I want to talk about Detroit and about the
federal government. I do so because they share a disease. It's
called liberal politics. It masquerades as "balance" and
"compromise.”
Suppose
you were sick and needed a doctor desperately.
Suppose your doctor prescribed a
mixture of real curatives and of deadly poison, say a mixture of penicillin and
curare.
Suppose your doctor defended this approach to
medicine as “balanced” and a “compromise.”
From
such a deadly and incompetent doctor you doubtless would flee for your
life. One does not “balance” penicillin with curare, or vice versa.
If you do, nothing is “compromised” but your survival.
As hideous, bizarre, or unimaginable as that
medical scenario seems, its political equivalent works itself all out around us
every day, on both the local and national level. I am sorry to say that
this deadly doctor’s political cousins live and work not only in Washington,
but also in Detroit, where they have been in business for decades. For
anything that ails us, whether it has a political cure or not (and most human
problems have no political cure), they prescribe poison and defend doing so as
a “balanced” approach and a suitable “compromise.” They want to “balance”
the curative of deficit reduction with the double curare of higher taxes and
greater spending. They've tried it all, from the "Model Cities"
program, to Head Start, to welfare, to state and federal subsidies. It
doesn't work.
It will never do; it never
has. For Detroit in particular, nothing works. After more than 60
straight years under a Democratic mayor, it's all been tried. It's
failed. But Detroit voters keep voting the same pack of reckless,
incompetent losers back into office regardless of their desperately dismal
record, losers who think that "compromise" solutions work.
Electing them makes as much sense as hiring a
football coach who calls a lot of plays sure to lose ground because he wants a
“balanced” offense and wants to “compromise” with the other side. You
wouldn’t accept that nonsense from your football program. Don’t accept it
from your government.
But intellectual times have gotten so bad that
if you refuse to accept nonsense like this from your government, those who work
in that government will denigrate you publicly and then banish you to Middle
Earth, as if you, and not they, were the devotees of fiction, fable, and
myth. It never occurs to them to notice that the cities of Dresden and
Hiroshima both are better off today after being completely destroyed by the
Allies in WWII than is Detroit after 60 years of peace time rule under an
unbroken sequence of Democratic regimes.
Please do not miss my point: As a city, you have a better future if you
are destroyed by Allied forces in a time of war than if you are run for decades
by Democratic mayors in a time of peace.
It’s as if we've all gone mad. Because
wisdom is irreplaceable; and because stupidity has consequences, contemporary
politicians need to be reminded that two opposite ideas cannot both be right at
the same time and in the same way. They might both be wrong, but they
cannot both be right. In such a situation, if you wish to find a balance
between those opposite prescriptions, then you know for certain that you are
mixing poison into your cure. Why anyone would wish to prescribe
political and economic poison is simply beyond the pale of prudence.
For example, all but the most
conceptually benighted (i.e., Harvard trained) among us understand that raising
taxes in a time of severe economic hardship is a fool’s prescription.
It’s poison. It kills. It sucks away venture capital so that new
businesses are not begun and old businesses are not expanded. It creates
a climate of uncertainty and economic oppression such that prudent investors
either hold their money in reserve or else send it elsewhere, where policies
are more sensible and predictable, where investment can actually pay off, and
where the payoff won’t be confiscated to fund even more “balanced” poisoning.
In other words, sucking blood
from the successful by raising their taxes (1) drives up unemployment to ever
higher and higher levels; (2) higher unemployment levels create more poor; whom
our political witch doctors (3) try to help by sucking even more blood from the
successful, which (4) keeps the poor coming back to the witch doctors again and
again, generation after generation, which (5) keeps the witch doctors in
business and in power. You can't fix what's wrong by raising taxes.
And you can't do it with more casinos.
The
political witch doctors and economic blood letters now in charge of the federal
government, and in charge of Detroit, addicted as they are to their own
pencillin/poison intravenous cocktails, cannot help themselves. They
cannot stop. They habitually prescribe economic poison -- higher taxes --
and they relentlessly apply their leeches, both to the veins of the successful
(via taxes) nationally, and the soon-to-be-unsuccessful (gamblers via casinos),
locally. In southeastern Michigan, it's the only prescription they
know: Suck blood from some; turn it into an addictive; give that
addictive to others; and keep them coming back for more. From Detroit,
the wealthy have left. Precious few remain. They are tired of being
clay pigeons in the local political skeet shoot.
In other words, imagine your
horrid fate if your doctor were your pusher.
My point is this: Not all the political
quacks and charlatans operate out of Washington. We should be so
lucky. We are not. The witch doctors, the quacks, and the
charlatans live and work in Detroit too. We’ve been going to them for
more than 60 years in a row, and they have tried to "balance" every
proposed curative with old poison. The unbalanced devastation is
everywhere to be seen.
Call your doctor “Democrat,” and call yourself
“Detroit.”
The Flying Wallendas were a
"balancing" act, too. You might recall what happened to them --
in Detroit.
1 comment:
Wisdom is irreplaceable. Leave it to Bauman to sum up the entire 31 chapters of Proverbs in the best 3 words imaginable. Thank you.
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