Posted on 01/07/2014 7:20:32 AM PST by SeekAndFind
New York Citys Sandinista-loving mayor couldnt decide whether he was ushering in the new or reviving the old during his inauguration speech last week.
Today, we commit to a new progressive direction in New York, Bill de Blasio proclaimed grandiloquently. We need a dramatic new approach rebuilding our communities from the bottom up, from the neighborhoods up. Yet this new progressive impulse is also a longstanding one, according to de Blasio: It has written our citys history. Its in our DNA.
So is de Blasios mission of fight[ing] injustice and inequality a novel experiment, turning New York into a laboratory for populist theories of government, in the words of the New York Times? Or is de Blasio simply recycling old ideas whose effects are already wholly predictable?
The latter. De Blasios new inequality agenda borrows heavily from the old War on Poverty, which celebrates its 50th anniversary this week. And no city has poured more money into government anti-poverty programs to negligible results than New York.
Candidate de Blasio constantly vaunted his plan to offer free pre-kindergarten to all, to be funded by yet higher taxes on upper incomes. Such a program, he claimed, would reduce inequality and break the cycle of poverty. He was, however, assiduously silent about the granddaddy of all War on Poverty programs: Head Start. And for good reason. De Blasios universal pre-K plan is simply an expanded version of that 1965 culturally competent classic, which has been repeatedly shown to have no long-term effects on academic performance or social development. A large federal study published in 2012 merely confirmed the obvious: Head Start has been a $150 billion sinkhole of taxpayer resources. De Blasios claim last Wednesday that study after study has shown the success of pre-K and other such compensatory programs was either a bald-faced lie or a sign of how cocooned progressive true-believers are. (Of course, President Obama and the rest of the federal bureaucracy have just as blithely ignored the federal Head Start study and want to expand it by $75 billion over the next decade.) Over the last 50 years, two count em, two early-education experiments arguably produced some slight lasting benefits, but those boutique programs enrolled a mere handful of students and wrapped them in expensive, high-quality services and personnel that could never be (and never have been) reproduced on a large scale, as Manhattan Institute fellow Kay Hymowitz has explained.
The rest of de Blasios platform is similarly familiar. He wants to co-locate social-service agencies in schools (a chestnut dating from the early 1960s Gray Areas program in New Haven), create more affordable housing (a perennial favorite of New Yorks governing class), and subject the citys successful public exam schools, which select students by a color-blind entrance test, to heavy-handed diversity pressures. He supports critical thinking over so-called rote learning (i.e., knowledge) and actually views private-sector experience as a disqualifier for a job in his administration. As New Yorks public advocate, de Blasio helped eviscerate New Yorks welfare-fraud protections; now, he has promised to reverse the citys policy of asking welfare users to work in exchange for their benefits. The citys 1.9 million food-stamp recipients 21 percent of the population is at least a quarter million recipients too low, per the new mayor.
New York has been down this road before, and it ended in New York becoming the welfare capital of America, supporting one-tenth of all welfare recipients nationally. The contemporary inequality agenda differs from the War on Poverty only in a barely perceptible reorientation toward the working poor, as opposed to the non-working underclass. But the best wealth-booster for both groups is the same, and similarly ignored by old- and allegedly new-school progressives: Above all, avoid having children out of wedlock, then apply yourself in high school, work full-time, and stay away from drugs and gangs. The Bloomberg administration outraged the citys poverty advocates last year by publicizing the social and economic toll of teen pregnancy; dont expect the de Blasio team to dare anything so honest.
The scariest aspect of de Blasios inauguration speech was not its dreary policy prescriptions, however, nor even its megalomaniacal self-regard (We are called to put an end to economic and social inequalities). Conservatives undoubtedly sound just as repetitive and just as laughably grandiose to liberal ears. The most disturbing part of his address was rather the revelation of just how blinkered he is.
If he has ever engaged seriously with a conservative urban-policy agenda, he kept that fact well-hidden. His understanding of conservative ideas comes straight from Howard Zinn: Some on the far right, he intoned righteously, believe that the way to move forward is to give more to the most fortunate. . . . They sell their approach as the path of rugged individualism. As Peggy Noonan caustically points out, that latter phrase has not been heard in New York for 100 years.
De Blasio sees American society as divided between the people and the elite, the latter an apparently monolithic entity hell-bent on retaining its ill-begotten privileges. It is not clear, however, whether the elite includes such de Blasio backers as George Soros, Alec Baldwin, and Susan Sarandon, or whether a tea-party member who supports rugged individualism is also a member, despite a $40,000 a year income. Nor did de Blasio disclose just how he managed to squelch his distaste for the elite long enough to go trolling for campaign cash among Wall Streets hedge-fund managers. Those suckers and sycophants ponied up three times the millions they conferred on his Republican rival Joe Lhota; de Blasio humbly accepted their contributions, only for the sake of economic justice, no doubt.
