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Brooks: Time to Torch the Constitution
Townhall.com ^ | December 16, 2013 | Shawn Mitchell

Posted on 12/16/2013 12:53:15 PM PST by Kaslin

History didn’t end quite as soon as Francis Fukayama famously forecast. Every generation will face interesting times, it seems. But, David Brooks, the New York Times’ idea of a conservative, recently bid to team with Fukayama to seize a consolation prize.If you can’t end history, maybe you can end the American Constitutional order. That would be interesting, and pleasing to deep thinkers disappointed in Congress’s failure to pass a lot of awesome new laws.

Brooks doesn’t exactly say so, but trashing the Constitution is what he advocates in his modestly titled piece: “Strengthen the Presidency.” Brooks sensitively builds his case by sharing the wrenching plight of Congressional budget analysts who toil thanklessly to analyze the impact of lots of really good bills that somehow never get passed.

The pathos! “They work furiously hard to analyze the impact of bills — immigration reform, tax reform, entitlement reform and gun legislation — but almost none of these bills ever makes it into law. There’s all this effort, but no result.”So, Brooks asserts we’re in era of “reform stagnation.” Years might go by without big, new laws.

To explain the drought’s cause, Brooks cites Fukayama’s essay in the current issue of The American Interest, The Decay of American Institutions, which diagnoses increased polarization, too many interest groups and lobbyists, and expansive power grabs by courts that foster too much litigation, all of which have combined to shrink the influence of the executive branch.

It’s a neat bit of verbal alchemy to jump from congressional gridlock and then somehow land at a hogtied presidency, but Brooks and Fukayama are agile enough to pull it off. Brooks has just the solution: Pump up the presidency! Expand its powers! Not because we necessarily trust the executive, but because we’re better off when the president is stronger than outside interest groups that “capture” Congress. Brooks must rank that insight as among nature’s self evident truths, because he leaves it mostly undeveloped.

Brooks argues the executive could forge solutions on things like immigration reform (and presumably the rest of his litany of tragically unpassed bills) that Congress is just too polarized to tackle. Further, he’s enthused that executive staffs are usually more expert than congressional staffs, and more insulated from the groups that do tawdry things like try to petition government.

The way out our reform wilderness, Brooks declares, is giving more policy making authority—“legislative power” in the Founders’ quaint parlance-- and administrative “flexibility” to the executive branch.

At this point, anyone who occupies the real world rather than an elite faculty lounge or Gray Lady Editorial suite should be choking. What universe is Brooks describing? Since when is the US president bound and hobbled from faithfully executing the law? For that matter, how is this president even hindered from making the law up?

One of the president’s first acts, in the name of stimulating the economy, was to rain down nearly a trillion dollars on his pets and friends in all levels of government and all stripes of left-wing activism. The Left is obscenely funded for a generation.

When Chrysler and General Motors crawled kneeling to Washington with cupped hands, the president decided he’d really rather the UAW keep its generous packages and get awarded billions in equity ahead of the secured creditors and fund investors. He ignored the law and made his leftist will happen.

When disaster struck the Gulf in the BP oil spill, the president didn’t rely on his crack environmental regulators and federal courts to administer the law and award compensation. He wrote a new script, demanded a $20 billion down payment from BP for a compensation fund, and made up the remedial program as we went.

When voters slapped the president back and put the other party in charge of the US House, this administration quickly pivoted (the only real pivot he ever executed) to achieving rule by regulation, crafting sweeping attacks on carbon, coal, American energy, and, it now appears, any property owners with mud on their land, vital wetland habitat, don’t you know?Navigable interstate waters, to be sure!

When Congress passed Obamacare, the Constitution’s First Branch did not so much codify a health plan as toss a two-thousand page invitation to the administration to draft tens of thousands of pages of regulations with the actual substance and details. Now, the president has demonstrated his belief—backed up by action—that he can alter and ignore whatever parts of the statutory law he wants for as long and whatever reason he wants.

Then there’s the sinister, unAmerican face of this president’s executive latitude. Audits of critics and activists by the IRS and other agencies. Mysterious paramilitary raids on companies like Gibson guitar. Targeted harassment and stonewalling nonprofit applications by conservative groups. Frivolous investigations and lawsuits by Eric Holder’s Justice Department against companies, states, schools, anyone or anything that displeases the administration or its leftist allies. The unscripted confession by the EPA administrator his agency subscribes to ancient Rome’s strategy of a few exemplary crucifixions to keep the locals in line. New IRS rules to knock conservative nonprofits further out of the game.

This all adds up to an exceedingly strange time for Brooks to conclude that because Congress doesn’t pass the shiny new laws he and Fukayama might favor, we should give up on separation of powers, checks and balances, and the creaky, old Constitution that made America the most successful nation in the known universe. Instead, we should vest domestic rule in an exalted executive.

Brooks might learn something from the honest liberal law professor. Jonathon Turley recently testified to Congress this president has become “the very danger the Constitution was designed to avoid.”

Brooks doesn’t care. He was never much a conservative. Now, he’s exposed himself as not much of a constitutional democrat. RIP Mr. Madison.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: davidbrooks; memebuilding; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; partisanmediashill; partisanmediashills
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To: cripplecreek
My thanks to you and Lippman for a wonderful new phrase.

“Bewildered Herd”

This might also resonate with parents of teenage children!

21 posted on 12/16/2013 1:36:24 PM PST by zeestephen
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To: Kaslin
That might fly in his corner of the former USA, but it won't fly in mine.


