC’s This Week, and the author of

numerous books on politics and baseball. He delivered these remarks at

the Cato Institute’s biennial Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing

Liberty Dinner on May 13.

I want to thank all of the people in this room for making Cato and its

work possible. I also want to thank a few million more people who, in

recent weeks, have toiled to demonstrate in a timely manner why Cato is

necessary. I refer, of course, to the people of Greece.

Milton Friedman, whose name we honor tonight, was honored often for his

recondite and subtle scholarship. But it was complemented by a sturdy

common sense much in fashion nowhere now. About 40 years ago he found

himself in an Asian country where the government was extremely eager to

show off a public works project of which it was inordinately and

excessively fond. It was digging a canal. They took Milton out to see

this, and he was astonished because there were hordes of workers but no

heavy equipment. He remarked on this to his government guide, who

replied, “You don’t understand, Mr. Friedman. This is a jobs program.

That’s why we only have men with shovels.” To which Friedman said,

“Well, if it’s a jobs program, why don’t they have spoons instead of

shovels?”

The attempt to educate the world to the principles of rationality and

liberty never ends. For a lot of us, it began in earnest in 1962 with

the publication of Capitalism and Freedom. In 1964, two years later, we

got a demonstration of how urgent it was to have that book, when Lyndon

Johnson, campaigning for president, said, “We’re in favor of a lot of

things, and we’re against mighty few.”

In 1964, the man running against Johnson was Barry Goldwater who, to the

superficial observer, appeared to lose because he carried only six

states. When the final votes were tabulated, 16 years later, it was

clear he had won. It was, however, a contingent victory.

In 2007, per capita welfare state spending, adjusted for inflation, was

77 percent higher than it had been when Ronald Reagan was inaugurated 27

years earlier. The trend continues and the trend is ominous. Fifty-one

days ago the president signed into law health care reform, that great

lunge to complete the New Deal project and the Great Society, that great

lunge to make us more European. At exactly the moment that this is done

the European Ponzi scheme of the social welfare state is being revealed

for what it is.

There is a difference. We are not Europeans. We are not, in Orwell’s

phrase, a “state-broken people.” We do not have a feudal background of

subservience to the state. No, that is the project of the current

administration – it can be boiled down to learned feudalism. It is a

dependency agenda that I have been talking about ad nauseam.

Two recent examples. First, when the government took over student loans,

making it the case that the two most important financial transactions of

the average family – a housing mortgage and a loan for college – will

now be transactions with the government, they included a provision that

said there will be special forgiveness of student loans for those who go

to work for the government or for nonprofits. Second, one third of the

recent stimulus was devoted to preserving unionized public employees’

jobs in states and local municipalities. And so it goes. The agenda is

constant.

In 1965, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (the final

dissolution, in some ways, of the federal government’s sense of

restraint) was advertised as aid for the poorest of the poor. Eighteen

years later, in 1983, 90 percent of all school districts were

participating in this. It is a principle of liberal social legislation

that a program for the poor is a poor program. The assumption is that

middle class Americans will not support a program aimed only at the

poor. That is a theory refuted by the fact that the Earned Income Tax

Credit – a policy supported and extended by Ronald Reagan – is extremely

popular in this country. But it does reveal the fact that dependency is

the agenda of the other side. Their agenda is to make more and more

people dependent on the government for more and more things.

We can see today, in the headlines from Europe, where that leads. It

leads to the streets of Athens, where we had what the media described as

“anti-government mobs.” Anti-government mobs composed almost entirely of

government employees going berserk about threats to their entitlements!

The Greeks and the Europeans have said all along, as they increase the

weight of the state, “So far, so good.” It reminds me, as everything

eventually does, of a baseball story. In 1951 Warren Spahn, on the way

to becoming the winningest left-handed pitcher in the history of

baseball, was pitching for the then-Boston Braves against the then-New

York Giants in the then-Polo Grounds. The Giants sent up to the plate a

rookie who was zero for twelve. It was clear this kid, name of Willie

Mays, could never handle big league pitching. Spahn stood out on the

mound 60 feet and six inches away, threw the ball to Willie Mays, who

crushed it – first hit, first home run. After the game the sports

writers came up to Spahn in the Club House and asked, “Spahnie, what

happened?” Spahn said, “Gentlemen, for the first 60 feet that was a hell

of a pitch!”

