When there is no penalty for failure, failures proliferate
By George
F. Will
In
1860, an uneasy Charles Darwin confided in a letter
to a friend: “I had no intention to write atheistically” but “I cannot persuade
myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly
created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living
bodies of caterpillars.” What appalled him had fascinated entomologist William
Kirby (1759-1850): The ichneumon fly inserts an egg in a caterpillar, and the
larva hatched from the egg, he said, “gnaws the inside of the caterpillar, and
though at last it has devoured almost every part of it except the skin and
intestines, carefully all this time avoids injuring the vital organs,
as if aware that its own existence depends on that of the insect on which it
preys!”
Government
employees’ unions living parasitically on Detroit have been less aware than ichneumon
larvae. About them, and their collaborators in the political class, the
question is: What. Were. They. Thinking? Well, how did Bernie Madoff or the Enron executives convince themselves their
houses of cards would never collapse?
Here,
where cattle could graze in vast swaths of this depopulated city, democracy ratified a double delusion:
Magic would rescue the city (consult the Bible, the bit about the
multiplication of the loaves and fishes), or Washington would deem Detroit, as
it recently did some banks and two of the three Detroit-based automobile
companies, “too big to fail.” But Detroit failed long ago. And not even
Washington, whose recklessness is almost limitless, is
oblivious to the minefield of moral hazard it would stride into if it rescued
this city and, then inevitably, others that are buckling beneath the weight of
their cumulative follies. It is axiomatic: When there is no penalty for
failure, failures proliferate.
This
bedraggled city’s decay poses no theological conundrum of the sort that
troubled Darwin, but it does pose worrisome questions about the viability of
democracy in jurisdictions where big government and its unionized employees
collaborate in pillaging taxpayers. Self-government has failed in what once was America’s fourth-largest
city and now is smaller than Charlotte.
Detroit,
which boomed during World War II when industrial America was “the arsenal of
democracy,” died of democracy. Today, among the exculpatory alibis invoked to
deflect blame from the political class and the docile voters who empowered it,
is the myth that Detroit is simply a victim of “de-industrialization.” In 1950,
however, Detroit and Chicago were comparable — except Detroit was probably
wealthier, as measured by per capita income. Chicago, too, lost manufacturing
jobs, to the American South, to south of the border, to South Korea and
elsewhere. But Chicago discerned the future and diversified. It is grimly
ironic that Chicago’s iconic street is Michigan Avenue.
Detroit’s
population, which is 62 percent smaller than in 1950, has
contracted less than the United Auto Workers membership, which once was 1.5 million and now is
around 390,000. Auto industry executives, who often were invertebrate
mediocrities, continually bought labor peace by mortgaging their companies’
futures in surrenders to union demands. Then city officials gave their
employees — who have 47 unions, including one for crossing guards —
pay scales comparable to those of autoworkers. Thus did private-sector
decadence drive public-sector dysfunction — government negotiating with
government-employees’ unions that are government organized as an interest group
to lobby itself to do what it wants to do: Grow.
Steven Rattner, who administered the bailout of part of the Detroit-based
portion of America’s automobile industry, says, “Apart from voting in elections,
the 700,000 remaining residents of the Motor City are no more responsible for
Detroit’s problems than were the victims of Hurricane Sandy for theirs.”
Congress, he says, should bail out Detroit because “America is just as much
about aiding those less fortunate as it is about personal responsibility.”
There
you have today’s liberalism: Human agency, hence responsibility, is denied.
Apart from the pesky matter of “voting in elections” — apart from decades of
voting to empower incompetents, scoundrels and criminals, and to mandate
unionized rapacity — no one is responsible for anything. Popular sovereignty is
a chimera because impersonal forces akin to hurricanes are sovereign.
The
restoration of America’s vitality depends on, among many other things, avoiding
the bottomless sinkhole that would be created by the federal government
rescuing one-party cities, and one-party states such as Illinois, from the
consequences of unchecked power. The consequences of such power — incompetence,
magical thinking, cynicism and sometimes criminality — are written in Detroit’s
ruins.
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