After America: Get Ready for Armageddon
culture. It redefines the relationship between the citizen and the state in fundamental ways that make small government all but impossible ever again. In most of the rest of the western world, it’s led to a kind of two-party one-party state: right-of-center parties will once in a while be in office, but never in power, merely presiding over vast left-wing bureaucracies that cruise on regardless. All such “technocratic” societies slide left, into statism and stasis.
    Many Americans are happy with the government monopoly. The monarchical urge persists even in a two-and-a-third-century-old republic.
    undreaming america 53
    So, when the distant Sovereign from Barackingham Palace graciously confers an audience on his unworthy subjects, they are eager to petition him to make all the bad stuff go away. “I have an urgent need,” one lady beseeched King Barack at a “town hall meeting” in Fort Myers early in 2009. “We need a home, our own kitchen, our own bathroom.”11
    He took her name—Henrietta Hughes—and ordered his staff to meet with her. Hopefully, he didn’t insult her by dispatching some no-name deputy assistant secretary of whatever instead of flying in one of the big-time tax-avoiding cabinet honchos to nationalize a Florida bank and convert one of its branches into a desirable family residence, with a swing set hanging where the drive-thru ATM used to be. The audience roared their gratitude. “Yes!” they yelped, and “Amen!” and even “Gracious God, thank you so much!”
    As Bing Crosby said to Bob Hope in The Road to Utopia , “Leave your name with the girl, and we may get to you for some crowd noises.” That’s the citizen’s role on America’s road to Utopia: Leave your name with the girl and, after the background check, you may qualify for the crowd scenes.
    Early in his term, President Obama called in some fellow smarties to test out some slogans. FDR had a “New Deal,” so Obama thought he’d wrap up his domestic innovations under the umbrella title of “New Foundation.”
    The historian Doris Kearns Goodwin cautioned against it. “New Foundation,” she said, sounds like a lady’s girdle.12 Actually, it’s more like a whale-bone corset. When the American citizen climbs into the “New Foundation,”
    the stays get cranked tighter and tighter, but incrementally—so you barely feel it, till you realize the bottom’s dropped out, and you’re coughing up blood, and they’re still cranking.
    ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
    the StatiSt Quo
    FDR was the first American president to pass off Big Government as technocracy. He had a so-called “Brains Trust.” As with so many pious 54
    after america
    liberal concepts, the term started as a throwaway joke. Back in the trust-busting days of the 1890s, a wag at The Daily Star of Marion, Ohio, mused:
    “Since everything else is tending to trusts, why not a brain trust . . . ? Our various and sundry supplies of gray matter may as well be controlled by a central syndicate.”13
    That’s how America’s ruling class now regards itself: a central syndicate of gray matter. Which brings us back to George Harrison and the Monopolies Commission. The Big Government “brains trust” is a trust like any other: it exists to monopolize, to prevent free trade, to rig the market. Specifically, it exists to enforce a monopoly of ideas, and squash all alternatives.
    You’ll recall that, during the 2008 primary season, Barack Obama was revealed, at a private fundraiser in San Francisco, to have belittled his own party’s voters in rural Pennsylvania as “bitter” people who “cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.”14 He subsequently
    “apologized” by explaining that “I said something everybody knows is true.”15
    “ Everybody ”? Well, maybe at a swank Dem fundraiser in California—
    and, if that’s not “everybody,” who is? This was an even more revealing remark than the original bitter-clingers crack. It

Similar Books

Crimson Waters

James Axler

Healers

Laurence Dahners

Revelations - 02

T. W. Brown

Cold April

Phyllis A. Humphrey

Secrets on 26th Street

Elizabeth McDavid Jones

His Royal Pleasure

Leanne Banks