The only serious opposition to this arrogant Ruling Party is coming not from feckless Republicans but from what might be called the Country Party -- and its vision is revolutionary.
By Angelo M. Codevilla
As over-leveraged investment houses began to fail in
September 2008, the leaders of the Republican and Democratic parties, of major
corporations, and opinion leaders stretching from the National Review magazine (and
the Wall Street Journal)
on the right to the Nation magazine
on the left, agreed that spending some $700 billion to buy the investors'
"toxic assets" was the only alternative to the U.S. economy's
"systemic collapse." In this, President George W. Bush and his
would-be Republican successor John McCain agreed with the Democratic candidate,
Barack Obama. Many, if not most, people around them also agreed upon the
eventual commitment of some 10 trillion nonexistent dollars in ways unprecedented
in America. They explained neither the difference between the assets' nominal
and real values, nor precisely why letting the market find the latter would
collapse America. The public objected immediately, by margins of three or four
to one.
When this majority discovered that virtually no one in
a position of power in either party or with a national voice would take their
objections seriously, that decisions about their money were being made in
bipartisan backroom deals with interested parties, and that the laws on these
matters were being voted by people who had not read them, the term
"political class" came into use. Then, after those in power changed
their plans from buying toxic assets to buying up equity in banks and major
industries but refused to explain why, when they reasserted their right to decide ad hoc on
these and so many other matters, supposing them to be beyond the general
public's understanding, the American people started referring to those in and
around government as the "ruling class." And in fact Republican and
Democratic office holders and their retinues show a similar presumption to
dominate and fewer differences in tastes, habits, opinions, and sources of
income among one another than between both and the rest of the country. They think,
look, and act as a class.
Although after the election of 2008 most Republican
office holders argued against the Troubled Asset Relief Program, against the
subsequent bailouts of the auto industry, against the several
"stimulus" bills and further summary expansions of government power
to benefit clients of government at the expense of ordinary citizens, the
American people had every reason to believe that many Republican politicians
were doing so simply by the logic of partisan opposition. After all, Republicans
had been happy enough to approve of similar things under Republican
administrations. Differences between Bushes, Clintons, and Obamas are of
degree, not kind. Moreover, 2009-10 establishment Republicans sought only to
modify the government's agenda while showing eagerness to join the Democrats in
new grand schemes, if only they were allowed to. Sen. Orrin Hatch continued
dreaming of being Ted Kennedy, while Lindsey Graham set aside what is true or
false about "global warming" for the sake of getting on the right
side of history. No prominent Republican challenged the ruling class's
continued claim of superior insight, nor its denigration of the American people
as irritable children who must learn their place. The Republican Party did not
disparage the ruling class, because most of its officials are or would like to
be part of it.
Never has there been so little diversity within
America's upper crust. Always, in America as elsewhere, some people have been
wealthier and more powerful than others. But until our own time America's upper
crust was a mixture of people who had gained prominence in a variety of ways,
who drew their money and status from different sources and were not predictably
of one mind on any given matter. The Boston Brahmins, the New York financiers,
the land barons of California, Texas, and Florida, the industrialists of
Pittsburgh, the Southern aristocracy, and the hardscrabble politicians who made
it big in Chicago or Memphis had little contact with one another. Few had much
contact with government, and "bureaucrat" was a dirty word for all.
So was "social engineering." Nor had the schools and universities
that formed yesterday's upper crust imposed a single orthodoxy about the
origins of man, about American history, and about how America should be
governed.
All that has changed.
Today's ruling class, from Boston to San Diego, was
formed by an educational system that exposed them to the same ideas and gave
them remarkably uniform guidance, as well as tastes and habits. These amount to
a social canon of judgments about good and evil, complete with secular sacred
history, sins (against minorities and the environment), and saints. Using the
right words and avoiding the wrong ones when referring to such matters --
speaking the "in" language -- serves as a badge of identity.
Regardless of what business or profession they are in, their road up included
government channels and government money because, as government has grown, its
boundary with the rest of American life has become indistinct. Many began their
careers in government and leveraged their way into the private sector. Some,
e.g., Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner, never held a non-government
job. Hence whether formally in government, out of it, or halfway, America's
ruling class speaks the language and has the tastes, habits, and tools of
bureaucrats. It rules uneasily over the majority of Americans not oriented to
government.
The Political Divide
Important as they are, our political divisions are the
iceberg's tip. When pollsters ask the American people whether they are likely
to vote Republican or Democrat in the next presidential election, Republicans
win growing pluralities. But whenever pollsters add the preferences
"undecided," "none of the above," or "tea party,"
these win handily, the Democrats come in second, and the Republicans trail far
behind. That is because while most of the voters who call themselves Democrats
say that Democratic officials represent them well, only a fourth of the voters
who identify themselves as Republicans tell pollsters that Republican
officeholders represent them well. Hence officeholders, Democrats and
Republicans, gladden the hearts of some one-third of the electorate -- most
Democratic voters, plus a few Republicans. This means that Democratic
politicians are the ruling class's prime legitimate representatives and that
because Republican politicians are supported by only a fourth of their voters
while the rest vote for them reluctantly, most are aspirants for a junior role
in the ruling class. In short, the ruling class has a party, the Democrats. But
some two-thirds of Americans -- a few Democratic voters, most Republican
voters, and all independents -- lack a vehicle in electoral politics.
Sooner or later, well or badly, that majority's demand
for representation will be filled. Whereas in 1968 Governor George Wallace's
taunt "there ain't a dime's worth of difference" between the
Republican and Democratic parties resonated with only 13.5 percent of the
American people, in 1992 Ross Perot became a serious contender for the
presidency (at one point he was favored by 39 percent of Americans vs. 31
percent for G.H.W. Bush and 25 percent for Clinton) simply by speaking ill of
the ruling class. Today, few speak well of the ruling class. Not only has it
burgeoned in size and pretense, but it also has undertaken wars it has not won,
presided over a declining economy and mushrooming debt, made life more
expensive, raised taxes, and talked down to the American people. Americans'
conviction that the ruling class is as hostile as it is incompetent has
solidified. The polls tell us that only about a fifth of Americans trust the
government to do the right thing. The rest expect that it will do more harm
than good and are no longer afraid to say so.
While Europeans are accustomed to being ruled by
presumed betters whom they distrust, the American people's realization of being
ruled like Europeans shocked this country into well nigh revolutionary
attitudes. But only the realization was new. The ruling class had sunk deep
roots in America over decades before 2008. Machiavelli compares serious
political diseases to the Aetolian fevers -- easy to treat early on while they
are difficult to discern, but virtually untreatable by the time they become
obvious.
Far from speculating how the political confrontation
might develop between America's regime class -- relatively few people supported
by no more than one-third of Americans -- and a country class comprising
two-thirds of the country, our task here is to understand the divisions that
underlie that confrontation's unpredictable future. More on politics below.
The Ruling Class
Who are these rulers, and by what right do they rule?
How did America change from a place where people could expect to live without
bowing to privileged classes to one in which, at best, they might have the
chance to climb into them? What sets our ruling class apart from the rest of
us?
The most widespread answers -- by such as the Times's Thomas Friedman and David
Brooks -- are schlock sociology. Supposedly, modern society became so complex
and productive, the technical skills to run it so rare, that it called forth a
new class of highly educated officials and cooperators in an ever less private
sector. Similarly fanciful is Edward Goldberg's notion that America is now
ruled by a "newocracy": a "new aristocracy who are the true
beneficiaries of globalization -- including the multinational manager, the
technologist and the aspirational members of the meritocracy." In fact,
our ruling class grew and set itself apart from the rest of us by its
connection with ever bigger government, and above all by a certain attitude.
