Posted by mandewilkes on Uncategorized
Do Something
You can always tell when the U.S. government is honoring the will of its people: Just listen for the din of citizen complaint.
With the rollout of a new relief packages comes the usual cries of socialism, of wealth distribution, and of a rogue government hell-bent on forsaking the people’s will. To hear it told, nobody at all supports this type of interventionism.
The thing is, there’s nothing rogue about the government’s recent bailouts. You can oppose them - I certainly do! - but opposition does nothing to bypass the fact that they are the will of the people.
The American people want their government to “do something” to resurrect the economy. What that “something” is, nobody seems to know. What that “something” isn’t is whatever the government happens to be doing, which at the moment is yet another bailout.
This has placed me in the very uncomfortable position of having to defend our government - something I object to on principal, and especially at a time when I’ve never been more at odds with its actions.
Still, I’m forced to defend the government - not because it is correct, but because it is honoring the will of its people.
The caterwauling continues because, frankly, everybody thinks the government won’t call their bluff. Americans are so used to being ignored by their political representatives that it’s difficult for us to imagine what it’s like to be not only heard but obeyed.
What if, however, Barack Obama and ilk actually deferred to this most recent public firestorm and called off any additional bailouts? Would people be satisfied, their faith in democracy restored? Or would people begin a whole new round of complaints?
We already know the answer.
Last fall, the government called our bluff. During the negotiations of the first bank bailout, the bill failed amid a national tantrum. Americans opposed the bill, it seemed, and with such fervor that Congress gave it up. The people wanted the bailout bill to fail, and fail it did - and Americans were incensed by its failure.
They had a fit, sure that without the government’s promise to “do something,” their financial futures were as good as dead. They mourned their IRAs, their 401ks, their portfolios, and their low interest rates. It turned out that people got very worried when the government decided not to “do something” to ensure the survival of all those investments.
Again the government listened, passing the bailout bill that Americans apparently wanted.
It didn’t stop there, though. The government was forever scarred by the experience, from then on determined to “do something.”
And so it is that there’s yet another bailout.
For the first time in a long time the government has honored the will of its people, and for that it must be recognized.
Like I said, I hate having to defend the American government, particularly on the subject of financial interventionism. The new structure of our country - the emerging socialist slant - worries me to pieces. But on that point I’m in the minority. The truth is that Americans want the government to “do something” - do anything, really - about everything. So, if I’m honest, the government is obligated to do just that.
Likewise, if ever the citizens return to their senses, the government should follow accordingly and right then remove their paws from our lives. The thing about government, though, is that it’s a lot more fun to do something than it is to do nothing - and now that it’s gotten a taste of power, it’s forgotten how to exist without it.


