by Barry Rubin
In his speech at
Ohio State University, President Barack Obama used the word “together”
four times. Yet each time he did so it was used to define collective
endeavor as merely that of government. Thus, while trying to turn
American history and even the Constitution into precedents for his goals
and policies, Obama is actually reversing them, undermining not only
the conservative vision of America but also the historic liberal one.
Normally, a president
would speak of the vast array of efforts made “together” to refer—at
least alongside—to non-government activities. That includes the actions
of communities, of organizations, of corporations, of charities,
religious groups, and trade unions. It is the freedom, energy, and
enthusiasm to form such groups on a voluntary basis that marks American
society as unusual in the world.
All those things are
actions independent of the government. It was the virtue of American
government that it accepted limitations to permit the maximum space for
the autonomous action of citizens and groups of citizens. After all,
democracy is not defined as the ability to come together to serve the
state. On one level, all countries require some such service. But on
another level this is the philosophy of the modern ideological
dictatorship.
Let’s consider Obama’s four uses of the word “together” to gain better understanding of his ideology:
“That’s precisely what the
founders left us: the power to adapt to changing times. They left us
the keys to a system of self-government – the tool to do big and
important things together that we could not possibly do alone. To
stretch railroads and electricity and a highway system across a
sprawling continent. To educate our people with a system of public
schools and land grant colleges, including Ohio State. To care for the
sick and the vulnerable, and provide a basic level of protection from
falling into abject poverty in the wealthiest nation on Earth. To
conquer fascism and disease; to visit the Moon and Mars; to gradually
secure our God-given rights for all our citizens, regardless of who they
are, what they look like, or who they love.”
Here, Obama cleverly cites
cases of consensus government action—the public school system,
fighting wars and the space program–though in a misleading way. Two
side remarks. First, it is significant that Obama doesn’t say, “To
conquer fascism and Communism.” Second, whatever one thinks on the
issue, Obama’s claim that gay marriage is a “God-given right” is
certainly a theological novelty.
But back to the main
point. In other words, because minimal or moderate government has
achieved great things, Obama illogically argues that maximum government
can also achieve even greater things, despite the contrary evidence of
history, including present American history.
It is quite true that land
was granted by the government to make it possible to build railroads
and colleges. But once the land was given, the government stepped
entirely out of the picture! Giving one item and then getting out of the
way—I’m talking here about creation not regulation—is quite different
from the government doing these things itself.
In fact, Obama is here
stealing credit from private enterprise and turning American history on
its head. The same point applies to “conquer…disease” where Obamacare
marks a highly questionable extension of government power to hitherto
unimaginable heights.
He continues about
providing “a basic level of protection,” which is often called the
safety net. But the whole point, of course, is that this idea emerged
relatively late in American history and was finally enshrined in the New
Deal of the 1930s and afterward. A “basic level of protection,”
however, has grown to extraordinary size, far beyond anything the
founders or previous generations of Americans could envision, to the
point that it threatens the sustainability of the economy and of
freedoms.
He continues:
“We, the people, chose to
do these things together. Because we know this country cannot
accomplish great things if we pursue nothing greater than our own
individual ambition.”
This is a fascinating
piece of propaganda. He begins by citing the Declaration of
Independence—coupling himself with the Founders (because he knows this
is a main argument of his opponents) and ending with a refutation of
capitalism. He counters “we the people,” (the 99 percent, Democrats,
those for strengthening the state) against greedy “individual ambition”
(the Republicans, capitalists, those who want to keep individual
freedom).
But this can be reversed:
We know this country cannot accomplish great things if we excessively
limit the ability of individual ambition which has been the motive force
of American success. The trick, of course, is that the potential for
“individual ambition” must be opened to the maximum number of people.
Yet taxes, regulations, and other restrictions block that from taking
place.
Moreover, as is typical of
Obama, his audience is offered an all or nothing approach. We can
either have unbridled government or unbridled individualism. The whole
point of American history is the debate over where to find the point of
balance, the need for a stronger government than existed in
pre-industrial America but not to have a government that was too
powerful. Similarly, he continues:
“Still, you’ll hear voices
that incessantly warn of government as nothing more than some separate,
sinister entity that’s the root of all our problems, even as they do
their best to gum up the works; or that tyranny always lurks just around
the corner. You should reject these voices. Because what they suggest
is that our brave, creative, unique experiment in self-rule is just a
sham with which we can’t be trusted.”