New York awaits an explanation of what constitutes success in the war on inequality and how economic justice is defined. Should all incomes and assets be equal? If not, why not, and what degree of spread is allowed? In theory, the War on Poverty could be declared over once everyone has a consumption level above a certain level. (In practice, of course, the goal posts kept moving, as relative poverty replaced poverty as the enemy). But inequality is a far more capacious and endlessly manipulable concept.
For the moment, we can operate with a provisional explanation of how the war on inequality operates: Everyone making more money than I do is fair game. Millions of Americans earn a fraction of what left-wing professors make, yet every last one of those progressive thinkers undoubtedly feels that he is being paid the bare minimum of what he is worth, and not a penny more. De Blasio himself, throughout his stultifyingly unvaried career in government, earned more than most New Yorkers. There is no record of his refusing his public salary or giving it away.
Here is the dirty little secret about the war on inequality: Everyone, rich and poor alike, wants cheap goods and services. We are hard-wired for bargains: If we can pay a lower price for the same item, we will choose the lower-priced version, all else being equal. We are all complicit in the drive for cheaper means of production. The poor are the biggest patrons of outsourced goods and big-box retailing with its allegedly unjust wages. Or look at it another way: The most frequent complaint about health care is that its too expensive, not that its too cheap. Yet raising the pay of low-skilled health-care workers, for example, will only increase the cost of health care for everyone, including the workers themselves.
Such conundrums are lost on de Blasio. Expect him to operate on progressive autopilot: The rich (except those who support me) are takers, the poor their victims; wealth comes at someone elses expense; government officials are wiser and more compassionate than private actors; inequalities are the product of racism and economic injustice; individual choices have little or nothing to do with poverty.
If New Yorkers were too ignorant or apathetic not to reject these LBJ-era bromides, they deserve what they are going to get.
Heather Mac Donald is a John M. Olin Fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
He’s a communist. The people chose him, and they got what they deserved.
New York City meet TOILET. TOILET meet New York City. LOL I hope the place disintigrates.
Go ahead...Bite the Big Apple....Don’t mind the maggots.
Pandering to Obama’s socialism to level the playing field. They will legalize marijuana for medical purpose, then up the ante like Colorado did. “Soma” in action to keep the sheeple “happy”.
New York City meet TOILET. TOILET meet New York City. LOL I hope the place disintigrates.
Finally changed his name legally in 2002 “when the discrepancy was noted during an election”.
we should all refer to him as Wilhem II
I hope he taxes them into non existence.
"The people have spoken ... and they must be punished."
In 1964, my Navy ship went to NYC for the world’s fair.
The city was clean and sailors in uniform were welcomed as NYCers remembered the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Go forward to 1970/71, after 6 years of LBJ’s war on poverty, NYC became a cess pool of filth and violence.
Thanks to liberals in DC and NYC, Fidel Castro and his serial killer Che became heroes.
Thanks to the liberal like John Kerry and Jane Fonda, active duty military and reservists were ordered not to wear their uniforms in NYC, DC, Chicago, LA, Seattle, Portland and Gay Frisco.
Then the rot due to the war on Poverty began to ruin most of our major cities. We have spent over 15 Trillion $’s* on the most expensive and never ending war, LBJ’s war on poverty.
*Taxpayers Have Spent $15 Trillion on ‘War on Poverty’ http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2013/04/05/BOOMTOWN-2-Taxpayers-Have-Spent-15-Trillion-On-The-War-on-Poverty - Since President Lyndon Baines Johnson declared war on poverty,.
The average NYC IQ was cut in half the day Rush left there.
RE: “The people have spoken ... and they must be punished.”
And they were...
That’s why they came to their senses after 4 years and voted in Rudy Giuliani.
brilliant analysis. i wish i had heard of that term before.
You'd think with the experience of Lindsay, Dinkins, and the other lib nightmare mayors, New Yorkers would be somewhat savvy about these things. And I'll wager a great percentage of the 75% who voted for their commie mayor were around when Disaster Dinkins was mayor. You can only shake your head.
The most interesting thing about New York is that when they move the financial distrct out of there, it is over. People with any money or sense would never go back to that pack of hungry wolves. DeBlas'e is just the leader of the wolf pack!
No way! Let the idiots who elected him stay and suffer the results of their policies.
Doubt it; the rest of the nation is not ignorant that they think of NY as a victim. NY voted this idiot in and now they should be made to rebuild their own economy and not leech off of the responsible.
The wealth will flee, but the communist idiot policies and moron culture is what will be brought with those fleeing. All those celebrities will be looking for a new playground, along with the corrupt elite and other idiots who made living in New York impossible if you’re just someone who has a basic job.
This time though, a skilled and intelligent and energetic candidate won’t want to put in the work of cleaning up a mess and decide to bypass running for Mayor. It’s the same reason we were stuck with Obama and Mittens; no sane person wants to keep fixing things, only to see it all fall apart once the people who wanted the mess fixed elect another idiot who lets all that hard work end up not making one ounce of difference.
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