Just because it’s a phony crisis doesn’t mean it can’t be made even phonier.
By Mark Steyn
Way back in January, when it emerged that
Beyoncé had treated us to the first ever lip-synched national anthem at a
presidential inauguration, I suggested in this space that this strange
pseudo-performance embodied the decay of America’s political
institutions from the real thing into mere simulacrum. But that applies
to government “crises,” too — such as the Obamacare “rollout,” the debt
“ceiling,” and the federal “shutdown,” to name only the three current
railroad tracks to which the virtuous damsel of Big Government has been
simultaneously tied by evil mustache-twirling Republicans.
This
week’s “shutdown” of government, for example, suffers (at least for
those of us curious to see it reduced to Somali levels) from the awkward
fact that the overwhelming majority of the government is not shut down
at all. Indeed, much of it cannot be shut down. Which is the
real problem facing America. “Mandatory spending” (Social Security,
Medicare, et al.) is authorized in perpetuity — or, at any rate, until
total societal collapse. If you throw in the interest payments on the
debt, that means two-thirds of the federal budget is beyond the control
of Congress’s so-called federal budget process. That’s why you’re
reading government “shutdown” stories about the PandaCam at the
Washington Zoo and the First Lady’s ghost-Tweeters being furloughed.
Nevertheless, just because it’s a phony crisis doesn’t
mean it can’t be made even phonier. The perfect symbol of the
shutdown-simulacrum so far has been the World War II Memorial. This is
an open-air facility on the National Mall — that’s to say, an area of
grass with a monument at the center. By comparison with, say, the IRS,
the National Parks Service is not usually one of the more controversial
government agencies. But, come “shutdown,” they’re reborn as the shock
troops of the punitive bureaucracy. Thus, they decided to close down an
unfenced open-air site — which oddly enough requires more personnel to
shut than it would to keep it open.
So the Parks Service
dispatched their own vast army to the World War II Memorial to ring it
with barricades and yellow “Police Line — Do Not Cross” tape strung out
like the world’s longest “We Support Our Troops” ribbon. For good
measure, they issued a warning that anybody crossing the yellow line
would be liable to arrest — or presumably, in extreme circumstances, the
same multi-bullet ventilation that that mentally ill woman from
Connecticut wound up getting from the coppers. In a heartening sign that
the American spirit is not entirely dead, at least among a small
percentage of nonagenarians, a visiting party of veterans pushed through
the barricades and went to honor their fallen comrades, mordantly
noting for reporters that, after all, when they’d shown up on the beach
at Normandy it too had not been officially open.
One would not be
altogether surprised to find the feds stringing yellow police tape along
the Rio Grande, the 49th parallel, and the Atlantic and Pacific coasts,
if only to keep Americans in rather than anybody else out. Still, I
would like to have been privy to the high-level discussions at which the
government took the decision to install its Barrycades on open
parkland. For anyone with a modicum of self-respect, it’s difficult to
imagine how even the twerpiest of twerp bureaucrats would consent to
stand at a crowd barrier and tell a group of elderly soldiers who’ve
flown in from across the country that they’re forbidden to walk across a
piece of grass and pay their respects. Yet, if any National Parks
Service employee retained enough sense of his own humanity to balk at
these instructions or other spiteful, petty closures of semi-wilderness
fishing holes and the like, we’ve yet to hear about it.
The World
War II Memorial exists thanks to some $200 million in private donations —
plus $15 million or so from Washington: In other words, the feds paid
for the grass. But the thug usurpers of the bureaucracy want to send a
message: In today’s America, everything is the gift of the government,
and exists only at the government’s pleasure, whether it’s your health
insurance, your religious liberty, or the monument to your fallen
comrades. The Barrycades are such a perfect embodiment of what James
Piereson calls “punitive liberalism” they should be tied round Obama’s
neck forever, in the way that “ketchup is a vegetable” got hung around
Reagan-era Republicans. Alas, the court eunuchs of the Obama media
cannot rouse themselves even on behalf of the nation’s elderly warriors.
Meanwhile,
Republicans offered a bill to prevent the shutdown affecting
experimental cancer trials for children. The Democrats rejected it. “But
if you can help one child who has cancer,” CNN’s Dana Bash asked Harry
Reid, “why wouldn’t you do it?”
“Why would we want to do that?”
replied the Senate majority leader, denouncing Miss Bash’s question as
“irresponsible.” For Democrats, the budget is all or nothing. Republican
bills to fund this or that individual program have to be rejected out
of hand as an affront to the apparent constitutional inviolability of
the “continuing resolution.” In fact, government by “continuing
resolution” is a sleazy racket: The legislative branch is supposed to
legislate. Instead, they’re presented with a yea-or-nay vote on a single
all-or-nothing multi-trillion-dollar band-aid stitched together behind
closed doors to hold the federal leviathan together while it belches its
way through to the next budget cycle. As Professor Angelo Codevilla of
Boston University put it, “This turns democracy into a choice between
tyranny and anarchy.” It’s certainly a perversion of responsible
government: Congress has less say over specific federal expenditures
than the citizens of my New Hampshire backwater do at Town Meeting over
the budget for a new fence at the town dump. Pace Senator Reid,
Republican proposals to allocate spending through targeted, mere
multi-billion-dollar appropriations are not only not “irresponsible”
but, in fact, a vast improvement over the “continuing resolution”: To
modify Lord Acton, power corrupts, but continuing power corrupts
continually.
America has no budget process. That’s why it’s the
brokest nation in history. So a budgeting process that can’t control
the budget in a legislature that can’t legislate leads to a government
shutdown that shuts down open areas of grassland and the unmanned boat
launch on the Bighorn River in Montana. Up next: the debt-ceiling
showdown, in which we argue over everything except the debt. The
conventional wisdom of the U.S. media is that Republicans are being
grossly irresponsible not just to wave through another couple trillion
or so on Washington’s overdraft facility. Really? Other countries are
actually reducing debt: New Zealand, for example, has a real budget that
diminishes net debt from 26 percent of GDP to 17 percent by 2020. By
comparison, America’s net debt is currently about 88 percent, and we’re
debating only whether to increase it automatically or with a few
ineffectual strings attached.
My favorite book of the moment is The Liberty Amendments,
the new bestseller by Mark Levin — not because I agree with all his
proposed constitutional amendments, and certainly not because I think
they represent the views of a majority of Americans, but because he’s
fighting on the right battleground. A century of remorseless expansion
by the “federal” government has tortured the constitutional order beyond
meaning. America was never intended to be an homogenized
one-size-fits-all nation of 300 million people run by a government as
centralized as France’s.
It’s no surprise that when it tries to be one
it doesn’t work terribly well.
Lord Protector Obama demands all you puny sheeple that live downwind from the national parks stop breathing his air until the shutdown is over. The One has spoken.
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