“Nothing more,” “all,”
“tyranny,” such phrases obscure real issues of how much debt, how much
regulation, how much government intervention is beneficial for the
“unique experiment.” Obama dismisses this argument as a “sham,” as
purely phony. So one cannot have such a debate. And that kind of
stance—often echoed in the universities and mass media—kills democracy.
Leaving aside the
accusation that American citizens are deliberately sabotaging the common
good—those who disagree with Obama are thus defined in effect as
enemies of the people—the key word is “separate.” Obama wants Americans
to believe that government is only the sum total of their efforts
together. But that is nonsense. Government is a separate institution
with huge power and its own interests and logic.
I want to use an analogy
here but to make clear that I don’t think Obama is a Communist or
Marxist-Leninist. But it was the concept of Marx and Lenin that the
state was merely the tool of the proletariat. Once the revolution took
place, the state could be given total power because there was nothing to
fear. How could the people repress or hurt the people?
Yet the state was not
merely the unfailing conveyer belt of the public will. All the things
predicted by America’s founders came true in the USSR: the state should
be distrusted. The destruction of liberty led to inevitable abuses. The
state did become a separate entity, its master not the people but the
Communist Party. A privileged elite arose whose behavior was ultimately
worse than if Russia had a democratic capitalist revolution. And of
course the whole enterprise stagnated and collapsed.
Again, I am not saying
this is the same situation as the one Obama favors. But there are
important parallels. Contrary to Obama’s trickery on this point, in the
“brave, creative, unique experiment in self-rule,” the word “self” here
doesn’t mean only rule by the state but self-rule by the individual to
the maximum possible extent. That is what made America unique.
“We have never been a
people who place all our faith in government to solve our problems, nor
do we want it to. But we don’t think the government is the source of
all our problems, either. Because we understand that this democracy is
ours. As citizens, we understand that America is not about what can be
done for us. It’s about what can be done by us, together, through the
hard and frustrating but absolutely necessary work of self-government.”
This is a straw man
argument. The use of the words “never” and “all” is the tip-off here.
But what percentage of our problems would Obama attribute to government?
Could it be that government has made the economy function worse in the
last four and a half years? Might it be possible that there are problems
like this in other areas? So might it be conceivable that less
government, lower taxes, and less regulation would reduce some problems?
Obama is fundamentally dishonest because—unlike other politicians–he
cannot and will not cede that there be any merit to his critics’
arguments.
Yet how can one ignore the
fact that government is a huge institution with its own interests,
privileges, and special interest clients? By the way, this is a novel
argument in American politics. If Republican-ruled governments were said
to be untrustworthy because they favored big business, Democratic-ruled
governments were said to be untrustworthy because they favored trade
unions or other constituencies. Distrust of government has always been
bipartisan.
Finally, there is one more
subtle touch, Obama’s restatement of President John F. Kennedy’s famous
1961 statement, “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you
can do for your country.” That is on an individual basis and Kennedy
was invoking patriotism. Obama reduces this to the idea that America
equals government.
To put it another way,
Kennedy’s statement was understood to mean that any action–say,
citizens’ organizing a charity or educational program to help the
poor–helping the country was a good thing; Obama’s that collective
action meant helping and strengthening the government.
After giving lip service
to saying that Americans should not just ask what “can be done for us,”
he then turns to what “can be done by us, together,” which is the
“absolutely necessary work of self-government.”
No one doubts that
self-government is “absolutely necessary,” the problem is that it is
becoming—in Obama’s interpretation—as the sum total of America, the sole
center of power. The huge space that the Founders set out for balances
has been confined. To Obama, individual liberty is merely “negative
liberty.”
In 1925, President Calvin
Coolidge said, “The chief business of the American people is business.
They are profoundly concerned with buying, selling, investing, and
prospering in the world.” Today, Obama has sought to alter that into
arguing that the chief business of the American people is government,
but that arguably has reached the point that it prevents them from
prospering in the world.
Barry Rubin
Source: http://www.gloria-center.org/2013/05/obamas-unprecedented-claim-america-equals-government/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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