Posted on 03/12/2011 12:12:20 PM PST by SeekAndFind
How mean-spirited are House Republicans? So mean-spirited that they would end federally funded cowboy poetry! Last Tuesday, Harry Reid, the majority leader, took to the Senate floor to thunder that this town aint big enough for both him and the Mean-Spirited Kid (John Boehner).
The mean-spirited bill, HR 1 . . . eliminates the National Endowment of the Humanities, National Endowment of the Arts, said Senator Reid. These programs create jobs. The National Endowment of the Humanities is the reason we have in northern Nevada every January a cowboy-poetry festival. Had that program not been around, the tens of thousands of people who come there every year would not exist.
Tens of thousands would not exist? There cant be that many cowboy poets, can there? Oh, cmon, dont be naïve. Where there are taxpayer-funded cowboy poets, there must surely be cowboy-poetry festival administrators, and a Bureau of Cowboy-Poetry Festival Licensing, and cowboy-poetry festival administration grant-writers, and a Department of Cowboy Poetry Festival Administration Grant Application Processing, and Professors of Cowboy-Poetry Festival Educational Workshop Management at dozens of American colleges credentialing thousands of cowboy-poetry festival workshop coordinating majors every year.
It all adds up. In western railroad halts where the Last Chance Saloon shuttered in 1893, dusty one-horse towns are now glittering one-grant towns, where elderly hoochie-koochie dancers are being retrained to lead rewarding lives as inspectors from the Agency of Cowboy-Poetry Festival Handicapped-Access Compliance. Used to be a man could ride the range for days on end under lonesome skies with nuthin on the horizon cept a withered mesquite and a clump of sagebrush, but now all you see are clouds of dust and all you hears the mighty roar of thundering hooves as every gnarled ol wrangler in the territory races for the last hitching post outside creative-writing class.
Well, its easy to mock, and in the hours after Senator Reids effusions many of us on the Internet did. I liked Mary Katherine Hams channeling of Ted Kennedy: John Boehners America is a land in which cowboys would be forced into back-alley poetry recitations. Funny although, being an example of private-sector non-government-funded wordsmithing, it obviously doesnt create jobs.
But whats more difficult to figure out is why everyone doesnt mock and why Senator Reid (and presumably senior flunkies in the bloated emir-sized retinues that now attend our citizen-legislators) thought this would be a persuasive line of argument. This year, the NEA will be giving $50,000 toward the exhibition Ranchlines: Verses And Visions Of The Rural West in Elko.
Whats the big deal? Its 50 grand, a couple of saddlebags in small bills. Not a large sum. But then when youre Harry Reid staggering around in your trillion-gallon hat, its all small potatoes, isnt it?
He and too many other Americans seem to be living their version of the old line: If you owe the bank a thousand dollars, you have a problem; if you owe the bank a million dollars, the bank has a problem. America owes the world $14 trillion, so the world has a problem.
And, if its the worlds problem, why bother our pretty little heads about it? Im struck by the number of times Ive been blithely assured by insiders in D.C. and elsewhere that its not in Chinas interest to yank the rug out from under America: We dont need to do anything drastic, because they wont do anything drastic. Im not so sure I could claim with any degree of confidence to know what China considered to be in its interest. But we have the planets most lavishly funded intelligence agency, so theyre bound to be on top of it, arent they?
In the new budget, theres a request from the CIA for an emergency appropriation of $513.7 million. Great! A mere half-billion. Thats enough for 10,000 cowboy-poetry festivals. So whats it for? Toppling Kim Jong-Il? Taking out the Iranian nuclear program?
Er, no. Its an emergency payment to stop the CIA pension fund from going bankrupt next year with unfunded liabilities of $6.4 billion. The CIA failed to foresee the collapse of the Iron Curtain until it happened. It failed to spot that Pakistan was going nuclear until it happened. But, when the worlds most bounteously endowed intelligence agency fails to spot that its own pension fund is going bankrupt until it happens, I wouldnt bet the future on anyone in the United States government having much of a clue about what is or isnt in Chinas interest.
That leaves America to calculate whats in Americas interest. And Harry Reid seems to have figured that its in Americas interest (or, at any rate, his) to spend like theres no tomorrow even as the clock chimes quarter-to-midnight. And, when the Complacent Caballero tells you that we cannot contemplate doing anything as mean-spirited as a $50,000 cut in a poetry festival, hes telling you its over.
What else do we fund apart from cowboy poetry? Well, American taxpayers fund the vast bulk of the rapidly expanding Chinese military merely through interest payments on the debt. This is the point in the cowboy movie when the guy squints through the window of the shack and says, Its quiet out there. Too quiet.
What do you need to write cowboy poetry? Words like tumbleweed and chaps. Also, trochees, spondees, and dactyls. Pencil and paper. Total cost: 79 cents. Maybe you and a half-dozen other cowboy poets like to book the back room at the local bar once a month for an evening of cowboy poetry and a few beers. Total cost: couple hundred bucks. Maybe folks get word and you figure you should get a bigger room and invite the public and charge a three-dollar admission. Why does any of this require national subsidies managed by a distant bureaucracy thousands of miles away?
Well, because these days, what doesnt? Once upon a time, the cowboy embodied the rugged individualism of the frontier. In Harry Reids world, he embodies dependency without end. To preserve the tradition, it is necessary to invert everything the tradition represents: From true grit to federally funded grit. Thus America, bouncing along in the Dead Wood Stage of history.
Whipcrack-away, whipcrack-away, whipcrack-away!
Mark Steyn, a National Review columnist, is author of America Alone
Mark Steyn is dreamy
It’s obvious that Reid doesn’t know a thing about cowboys. They don’t need government for anything.
I wouldn’t be surprised to discover that some of those cowboys aren’t cowboys at all.
Oh, they're cowboys alright.
Yes, you are probably right!
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