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Doomsday
by
Doug French
by Doug French
With
the Wall Street cum Main Street meltdown, worries about a collapse
of the Social Security system have been put off. Maintaining employment,
putting food on the table and servicing the now-exploding payment
on that negative-amortization, adjustable-rate, now underwater mortgage
that seemed like such a good idea back when Alan Greenspan was the
Maestro are what’s keeping Americans awake at night. Whether we
will be able to draw from FDR’s what-Madoff-can-do-I-can-do-better-program
is a problem for another day.
But back in
2007, just as the downside of the sub-prime securitization idea
was just starting to appear, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
was on its way to setting an all-time high, Christopher Buckley
took a satirical swing at the Social Security question with his
novel Boomsday.
Buckley is well known not only for being the son of William F. Buckley,
and authoring Thank
You for Smoking that was made into a movie, but also for
backing Barack Obama for President and subsequently resigning as
columnist because of that endorsement from The National
Review, the magazine his late father founded.
Not only can
Buckley write, but he spent enough time inside the beltway as Bush
41’s speechwriter that spinning a believable Washington satire is
second nature. It’s not so crazy to imagine that 20-something-year-olds
could start protesting against paying into Social Security when
they know that cupboard will be bare when their golden years roll
around. Even property owners in Hoboken, New Jersey, protesting
the huge tax hikes in that city, had the brass recently to display
a tarred-and-feathered effigy of Hoboken mayor Dave Roberts during
a rally in front of city hall.
Buckley begins
his tale with young people storming the gates of retirement communities,
wrecking golf carts and assaulting elderly golfers in protest of
a hike in Social Security taxes. He then quickly introduces the
reader to Boomsday heroine Cassandra Devine. The Red Bull
swilling workaholic Cass is not yet thirty and works in the media
training business by day and goes home to blog about the impending
collapse of the Social Security system at night. She has no social
life, but her looks don’t stand in the way. She’s a hot blond with
a killer body but is up half the night, every night, "railing
at the government for – fiscal irresponsibility."
Our leading
lady is outraged when the Senate votes to raise payroll taxes by
thirty percent only on people under 35 years old. But her boss Terry
is not amused. After all, his company is a public relations firm,
spreading calm, not starting revolutions. She tells him, "I’m
calling for an economic Bastille Day."
"You’ve
been reading Ann Rand again. I can tell," Terry says.
"Ayn
Rand. And what’s wrong with that?"
Cassandra’s
call for Social Security protests lands her in prison only to be
released with the help of public outrage and an old acquaintance,
Senator Randolph K. Jepperson. Once released, she hatches a plan
to make the government solvent by offering incentives for people
to kill themselves at age seventy and younger. Instead of calling
it suicide, Cassandra refers to it euphemistically as "Voluntary
Transitioning."
Of course her
repugnant idea is just to stimulate debate; the plan would never
come to a vote. If it did it would never pass. If it did pass, the
president would veto it, and if he didn’t the Supreme Court would
rule it unconstitutional. But that’s when the absurdity of politics
takes over and the fun begins. The good Senator Jepperson sponsors
the Voluntary Transitioning bill and instead of being laughed out
of town catches political lightening in a bottle, while Cassandra
watches in horror as Jepperson makes political sausage of her wake-up
call. Along the way, the Rand-reading rebel crosses paths with her
estranged father who lost her college fund on an internet startup,
evangelist Gideon Payne, and the strange political bedfellows that
control Washington.
Buckley’s
story is set in an economic climate of stagflation, protectionism,
plunging stock prices, negative economic growth, US military action
around the globe, the Treasury furiously printing dollars and a
projected federal deficit of $1.1 trillion. This all sounds very
familiar other than the plunging dollar and high interest rates.
But give it time.
No doubt, the
author picked a $1.1 trillion deficit number for its shock value.
But it seems quaint now that his president has proposed a $3.6 trillion
dollar budget and says deficits don’t matter. As Buckley himself
writes on The Daily Beast, "The US government is now spending
annually about one-third of what the entire US economy produces."
Yes, Buckley
sounds skeptical of the Obama plan writing in an article entitled,
"The Audacity of Nope": "If he turns out to be wrong,
then it will look very different, the entrance ramp to the Road
to Serfdom, perhaps, and he will reap the whirlwind that follows,
along with the rest of us."
Buckley’s Boomsday
is loaded with laughs and sharp dialogue and would make a great
movie. Unfortunately Obama’s Road to Serfdom is not fiction and
no laughing matter.
March
10, 2009
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.
Copyright
© 2009 Doug French
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