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We Ain't Seen Nothing Yet-- "we are doing nothing to prepare for the crises to come."
Real Clear Politics ^ | November 26, 2009 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 11/26/2009 8:27:50 AM PST by Ooh-Ah

When it comes to the problems facing this country, an old slogan comes to mind: "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet."

High unemployment, the recession and a terrorist resurgence in Afghanistan are bad enough. But there are a number of problems on the horizon that could dwarf President Obama's first-year trials.

Why the pessimism? In short, we are doing nothing to prepare for the crises to come.

A global recession has led to low oil prices. Yet in this window of opportunity, America has not decreased its foreign-oil dependence. We are not encouraging domestic exploration. And we are still ambivalent on nuclear power.

...

Finally, there is an array of taxes on the horizon -- increased federal income tax rates; promised hikes in health-care surcharge taxes; and even rumors of value-added federal sales taxes. These increases are said to be aimed at the proverbial wealthy. But that could change -- given that the top 5 percent of households already provide 60 percent of the nation's income-tax revenue. And many are already paying 50 percent to 60 percent of their incomes in combined local, state, federal and payroll taxes.

Just consider. The price of gas will soon likely increase. The cost of servicing our profligate borrowing will, too. One more terrorist attack like at Fort Hood, or nightly sermons from a grandstanding Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, or a new Taliban offensive, and the momentum could shift to radical Islam in their decades-long war against the United States. Next year's tax hikes will be real and large -- and no longer just this year's idle talk.

As these storm clouds gather, Congress bickers on Saturday nights about borrowing even more money for health-care reform, yet another federal entitlement.

(Excerpt) Read more at realclearpolitics.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: congress; duplicate; economy; vdhanson; victordavishanson

1 posted on 11/26/2009 8:27:50 AM PST by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah

This must end ... .


2 posted on 11/26/2009 8:31:26 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: Ooh-Ah

This must end ... .


3 posted on 11/26/2009 8:33:04 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: nmh

I wouldn’t say “we” are doing nothing. I think “we” are doing quite a bit. The -15bama admin is busy making sure all potential crises do indeed occur, explores ways to make them more acute. In the R/D section, there are folks researching new and more clever ruses and crisis to foment.


4 posted on 11/26/2009 8:35:18 AM PST by C210N (A government big enough to give you everything you want, is big enough to take everything you have)
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To: nmh

Eventually, it will end, but it will probably be ugly. Either is will be a full fledged “People’s State” or the restoration of a republic (likely after a civil war). If we go the People’s State route, ironically, Eastern Europe might be the place many of us flee too.


5 posted on 11/26/2009 8:37:04 AM PST by rbg81 (DRAIN THE SWAMP!!)
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To: Ooh-Ah

In 1980 we had a two-word solution for myriad problems not unlike these we face today. In 2012 we will have a two-word solution again: Sarah Palin.


6 posted on 11/26/2009 8:39:12 AM PST by PaleoBob
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To: Ooh-Ah

They, the anti-constitutional, anti-truth, anti-freedom, anti-American bureaucrats Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet.


7 posted on 11/26/2009 8:43:18 AM PST by PGalt (Happy Thanksgiving to you and all posters)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Why are the Congressional Repubs not making absolute maximum noise over the Obama anti-American agenda??? Why are they not in front of EVERY camera that will put them on the air? They should be yelling from every street corner waking the moron public up. Where are the constant press conferences they should be holding?? They should already be harping on 2010 and the need to take this country back away from the radical socialists.


8 posted on 11/26/2009 8:45:05 AM PST by EagleUSA (W)
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To: rbg81
I don't know what will be the means to the end ... a coo? A revolt? Voting them out, factoring in the fraud %? But I know it must end before we are another Zimbabwe. Thomas Sowell was right. We are turning into another Argentina with Zimbabwe as the ultimate result.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Zimbabwe in America's Future?

This morning one of the media lookouts at AIPnews.com drew attention to an article in the Washington Times about the awful conditions in Zimbabwe. In the article images of prison conditions there are likened to photos of inmates just after their liberation from the Nazi death camps. In addition to the horrid prison conditions, the country as a whole is in a state of collapse. "UN agencies estimate that up to three-quarters of Zimbabwe's estimated 12 million people are malnourished and dependent on food aid. Critics blame bad governance and a land-distribution program that began in 1999 and has left a majority of farms idle. Until 2001, Zimbabwe was a net exporter of food."

In the fall of 1980 I returned from Mumbai, India, my first posting as a foreign service officer, to take up my new chores as "desk officer" for the BLS countries (Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland) and assistant desk officer for the newly minted nation of Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia). On the way, I stopped in New York to witness Zimbabwe's admission to the United Nations (August 25, 1980), and got my first glimpse of the successful insurgent leader, Robert Mugabe. Over the years since, I've tried to keep up with the subject of my former responsibilities. Like some others, I watched with wary hope, then increasing dismay and grief, as stupid leftist ideology and political ambition overcame common sense and love of country to set Mugabe and his cronies on a path that ultimately destroyed Zimbabwe's once flourishing economy and turned its promised constitutional system into a paradigmatic wasteland of tyranny and repression.

The shallow advocates of "majority rule" in southern Africa pretend that this is somehow just the result of the personal flaws and failings of Mugabe and the people around him, but this isn't an adequate explanation. The very idea that the aim of just revolution is "majority rule" has to bear its share of the blame. Of course the socialist mentality that dominates all too many among America's foreign policy elite (including the black elites that professed such burning interest in justice for blacks in southern Africa) tacitly approves the notion that unalloyed "majority rule" is a just and sustainable form of government. The short and tragic history of Zimbabwe is a classic illustration of why, as Artemus Ward might say, that notion is among "the things we know that just ain't so."

