Government Planners Never Meet a Crisis They Don’t Like
by
Karen De Coster
by Karen De Coster
DIGG THIS
The State
of Michigan's new fiscal year starts Monday, October 1st, but the
government may be shutting down due to a
budget crisis. Thus we are informed that there will be fewer
state police to rob us of our civil liberties, and, god forbid,
horse manure will not get cleaned
up from the streets of scenic Mackinac Island. It’s a good thing
Ron Paul left Mackinac Island last week, just in time to avoid the
slippery pool of waste that will now litter the island. In fact,
the shutdown will occur just in time for Ron Paul to come to Michigan
for the Republican
debate in Dearborn a week from this Tuesday. With any luck we
can sustain a shutdown state of affairs and make Dr. Paul proud.
Not surprisingly,
folks are in a state of panic over the coming blackout. For instance,
I experienced it somewhat because my gym is in a strip mall with
a Secretary of State office (Michigan's elitist name for the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles). I arrived at the gym at 7:45am on September
29th, and cars were fighting to get in the parking lot over one
hour before the office was scheduled to open. When I came out of
the gym I had a rough time getting out of the parking lot, people
were yelling and fighting over parking spots, single-digit fingers
were being hoisted everywhere, the line of patrons was circling
all around the strip mall, and the local police were on hand trying
to manage the mob and bring order to the parking lot. Of course
you can bet that no one really needed to go to the motor
vehicle bureau on that particular day. Nevertheless, people flock
to the mob scene so that they can partake in the chaos, the misery,
and the overall experience of a panic. Unfortunately, the masses
seem to be drawn to the collectivist misery the government serves
up. Bread lines would probably make them happy because it would
give them a reason to grumble.
The media has
spent days getting the masses all riled up over the looming shutdown,
and the Governor has threatened us all with chaos and misery if
her spending sprees and new taxes aren't approved by the uncooperative
legislature.
In addition,
horse racing and campgrounds would shut down, road construction
would stop, Secretary of State offices and highway rest areas
would close and state inspections of food, gas pumps and nursing
homes would end, according to a state shutdown plan released for
the first time Friday.
Six drawbridges
would be locked upright, allowing only water traffic. Farmers
wouldn't be able to export fruit, vegetables and grain overseas.
Of course Governor
Granholm could put an emergency continuation budget into place,
but the reason she does not do so is because she desires
to make people suffer so the mob of fools will be begging lawmakers
for a balanced budget, including all of its disputed tax hikes.
The occupiers of state power are coaching people to ask decidedly
important questions such as:
- I suspect
that the food I ate at a restaurant made me sick. How do
I report it?
- Will
firewood still be inspected at the Mackinac Bridge?
- Will
I be able to access the Public Sex Offender Registry?
- I just
moved to Michigan and want to make an application for food, Medicaid,
and cash assistance. Can I make an application?
- I want
to report a hate crime or bias incident to the Civil Rights Crisis
Response Hotline. How can I get assistance?
While I think
it is splendid to see any government go bust, even for a day or
two, the advantage goes to the people in charge because it is they
who have control of the media, and accordingly, the story can be
spun as they see fit. Governor Granholm and her cronies have contrived
a crisis – and that crisis is that hapless legislators are not responsible
enough to strike a budget deal, thus leaving the public out in the
cold. Crises, of course, always call for more government intervention
in order to resolve them. So more government power is needed, and
quickly, so the power grab is marketed to the masses as the solution
to end the problem. Hence the scope of government’s role increases
because of another engineered crisis and a successful marketing
plan.
In reality,
a few decent guys in the Michigan legislature are standing their
ground. At least one publicly admitted that the teachers, with all
of their special benefits and premium health care, are bleeding
the taxpayers dry. This issue at least they say this now will
be negotiated or there will be no balanced budget. In fact, many
of the Republican legislators are heroically resisting Granholm’s
revenue measures – a series of obscene tax hikes and new tax schemes
that will dig deep into taxpayers’ pockets. Mostly at stake is the
issue of raising the state sales tax (again), and adding, above
and beyond that, a new
tax on services.
In the real
world, when someone goes bankrupt or shuts down, there are alternatives
to that business. No chaos, no crowds, no fights, no misery. Some
other entrepreneur is there to provide the service with little or
no disruption. But then there's government, with its monopoly on
laws, forcing people to obtain an official stamp of approval for
every move, every breath, every purchase or sale. The many layers
of government planners that control our lives, our family, our wealth,
and our occupations allow us to function as long as we have the
approved licenses, the appropriate lifestyles, allowable jobs, authorized
thoughts, and an acceptable Body Mass Index (BMI).
So when the
bureaucrats warn the masses that they are turning the lights out
on the bureaucracy, the collective response begs the question, "Like
dude, how do we function?" Unfortunately, the state government
has monopolized so many functions and services, people will have
to do without a lot of life’s essentials for some period of time.
In contrast, thank goodness the firewood inspections and hate crime
reporting will continue uninterrupted.
October
1, 2007
Karen
De Coster [send
her mail] is a Certified Public Accountant who
works in finance and accounting in the securities industry. She
is also a freelance writer/researcher, and oftentimes writes for
clients in the nutrition, food, and fitness industry. This is
her
LewRockwell.com archive and her Mises.org
archive. Check out her
website, along with her
blog.
Copyright
© 2007 Karen De Coster
Karen
De Coster Archives
|