President of the PIIGS?

December 10, 2011

The PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain) countries of Europe continue their economic slide, well past the tipping point and closer to the abyss than ever.  In spite of European Union bail-out efforts, combined with attempts to convince the profligate Socialist governments that they must rein in their unaffordable entitlement programs, little or no progress has been made on solving the underlying, core problem.

Recently, a number of the EU member states have managed to get the International Monetary Fund and its chief contributor, the United States, to contribute (“loan”) more money to try to prop up Italy, along with whatever a few of the EU members can scrape up.  As big a deal as it is to U.S. taxpayers, it’s just another drop into the fire bucket to be poured onto the European Socialist conflagration.  That whole effort may really be just to shame Germany, France and the United Kingdom into deeper financial participation in this unprecedented firefighting exercise.

The root of the problem is, of course, half one of human nature and half one of the known vulnerability that all democracies share.  The human frailty, which we all recognize even if we believe it is impolite to mention it, is our desire to get something for nothing.  Of course, all politicians―even the most dense and inarticulate―know that votes are purchased with promise capital.  Moreover, even that stupidest politician knows that the very best lure is something for nothing and that an ongoing vote-buying program is best of all.  Politicians also well understand that feasibility or deliverability of the promise is immaterial; we want to believe that we will get something free, with no strings attached.

That other part of the cause is a characteristic of democratic governments.  Alexis de Toqueville, a French scholar and philosopher, made an extensive visit and study of the United States.  It was de Toqueville who observed, ”A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations has been 200 years”.  No one has yet discovered a procedural method of avoiding this pitfall; but the United States has managed so far to last only a tiny bit longer than 200 years.

Barack Obama began campaigning for the office of President of the United States around 2002, and in 2008 he succeeded in being elected.  In large part, Obama’s appeal was his promise to be “a President of all the people”.  His “hope and change” slogan resonated even with some number of reasonable, educated and knowledgeable voters.  Over the years since he was elected, however, that promise seems increasingly in doubt.

President Obama seems to be stuck in a rut, ever since his 2012 reelection campaign season began in 2010.  His repetitive speeches are more strident and angry; his nice guy attitude is nowhere to be seen.  The only vestige of the old Obama is his prowess in raising campaign contributions.  He has been delivering Marxist class-envy speeches, filled with trite cold-war-era Soviet phrases, at every fund-raising stop on his current campaign trail.  It seems that Obama would feel comfortable only in a European Socialist government setting.

Obama’s legislative accomplishments also appear to be copies of the European Socialist initiatives that have led those progressive governments into imminent financial peril.  The President has refused to consider any but the most trivial reductions in government spending, and he is obsessed with increasing income taxes.  Taken together, the President’s speeches and his legislative agenda indicate that Obama is more of a President of the PIIGS than he is a President of the United States.  Perhaps it would be best if he abandoned the 2012 U.S. election and instead looked into organizing the PIIGS into their own union, with Barack Obama as its head.  PIIGS voters would undoubtedly be receptive to promises of more and more government largesse.


Enough of the Class Envy Rhetoric, Already!

December 7, 2010

President Barack Obama, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid:

President Obama, you have had about two years in office, and it is likely that you have produced more public communications in that period than any previous President.  Many of us commend you for your efforts to inform, to explain and to influence us.

Speaker Pelosi, you have also made efforts to inform us, to explain  inexplicable congressional bills, and to chide us when you think we need it.  You, also, are commended by many of us.

Majority Leader Reid, you have not been shy in telling us what you think we need to hear.  Undoubtedly, many commend you also.

As important as all of your speeches and other public pronouncements are to your cause and to your passion, they need refreshing.  Those of us who are not quite so youth-challenged can remember phonograph records (think of an ancient form of MP3).  The sound was produced by a stylus (“needle”) running the course of a prerecorded spiral groove which had microscopic variations that corresponded to the original sound.  For such an ancient technology, the reproduced sound was quite faithful to the live performance.  Unfortunately, phonograph records developed problems with overuse, or careless handling, across time.

A damaged groove could cause the stylus to simply keep repeating a short segment incessantly.  Very few people could tolerate that endless repetition of the same words or phrase. Your class-envy baiting at every opportunity now sounds like a stuck phonograph record to our ears (see Election, Congress, 2010).  It’s not working any more.

We know that your guru-hero was a 19th century “economist” who believed that class envy was too powerful an emotion to waste; therefore he developed a scheme of “governing” that depends entirely on exploitation of that emotion.  That scheme appeared to work at first, and it is still tried in places where citizens are ignorant and uninformed (see Chavez, Hugo, Venezuela, 2010).  But most Americans think that your belief in a  class-envy government puts you in the same category as Hans Christian Andersen’s Emperor, the one with the new clothes.

We understand that highly educated people in your lofty positions can come to have low opinions of us ordinary citizens; we do make stupid and childish decisions occasionally.  But astute observers of our antics will notice that, in the long run, we vote with our wallets and with our feet.  Hit us over the head a number of times; we will then stop paying you to deliver the pain, or we will get outside of your reach—or both.  Some of us are even smart enough to learn the need to take action, from watching you punish friends and neighbors, before you get around to hitting us personally.

Not nearly so many of us take perverse pleasure in watching you punish the more successful or more affluent as you must imagine.  Nor do we fail to understand that fifty percent of us pay very little or no income taxes and that your much-despised “top two percent of income earners” pay about 65% of all income taxes.  In fact, a great many of us are coming to the realization that the only “fair” tax is is a true flat tax (see Election, Congress, 2010).

President Obama, Speaker / Minority Leader Pelosi, Majority Leader Reid, please cease and desist with the endless and monotonous class envy rhetoric.  Stop demonizing those who are financially successful.  Try using logical reasoning instead of emotional appeals at least once in a while.  To be sure, we understand that a salesman’s gotta sell; but when the old sales pitch is stale, tired and tawdry, a new approach is in order.

You might even consider a radical change, one with some hope embedded.  If worse comes to worst, consider playing it straight—just to confuse us if for no other reason.  Pretend that the roadmap laid out for us by Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, et al actually works.  Act as if the United States really is exceptional; search for scraps of  hope hidden within the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Playing it straight for a while might surprise you.


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