From ancient times (see for example Book VIII of Plato's Republic) pure democracy has been identified as perhaps the most unstable form of government. It's like a radioactive element with a short half-life fated to break down speedily into its next form. Under the influence of demagogues pure democracy declines to mob rule which feeds such a collapse of order and security that people literally beg for the iron hand of tyranny to rescue them from calamity. Years ago, as I helped to staff those who were participating in discussions about the political future of southern Africa, this often came to my mind. It tempered my enthusiasm for seemingly quick paths to black majority rule that paid no attention to the need for carefully considered institutions that would avoid the inevitable tendency of pure democracy to give birth to destructive tyranny. Later, as an Assistant Secretary of state, I gave a speech to the National Urban league that reflected these concerns. I was caricatured by the propaganda hit men of the left, derided as some kind of tool of intransigent, racist whites simply because I refused to forget that the productive cooperation of the white minority would be absolutely essential to the success of the new forms of government emerging in the region. (Though events have proven me right, to this day I am slurred by leftist blacks for showing this concern. For some people there is no sin more unforgivable than to see the truth before they do.)

In Zimbabwe this meant avoiding what I thought of as the tragic mistake of the Gracchi brothers, whose precipitous implementation of "land reforms" (redistribution of land from the aristocratic few to the land-poor majority) hastened the collapse of the Roman Republic. No historical parallels are exact, of course, but they can suggest principles to keep in mind. In Zimbabwe's case this meant realizing that the imperative of economic and social success required respect for the demonstrated expertise and success of the several thousand white farming families whose adaptation of modern techniques had produced a little agricultural miracle. In countries large and small, the first prerequisite of economic development seems to be the sustained and efficient generation of large surpluses in the farm economy. The burgeoning urban areas so characteristic of rapidly expanding industrial and technological economies mean that expansive non-farm populations must be fed. Master this challenge, and there's a solid foundation for sustained economic growth. Fail to master it (as for instance the old Soviet Union did) and even great natural advantages (arable land, metal and mineral resources, etc.) resist the possibility of material success.

The framers of Zimbabwe's constitution needed to eschew sloganeered thinking about majority rule and devise ways to assure constitutional mechanisms that gave the white minority enough political clout to hamper any efforts simply to despoil them of their wealth. The result would have done more than avoid economic folly. It would have encouraged white/black coalitions that hampered the implementation of the kind of demagogic mob politics Mugabe has used to fortify his political power at the expense of his country's happiness.

These days, Americans should not think of these reflections on Zimbabwe's plight as curious thoughts about a distant misery. I have frequently made the point that, given his upbringing and ideology, Barack Obama doesn't represent the heritage of Black Americans. In both respects, however, he more than adequately represents the characteristics of tragically failed socialist leaders in Africa, like Robert Mugabe. Can we see his politically motivated orgy of debt financed spending as the demagogue's destructive disregard for the real well being of the nation? Can we see in his bid for dictatorial control of the economic sector preparation for the disastrous subordination of economic sense to political ambition? Though he is not alone in doing so (his sold-out Democrat and Republican colleagues share in his actions) will his calculated acts of "creative destruction" turn the once flourishing strength of the American people into a wrecked and timorous shadow of its former self? On all sides, the political elite in this country seemed ready to abandon the constitutional system of self-government in favor of a mobocratic implementation of pure democracy that temporarily allows demagogues to flourish, while they rape and pillage the hopes of the people they mislead. Is there more than a little Zimbabwe in our future?

http://loyaltoliberty.blogspot.com/2009/03/zimbabwe-in-america-future.html

9 posted on 11/26/2009 8:46:11 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: nmh

http://loyaltoliberty.blogspot.com/2009/03/zimbabwe-in-america-future.html

I know Sowell would want this posted.

It’s the truth!


10 posted on 11/26/2009 8:47:13 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: PGalt

The Tree of Liberty has to be Refreshed occasionally with the blood of tyrants.

Long live the 2nd Amendment. The last line of defense.


11 posted on 11/26/2009 8:47:21 AM PST by o_zarkman44
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To: nmh

I think there are too many guns in this country for it to ever get like Zimbabwe without a big fight. Any liberal who thinks the Police are going to go from house to house collecting guns is smoking something.


12 posted on 11/26/2009 8:51:11 AM PST by rbg81 (DRAIN THE SWAMP!!)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Not being the brightest bulb on the tree, If I were President (which obviously does not require brains) I would be drilling oil wells everywhere.

We owe Billions to China and China is buying oil, buying a lot of it. We have it. We could be paying back our debt with oil, and at the same time making ourselves independent of foreign oil , and we could stop sending billions to buy oil ,to people who want us dead.


13 posted on 11/26/2009 8:51:24 AM PST by Venturer
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To: rbg81

“I think there are too many guns in this country for it to ever get like Zimbabwe without a big fight. Any liberal who thinks the Police are going to go from house to house collecting guns is smoking something.”

Ah, remember WACO and other situations where they murdered them. Recall all these turn in your gun programs. There maybe a big fight but this is what they want. Guns put “teeth into liberty”. Zero and his tribe are against liberty.


14 posted on 11/26/2009 8:53:59 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: rbg81

In GB they just said turn them in or go to jail.


15 posted on 11/26/2009 8:56:19 AM PST by omega4179 (0 is an embarrassment to us all.)
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To: rbg81
Look at D.C.. Yes it is infested with criminals and I'm not including Zero and his tribe of thugs. D.C. is riddled with crime. I forget where it stands but I believe guns are not allowed in D.C.. It is unconstitutional to NOT allow someone to bear arms but that doesn't stop them from being selective on a city notorious for gun crime. Allot of America will say, “yeah, take the guns away there, but not where I live...” That's how they do it!
16 posted on 11/26/2009 8:56:42 AM PST by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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