Other explanations are counterintuitive. Wealth? The
heads of the class do live in our big cities' priciest enclaves and suburbs,
from Montgomery County, Maryland, to Palo Alto, California, to Boston's Beacon
Hill as well as in opulent university towns from Princeton to Boulder. But they
are no wealthier than many Texas oilmen or California farmers, or than
neighbors with whom they do not associate -- just as the social science and
humanities class that rules universities seldom associates with physicians and
physicists. Rather, regardless of where they live, their social-intellectual
circle includes people in the lucrative "nonprofit" and
"philanthropic" sectors and public policy. What really distinguishes
these privileged people demographically is that, whether in government power
directly or as officers in companies, their careers and fortunes depend on
government. They vote Democrat more consistently than those who live on any of
America's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Streets. These socioeconomic opposites
draw their money and orientation from the same sources as the millions of
teachers, consultants, and government employees in the middle ranks who aspire
to be the former and identify morally with what they suppose to be the latter's
grievances.
Professional prominence or position will not secure a
place in the class any more than mere money. In fact, it is possible to be an
official of a major corporation or a member of the U.S. Supreme Court (just ask
Justice Clarence Thomas), or even president (Ronald Reagan), and not be taken seriously
by the ruling class. Like a fraternity, this class requires above all comity --
being in with the right people, giving the required signs that one is on the
right side, and joining in despising the Outs. Once an official or professional
shows that he shares the manners, the tastes, the interests of the class, gives
lip service to its ideals and shibboleths, and is willing to accommodate the
interests of its senior members, he can move profitably among our
establishment's parts.
If, for example, you are Laurence Tribe in 1984,
Harvard professor of law, leftist pillar of the establishment, you can
"write" your magnum opus by using the products of your student
assistant, Ron Klain. A decade later, after Klain admits to having written some
parts of the book, and the other parts are found to be verbatim or paraphrases
of a book published in 1974, you can claim (perhaps correctly) that your
plagiarism was "inadvertent," and you can count on the Law School's
dean, Elena Kagan, to appoint a committee including former and future Harvard
president Derek Bok that issues a secret report that "closes" the
incident. Incidentally, Kagan ends up a justice of the Supreme Court. Not one
of these people did their jobs: the professor did not write the book himself,
the assistant plagiarized instead of researching, the dean and the committee
did not hold the professor accountable, and all ended up rewarded. By contrast,
for example, learned papers and distinguished careers in climatology at MIT
(Richard Lindzen) or UVA (S. Fred Singer) are not enough for their questions
about "global warming" to be taken seriously. For our ruling class,
identity always trumps.
Much less does membership in the ruling class depend
on high academic achievement. To see something closer to an academic
meritocracy consider France, where elected officials have little power, a vast
bureaucracy explicitly controls details from how babies are raised to how to
make cheese, and people get into
and advance in that bureaucracy strictly by competitive exams. Hence for
good or ill, France's ruling class are bright people -- certifiably. Not ours.
But didn't ours go to Harvard and Princeton and Stanford? Didn't most of them
get good grades? Yes. But while getting into the Ecole Nationale
d'Administration or the Ecole Polytechnique or the dozens of other entry points
to France's ruling class requires outperforming others in blindly graded exams,
and graduating from such places requires passing exams that many fail, getting
into America's "top schools" is less a matter of passing exams than
of showing up with acceptable grades and an attractive social profile. American
secondary schools are generous with their As. Since the 1970s, it has been
virtually impossible to flunk out of American colleges. And it is an open
secret that "the best" colleges require the least work and give out
the highest grade point averages. No, our ruling class recruits and renews
itself not through meritocracy but rather by taking into itself people whose
most prominent feature is their commitment to fit in. The most successful
neither write books and papers that stand up to criticism nor release their
academic records. Thus does our ruling class stunt itself through negative
selection. But the more it has dumbed itself down, the more it has defined
itself by the presumption of intellectual superiority.
The Faith
Its attitude is key to understanding our bipartisan
ruling class. Its first tenet is that "we" are the best and brightest
while the rest of Americans are retrograde, racist, and dysfunctional unless
properly constrained. How did this replace the Founding generation's paradigm
that "all men are created equal"?
The notion of human equality was always a hard sell,
because experience teaches us that we are so unequal in so many ways, and
because making one's self superior is so tempting that Lincoln called it
"the old serpent, you work I'll eat." But human equality made sense
to our Founding generation because they believed that all men are made in the
image and likeness of God, because they were yearning for equal treatment under
British law, or because they had read John Locke.
It did not take long for their paradigm to be
challenged by interest and by "science." By the 1820s, as J. C.
Calhoun was reading in the best London journals that different breeds of
animals and plants produce inferior or superior results, slave owners were
citing the Negroes' deficiencies to argue that they should remain slaves
indefinitely. Lots of others were reading Ludwig Feuerbach's rendition of
Hegelian philosophy, according to which biblical injunctions reflect the
fantasies of alienated human beings or, in the young Karl Marx's formulation,
that ethical thought is "superstructural" to material reality. By
1853, when Sen. John Pettit of Ohio called "all men are created
equal" "a self-evident lie," much of America's educated class
had already absorbed the "scientific" notion (which Darwin only
popularized) that man is the product of chance mutation and natural selection
of the fittest. Accordingly, by nature, superior men subdue inferior ones as
they subdue lower beings or try to improve them as they please. Hence while it
pleased the abolitionists to believe in freeing Negroes and improving them, it
also pleased them to believe that Southerners had to be punished and
reconstructed by force. As the 19th century ended, the educated class's
religious fervor turned to social reform: they were sure that because man is a
mere part of evolutionary nature, man could be improved, and that they, the
most highly evolved of all, were the improvers.
Thus began the Progressive Era. When Woodrow Wilson in
1914 was asked "can't you let anything alone?" he answered with,
"I let everything alone that you can show me is not itself moving in the
wrong direction, but I am not going to let those things alone that I see are
going down-hill." Wilson spoke for the thousands of well-off Americans who
patronized the spas at places like Chautauqua and Lake Mohonk. By such
upper-middle-class waters, progressives who imagined themselves the world's
examples and the world's reformers dreamt big dreams of establishing order,
justice, and peace at home and abroad. Neither were they shy about their desire
for power. Wilson was the first American statesman to argue that the Founders
had done badly by depriving the U.S. government of the power to reshape
American society. Nor was Wilson the last to invade a foreign country (Mexico)
to "teach [them] to elect good men."
World War I and the chaos at home and abroad that
followed it discredited the Progressives in the American people's eyes. Their
international schemes had brought blood and promised more. Their domestic
management had not improved Americans' lives, but given them a taste of
arbitrary government, including Prohibition. The Progressives, for their part,
found it fulfilling to attribute the failure of their schemes to the American
people's backwardness, to something deeply wrong with America. The American
people had failed them because democracy in its American form perpetuated the
worst in humanity. Thus Progressives began to look down on the masses, to look
on themselves as the vanguard, and to look abroad for examples to emulate.
