The Wages of Sin on C-Span
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
In this world,
we shall always have well-meaning people offering false counsel.
They include those kind-hearted folks who say, "Jack, you should
get out more!" Father, forgive them for they know not what
they say.
There is now
enough depravity and occasion of sin to be encountered on TV and
the Internet that no one really needs to "get out more."
The average American can see the world, in all its Technicolor decadence,
from his living room. You can see Catherine Bach as Daisy Duke on
one of those nostalgia channels and once again your mind is back
into the near occasion of sin. Or you can listen to the politicians
on C-Span and be tempted to the far greater sin of despair. Yes,
the first circle of Hell is reserved, I imagine, for those who have
lost their souls watching Daisy on "The Dukes of Hazzard."
The nether regions are for those who listen to Republicans on C-Span.
Now I have
recently read that the senior U.S. senator from my state, the semi-honorable
"Jolly" Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, has determined that
the Senate will not be able to pass a budget this year because,
as determined by the gentleman from the Granite State, who is chairman
of the Budget Committee, the more or less honorable gentle persons
of that august body cannot agree on spending priorities. We pick
these hundred men and women out of a nation of 280 or so million
to make these decisions for us, only to learn that making decisions
is above their pay grade. Let George do it.
But it was
while watching C-Span a year ago, on a day when a driving rain dampened
my incentive to "get out more," that I discovered what
the Republicans in Congress were really up to. There was one GOP
senator (Gordon Smith of Oregon) bewailing proposed cuts in Medicaid,
the federal program to help the poor. There was Lamar Alexander
of Tennessee, the recycled former governor and U.S. Secretary of
Education, arguing that the cut denounced by Sen. Smith was really
a one to two percent reduction in the rate of increase in Medicaid
spending, which must be effected if we are to be able to spend more
on Medicare and other government programs like saving our schools
and maybe even going to Mars.
And there was
New Hampshire’s own Jolly Judd, trying manfully to eliminate a federal
program called COPS, for Community Oriented Police Services. This
was a program passed by the Republican Congress in a fit of bipartisanship
under the Clinton administration to help meet the Clinton goal of
"100,000 more cops on the beat," not to mention in the
speed traps, alleyways and donut shops. And what "law and order"
conservative could have opposed that?
The problem,
though, is that some logical thinkers ask for consistency, which
usually means more spending. If, for example, it is a Congressional
responsibility to provide another 100,000 cops, then why is it not
likewise up to Congress to provide another 100,000 classroom teachers?
Or another 100,000 farmers, pharmacists, philosophers or peanut
vendors? Why not? They all have an effect, in one way or another,
on interstate commerce.
But that is
not the problem Sen. Gregg was addressing on this rainy day in Florida,
where I was as I was watching the goings-on in Washington. The problem,
said the senator, is that the federal government had shelled out
the money and put the additional cops on the beat and neither the
local governments nor the Dunkin’ Donuts shops were grateful enough
to pick up the tab for their continued employment. Instead, you
had mayors and governors, aldermen and lobbyists for the legislatures,
all petitioning Congress to continue funding the program, so the
municipalities could spend the taxpayers’ money on other things,
like grant writers to apply for more federal money.
Now Gregg,
who supported the program to begin with, made it clear that the
"feds" were supplying the seed money and the locals were
to eventually pay for the harvest of more and better law enforcement.
In other words, he was using your federal tax dollars as a carrot
to get your local governments to spend more of your local tax dollars
to pay for more law enforcement than you would have been willing
to pay for if it had been recognized as a local responsibility to
begin with. This is modern Republicanism, also known as federalism
in our time.
This is what
the Congress critters don’t often tell you when they are out on
the stump telling you that they voted to put more cops on the street
in your neighborhood, town or city. They want you to think they
are saving you taxpayer dollars. Because money grows on trees in
Washington.
And deficits
grow under Bushes.
April
3, 2006
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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