When
Public 'Servants' Are Our Masters
by
Steven Greenhut
by Steven Greenhut
I
routinely hear from readers who, upon agreeing with my lamentations
about America’s frightening and ongoing loss of freedoms, want to
know what exactly they can do to help stem the tide. That’s where
I get into my biggest arguments with the many readers who somehow
believe that there’s a quick and magical solution to our problems.
Many get mad at me for simply pointing to problems without offering
some easy blueprint to lead us back to the Promised Land.
The
solutions these readers offer range from the insane to the hilarious.
I’ve got one who constantly implores me to take up the cause of
dividing California into two separate states. What a great idea.
Then instead of sending two left-wing wackos to the U.S. Senate,
we can send four. Granted, the Bay Area leftists are nutty even
by Southern California standards, but as this area turns increasingly
into a northern province of Mexico, what would a break-up solve?
Others
argue for regional secession. This is fantasy. No region is noticeably
better than any other one these days (although some are noticeably
worse). The same national trends ruining the national culture have
become the norm everywhere. How exactly would the media and the
national parties portray an effort by, say, the South to secede
from the rest of the country? This is infantilism masquerading as
serious thought, yet I am routinely peppered with emails by intelligent-sounding
people who seriously buy into such a "solution."
The
Third Party true believers are the funniest because they really
do believe that if we all pool our resources, we can reject the
Socialist Kerry and the National Socialist Bush and elect that Libertarian
Party guy who advocated blowing up the United Nations building and
who refuses to drive lest the government get his Social Security
number. Most of the Libertarian Party candidates for local office
I run into are the type that hasn’t even learned the importance
of showering and wearing decent clothes, yet can’t understand why
they are failures in the world of retail politics. Even if they
didn’t have flies swirling around their heads, and could actually
win an office, what good what that do anyway? Yet they are sure
they are accomplishing something.
In
California, activists have unending faith in initiatives, and they
can be quite effective at times. Prop. 13 was perhaps the most groundbreaking,
authentic and effective measure to pass, yet since 1978 governments
have simply found new ways to make up for the revenue that Prop.
13 promised to deprive them of. Governments are bigger and flusher
with cash than ever, so Prop. 13’s limits on property taxes didn’t
really work. It’s important to support it against assaults by government
officials who would love to tax us out of our homes, but believers
in limited government ought not to believe that any political gimmick
can roll back Leviathan.
Remember
term limits? California passed a term limits law and yet the Legislature
has become more left-wing and corrupt than ever. It never occurred
to advocates that the good (or, at least, the not-so-bad) would
be cast aside along with the bottom-feeders, or that it would hand
over the Legislature to a younger and younger crowd, made up mainly
of former staffers with no experience whatsoever outside the strange
world of the state Capitol in Sacramento.
Even
the recall, a wonderful populist revolt against a corrupt governor
backed by corrupt interest groups (Indian casinos, trial lawyers
and public-sector unions) has come up wanting. The new governor,
Arnold Schwarzenegger, is little more than a really cool Gray Davis.
He is cutting the same kind of shameless deals as Davis, and is
employing the same fiscal tricks – i.e., floating debt and postponing
the day of reckoning – as his pathetic predecessor.
There
is no easy solution.
California
is facing a new, looming crisis. You should be scared, even if you
live in another place in the country, because what happens here
eventually happens there also. My newspaper, The Orange County Register,
refers to it as the Pension Tsunami. A tidal wave of excessive public
benefits granted to politically powerful public-sector unions is
pushing one California city after another to the brink of bankruptcy.
Union officials, especially the police and fire unions, have exploited
post-9/11 sentiment to exact CEO-style retirement packages for their
members. Cops and firefighters can retire in Orange County with
100 percent of their final salary after 30 years. Their salaries
can easily hit the $140,000 range.
In
Orange County, the Board of Supervisors is about to approve a package
of similarly generous benefits for all county employees, granting
an instant 50-percent pension spike to these "public servants."
There might be one, or at the most two votes, against this horrendous
gift of public funds – on a board that has a 5-0 Republican majority.
So you know what’s happening in more liberal counties. They are
granting these benefits even as the walls cave in on cities all
around them. But politicians refuse to fight against unions that
promise to take them out in the next election. They rely on union
estimates that the retirement spikes won’t cost taxpayers anything.
But those estimates are based on bald-faced lies, on the idea that
the stock market will perform at record levels for the next three
decades.
In
Orange County, average firefighters earn between $90,000 and $130,000
a year, and one firefighter earns $227,000 a year. Cops aren’t far
behind in salary, and these guys retire with 100 percent of final
pay or more, after they spike their last year’s salary. Yet, as
Tom DiLorenzo pointed out in the LRC blog on Tuesday, public safety
officials will not even perform their basic duties. They allow hurricane-ravaged
Florida neighborhoods to be looted without doing anything, but then
shoot a guy with a taser gun in front of his two kids as he tries
to go back and protect his home. Don’t expect any accountability
for the cops or any sympathy for the homeowner.
Years
ago, when I lived in Des Moines and the city was covered in flood
waters, I helped organize private post-flood relief efforts on behalf
of my church. Other churches did similar things. As soon as the
flood waters receded, we organized teams of volunteers to go door-to-door
to see what was needed. We pumped out basements, removed soggy furniture,
and brought foodstuffs to the elderly. Meanwhile, within hours it
seemed, insurance adjusters were showing up to make repair estimates
and to get the neighborhood up and running again. But then the National
Guard and the federal relief workers showed up, and we were ordered
out of the neighborhood. The whole process shut down completely
for about three weeks, while the bureaucrats bullied people around
and took charge of the situation. I remember Lew Rockwell describing
a similar event after the earthquake in the Bay Area.
Yet
Americans are constantly told to dig more deeply into their pockets
to give these bureaucrats and bullies more of our money and more
of our freedoms. They are heroes, we are constantly told. And too
many of my friends and neighbors believe it, refusing to recognize
the public looting and abuses perpetrated by these authorities.
They close their eyes when, say, the "heroes" who run
local fire departments use their political power to drive private
emergency technicians out of business. They refuse to pay attention
to the dishonest tactics used to drive up public pensions.
Americans
refuse to recognize, as one local taxpayers’ group explains, that
those of us working in the private sector are working into our 70s
and longer to pay the higher taxes demanded so that our so-called
public servants can retire earlier and earlier at higher and higher
amounts. We’re their servants and they are our masters. Yet, like
good slaves, we obey and worship those who mock and abuse us.
This
brings me back to the purpose of the article. What can we do about
it? I don’t think any grand scheme or gimmick will roll back the
problem. I doubt that we can compete in the political world with
those who finance their campaigns on public dollars, and money coerced
by union members.
But
we can object whenever thuggish and greedy public servants are depicted
as heroes. We can tell people we know about the abuses and the plundering
and the lack of respect public safety officials have for the public.
We can actively work to take the halo off these overpaid government
workers by pointing out the truth. It’s not as fun as fantasizing
about secession, but it will achieve more in the long run.
August
18, 2004
Steven
Greenhut (send him mail)
is a senior editorial writer and columnist for the Orange County
Register. He is the author of the new book, Abuse
of Power.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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