The cultural divide between the "educated
class" and the rest of the country opened in the interwar years. Some
Progressives joined the "vanguard of the proletariat," the Communist
Party. Many more were deeply sympathetic to Soviet Russia, as they were to
Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. Not just the Nation, but also the New
York Timesand National
Geographic found much to be imitated in these regimes because they
promised energetically to transcend their peoples' ways and to build "the
new man." Above all, our educated class was bitter about America. In 1925
the American Civil Liberties Union sponsored a legal challenge to a Tennessee
law that required teaching the biblical account of creation. The ensuing trial,
radio broadcast nationally, as well as the subsequent hit movie Inherit the Wind, were the occasion
for what one might have called the Chautauqua class to drive home the point
that Americans who believed in the Bible were willful ignoramuses. As World War
II approached, some American Progressives supported the Soviet Union (and its
ally, Nazi Germany) and others Great Britain and France. But Progressives agreed
on one thing: the approaching war should be blamed on the majority of
Americans, because they had refused to lead the League of Nations. Darryl
Zanuck produced the critically acclaimed movie [Woodrow] Wilson featuring
Cedric Hardwicke as Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, who allegedly brought on the war
by appealing to American narrow-mindedness against Wilson's benevolent genius.
Franklin Roosevelt brought the Chautauqua class into
his administration and began the process that turned them into rulers. FDR described
America's problems in technocratic terms. America's problems would be fixed by
a "brain trust" (picked by him). His New Deal's solutions -- the
alphabet-soup "independent" agencies that have run America ever since
-- turned many Progressives into powerful bureaucrats and then into lobbyists.
As the saying goes, they came to Washington to do good, and stayed to do well.
As their number and sense of importance grew, so did
their distaste for common Americans. Believing itself "scientific,"
this Progressive class sought to explain its differences from its neighbors in
"scientific" terms. The most elaborate of these attempts was Theodor
Adorno's widely acclaimed The
Authoritarian Personality (1948). It invented a set of criteria by
which to define personality traits, ranked these traits and their intensity in
any given person on what it called the "F scale" (F for fascist),
interviewed hundreds of Americans, and concluded that most who were not liberal
Democrats were latent fascists. This way of thinking about non-Progressives
filtered down to college curricula. In 1963-64 for example, I was assigned
Herbert McCloskey's Conservatism
and Personality (1958) at Rutgers's Eagleton Institute of Politics
as a paradigm of methodological correctness. The author had defined
conservatism in terms of answers to certain questions, had defined a number of
personality disorders in terms of other questions, and run a survey that proved
"scientifically" that conservatives were maladjusted ne'er-do-well
ignoramuses. (My class project, titled "Liberalism and Personality,"
following the same methodology, proved just as scientifically that liberals
suffered from the very same social diseases, and even more amusing ones.)
The point is this: though not one in a thousand of
today's bipartisan ruling class ever heard of Adorno or McCloskey, much less
can explain the Feuerbachian-Marxist notion that human judgments are
"epiphenomenal" products of spiritual or material alienation, the
notion that the common people's words are, like grunts, mere signs of pain,
pleasure, and frustration, is now axiomatic among our ruling class. They
absorbed it osmotically, second -- or thirdhand, from their education and from
companions. Truly, after Barack Obama described his opponents' clinging to "God
and guns" as a characteristic of inferior Americans, he justified himself
by pointing out he had said "whateverybody knows
is true." Confident "knowledge" that "some of us, the ones
who matter," have grasped truths that the common herd cannot, truths that direct
us, truths the grasping of which entitles us to discount what the ruled say and
to presume what they mean, made our Progressives into a class long before they
took power.
The Agenda: Power
Our ruling class's agenda is power for itself. While
it stakes its claim through intellectual-moral pretense, it holds power by one
of the oldest and most prosaic of means: patronage and promises thereof. Like
left-wing parties always and everywhere, it is a "machine," that is,
based on providing tangible rewards to its members. Such parties often provide
rank-and-file activists with modest livelihoods and enhance mightily the upper
levels' wealth. Because this is so, whatever else such parties might
accomplish, they must feed the machine by transferring money or jobs or
privileges -- civic as well as economic -- to the party's clients, directly or
indirectly. This, incidentally, is close to Aristotle's view of democracy.
Hence our ruling class's standard approach to any and all matters, its solution
to any and all problems, is to increase the power of the government -- meaning
of those who run it, meaning themselves, to profit those who pay with political
support for privileged jobs, contracts, etc. Hence more power for the ruling
class has been our ruling class's solution not just for economic downturns and
social ills but also for hurricanes and tornadoes, global cooling and global
warming. A priori, one
might wonder whether enriching and empowering individuals of a certain kind can
make Americans kinder and gentler, much less control the weather. But there can be no doubt that such power
and money makes Americans ever more dependent on those who wield it. Let
us now look at what this means in our time.
Dependence Economics
By taxing and parceling out more than a third of what Americans produce, through regulations that reach deep into American life, our ruling class is making itself the arbiter of wealth and poverty. While the economic value of anything depends on sellers and buyers agreeing on that value as civil equals in the absence of force, modern government is about nothing if not tampering with civil equality. By endowing some in society with power to force others to sell cheaper than they would, and forcing others yet to buy at higher prices -- even to buy in the first place -- modern government makes valuable some things that are not, and devalues others that are. Thus if you are not among the favored guests at the table where officials make detailed lists of who is to receive what at whose expense, you are on the menu. Eventually, pretending forcibly that valueless things have value dilutes the currency's value for all.
By taxing and parceling out more than a third of what Americans produce, through regulations that reach deep into American life, our ruling class is making itself the arbiter of wealth and poverty. While the economic value of anything depends on sellers and buyers agreeing on that value as civil equals in the absence of force, modern government is about nothing if not tampering with civil equality. By endowing some in society with power to force others to sell cheaper than they would, and forcing others yet to buy at higher prices -- even to buy in the first place -- modern government makes valuable some things that are not, and devalues others that are. Thus if you are not among the favored guests at the table where officials make detailed lists of who is to receive what at whose expense, you are on the menu. Eventually, pretending forcibly that valueless things have value dilutes the currency's value for all.
Laws and regulations nowadays are longer than ever
because length is needed to specify how people will be treated unequally. For
example, the health care bill of 2010 takes more than 2,700 pages to make sure
not just that some states will be treated differently from others because their
senators offered key political support, but more importantly to codify bargains
between the government and various parts of the health care industry, state
governments, and large employers about who would receive what benefits (e.g.,
public employee unions and auto workers) and who would pass what indirect taxes
onto the general public. The financial regulation bill of 2010, far from
setting univocal rules for the entire financial industry in few words, spends
some 3,000 pages (at this writing) tilting the field exquisitely toward some
and away from others. Even more
significantly, these and other products of Democratic and Republican
administrations and Congresses empower countless boards and commissions
arbitrarily to protect some persons and companies, while ruining others.
Thus in 2008 the Republican administration first bailed out Bear Stearns, then
let Lehman Brothers sink in the ensuing panic, but then rescued Goldman Sachs
by infusing cash into its principal debtor, AIG. Then, its Democratic successor
used similarly naked discretionary power (and money appropriated for another
purpose) to give major stakes in the auto industry to labor unions that support
it. Nowadays, the members of our ruling class admit that they do not read the
laws. They don't have to. Because modern laws are primarily grants of
discretion, all anybody has to know about them is whom they empower.
