There
were many of us on the right that thought that this election was our
last chance to stop America’s decline into social welfare statism. Last
night proved that we were wrong - the hour was later than we thought,
and our last chance to stop it had already passed. The tipping point had
already been reached. Mitt Romney did not run a flawless campaign but
it was about as good as could have been expected; in fact, if we
remember what we thought of Romney before the general election began, he
exceeded expectations as a candidate. The President got a nice gift
from the heavens in the form of Hurricane Sandy that allowed him to look
Presidential and bi-partisan (thank you Chris Christie) leading into
the election. But that is all in the noise; if America were truly
interested in remaining a unique bastion of liberty rather than sliding
into the soft despotism of nanny-state paternalism, this election
wouldn’t have been close.
Give
Obama credit for this: He recognized the state of affairs better than
conservatives did. Unlike Bill Clinton, he made no pivot to the center
and neither did he hide behind a vague Hope and Change mythology as in
his first campaign. He ran as a straightforward Big Government leftist
intent on punishing the rich with taxes, expanding the size, scope and
reach of government, and squeezing religious conscience into a publicly
irrelevant private box. He bet that enough people were now getting
government benefits in the form of checks or Obamaphones or crony
capitalist bailouts that he had a coalition sufficient to explicitly
move the leftist project forward, everyone else be damned. And he was
right. Those who say he earned no mandate with his narrow victory miss
the point; he is not a guy to ever let his ambitions be stopped by lack
of a mandate (or even the rule of law), but he can fairly say that
pushing forward the leftist project is exactly what he ran on:
“Forward!”
The
interesting thing about Romney’s much talked about “47%” comment is
that critics said it was foolish and insulting... but I didn’t hear
anyone say that it was false. In an unguarded moment Romney spoke the
truth that we all know but don’t speak: There is a vast constituency of
people receiving a government check of one form or another for whom
elections come down to the single question - Will the government keep
writing the check or not? Talk of trillion dollar deficits, fiscal
cliffs, economic ruin through taxation and regulation - these things
mean nothing in light of the single question. This is the current
situation in Greece. As the Greek nation plunges ever further into ruin
and chaos, riots break out and cars burn on any suggestion that the
government might scale back the check writing. This is our future.
One
of the things that, paradoxically, has helped Obama is the long period
of unprecedented prosperity this nation has enjoyed. People are used to
seeing supermarkets with shelves fully stocked with a mind-boggling
array of good, cheap food, fresh vegetables and fruit, steak for a few
dollars a pound, and fresh baked bread. They are used to eating cheaply
at places like the 99 or even Wendy’s that are unknown to the vast
majority of the world’s population. They are used to having several
flatscreen TVs, a refrigerator, washer and dryer, and several computers
in their house. This has gone on for so long and so consistently that
people cannot imagine it ever ending. They see no connection between the
rare combination of relatively limited government, the rule of law, and
free markets this nation has traditionally embraced and the prosperity
they have enjoyed. They imagine that they can embrace the social welfare
statism that has been tried and failed in so many parts of the world
and those supermarket shelves will forever go on being stocked with
fresh, cheap food. Even in our current recession, Americans live far
better than almost anyone else in the world. But there is nothing
inevitable about any of this; the goods on those supermarket shelves are
the result of a complex, dynamic, and always evolving free market
system that needs a specific environment in which to thrive. And we have
embraced the man who has made it his mission to change that
environment.
Years
ago I spent time in England working as an engineer. What struck me
about the country was that it was similar to home but everything was
smaller, usually dingier, and much more expensive. They had
supermarkets, but they didn’t have the quality or variety normal in
American supermarkets, and what they did have cost more. When the
English engineers would come to the states for a project, they would
bring an empty suitcase that they would stuff with American bought jeans
and other clothing, and sometimes even electronics (this was pre-9/11)
which were far cheaper over here than in the UK. This too is our future.
I wonder how long it will be before Americans are bringing empty
suitcases to Australia or Hong Kong.
Besides
the fact that this election revealed that the bell has already tolled
for basic liberty in this country, it also revealed a moral complacency
among those opposed to the militant secularism that is part of the Obama
vision. I am thinking specifically here of the Catholic Church, which
was vocal when the assault on religious liberty in Obamacare became
clear with the HHS mandate that health insurance support contraception
and abortion. The mandate was an expression of Obama’s contempt for the
Church and the moral vision it represents: In an election year, he was
willing to give the middle finger to the Church and dare her to oppose
him. After some initial public opposition, the response of the Church
faded and the bishops were silent about Obamacare in the closing months
of the election. The only way to stop the mandate was to unseat Obama,
and if the Church really cared about the threat to freedom of conscience
it would have publicly and forcefully committed to making it an issue
in the election. At least this is how I suspect Obama will interpret it,
and the passivity of the Church in the face of Obama’s outrages will
only increase his contempt for her. If he was happy to insult the Church
in the runup to an election, we can expect him to mercilessly bring the
full weight of the Federal bureaucracy, and its regulatory and legal
apparatus, down on the Church now that he is safe for his final four
years.
There
is a Weimar feel to what is now happening, but perhaps I am just
overreading things in my gloom. I don’t mean that Obama is leading us to
a Hitler-like situation, because he’s not. I’m referring to a lack of
moral resolve in people in positions of power who should know better,
but who either stay silent or offer half-hearted opposition until it is
too late. In the latter camp I place the Catholic bishops. In the former
are the university elites and particularly the mainstream media. Media
bias is one thing; deliberately suppressing stories involving someone in
the chain of command leaving four Americans to twist in the wind,
allowing them to be killed by terrorists despite repeated calls for help
over hours, is quite another. I am of course referring to Benghazi. Obama claims he gave orders from the
beginning that every effort should be made to help the stranded men. If this is
true, someone in the chain of command disobeyed his orders or there was a
massive communication failure (over seven hours). Whatever the case,
the family of those that died, not to mention the military and the
country in general, deserves answers as to how those men were left to
their fate. Yet no one in the mainstream media shows any interest in
finding out, obviously for the sake of protecting Obama. Isn’t anyone’s
conscience in the CBS/ABC/NBC/CNN/WashPost/NYTimes newsrooms troubled by
the plaintive cries of the mothers and fathers of these slain men? They
are not partisans; they simply want to know what happened to their
children. But our media watchdogs are unmoved.
At
times like these I ponder my parish Church, a stone building up the street built
in the Romanesque style. The ancient architecture is appropriate for a
Church, for it is a sign that the Church endures. Christ promised that
the gates of hell would not prevail before the Church; he made no such
promise for the United States or its Constitution. The United States is a
purely human institution susceptible of no divine guarantees; as an
online commenter noted today, 100 years is a pretty good run for a
superpower. The most depressing aspect of this is that we did it to
ourselves. The British spent 200 years as a global power and only
relinquished the status after suffering through two devastating world
wars. In 1990, with the fall of the Soviet Union, an enduring era of
peace and prosperity seemed at hand. Barely twenty years later, and
without suffering any calamity on the scale of a world war, the nation
teeters on the brink of economic catastrophe, and has reelected a man
who has no serious interest in addressing the problem.
1 comment:
Dave,
Beautifully written!
--Ed
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