It’s not good enough in baseball and it’s not good enough in governance,

either. Let me give you a framework to understand this extraordinarily

interesting moment in which we live. I believe that today, as has been

the case for 100 years, and as will be the case for the foreseeable

future, the American political argument is an argument between two

Princetonians: James Madison of the class of 1771, and Thomas Woodrow

Wilson of the class of 1879. I firmly believe that the most important

decision taken anywhere in the 20th century was the decision where to

locate the Princeton graduate college. Woodrow Wilson, then Princeton’s

president, wanted it located on the campus, others wanted it located,

where it in fact is, up on the golf course away from campus. When Wilson

lost that, he had one of his characteristic tantrums, went into

politics, and ruined the 20th century.

I’m simplifying a bit. Madison asserted that politics should take its

bearings from human nature and from the natural rights with which we are

endowed, and which preexist government. Woodrow Wilson, like all people

steeped in the 19th century discovery that history is a proper noun -

History – with a mind and a life of its own, argued that human nature is

as malleable and changeable as history itself, and that it’s the job of

the state to regulate and guide the evolution of human nature and the

changeable nature of the rights we are owed by the government that – in

his view – dispenses rights.

Heraclitus famously said that you “cannot step into the same river

twice,” meaning the river would change. The modern Progressive believes

you can’t step into the same river twice because you change constantly.

Those of us of the Madisonian persuasion believe that we take our

bearings from a certain constancy. Not from – to coin a phrase – “the

evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing

society.” That phrase, from Justice Warren, has become the standard by

which the Constitution is turned into a living document – a Constitution

that no longer can constitute. A constitution has, as Justice Scalia has

said, an anti-evolutionary purpose. The very virtue of a constitution is

that it’s not changeable. It exists to prevent change, to embed certain

rights so that they cannot easily be taken away.

Madison said rights pre-exist government. Wilson said government exists

to dispense whatever agenda of rights suits its fancy, and to

annihilate, regulate, attenuate, or dilute others. Madison said the

rights we are owed are those necessary for the individual pursuit of

happiness. Wilson and the Progressives said the rights you deserve are

those that will deliver material happiness to you, and spare you the

strain and terror of striving.

The result of this is now clear. We see, in the rampant indebtedness of

our country and the European countries, what Yuval Levin has called a

“gluttonous feast upon the flesh of the future.” We see the

infantilization of publics that become inert and passive, waiting for

the state to take care of them. One statistic: 50 percent of all

Americans 55 years old or older have less than $50,000 in savings and

investment. The feast on the flesh of the future is what debt is.

Let’s get a sense of the size of our debt. In 1916, in Woodrow Wilson’s

first term, the richest man in America, John D. Rockefeller, could have

written a personal check and retired the national debt. Today, the

richest man in America, Bill Gates, could write a personal check for all

his worth and not pay two months interest on the national debt. By 2015,

debt service will consume about one-quarter of individual income taxes.

Ten years from now the three main entitlements – Medicare, Medicaid, and

Social Security – plus interest will consume 93 percent of all federal

revenues. Twenty years from now debt service will be the largest item in

the federal budget.

Calvin Coolidge, the last president with whom I fully agreed, once said

that when you see a problem coming down the road at you, relax – nine

times out of ten it will go into the ditch before it gets to you. He was

wrong about the one we now face. We are facing the most predictable

financial crisis – the most predictable social and political crisis – of

our time. And all the political class can do is practice what I call

“the politics of assuming a ladder.”

There’s an old story where two people are walking down the road, one an

economist, the other a normal American, and they fall into a pit with

very steep sides. The normal American says, “Good Lord, we can’t get

out.” The economist says, “Not to worry; we’ll just assume a ladder.”

This seems to me to be the only approach politicians have to the Ponzi

nature of our own welfare state.

It is time for us to understand that the model we share – so far in

attenuated form – with Europe simply cannot work. It states that we

should tax the rich (a.k.a. the investing and job-creating class), while

counting on spending the revenues of investment and job creation. No one

has explained to the political class that it is very dangerous to try to

leap a chasm in two bounds.

We are now being told that a Value Added Tax is going to be required. A

VAT would help the political class to shower benefits on those who can

vote for them while taxing people who can’t vote for them. The beauty of

the VAT is that it taxes everybody, but nobody quite notices it.

We are going to come to a time when America is going to have to revisit

Madison’s Federalist Paper no. 45, and his statement, “The powers

delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few

and defined.” The cost of not facing this fact, of not enforcing the

doctrine, in some sense, of enumerated powers, is that big government

inevitably breeds bigger government. James Q. Wilson, one of the great

social scientists in American history, put it this way. “Once, politics

was about only a few things. Today, it is about nearly everything.”

Once the legitimacy barrier has fallen, political conflict takes a very

different form. New programs need not await the advent of a crisis of

extraordinary majority, because no program is any longer new. It is

seen, rather, as an extension, modification or enlargement of something

the government is already doing. Since there is virtually nothing the

government has not already tried to do, there is little it cannot be

asked to do. And so we have today’s death spiral of the welfare state;

an ever-larger government resting on an ever-smaller tax base -

government impeding the creation of wealth in order to enforce the

redistribution of it. They are not, however, fooling the American

people.