By making economic rules dependent on discretion, our
bipartisan ruling class teaches that prosperity is to be bought with the coin
of political support. Thus in the 1990s and 2000s, as Democrats and Republicans
forced banks to make loans for houses to people and at rates they would not
otherwise have considered, builders and investors had every reason to make as
much money as they could from the ensuing inflation of housing prices. When the
bubble burst, only those connected with the ruling class at the bottom and at
the top were bailed out. Similarly, by taxing the use of carbon fuels and
subsidizing "alternative energy," our ruling class created arguably
the world's biggest opportunity for making money out of things that few if any
would buy absent its intervention. The ethanol industry and its ensuing
diversions of wealth exist exclusively because of subsidies. The prospect of
legislation that would put a price on carbon emissions and allot certain
amounts to certain companies set off a feeding frenzy among large companies to
show support for a "green agenda," because such allotments would be
worth tens of billions of dollars. That is why companies hired some 2,500
lobbyists in 2009 to deepen their involvement in "climate change." At
the very least, such involvement profits them by making them into privileged
collectors of carbon taxes. Any "green jobs" thus created are by
definition creatures of subsidies -- that is, of privilege. What effect
creating such privileges may have on "global warming" is debatable.
But it surely increases the number of people dependent on the ruling class, and
teaches Americans that satisfying that class is a surer way of making a living
than producing goods and services that people want to buy.
Beyond patronage, picking economic winners and losers
redirects the American people's energies to tasks that the political class
deems more worthy than what Americans choose for themselves. John Kenneth
Galbraith's characterization of America as "private wealth amidst public
squalor" (The Affluent
Society, 1958) has ever encapsulated our best and brightest's complaint:
left to themselves, Americans use land inefficiently in suburbs and exurbs,
making it necessary to use energy to transport them to jobs and shopping.
Americans drive big cars, eat lots of meat as well as other unhealthy things,
and go to the doctor whenever they feel like it. Americans think it justice to
spend the money they earn to satisfy their private desires even though the
ruling class knows that justice lies in improving the community and the planet.
The ruling class knows that Americans must learn to live more densely and close
to work, that they must drive smaller cars and change their lives to use less
energy, that their dietary habits must improve, that they must accept limits in
how much medical care they get, that they must divert more of their money to
support people, cultural enterprises, and plans for the planet that the ruling
class deems worthier. So, ever-greater taxes and intrusive regulations are the
main wrenches by which the American people can be improved (and, yes, by which
the ruling class feeds and grows).
The 2010 medical law is a template for the ruling
class's economic modus operandi: the government taxes citizens to pay for
medical care and requires citizens to purchase health insurance. The money thus
taken and directed is money that the citizens themselves might have used to pay
for medical care. In exchange for the money, the government promises to provide
care through its "system." But then all the boards, commissions,
guidelines, procedures, and "best practices" that constitute
"the system" become the arbiters of what any citizen ends up getting.
The citizen might end up dissatisfied with what "the system" offers.
But when he gave up his money, he gave up the power to choose, and became
dependent on all the boards and commissions that his money also pays for and
that raise the cost of care. Similarly, in 2008 the House Ways and Means
Committee began considering a plan to force citizens who own Individual
Retirement Accounts (IRAs) to transfer those funds into government-run
"guaranteed retirement accounts." If the government may force
citizens to buy health insurance, by what logic can it not force them to trade
private ownership and control of retirement money for a guarantee as sound as
the government itself? Is it not clear that the government knows more about
managing retirement income than individuals?
Who Depends on Whom?
In Congressional
Government (1885) Woodrow Wilson left no doubt: the U.S.
Constitution prevents the government from meeting the country's needs by
enumerating rights that the government may not infringe. ("Congress shall
make no law..." says the First Amendment, typically.) Our electoral
system, based on single member districts, empowers individual voters at the
expense of "responsible parties." Hence the ruling class's perpetual
agenda has been to diminish the role of the citizenry's elected
representatives, enhancing that of party leaders as well as of groups willing
to partner in the government's plans, and to craft a "living"
Constitution in which restrictions on government give way to "positive
rights" -- meaning charters of government power.
Consider representation. Following Wilson, American
Progressives have always wanted to turn the U.S. Congress from the role defined
by James Madison's Federalist #10,
"refine and enlarge the public's view," to something like the British
Parliament, which ratifies government actions. Although Britain's electoral
system -- like ours, single members elected in historic districts by plurality
vote -- had made members of Parliament responsive to their constituents in
ancient times, by Wilson's time the growing importance of parties made MPs
beholden to party leaders. Hence whoever controls the majority party controls
both Parliament and the government.
In America, the process by which party has become
(almost) as important began with the Supreme Court's 1962 decision in Baker v. Carr which, by setting
the single standard "one man, one vote" for congressional districts,
ended up legalizing the practice of "gerrymandering," concentrating
the opposition party's voters into as few districts as possible while placing
one's own voters into as many as possible likely to yield victories. Republican
and Democratic state legislatures have gerrymandered for a half century. That
is why today's Congress consists more and more of persons who represent their
respective party establishments -- not nearly as much as in Britain, but
heading in that direction. Once districts are gerrymandered "safe"
for one party or another, the voters therein count less because party leaders
can count more on elected legislators to toe the party line.
To the extent party leaders
do not have to worry about voters, they can choose privileged interlocutors,
representing those in society whom they find most amenable. In America
ever more since the 1930s -- elsewhere in the world this practice is ubiquitous
and long-standing -- government has designated certain individuals, companies,
and organizations within each of society's sectors as (junior) partners in
elaborating laws and administrative rules for those sectors. The government
empowers the persons it has chosen over those not chosen, deems them the
sector's true representatives, and rewards them. They become part of the ruling
class.
Thus in 2009-10 the American Medical Association (AMA)
strongly supported the new medical care law, which the administration touted as
having the support of "the doctors" even though the vast majority of
America's 975,000 physicians opposed it. Those who run the AMA, however, have a
government contract as exclusive providers of the codes by which physicians and
hospitals bill the government for their services. The millions of dollars that
flow thereby to the AMA's officers keep them in line, while the impracticality
of doing without the billing codes tamps down rebellion in the doctor ranks.
When the administration wanted to bolster its case that the state of Arizona's
enforcement of federal immigration laws was offensive to Hispanics, the
National Association of Chiefs of Police -- whose officials depend on the
administration for their salaries -- issued a statement that the laws would
endanger all Americans by raising Hispanics' animosity. This reflected
conversations with the administration rather than a vote of the nation's police
chiefs.
Similarly, modern labor unions are ever less bunches
of workers banding together and ever more bundled under the aegis of an
organization chosen jointly by employers and government. Prototypical is the
Service Employees International Union, which grew spectacularly by persuading
managers of government agencies as well as of publicly funded private entities
that placing their employees in the SEIU would relieve them of responsibility.
Not by being elected by workers' secret ballots did the SEIU conquer workplace
after workplace, but rather by such deals, or by the union presenting what it
claims are cards from workers approving of representation. The union gets 2
percent of the workers' pay, which it recycles as contributions to the
Democratic Party, which it recycles in greater power over public employees. The
union's leadership is part of the ruling class's beating heart.
The point is that a doctor, a building contractor, a
janitor, or a schoolteacher counts in today's America insofar as he is part of
the hierarchy of a
sector organization affiliated with the ruling class. Less and less do such
persons count as voters.
Ordinary people have also gone a long way toward
losing equal treatment under law. The America described in civics books, in
which no one could be convicted or fined except by a jury of his peers for
having violated laws passed by elected representatives, started disappearing
when the New Deal inaugurated today's administrative state -- in which
bureaucrats make, enforce, and adjudicate nearly all the rules. Today's
legal-administrative texts are incomprehensibly detailed and freighted with
provisions crafted exquisitely to affect equal individuals unequally. The
bureaucrats do not enforce the rules themselves so much as whatever
"agency policy" they choose to draw from them in any given case. If
you protest any "agency policy" you will be informed that it was
formulated with input from "the public." But not from the likes of
you.
