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Liberals Say U.S. Is Ungovernable. Again.
American Thinker ^
| 2-16-2010
| Christopher Chantrill
Posted on 02/15/2010 10:33:17 PM PST by smoothsailing
February 16, 2010Liberals Say U.S. Is Ungovernable. Again.
By Christopher Chantrill
Liberals are at it again. They are worrying that the U.S. is "ungovernable." Political scientist
Jay Cost has the details:
Ezra Klein
argued that it was time to reform the filibuster because the government cannot function with it intact anymore. Tom Friedman
suggested that America's "political instability" was making people abroad nervous. And Michael Cohen of Newsweek
blamed "obstructionist Republicans," "spineless Democrats," and an "incoherent public" for the problem.
Liberals were saying exactly the same thing in 1980, thirty years ago, in the darkest days of the Carter administration. The mess of inflation, recession, Iran hostages, and gas lines, they decided, was not a direct result of stupid Carter administration policy. It was a sign that America's best days were behind us, and that there was nothing to do but decline gracefully.
You'll remember that U.S. voters in the fall of 1980 had a different idea. They decided to elect a B-movie actor to the presidency. Yes, that's what liberals called Ronald Reagan back then. Clark Clifford, the "wise man of Washington," hadn't even thought of calling him an "amiable dunce." Not yet.
The Amiable Dunce proceeded to cut tax rates. He strengthened the dollar and cut government spending. It wasn't so much governing as getting government out of the way. The result was a twenty-year boom. And now here we are back where we started, with a nasty economy, a soft dollar, a failed presidency, and another generation of liberals complaining that the U.S. is ungovernable.
To call a nation ungovernable is as ignorant as calling an airplane in which you are the pilot "unflyable." When Tex Johnston made the first flight in the eight-engine YB-52 bomber in April 1952, he found on climb-out that the control force needed to apply bank with the ailerons made it impossible to turn the airplane. Did he give up and bail out of this unflyable airplane? Not according to the story he tells in Jet-Age Test Pilot. He tried the rudder pedals and found that he could yaw the airplane -- and the secondary effect of yaw, as every pilot knows, is bank. So Tex brought the prototype YB-52 in to land using the rudder pedals, directed the engineers to make some adjustments, and the rest is history.
Tex's problem with the B-52 ailerons is the same as the liberal problem with the filibuster. Liberals are finding the Senate's controls too heavy. It's almost impossible, they complain, to get the Senate to turn on command. So they want to change the rules to make it easier for them to do a cram-down on partisan legislation.
Don't they realize that the founding fathers wrote the U.S. Constitution precisely to make it hard to control the Senate? The founders wanted to restrain momentary Pelosian majorities in the House of Representatives with regional power in the upper house. They set the controls to make the U.S. almost ungovernable -- by design.
Our liberal friends have helped in one area. Their postmodern professors have taught us that history is nothing more than a self-serving narrative dictated by the powerful. Radical historians like the recently departed Howard Zinn in A People's History of the United States have made fortunes out of exploding the notion of European civilization by recounting the nasty things white European males have done to "the people" all over the world. Noam Chomsky has made himself a rich man penning screeds about American imperialism.
Our left-wing friends never seem to have thought that their narrative of injustice, which exposed the hypocrisies of the world bourgeoisie and global corporations, applies exactly to them and their progressive project.
When you look at the great government programs, you can believe the liberal narrative about helping people, or you can believe the liberal postmodernists and assume that it's all about power. Every regulation is a bid for power; every dollar of spending is a payoff to supporters. You can make a case that the Obama administration's program of stimuli, bailouts, tax "agnosticism," and crony capitalism is all about hope and change for the people. But in the modern age, stripped of superstition and Platonic "likely stories," we believe in the simple, elegant explanation. Nah, it's all about power.
Stripped of its narrative myth, every government is an armed minority occupying territory and subjugating its population. That's why the Audi Green Police commercial is so mordantly funny. In the United States in 2010, the police power can fine you for not separating your garbage correctly. But an armed minority does not just sic the police on its middle-class citizens. It must reward its supporters. That's why government spending has gone from 7 percent of GDP to 45 percent in a century. That's why government workers earn more than private-sector workers.
So when liberal wring their hands because the U.S. seems to be ungovernable, we conservatives chuckle. That's not a bug, liberals; that's a feature.
Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/02/liberals_say_us_is_ungovernabl.html at February 16, 2010 - 12:30:38 AM CST
TOPICS: Editorial; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: ezraklein
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To: smoothsailing
to govern means to control. hmm, freedom is having to say we do NOT want to be controlled. Limited government is a GOOD THING,
To: SWAMPSNIPER
Amen. The rule of law to liberals: “you are not fit to act because we know what’s good for you”. Submit to Obama now!
To: smoothsailing
Liberals are at it again. They are worrying that the U.S. is "ungovernable." If they're admitting they are incapable of governing, I would agree with them. But the fault lies in them, not America.
23
posted on
02/15/2010 11:33:32 PM PST
by
highlander_UW
(Obama has lost or not saved over 4 million jobs!)
To: smoothsailing
Don't they realize that the founding fathers wrote the U.S. Constitution precisely to make it hard to control the Senate? The founders wanted to restrain momentary Pelosian majorities in the House of Representatives with regional power in the upper house. They set the controls to make the U.S. almost ungovernable -- by design. I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the filibuster a Senate procedural rule, and not something implemented by the Founders?