This morning, the Wall Street Journal announced, with a sort of

breathless surprise, that 80 percent of the American people disapprove

of Congress – raising a fascinating question: who are the 20 percent!?

It is a sign of national health that Americans still think about

Washington the way they used to talk about the old Washington Senators

baseball team, when the saying was, “First in war, first in peace, and

last in the American League.” Back then they were run by a man named

Clark Griffith who said, “The fans like home runs, and we have assembled

a pitching staff to please our fans.”

That is why the American people do not mind what they are instructed by

their supposed betters to mind, the supposed problem of legislative

gridlock. Gridlock is not an American problem, it is an American

achievement! When James Madison and 54 other geniuses went to

Philadelphia in the sweltering summer of 1787, they did not go there to

design an efficient government. That idea would have horrified them.

They wanted a safe government, to which end they filled it with blocking

mechanisms: three branches of government, two branches of the

legislative branch, veto, veto override, supermajorities, and judicial

review. And yet, I can think of nothing the American people have wanted

intensely and protractedly that they did not eventually get. The world

understands, a world most of whose people live under governments they

wish were capable of gridlock, that we always have more to fear from

government speed than government tardiness.

We are told that one must not be a “Party of No.” To “No,” I say an

emphatic “Yes!” For two reasons. The reason that almost all improvements

make matters worse is that most new ideas are false. Second, the most

beautiful five words in the English language are the first five words of

the First Amendment, “Congress shall make no law.” That is: no law

abridging Freedom of Speech, no law establishing religion, no law

abridging the right to assemble and petition in redress of grievance.

The Bill of Rights is a litany of “No’s” – no unreasonable search and

seizure, no cruel and unusual punishments, no taking of property without

just compensation, and so it goes.

The American people are, I think, healthier than they are given credit

for. They have only one defect. They have nothing to fear, right now,

but an insufficiency of their fear itself. It is time for a wholesome

fear of what people with a dependency agenda are trying to do. We have

few allies. We don’t have Hollywood, we don’t have academia, and we

don’t have the mainstream media. But we have two things. First, we have

arithmetic. The numbers do not add up, and cannot be made to do so.

Second, we have the Cato Institute. The people in this room are what the

Keynesians call “a multiplier.” And, for once, they are right!

In Athens, the so-called “cradle of democracy,” the demos (a Greek word

for “the people”) have been demonstrating, in recent days, the

degradation that attends people who become state-broken to a fault – who

become crippled by dependency and the infantilization that comes with

it. We shall see. I think America is organized around the very principle

of individualism, which I can illustrate with what is, I promise you,

the last baseball story.

Rogers Hornsby, the greatest right-handed hitter in the history of

baseball, was at the plate, and a rookie was on the mound. He was, quite

reasonably, petrified. The rookie threw three pitches that he thought

were on the edge of the plate, but the umpire called, “Ball one! Ball

two! Ball three!” The rookie got flustered, and shouted at the umpire,

“Those were strikes!” The umpire took off his mask, looked out at the

rookie, and said, “Young man, when you throw a strike, Mr. Hornsby will

let you know.”

Hornsby had become the standard of excellence. If he didn’t swing, it

wasn’t a strike. We want a country in which everyone is encouraged to

strive to be his own standard of excellence and have the freedom to

pursue it. There are reasons to be downcast at the moment. Certain

recent elections have not gone so well. Let me remind you, however, of

something, again going back to 1964. In 1964 the liberal candidate got

90 percent of the electoral votes. Eight years later the liberal

candidate got 3 percent of the electoral votes. This is a very

changeable country.

Recall the words of the first Republican president who, two years before

he became president, spoke at the Wisconsin State Fair, with terrible

clouds of civil strife lowering over the country. Lincoln told his

audience the story of the Oriental despot who summoned his wise men, and

assigned them to devise a statement to be carved in stone, to be forever

in view and forever true. They came back ere long, and the statement

they had carved in stone was, “This, too, shall pass away.”

“How consoling in times of grief,” said Lincoln, “How chastening in

times of pride.” And yet, said Lincoln, if we cultivate the moral world

within us as prodigiously as we Americans cultivate the physical world

around us it need not be true. Lincoln understood that freedom is the

basis of values, not the alternative to a values approach to politics.

Freedom is the prerequisite for the moral dimension to flower. Given

freedom, the American people will flower. Given the Cato Institute, the

American people will, in time, secure freedom.

georgewill@washpost.com <mailto:%20georgewill@washpost.com>

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