Disregard for the text of laws -- for the dictionary
meaning of words and the intentions of those who wrote them -- in favor of the
decider's discretion has permeated our ruling class from the Supreme Court to
the lowest local agency. Ever since Oliver Wendell Holmes argued in 1920 (Missouri v. Holland) that presidents,
Congresses, and judges could not be bound by the U.S. Constitution regarding
matters that the people who wrote and ratified it could not have foreseen, it
has become conventional wisdom among our ruling class that they may transcend
the Constitution while pretending allegiance to it. They began by stretching
such constitutional terms as "interstate commerce" and "due
process," then transmuting others, e.g., "search and seizure,"
into "privacy." Thus in 1973 the Supreme Court endowed its invention
of "privacy" with a "penumbra" that it deemed "broad
enough to encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate her
pregnancy." The court gave
no other constitutional reasoning, period. Perfunctory to the point of
mockery, this constitutional talk was to reassure the American people that the
ruling class was acting within the Constitution's limitations. By the 1990s
federal courts were invalidating amendments to state constitutions passed by
referenda to secure the "positive rights" they invent, because these
expressions of popular will were inconsistent with the constitution they
themselves were construing.
By 2010 some in the ruling class felt confident enough
to dispense with the charade. Asked what in the Constitution allows Congress
and the president to force every American to purchase health insurance, House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi replied: "Are you serious? Are you serious?" No
surprise then that lower court judges and bureaucrats take liberties with laws,
regulations, and contracts. That is why legal words that say you are in the
right avail you less in today's America than being on the right side of the
persons who decide what they want those words to mean.
As the discretionary powers of officeholders and of
their informal entourages have grown, the importance of policy and of law
itself is declining, citizenship is becoming vestigial, and the American people
become ever more dependent.
Disaggregating and Dispiriting
The ruling class is keener to reform the American
people's family and spiritual lives than their economic and civic ones. In no
other areas is the ruling class's self-definition so definite, its contempt for
opposition so patent, its Kulturkampf so
open. It believes that the Christian family (and the Orthodox Jewish one too)
is rooted in and perpetuates the ignorance commonly called religion, divisive
social prejudices, and repressive gender roles, that it is the greatest barrier
to human progress because it looks to its very particular interest -- often
defined as mere coherence against outsiders who most often know better. Thus
the family prevents its members from playing their proper roles in social
reform. Worst of all, it reproduces itself.
Since marriage is the family's fertile seed,
government at all levels, along with "mainstream" academics and
media, have waged war on it. They legislate, regulate, and exhort in support
not of "the family" -- meaning married parents raising children --
but rather of "families," meaning mostly households based on
something other than marriage. The institution of no-fault divorce diminished
the distinction between cohabitation and marriage -- except that husbands are
held financially responsible for the children they father, while out-of-wedlock
fathers are not. The tax code penalizes marriage and forces those married
couples who raise their own children to subsidize "child care" for
those who do not. Top Republicans and Democrats have also led society away from
the very notion of marital fidelity by precept as well as by parading their
affairs. For example, in 1997 the Democratic administration's secretary of
defense and the Republican Senate's majority leader (joined by the New York Times et al.) condemned
the military's practice of punishing officers who had extramarital affairs.
While the military had assumed that honoring marital vows is as fundamental to
the integrity of its units as it is to that of society, consensus at the top
declared that insistence on fidelity is "contrary to societal norms."
Not surprisingly, rates of marriage in America have decreased as out-of-wedlock
births have increased. The biggest demographic consequence has been that about
one in five of all households are women alone or with children, in which case
they have about a four in 10 chance of living in poverty. Since unmarried
mothers often are or expect to be clients of government services, it is not
surprising that they are among the Democratic Party's most faithful voters.
While our ruling class teaches that relationships
among men, women, and children are contingent, it also insists that the
relationship between each of them and the state is fundamental. That is why
such as Hillary Clinton have written law review articles and books advocating a
direct relationship between the government and children, effectively abolishing
the presumption of parental authority. Hence whereas within living memory
school nurses could not administer an aspirin to a child without the parents'
consent, the people who run America's schools nowadays administer pregnancy
tests and ship girls off to abortion clinics without the parents' knowledge.
Parents are not allowed to object to what their children are taught. But the
government may and often does object to how parents raise children. The ruling
class's assumption is that what it mandates for children is correct ipso facto,
while what parents do is potentially abusive. It only takes an anonymous
accusation of abuse for parents to be taken away in handcuffs until they prove
their innocence. Only sheer political weight (and in California, just barely)
has preserved parents' right to homeschool their children against the ruling
class's desire to accomplish what Woodrow Wilson so yearned: "to make
young gentlemen as unlike their fathers as possible."
At stake are the most important questions: What is the
right way for human beings to live? By what standard is anything true or good?
Who gets to decide what? Implicit in Wilson's words and explicit in our ruling
class's actions is the dismissal, as the ways of outdated "fathers,"
of the answers that most Americans would give to these questions. This
dismissal of the American people's intellectual, spiritual, and moral substance
is the very heart of what our ruling class is about. Its principal article of
faith, its claim to the right to decide for others, is precisely that it knows
things and operates by standards beyond others' comprehension.
While the unenlightened ones believe that man is
created in the image and likeness of God and that we are subject to His and to
His nature's laws, the enlightened ones knowthat we are products of evolution, driven by chance, the
environment, and the will to primacy. While the un-enlightened are stuck with
the antiquated notion that ordinary human minds can reach objective judgments
about good and evil, better and worse through reason, the enlightened ones know that all such judgments are
subjective and thatordinary people can
no more be trusted with reason than they can with guns. Because ordinary
people will pervert reason with ideology, religion, or interest, science is
"science" only in the "right" hands. Consensus among the
right people is the only standard of truth. Facts and logic matter only insofar
as proper authority acknowledges them.
That is why the ruling class is united and adamant
about nothing so much as its right to pronounce definitive,
"scientific" judgment on whatever it chooses. When the government
declares, and its associated press echoes that "scientists say" this
or that, ordinary people -- or for that matter scientists who "don't
say," or are not part of the ruling class -- lose any right to see the
information that went into what "scientists say." Thus when
Virginia's attorney general subpoenaed the data by which Professor Michael Mann
had concluded, while paid by the state of Virginia, that the earth's
temperatures are rising "like a hockey stick" from millennial
stability -- a conclusion on which billions of dollars' worth of decisions were
made -- to investigate the possibility of fraud, the University of Virginia's
faculty senate condemned any inquiry into "scientific endeavor that has
satisfied peer review standards" claiming that demands for data "send
a chilling message to scientists...and indeed scholars in any discipline."
TheWashington Post editorialized
that the attorney general's demands for data amounted to "an assault on
reason." The fact that the "hockey stick" conclusion stands
discredited and Mann and associates are on record manipulating peer review, the
fact that science-by-secret-data is an oxymoron, the very distinction between
truth and error, all matter far less to the ruling class than the distinction
between itself and those they rule.
