Instead of roads and bridges, Obama-sized government funds stasis and sclerosis: The Hoover Dam of regulatory obstruction, the Golden Gateway to dependency.
By mark steyn
On the evidence of last week's Republican campaign events, President
Obama's instant classic – "You didn't build that" – is to Mitt Romney
what that radioactive arachnid is to Spider-Man: It got under his skin, and, in
an instant, the geeky stiff was transformed into a muscular Captain Capitalism
swinging through the streets and deftly squirting his webbing all over
Community-Organizerman. Rattled by the reborn Romney, the Obama campaign
launched an attack on Romney's attack on Obama's attack on American business.
First they showed Romney quoting Obama: "He said, 'If you've got a
business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen.'" And
then the Obama team moved in for the kill: "The only problem? That's not
what he said."
Indeed. What Obama actually said was:
"If you've got a business, you, you didn't build that. [Interjection by fawning supporters: "Yeeaaaaah!"] "Somebody else made that happen."
Since the president is widely agreed to be "the smartest guy ever
to become president" (Michael Beschloss, presidential historian), the
problem can't be "what he said" but that you dummies aren't smart
enough to get the point he was trying to make. According to Slate's David
Weigel, the "you didn't build that" bit referred back to something
he'd said earlier in the speech – "somebody invested in roads and
bridges." You didn't build those, did you? Or maybe he was referring back
to "this unbelievable American system we have that allowed you to
thrive." You didn't build the system, did you? Or maybe he was referring
to the teleprompter. You didn't build that, did you? Well, unless you're Rajiv
or Suresh from the teleprompter factory in Bangalore, you didn't. Maybe he was
referring back to something he said in a totally different speech – the Berlin
Wall one, perhaps. You didn't build that, did you? Who are we to say which of
these highly nuanced interpretations of the presidential text is correct?
If this is the best all the King's horses and all the King's men can do to put Humpty Dumpty's silver-tongued oratory together again, they might as well cut to the chase and argue that accurately quoting President Obama is racist. The obvious interpretation sticks because it fits with the reality of the last three-and-a-half years – that America's chief executive is a man entirely ignorant of business who presides over an administration profoundly hostile to it.
But, just for the record, I did
"invest in roads and bridges," and so did you. In fact, every dime in
those roads and bridges comes from taxpayers, because government doesn't have
any money except for what it takes from the citizenry. And the more successful
you are, the more you pay for those roads and bridges.
So here's a breaking-news alert for
President Nuance: We small-government guys are in favor of roads. Hard as it
may be to credit, roads predated Big Government. Which came first, the chicken
crossing the road or the Egg Regulatory Agency? That's an easy one: Halfway
through the first millennium B.C., the nomadic Yuezhi of Central Asia had
well-traveled trading routes for getting nephrite jade from the Tarim Basin to
their customers at the Chinese court, more than 2,500 miles away. On the other
hand, the Yuezhi did not have a federal contraceptive mandate or a Bloombergian
enforcement regime for carbonated beverages at concession stands at the rest
area two days out of Khotan, so that probably explains why they're not in the
G7 today.
In Obama's world, businessmen build
nothing, whereas government are the hardest hard-hats on the planet. So, in his
"You didn't build that" speech, he invoked, yet again, the Hoover Dam
and the Golden Gate Bridge. "When we invested in the Hoover Dam or the
Golden Gate Bridge, or the Internet, sending a man to the moon – all those
things benefited everybody. And so that's the vision that I want to carry
forward."
He certainly carries it forward from one
dam speech to another. He was doing his Hoover Dam shtick only last month, and
I pointed out that there seemed to be a certain inconsistency between his
enthusiasm for federal dam-building and the definitive administration
pronouncement on the subject, by Deanna Archuleta, his Deputy Assistant Secretary
of the Interior, in a speech to Democratic environmentalists in Nevada:
"You will never see another federal
dam."
Ever. So the president can carry forward
his "vision," but it apparently has no more real-world application
than the visions he enjoyed as a member of his high school "choom
gang" back in Hawaii. Incidentally, I was interested to learn from David
Maraniss' enlightening new biography that, during car-chooming sessions, young
Barry insisted all the windows be rolled up so that no marijuana smoke would
escape. If you can seriously envision President Obama opening a 21st century
Hoover Dam, you need to lower the windows on your Chevy Volt.
The Golden Gate Bridge? As Reason's Matt
Welch pointed out, the Golden Gate cost at the time $35 million – or about $530
million today. So, for the cost of Obama's 2009 stimulus bill alone, we could
have had 1,567 Golden Gate Bridges. Where are they? Where are, say, the first
dozen? If you laid 1,567 Golden Gate Bridges end to end, you'd have enough for
one Golden Choom Bridge stretching from Obama's Punahou High School in Honolulu
over the Pacific all the way to his Occidental College in Los Angeles, so that
his car-chooming chums can commute from one to the other without having to
worry about TSA patdowns.
A stimulus bill equivalent to 1,567 Golden
Gate bridges. A 2011 federal budget equivalent to 6,788 Golden Gate bridges.
And yet we don't have a single one.
Because that's not what Big Government
does: Money-no-object government spends more and more money for less and less
objects. For all the American economy has to show for it, President Bob the
Builder took just shy of a trillion dollars in stimulus, stuck it in his
wheelbarrow, pushed it halfway across the Golden Gate Bridge, and tossed it
into the Pacific.
Instead of roads and bridges, Obama-sized
government funds stasis and sclerosis: The Hoover Dam of regulatory
obstruction, the Golden Gateway to dependency. Last month, 80,000 Americans
signed on to new jobs, but 85,000 Americans signed on for Social Security
disability checks. Most of these people are not "disabled" as that
term is generally understood. Rather, it's the U.S. economy that's disabled,
and thus Obama incentivizes dependency. What Big Government is doing to those
85,000 "disabled" is profoundly wicked. Let me quote a guy called
Mark Steyn, from his last book:
"The evil of such a system is not the
waste of money but the waste of people. Tony Blair's ministry discovered it was
politically helpful to reclassify a chunk of the unemployed as 'disabled.' A
fit, able-bodied 40-year-old who has been on disability allowance for a decade
understands somewhere at the back of his mind that he is living a lie, and that
not just the government but his family and his friends are colluding in that
lie."
Millions of Americans have looked at the
road ahead, and figured it goes nowhere. Best to pull off into the Social
Security parking lot. Don't worry, it's not your fault. As the president would
say, you didn't build the express check-in to the Disability Office. Government
built it, and, because they built it, you came. In Obama's "visions,"
he builds roads and bridges. In reality, the President of Dependistan has put
nothing but roadblocks in the path to opportunity and growth.
That he can build. That's all he can
build.
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