By MARK STEYN
Amid the ruin and rubble of the grey morning after, it may seem in poor
taste to do anything so vulgar as plug the new and stunningly topical paperback
edition of my book, "After America" – or, as Dennis Miller re-titled
it on the radio the other day, "Wednesday." But the business of
America is business, as Calvin Coolidge said long ago in an alternative
universe, and I certainly could use a little. So I'm going to be vulgar and
plug away. The central question of "Wednesday" – I mean, "After
America" – is whether the Brokest Nation In History is capable of
meaningful course correction. On Tuesday, the American people answered that
question. The rest of the world will make its dispositions accordingly.
In the weeks ahead, Democrats and Republicans will reach a triumphant
"bipartisan" deal to avert the "fiscal cliff" through some
artful bookkeeping mechanism that postpones Taxmageddon for another year, or
six months, or three, when they can reach yet another triumphant deal to
postpone it yet again. Harry Reid has already announced that he wants to raise
the debt ceiling – or, more accurately, lower the debt abyss – by $2.4 trillion
before the end of the year, and no doubt we can look forward to a spectacular
"bipartisan" agreement on that, too. It took the government of the
United States two centuries to rack up its first trillion dollars in debt. Now
Washington piles on another trillion every nine months. Forward!
If you add up the total debt – state, local, the works – every man,
woman, and child in this country owes 200 grand (which is rather more than the
average Greek does). Every American family owes about three-quarters of a
million bucks, or about the budget deficit of Lichtenstein, which has the
highest GDP per capita in the world. Which means that HRH Prince Hans-Adam II
can afford it rather more easily than Bud and Cindy at 27b Elm Street. In 2009,
the Democrats became the first government in the history of the planet to
establish annual trillion-dollar deficits as a permanent feature of life.
Before the end of Obama's second term, the federal debt alone will hit $20
trillion. That ought to have been the central fact of this election – that
Americans are the brokest brokey-broke losers who ever lived, and it's time to
do something about it.
My Hillsdale College comrade Paul Rahe, while accepting much of my
thesis, thought that, as an effete milquetoast pantywaist sissified foreigner,
I had missed a vital distinction. As he saw it, you can take the boy out of
Canada but you can't take the Canada out of the boy. I had failed to appreciate
that Americans were not Euro-Canadians, and would not go gently into the
statist night. But, as I note in my book, "a determined state can change
the character of a people in the space of a generation or two." Tuesday's
results demonstrate that, as a whole, the American electorate is trending very
Euro-Canadian. True, you still have butch T-shirts – "Don't Tread On
Me," "These Colors Don't Run"... In my own state, where the
Democrats ran the board on Election Night, the "Live Free Or Die"
license plates look very nice when you see them all lined up in the parking lot
of the Social Security office. But, in their view of the state and its
largesse, there's nothing very exceptional about Americans, except that they're
the last to get with the program. Barack Obama ran well to the left of Bill
Clinton and John Kerry, and has been rewarded for it both by his party's
victory and by the reflex urgings of the usual GOP experts that the Republican
Party needs to "moderate" its brand.
I have no interest in the traditional straw clutching – oh, it was the
weak candidate... hard to knock off an incumbent... next time we'll have a
better GOTV operation in Colorado... I'm always struck, if one chances to be
with a GOP insider when a new poll rolls off the wire, that their first
reaction is to query whether it's of "likely" voters or merely
"registered" voters. As the consultant class knows, registered voters
skew more Democrat than likely voters, and polls of "all adults" skew
more Democrat still. Hence the preoccupation with turnout models. In other
words, if America had compulsory voting as Australia does, the Republicans
would lose every time. In Oz, there's no turnout model, because everyone turns
out. The turnout-model obsession is an implicit acknowledgment of an awkward
truth – that, outside the voting booth, the default setting of American society
is ever more liberal and statist.
The short version of electoral cycles is as follows: the low-turnout
midterms are fought in political terms, and thus Republicans do well and
sometimes spectacularly well (1994, 2010); the higher-turnout presidential
elections are fought in broader cultural terms, and Republicans do poorly,
because they've ceded most of the cultural space to the other side. What's more
likely to determine the course of your nation's destiny? A narrow focus on
robocalls in selected Florida and New Hampshire counties every other fall? Or
determining how all the great questions are framed from the classroom to the iPod
to the movie screen in the 729 days between elections?
The good news is that reality (to use a quaint expression) doesn't need
to swing a couple of thousand soccer moms in northern Virginia. Reality doesn't
need to crack 270 in the Electoral College. Reality can get 1.3 percent of the
popular vote and still trump everything else. In the course of his first term,
Obama increased the federal debt by just shy of $6 trillion and, in return,
grew the economy by $905 billion. So, as Lance Roberts at Street Talk Live
pointed out, in order to generate every $1 of economic growth the United States
had to borrow about $5.60. There's no one out there on the planet – whether
it's "the rich" or the Chinese – who can afford to carry on
bankrolling that rate of return. According to one CBO analysis, US government
spending is sustainable as long as the rest of the world is prepared to sink 19
percent of its GDP into U.S. Treasury debt. We already know the answer to that:
In order to avoid the public humiliation of a failed bond auction, the U.S.
Treasury sells 70 percent of the debt it issues to the Federal Reserve – which
is to say the left hand of the U.S. government is borrowing money from the
right hand of the U.S. government. It's government as a Nigerian email scam, with
Ben Bernanke playing the role of the dictator's widow with $4 trillion under
her bed that she's willing to wire to Timmy Geithner as soon as he sends her
his bank account details.
If that's all a bit too technical, here's the gist: There's nothing
holding the joint up.
So, Washington cannot be saved from itself. For the moment, tend to your
state, and county, town and school district, and demonstrate the virtues of
responsible self-government at the local level. Americans as a whole have
joined the rest of the Western world in voting themselves a lifestyle they are
not willing to earn. The longer any course correction is postponed the more
convulsive it will be. Alas, on Tuesday, the electorate opted to defer it for
another four years. I doubt they'll get that long.
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