By identifying science and reason with themselves, our
rulers delegitimize opposition. Though they cannot prevent Americans from
worshiping God, they can make it as socially disabling as smoking -- to be done
furtively and with a bad social conscience. Though they cannot make Americans
wish they were Europeans, they continue to press upon this nation of refugees from the rest of the world the
notion that Americans ought to live by "world standards." Each
day, the ruling class produces new "studies" that show that one or
another of Americans' habits is in need of reform, and that those Americans
most resistant to reform are pitiably, perhaps criminally, wrong. Thus does it
go about disaggregating and dispiriting the ruled.
Meddling and Apologies
America's best and brightest believe themselves
qualified and duty bound to direct the lives not only of Americans but of
foreigners as well. George W. Bush's 2005 inaugural statement that America
cannot be free until the whole world is free and hence that America must push
and prod mankind to freedom was but an extrapolation of the sentiments of
America's Progressive class, first articulated by such as Princeton's Woodrow
Wilson and Columbia's Nicholas Murray Butler. But while the early Progressives
expected the rest of the world to follow peacefully, today's ruling class makes
decisions about war and peace at least as much forcibly to tinker with the
innards of foreign bodies politic as to protect America. Indeed, they conflate
the two purposes in the face of the American people's insistence to draw a
bright line between war against our enemies and peace with non-enemies in whose
affairs we do not interfere. That is why, from Wilson to Kissinger, the ruling
class has complained that the American people oscillate between bellicosity and
"isolationism."
Because our ruling class deems unsophisticated the
American people's perennial preference for decisive military action or none,
its default solution to international threats has been to commit blood and
treasure to long-term, twilight efforts to reform the world's Vietnams, Somalias,
Iraqs, and Afghanistans, believing that changing hearts and minds is the
prerequisite of peace and that it knows how to change them. The apparently
endless series of wars in which our ruling class has embroiled America, wars
that have achieved nothing worthwhile at great cost in lives and treasure, has
contributed to defining it, and to discrediting it -- but not in its own eyes.
Rather, even as our ruling class has lectured,
cajoled, and sometimes intruded violently to reform foreign countries in its
own image, it has apologized to them for America not having matched that image
-- their private image. Woodrow Wilson began this double game in 1919, when he
assured Europe's peoples that America had mandated him to demand their
agreement to Article X of the peace treaty (the League of Nations) and then
swore to the American people that Article X was the Europeans' non-negotiable
demand. The fact that the U.S. government had seized control of transatlantic
cable communications helped hide (for a while) that the League scheme was
merely the American Progressives' private dream. In our time, this double game
is quotidian on the evening news. Notably, President Obama apologized to Europe
because "the United States has fallen short of meeting its responsibilities"
to reduce carbon emissions by taxation. But the American people never assumed
such responsibility, and oppose doing so. Hence President Obama was not
apologizing for anything that he or anyone he respected had done, but rather
blaming his fellow Americans for not doing what he thinks they should do while
glossing over the fact that the Europeans had done the taxing but not the
reducing. Wilson redux.
Similarly, Obama "apologized" to Europeans
because some Americans -- not him and his friends -- had shown "arrogance
and been dismissive" toward them, and to the world because President
Truman had used the atom bomb to end World War II. So President Clinton
apologized to Africans because some Americans held African slaves until 1865
and others were mean to Negroes thereafter -- not himself and his friends, of
course. So assistant secretary of state Michael Posner apologized to Chinese
diplomats for Arizona's law that directs police to check immigration status.
Republicans engage in that sort of thing as well: former Soviet dictator
Mikhail Gorbachev tells us that in 1987 then vice president George H. W. Bush
distanced himself from his own administration by telling him, "Reagan is a
conservative, an extreme conservative. All the dummies and blockheads are with
him..." This is all about a class of Americans distinguishing itself from
its inferiors. It recalls the Pharisee in the Temple: "Lord, I thank thee
that I am not like other men..."
In sum, our ruling class does not like the rest of
America. Most of all does it dislike that so many Americans think America is
substantially different from the rest of the world and like it that way. For
our ruling class, however, America is a work in progress, just like the rest
the world, and they are the engineers.
The Country Class
Describing America's country class is problematic
because it is so heterogeneous. It has no privileged podiums, and speaks with
many voices, often inharmonious. It shares above all the desire to be rid of
rulers it regards inept and haughty. It defines itself practically in terms of
reflexive reaction against the rulers' defining ideas and proclivities -- e.g.,
ever higher taxes and expanding government, subsidizing political favorites,
social engineering, approval of abortion, etc. Many want to restore a way of
life largely superseded. Demographically, the country class is the other side
of the ruling class's coin: its most distinguishing characteristics are
marriage, children, and religious practice. While the country class, like the
ruling class, includes the professionally accomplished and the mediocre,
geniuses and dolts, it is different because of its non-orientation to
government and its members' yearning to rule themselves rather than be ruled by
others.
Even when members of the country class happen to be
government officials or officers of major corporations, their concerns are
essentially private; in their view, government owes to its people equal
treatment rather than action to correct what anyone perceives as imbalance or
grievance. Hence they tend to oppose special treatment, whether for
corporations or for social categories. Rather than gaming government
regulations, they try to stay as far from them as possible. Thus the Supreme
Court's 2005 decision inKelo,
which allows the private property of some to be taken by others with better
connections to government, reminded the country class that government is not
its friend.
Negative orientation to privilege distinguishes the
corporate officer who tries to keep his company from joining the Business
Council of large corporations who have close ties with government from the
fellow in the next office. The first wants the company to grow by producing.
The second wants it to grow by moving to the trough. It sets apart the
schoolteacher who resents the union to which he is forced to belong for putting
the union's interests above those of parents who want to choose their
children's schools. In general, the country class includes all those in
stations high and low who are aghast at how relatively little honest work
yields, by comparison with what just a little connection with the right
bureaucracy can get you. It includes those who take the side of outsiders
against insiders, of small institutions against large ones, of local government
against the state or federal. The country class is convinced that big business,
big government, and big finance are linked as never before and that ordinary
people are more unequal than ever.
Members of the country class who want to rise in their
profession through sheer competence try at once to avoid the ruling class's
rituals while guarding against infringing its prejudices. Averse to wheedling,
they tend to think that exams should play a major role in getting or advancing
in jobs, that records of performance -- including academic ones -- should be
matters of public record, and that professional disputes should be settled by
open argument. For such people, the Supreme Court's 2009 decision in Ricci, upholding the right of
firefighters to be promoted according to the results of a professional exam,
revived the hope that competence may sometimes still trump political
connections.
Nothing has set the country class apart, defined it,
made it conscious of itself, given it whatever coherence it has, so much as the
ruling class's insistence that people other than themselves are intellectually
and hence otherwise humanly inferior. Persons who were brought up to believe
themselves as worthy as anyone, who manage their own lives to their own
satisfaction, naturally resent politicians of both parties who say that the
issues of modern life are too complex for any but themselves. Most are insulted
by the ruling class's dismissal of opposition as mere "anger and
frustration" -- an imputation of stupidity -- while others just scoff at
the claim that the ruling class's bureaucratic language demonstrates superior
intelligence. A few ask the fundamental question: Since when and by what right
does intelligence trump human equality? Moreover, if the politicians are so
smart, why have they made life worse?
The country class actually believes that America's
ways are superior to the rest of the world's, and regards most of mankind as
less free, less prosperous, and less virtuous. Thus while it delights in
croissants and thinks Toyota's factory methods are worth imitating, it dislikes
the idea of adhering to "world standards." This class also takes part
in the U.S. armed forces body and soul: nearly all the enlisted,
non-commissioned officers and officers under flag rank belong to this class in
every measurable way. Few vote for the Democratic Party. You do not doubt that
you are amidst the country class rather than with the ruling class when the
American flag passes by or "God Bless America" is sung after seven
innings of baseball, and most people show reverence. The same people wince at
the National Football League's plaintive renditions of the "Star Spangled
Banner."
