Let's review what Niall Ferguson, Harvard professor and author of the just published book "The Great Degeneration" has to say about what he refers to as "Planet Government."
Ferguson is not some kind of a quack, and neither is he an alarmist. He's thoughtful, well grounded in the facts, and is definitely one highly intelligent, concerned and well informed individual.
Of course, the "progressives" among us won't want to hear about the many negatives of our country's overreliance on big government today, but they're just flat wrong in believing government knows best solutions will work to make our country stronger. That's simply not the way the world works.
The Regulated States of America is subtitled 'Tocqueville saw a nation of individuals who were defiant of authority. Today? Welcome to Planet Government:'
"In "Democracy in America," published in 1833, Alexis de Tocqueville marveled at the way Americans preferred voluntary association to government regulation. "The inhabitant of the United States," he wrote, "has only a defiant and restive regard for social authority and he appeals to it . . . only when he cannot do without it."
Unlike Frenchmen, he continued, who instinctively looked
to the state to provide economic and social order, Americans relied on their own
efforts. . . .
What especially amazed Tocqueville was the sheer range
of nongovernmental organizations Americans formed: "Not only do they have
commercial and industrial associations . . . but they also have a thousand other
kinds: religious, moral, grave, futile, very general and very particular,
immense and very small; Americans use associations to give fetes, to found
seminaries, to build inns, to raise churches, to distribute books, to send
missionaries to the antipodes; in this manner they create hospitals, prisons,
schools."
Tocqueville would not recognize America today. Indeed,
so completely has associational life collapsed, and so enormously has the state
grown, that he would be forced to conclude that, at some point between 1833 and
2013, France must have conquered the United States.
The decline of American
associational life was memorably documented in Robert Puttnam's seminal 1995
essay "Bowling Alone," which documented the exodus of Americans from bowling
leagues, Rotary clubs and the like. Since then, the downward trend in "social
capital" has only continued. . . .
Instead of joining together to get things done,
Americans have increasingly become dependent on Washington. On foreign policy,
it may still be true that Americans are from Mars and Europeans from Venus. But
when it comes to domestic policy, we all now come from the same place: Planet
Government.
As the Competitive Enterprise Institute's Clyde Wayne
Crews shows in his invaluable annual survey of the federal regulatory state, we
have become the regulation nation almost imperceptibly. Excluding blank pages,
the 2012 Federal Register—the official directory of regulation—today runs to
78,961 pages. Back in 1986 it was 44,812 pages. In 1936 it was just 2,620. . . .
The last time regulation was cut was under Ronald
Reagan, when the number of pages in the Federal Register fell by 31%. Surprise:
Real GDP grew by 30% in that same period. But Leviathan's diet lasted just eight
years. Since 1993, 81,883 new rules have been issued. In the past 10 years, the
"final rules" issued by our 63 federal departments, agencies and commissions
have outnumbered laws passed by Congress 223 to 1. . . .
The cost of all this, Mr. Crews estimates, is $1.8
trillion annually—that's on top of the federal government's $3.5 trillion in
outlays, so it is equivalent to an invisible 65% surcharge on your federal
taxes, or nearly 12% of GDP. . . .
Next year's big treat will be
the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, something every small business in
the country must be looking forward to with eager anticipation. . . .
President Obama occasionally pays lip service to the
idea of tax reform. But nothing actually gets done and the Internal Revenue
Service code (plus associated regulations) just keeps growing—it passed the
nine-million-word mark back in 2005, according to the Tax Foundation, meaning
nearly 19% more verbiage than 10 years before. While some taxes may have been
cut in the intervening years, the tax code just kept growing.
I wonder if all this could have anything to do with the
fact that we still have nearly 12 million people out of work, plus eight million
working part-time jobs, five long years after the financial crisis began.
Genius that he was, Tocqueville saw this transformation
of America coming. Toward the end of "Democracy in America" he warned against
the government becoming "an immense tutelary power . . . absolute, detailed,
regular . . . cover[ing] [society's] surface with a network of small,
complicated, painstaking, uniform rules through which the most original minds
and the most vigorous souls cannot clear a way."
Tocqueville also foresaw exactly how this regulatory
state would suffocate the spirit of free enterprise: "It rarely forces one to
act, but it constantly opposes itself to one's acting; it does not destroy, it
prevents things from being born; it does not tyrannize, it hinders, compromises,
enervates, extinguishes, dazes, and finally reduces [the] nation to being
nothing more than a herd of timid and industrious animals of which the
government is the shepherd."
If that makes you bleat with frustration, there's still
hope.""
Summing Up
Yes, Planet Government is real.
We have become a nation that has joined with the rest of the world of government dependents and government knows best elitism.
A society that looks outward to the government instead of inward to ourselves for the real and lasting solutions to our problems.
Alas, that simply doesn't work, and each day more and more of us are beginning to realize that profoundly simple and inescapable fact.
And that's a good thing. Facing reality precedes creating a better reality, and a better reality is definitely what is needed in America today.
That's my take.
Thanks. Bob.
"This is madness...madness"...here and now on "Planet Government." No, not in a movie but in reality! Tocqueville saw it coming...200 years ago...so did Charlton Heston...in "Planet of the Apes." The APES (America's Political Establish) now rule all us humanoid field workers here in "The Forbidden Zone" which is mostly everywhere in America outside the "District of Corruption." (Washington D.C.)
ReplyDelete"Get your hands off me you damned dirty APE!!"