22 posted on 12/16/2013 1:37:41 PM PST by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: turducken

The old Marxist dialectic: keep moving the goal halfway to your position until you are standing over the pit or in a gulag.


23 posted on 12/16/2013 1:38:40 PM PST by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Kaslin

Poofters like Davie have a different way of looking at things. They live for the moment.


24 posted on 12/16/2013 1:40:07 PM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Who knew that one day professional wrestling would be less fake than professional journalism?)
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To: Gen.Blather
If liberals had their way with gun control....

.


25 posted on 12/16/2013 1:41:12 PM PST by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

I predict he’ll grow up to be an aronist who dies in his own fire.


26 posted on 12/16/2013 1:41:31 PM PST by tacticalogic
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To: Kaslin
Under Obama and his Marxists the "Pax Americana that has lasted almost 100 years is now for all practical purposes DEAD. What will replace it is pure conjecture but my guess is that it will not be peaceful by any definition.
27 posted on 12/16/2013 1:44:09 PM PST by Don Corleone ("Oil the gun..eat the cannoli. Take it to the Mattress.")
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To: Kaslin

An article you will NEVER see a Leftist like Brooks write when a Republican is in office.

Brooks is a fascist hypocrite of the highest order. What Brooks really wants, and what everybody who reads this column intuitively understands, is that Brooks really wants a fascist government run by central planners made up of Democrats. He is arguing for a benevolent dictatorship because he believes it’s good for us.

Speak for yourself, you fool!


28 posted on 12/16/2013 1:58:30 PM PST by Obadiah (I Like Ted.)
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To: Kaslin

Brooks wrote an article that voters should stop caring about political issues now Obama has failed him.


29 posted on 12/16/2013 2:02:27 PM PST by ObamahatesPACoal
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To: Darren McCarty
"A couple of damn neocons."

If he wants to ditch the constitution, he's not any variety of conservative - "neo" or otherwise.

30 posted on 12/16/2013 2:03:26 PM PST by Flag_This (Liberalism: Kills countries dead.)
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To: Kaslin
“Strengthen the Presidency.”

Ah yes, the cry for a strong man to silence the babble and inconvenience that arises from self rule, and lead through strength of will.

It has been heard before. Dave's Site

31 posted on 12/16/2013 2:10:39 PM PST by Pilsner
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To: Kaslin

Every area of our lives is political these days precisely because government permeates every aspect of our lives.

Government has become far too huge and unmanageable. Brook’s answer is to make it even larger and more dictatorial.


32 posted on 12/16/2013 2:11:15 PM PST by headstamp 2 (What would Scooby do?)
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To: Kaslin

It IS time to torch the Constitution, but not in the way that Brooks wants. It is time to redefine and repair the federal government. It is time for Fed 2.0 and there are many things that need fixing.

The first thing is to understand that what Jefferson and Reagan said are true, that as government expands personal liberty must retreat. The reason to have a federal government, indeed to have any government at all, is to maximize liberty, not to have the biggest government we can afford. The two are the inverse of each other, and INFINITE MONEY enables INFINITE GOVERNMENT, which is what Cambodia had under Pol Pot and what Russia had under Lenin and Stalin.

So, when we redefine Fed 2.0, it will be a government that can only spend what it takes in, and that must be limited lest government get too big and consume too much of our wealth.

We must also have a government that cannot exempt itself from its own laws. The first change must be to repeal 18 USC 1001 which makes it a felony to lie to a government employee but does not make it a felony for a government employee to lie to any citizen.

And certainly no Constitutional right should require application for a permit to exercise.

I am sure that FReepers can suggest other repairs. Meanwhile some other people far smarter than I have done so:

Randy Barnett’s Proposed “Federalism Amendment”
http://archive.mises.org/9837/randy-barnetts-proposed-federalism-amendment/


33 posted on 12/16/2013 2:33:21 PM PST by theBuckwheat
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To: Kaslin

Just get rid of obama.


34 posted on 12/16/2013 2:35:43 PM PST by Right Wing Assault
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To: Right Wing Assault

Confused and Dazed is the only thing I can think of when this freaks face comes up.


35 posted on 12/16/2013 3:08:25 PM PST by spawn44 (MOO)
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To: Kaslin

Our Founding Fathers feared that a tyrannical federal government might occur despite the careful checks and balances of the Constitution. Their last ditch defense of liberty is embodied in the Second Amendment.


36 posted on 12/16/2013 3:13:11 PM PST by The Great RJ ( eating)
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To: Puppage

It pisses me off that so many CONSERVATIVES even gripe about the house and senate “not getting anything done”.

The IDEAL situation in government is them not getting ANYTHING done. If they aren’t doing s***, they can’t screw anything up...


37 posted on 12/16/2013 3:17:35 PM PST by Axenolith (Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
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To: Kaslin

Heil obama, dictator for life!

Brooks, he’s going to draw and quarter you first.


38 posted on 12/16/2013 3:18:30 PM PST by Right Wing Assault
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To: Kaslin

If George Bush were still president, would Brooks be advocating this?


39 posted on 12/16/2013 3:29:03 PM PST by Walrus (America died on November 6, 2012 --- RIP)
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To: Kaslin
Good, I agree with Brooksie.

We'll start with stripping his rights and torching him in the middle of Central Park for the amusement of the Yutes -- a RW "bonfire of the vanities".

Then we can nuke Manhattan. Ooops, sorry, we really don't like you, but we actually intended to let you run for it first. Sorry 'bout that. Muh finger slipped.

Brooksie is such a boron.

40 posted on 12/16/2013 4:11:23 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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