Unlike the ruling class, the country class does not
share a single intellectual orthodoxy, set of tastes, or ideal lifestyle. Its
different sectors draw their notions of human equality from different sources:
Christians and Jews believe it is God's law. Libertarians assert it from
Hobbesian and Darwinist bases. Many consider equality the foundation of
Americanism. Others just hate snobs. Some parts of the country class now follow
the stars and the music out of Nashville, Tennessee, and Branson, Missouri --
entertainment complexes larger than Hollywood's -- because since the 1970s most
of Hollywood's products have appealed more to the mores of the ruling class and
its underclass clients than to those of large percentages of Americans. The
same goes for "popular music" and television. For some in the country
class Christian radio and TV are the lodestone of sociopolitical taste, while
the very secular Fox News serves the same purpose for others. While symphonies
and opera houses around the country, as well as the stations that broadcast
them, are firmly in the ruling class's hands, a considerable part of the
country class appreciates these things for their own sake. By that very token,
the country class's characteristic cultural venture -- the homeschool movement
-- stresses the classics across the board in science, literature, music, and
history even as the ruling class abandons them.
Congruent Agendas?
Each of the country class's diverse parts has its own
agenda, which flows from the peculiar ways in which the ruling class impacts
its concerns. Independent businesspeople are naturally more sensitive to the
growth of privileged relations between government and their competitors.
Persons who would like to lead their community rue the advantages that
Democratic and Republican party establishments are accruing. Parents of young
children and young women anxious about marriage worry that cultural directives
from on high are dispelling their dreams. The faithful to God sense
persecution. All resent higher taxes and loss of freedom. More and more realize
that their own agenda's advancement requires concerting resistance to the
ruling class across the board.
Not being at the table when government makes the rules
about how you must run your business, knowing that you will be required to pay
more, work harder, and show deference for the privilege of making less money,
is the independent businessman's nightmare. But what to do about it? In our
time the interpenetration of government and business -- the network of
subsidies, preferences, and regulations -- is so thick and deep, the people
"at the table" receive and recycle into politics so much money, that
independent businesspeople cannot hope to undo any given regulation or grant of
privilege. Just as no manufacturer can hope to reduce the subsidies that raise
his fuel costs, no set of doctors can shield themselves from the increased
costs and bureaucracy resulting from government mandates. Hence independent
business's agenda has been to resist the expansion of government in general,
and of course to reduce taxes. Pursuit of this agenda with arguments about
economic efficiency and job creation -- and through support of the Republican
Party -- usually results in enough relief to discourage more vigorous
remonstrance. Sometimes, however, the economic argument is framed in moral
terms: "The sum of good government," said Thomas Jefferson, is not
taking "from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned." For
government to advantage some at others' expense, said he, "is to violate
arbitrarily the first principle of association." In our time, more and
more independent businesspeople have come to think of their economic problems
in moral terms. But few realize how revolutionary that is.
As bureaucrats and teachers' unions disempowered
neighborhood school boards, while the governments of towns, counties, and
states were becoming conduits for federal mandates, as the ruling class reduced
the number and importance of things that American communities could decide for
themselves, America's thirst for self-governance reawakened. The fact that
public employees are almost always paid more and have more generous benefits
than the private sector people whose taxes support them only sharpened the
sense among many in the country class that they now work for public employees
rather than the other way around. But how to reverse the roles? How can voters
regain control of government? Restoring localities' traditional powers over
schools, including standards, curriculum, and prayer, would take repudiating
two generations of Supreme Court rulings. So would the restoration of
traditional "police" powers over behavior in public places. Bringing
public employee unions to heel is only incidentally a matter of cutting pay and
benefits. As self-governance is crimped primarily by the powers of government
personified in its employees, restoring it involves primarily deciding that any
number of functions now performed and the professional specialties who perform
them, e.g., social workers, are superfluous or worse. Explaining to one's self
and neighbors why such functions and personnel do more harm than good, while
the ruling class brings its powers to bear to discredit you, is a very
revolutionary thing to do.
America's pro-family movement is a reaction to the
ruling class's challenges: emptying marriage of legal sanction, promoting
abortion, and progressively excluding parents from their children's education.
Americans reacted to these challenges primarily by sorting themselves out.
Close friendships and above all marriages became rarer between persons who
think well of divorce, abortion, and government authority over children and
those who do not. The homeschool movement, for which the Internet became the
great facilitator, involves not only each family educating its own children,
but also extensive and growing social, intellectual, and spiritual contact
among like-minded persons. In short, the part of the country class that is most
concerned with family matters has taken on something of a biological identity.
Few in this part of the country class have any illusion, however, that simply
retreating into private associations will long save their families from societal
influences made to order to discredit their ways. But stopping the ruling
class's intrusions would require discrediting its entire conception of man, of
right and wrong, as well as of the role of courts in popular government. That
revolutionary task would involve far more than legislation.
The ruling class's manifold efforts to discredit and
drive worship of God out of public life -- not even the Soviet Union arrested
students for wearing crosses or praying, or reading the Bible on school
property, as some U.S. localities have done in response to Supreme Court
rulings -- convinced many among the vast majority of Americans who believe and
pray that today's regime is hostile to the most important things of all. Every
December, they are reminded that the ruling class deems the very word
"Christmas" to be offensive. Every time they try to manifest their
religious identity in public affairs, they are deluged by accusations of being
"American Taliban" trying to set up a "theocracy." Let
members of the country class object to anything the ruling class says or does,
and likely as not their objection will be characterized as
"religious," that is to say irrational, that is to say not to be
considered on a par with the "science" of which the ruling class is
the sole legitimate interpreter. Because aggressive, intolerant secularism is
the moral and intellectual basis of the ruling class's claim to rule,
resistance to that rule, whether to the immorality of economic subsidies and
privileges, or to the violation of the principle of equal treatment under equal
law, or to its seizure of children's education, must deal with secularism's
intellectual and moral core. This lies beyond the boundaries of politics as the
term is commonly understood.
The Classes Clash
The ruling class's appetite for deference, power, and
perks grows. The country class disrespects its rulers, wants to curtail their
power and reduce their perks. The ruling class wears on its sleeve the view
that the rest of Americans are racist, greedy, and above all stupid. The
country class is ever more convinced that our rulers are corrupt, malevolent,
and inept. The rulers want the ruled to shut up and obey. The ruled want
self-governance. The clash between the two is about which side's vision of
itself and of the other is right and which is wrong. Because each side --
especially the ruling class -- embodies its views on the issues, concessions by
one side to another on any issue tend to discredit that side's view of itself.
One side or the other will prevail. The clash is as sure and momentous as its
outcome is unpredictable.
In this clash, the ruling class holds most of the
cards: because it has established itself as the fount of authority, its primacy
is based on habits of deference. Breaking them, establishing other founts of
authority, other ways of doing things, would involve far more than electoral
politics. Though the country class had long argued along with Edmund Burke
against making revolutionary changes, it faces the uncomfortable question
common to all who have had revolutionary changes imposed on them: are we now to
accept what was done to us just because it was done? Sweeping away a half
century's accretions of bad habits -- taking care to preserve the good among
them -- is hard enough. Establishing, even reestablishing, a set of better
institutions and habits is much harder, especially as the country class wholly
lacks organization. By contrast, the ruling class holds strong defensive
positions and is well represented by the Democratic Party. But a two to one
numerical disadvantage augurs defeat, while victory would leave it in control
of a people whose confidence it cannot regain.