24
posted on
02/15/2010 11:56:12 PM PST
by
thecabal
(Destroy Progressivism)
To: sauron
I didn’t read the replies yet, so I guess that’s correct then. (I caught it, hah!)
25
posted on
02/15/2010 11:57:10 PM PST
by
thecabal
(Destroy Progressivism)
To: smoothsailing
Liberals Say U.S. Is Ungovernable. Again.Damn straight. We can govern ourselves.
Learn it. Live it. Love it.
26
posted on
02/16/2010 12:04:04 AM PST
by
Texas Eagle
(If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all. -- Texas Eagle)
To: smoothsailing
Un-govenerable? HellYa! It’s called ANTI-TYRRANY. Any questions? Goody. Class dismissed.
27
posted on
02/16/2010 12:09:41 AM PST
by
Danae
(Don't like our Constitution? Try living in a country with out one.)
To: DariusBane
Obama’s presense in the WH breaks the constitution. Don’t wonder why they are pushing unconstitutional legislation. They are unbound by it.
28
posted on
02/16/2010 12:13:33 AM PST
by
Danae
(Don't like our Constitution? Try living in a country with out one.)
To: smoothsailing
I’m glad they got that decided! Now they can stop trying.
29
posted on
02/16/2010 12:14:16 AM PST
by
ArmstedFragg
(hoaxy dopey changey)
To: Nooseman
why cant they just go find a place in northern california,and live their life.dangit.
30
posted on
02/16/2010 12:31:23 AM PST
by
Nooseman
(--mart)
To: smoothsailing
They’re pushing this crap all over.
Nonsense. We are the most ‘governed’ society in the history of mankind. The fact that we are willing to tolerate this in a non-violent manner blows the ‘ungovernable’ argument out of the water.
31
posted on
02/16/2010 1:40:51 AM PST
by
CowboyJay
(T(s)EA - Honest money, or bust!)
To: smoothsailing; All
They said that about NYC for years, too— and Rudy ( no fan here, but give him his due ) proved how wrong they were...
32
posted on
02/16/2010 2:33:21 AM PST
by
backhoe
(All Across America, the Lights are being relit again...)
To: sauron
I knew a FReeper would catch this.
It reminds me of the useful idiots who say that our system of checks and balances means political parties checking one another.
33
posted on
02/16/2010 2:46:38 AM PST
by
2nd Bn, 11th Mar
(The "P" in democrat stands for patriotism)
To: smoothsailing
Yep, just because Americans will not go down the road to socialism, they are ungovernable.
Sure, whatever!
To: smoothsailing
What happened to "consent of the governed?"
The American people don't want to be dictated to?
Imagine their nerve - demanding control over their own lives!
To: smoothsailing
“Liberals are at it again. They are worrying that the U.S. is “ungovernable.””
That’s what the scum say when we don’t go along with their version of communism.
36
posted on
02/16/2010 4:01:42 AM PST
by
Scotsman will be Free
(11C - Indirect fire, infantry - High angle hell - We will bring you, FIRE)
To: smoothsailing
Dear Liberals,
Governing.
You’re doing it wrong.
37
posted on
02/16/2010 4:02:53 AM PST
by
paulycy
(Demand Constitutionality. (Hi Mom.))
To: thecabal
“I’m sure someone will correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t the filibuster a Senate procedural rule, and not something implemented by the Founders?”
I don’t think he was talking about the filibuster.
In the Constitution as written, Senators were not elected, but appointed by state legislatures—and that for a six year term. That was supposed to give them a certain stability that would counter the zigs and zags of the House, whose members are elected for two year terms.
James Madison said:
The use of the Senate is consistent in its proceedings with more coolness, more wisdom than the popular branch of government. Its hallmark would not be the majoritism of the House, but the emphasis on the rights of individual Senators to consider and impact legislation.
Tom Coburn said:
There are two examples in history on how the Senate has operated as intended as a bulwark against hasty decisions and bad policy.
38
posted on
02/16/2010 4:15:08 AM PST
by
dsc
(Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
To: smoothsailing
Ezra Klein argued that it was time to reform the filibuster because the government cannot function with it intact anymore. Tom Friedman suggested that America's "political instability" was making people abroad nervous. And Michael Cohen of Newsweek blamed "obstructionist Republicans," "spineless Democrats," and an "incoherent public" for the problem.Perhaps they find us ungovernable because they fail to follow the Constitution. Reform the filibuster? Republicans haven't really used it yet, we have not had the support to hold one. Our "political instablity" is the result of an out of control elitist political system. "Obstructionist" and "spineless," on the contrary, those too few who stood against the impending tyranny are called Patriots. And lastly the "incoherent public" is not drunk, nor high, nor disassembled, nor in a coma. We are awake, aware, and wondering why Washington still can't seem to hear us now.
It is not Americans who are ungovernable, it is the government that has gotten too big for its own britches.
39
posted on
02/16/2010 4:18:48 AM PST
by
EBH
(The warning bell of Freedom is ringing, can you not hear it?)
To: smoothsailing
'Liberals Say U.S. Is Ungovernable. Again.'
Yeah. We need a nice, gentle, benevolent DICTATOR to take complete charge.
Like say, this guy....
Oops, never mind. He's already trying to TAKE that role.
(NOT sarcasm)
40
posted on
02/16/2010 4:21:15 AM PST
by
Condor51
(The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits [A. Einstein])
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