"If you've got a
business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen." Mitt
Romney fell on this Obama quote like an NFL lineman on an end zone fumble
during the Super Bowl. And understandably so.
For this was no
gaffe, said Romney, this is what Obama believes. This is straight out of the
catechism. Obama thinks that had not the government created the preconditions,
none of us could succeed. We all depend on government. None of us can make it
on our own.
Had Obama been
channeling Isaac Newton – "If I have seen further than others it is
because I am standing on the shoulders of giants" – or John Donne –
"No man is an island, entire of itself" – many would have nodded in
agreement.
But what Obama
seemed to be saying – indeed, was saying – was that, without government, no
business can succeed.
Realizing that statement rubs against a deeply ingrained American belief – that the people built the nation – Obama and his acolytes are charging that Romney ripped his words out of context.
Here is Obama's
full quote:
"If you were
successful, somebody along the line gave you some help. There was a great
teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this unbelievable
American system that we have that allowed you to thrive. Somebody invested in
roads and bridges. If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody
else made it happen."
Even with this preamble, Romney seems to have it right. Obama sees government as indispensable. Without the roads and bridges that government builds, without the teachers government provides, no one succeeds. It takes a village.
Yet Obama's
narrative does not tell us why some succeed and others fail. Does Obama
understand America? For he surely does not seem to understand her history as
once taught to every schoolchild.
From Jamestown in
1607 to Yorktown in 1781, there was no federal government. There was no United
States. Yet generations of colonists had built forts, cleared lands, created
farms, established workshops. Americans fed, clothed and housed themselves,
creating one of the highest standards of living on earth for 3 million people.
How could the U.S.
government have built the roads and bridges if the U.S. government did not
exist before 1789? There were no public schools until the 19th century.
Colleges were the creations of religious denominations. The Pell grant had not
yet been invented.
Was government
indispensable to Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin, Robert Fulton's
invention of the steam boat, Alexander Graham Bell's invention of the
telephone, Guglielmo Marconi's invention of the radio and Thomas Edison's
invention of the light bulb, and just about everything else?
Did Wilbur and
Orville Wright learn how to build bicycles in a CETA program? Were the feds
responsible for the flight at Kitty Hawk?
Seeing government
as antecedent to enterprise, Obama has it backward. In America, individuals,
families, communities came first. Hardworking men and women built the society.
Only after that did they send their best and brightest off to the House of
Burgesses to discuss colonial issues.
The Founding
Fathers who created the U.S. government were deeply distrustful of the centralized
power Obama seems to worship. They had had enough of the beneficent big
government of George III. Obama notwithstanding, government does not create
wealth. Government collects wealth, redistributes wealth, consumes wealth.
Even when
government "builds" something like a Golden Gate Bridge, it does not
really build it. It commissions it. Architects, engineers and construction
companies build the bridge, not bureaucrats from HUD.
As Arthur Herman
writes in "Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in
World War Two," FDR immediately turned to GM's Big Bill Knudsen to corral
the leaders of American industry to stop making Fords, Packards, Lincolns and
Chryslers, and start making jeeps, tanks, guns and aircraft engines.
"Some people
regard private enterprise as a predatory tiger to be shot. Others look on it as
a cow they can milk. Not enough people see it as a healthy horse, pulling a
sturdy wagon," said Winston Churchill.
Obama belongs to
category two.
But perhaps he
cannot be blamed for not understanding the real America. His mother and father,
his role models like Frank Marshall Davis and Saul Alinsky, his neighbors like
Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, all came out of the anti-capitalist left.
From academia to
community organizing to an Illinois legislature that milked so much money from
the people the state may beat Jerry Brown's California into bankruptcy –
Obama's life has been spent in tax-exempt, tax-subsidized and tax-supported
institutions.
Yet this Obama-Romney
collision frames the great issue of 2012.
Which is the true
creator of wealth and engine of prosperity?
Is it, as Obama
believes, government?
Or is it, as
Romney believes, people and their institutions and businesses that, though
carrying the immense burden of government that consumes 37 percent of the
economy, still employs six of seven Americans still working? That's the choice.
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