Certainly the country class lacks its own political
vehicle -- and perhaps the coherence to establish one. In the short term at
least, the country class has no alternative but to channel its political
efforts through the Republican Party, which is eager for its support. But the
Republican Party does not live to represent the country class. For it to do so,
it would have to become principles-based, as it has not been since the
mid-1860s. The few who tried to make it so the party treated as rebels: Barry
Goldwater and Ronald Reagan. The party helped defeat Goldwater. When it failed
to stop Reagan, it saddled his and subsequent Republican administrations with
establishmentarians who, under the Bush family, repudiated Reagan's principles
as much as they could. Barack Obama exaggerated in charging that Republicans
had driven the country "into the ditch" all alone. But they had a
hand in it. Few Republican voters, never mind the larger country class, have
confidence that the party is on their side. Because, in the long run, the
country class will not support a party as conflicted as today's Republicans,
those Republican politicians who really want to represent it will either reform
the party in an unmistakable manner, or start a new one as Whigs like Abraham
Lincoln started the Republican Party in the 1850s.
The name of the party that will represent America's
country class is far less important than what, precisely, it represents and how
it goes about representing it because, for the foreseeable future, American
politics will consist of confrontation between what we might call the Country
Party and the ruling class. The Democratic Party having transformed itself into
a unit with near-European discipline, challenging it would seem to require
empowering a rival party at least as disciplined. What other antidote is there
to government by one party but government by another party? Yet this logic,
though all too familiar to most of the world, has always been foreign to
America and naturally leads further in the direction toward which the ruling
class has led. Any country party would have to be wise and skillful indeed not
to become the Democrats' mirror image.
Yet to defend the country class, to break down the
ruling class's presumptions, it has no choice but to imitate the Democrats, at
least in some ways and for a while. Consider: The ruling class denies its
opponents' legitimacy. Seldom does a Democratic official or member of the
ruling class speak on public affairs without reiterating the litany of his
class's claim to authority, contrasting it with opponents who are either
uninformed, stupid, racist, shills for business, violent, fundamentalist, or
all of the above. They do this in the hope that opponents, hearing no other
characterizations of themselves and no authoritative voice discrediting the
ruling class, will be dispirited. For the country class seriously to contend
for self-governance, the political party that represents it will have to
discredit not just such patent frauds as ethanol mandates, the pretense that
taxes can control "climate change," and the outrage of banning God
from public life. More important,
such a serious party would have to attack the ruling class's fundamental claims
to its superior intellect and morality in ways that dispirit the target and
hearten one's own. The Democrats having set the rules of modern
politics, opponents who want electoral success are obliged to follow them.
Suppose that the Country Party (whatever its name
might be) were to capture Congress, the presidency, and most statehouses. What
then would it do? Especially if its majority were slim, it would be tempted to
follow the Democrats' plan of 2009-2010, namely to write its wish list of
reforms into law regardless of the Constitution and enact them by partisan
majorities supported by interest groups that gain from them, while continuing
to vilify the other side. Whatever effect this might have, it surely would not
be to make America safe for self-governance because by carrying out its own
"revolution from above" to reverse the ruling class's previous
"revolution from above," it would have made that ruinous practice
standard in America. Moreover, a revolution designed at party headquarters
would be antithetical to the country class's diversity as well as to the
American Founders' legacy.
Achieving the country class's inherently revolutionary
objectives in a manner consistent with the Constitution and with its own
diversity would require the Country Party to use legislation primarily as a
tool to remove obstacles, to instruct, to reintroduce into American life ways
and habits that had been cast aside. Passing national legislation is easier
than getting people to take up the responsibilities of citizens, fathers, and
entrepreneurs.
Reducing the taxes that most Americans resent requires
eliminating the network of subsidies to millions of other Americans that these
taxes finance, and eliminating the jobs of government employees who administer
them. Eliminating that network is practical, if at all, if done simultaneously,
both because subsidies are morally wrong and economically counterproductive,
and because the country cannot afford the practice in general. The electorate
is likely to cut off millions of government clients, high and low, only if its
choice is between no economic privilege for anyone and ratifying government's
role as the arbiter of all our fortunes. The same goes for government grants to
and contracts with so-called nonprofit institutions or non-governmental
organizations. The case against all arrangements by which the government favors
some groups of citizens is easier to make than that against any such
arrangement. Without too much fuss, a few obviously burdensome bureaucracies,
like the Department of Education, can be eliminated, while money can be cut off
to partisan enterprises such as the National Endowments and public
broadcasting. That sort of thing is as necessary to the American body politic
as a weight reduction program is essential to restoring the health of any human
body degraded by obesity and lack of exercise. Yet shedding fat is the easy
part. Restoring atrophied muscles is harder. Reenabling the body to do
elementary tasks takes yet more concentration.
The grandparents of today's Americans (132 million in
1940) had opportunities to serve on 117,000 school boards. To exercise
responsibilities comparable to their grandparents', today's 310 million
Americans would have radically to decentralize the mere 15,000 districts into
which public school children are now concentrated. They would have to take
responsibility for curriculum and administration away from credentialed
experts, and they would have to explain why they know better. This would
involve a level of political articulation of the body politic far beyond voting
in elections every two years.
If self-governance means anything, it means that those
who exercise government power must depend on elections. The shorter the
electoral leash, the likelier an official to have his chain yanked by voters,
the more truly republican the government is. Yet to subject the modern
administrative state's agencies to electoral control would require ordinary
citizens to take an interest in any number of technical matters. Law can
require environmental regulators or insurance commissioners, or judges or
auditors to be elected. But only citizens' discernment and vigilance could make
these officials good. Only citizens' understanding of and commitment to law can
possibly reverse the patent disregard for the Constitution and statutes that
has permeated American life. Unfortunately, it is easier for anyone who
dislikes a court's or an official's unlawful act to counter it with another
unlawful one than to draw all parties back to the foundation of truth.
How, for example, to remind America of, and to drive
home to the ruling class, Lincoln's lesson that trifling with the Constitution
for the most heartfelt of motives destroys its protections for all? What if a
country class majority in both houses of Congress were to co-sponsor a
"Bill of Attainder to deprive Nancy Pelosi, Barack Obama, and other
persons of liberty and property without further process of law for having
violated the following ex post facto law..." and larded this
constitutional monstrosity with an Article III Section 2 exemption from federal
court review? When the affected members of the ruling class asked where
Congress gets the authority to pass a bill every word of which is contrary to
the Constitution, they would be confronted, publicly, with House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi's answer to a question on the Congress's constitutional authority to
mandate individuals to purchase certain kinds of insurance: "Are you
kidding? Are you kidding?" The point having been made, the Country Party
could lead public discussions around the country on why even the noblest
purposes (maybe even Title II of the Civil Rights Bill of 1964?) cannot be
allowed to trump the Constitution.
How the country class and ruling class might clash on
each item of their contrasting agendas is beyond my scope. Suffice it to say
that the ruling class's greatest difficulty -- aside from being outnumbered --
will be to argue, against the grain of reality, that the revolution it
continues to press upon America is sustainable. For its part, the country
class's greatest difficulty will be to enable a revolution to take place
without imposing it. America has been imposed on enough.
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