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Buffalo Is the Front Line in America’s War Against Big Government
by
James Ostrowski
by James Ostrowski
The
wheels of the gods grind slowly, but they grind exceedingly fine.
~old
English proverb
With
only seeming irony, the revolt against big government in America
has started in Buffalo, New York, traditionally one of big government
strongest outposts along with New York City. Why Buffalo? Because
it has probably the biggest and most oppressive government of any
locale in the country except for New York City. New York City, as
the capital of the planet, can absorb lots of shocks that a smaller
town like Buffalo cannot. As I explained in my new book:
The
discussion that follows pertains specifically to Buffalo but is
based on analytical tools of general applicability. The analysis
therefore could likely be applied to other urban political machines,
particularly those in the Northeast "Rust Belt." The
Northeast political scene does differ from other locales because,
as Mancur Olson has suggested, the older a regime, the
more corrupt it will be. New York State has existed in its present
form for well over 200 years. Buffalo has existed for over 170
years. The special interests have had all that time to get their
clutches onto the mechanisms of power and advantage. In contrast,
the regimes in the post-bellum South and in the West are newer
and therefore the interest groups have had less time to do their
dirty work. In that sense, this analysis of Buffalo politics
offers these newer polities a preview of coming attractions.
Recently,
citizens in Greater Buffalo spontaneously rose up and formed a powerful
populist movement that defeated a proposed sales tax increase.
The
national media has taken note, including the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal, The New York Sun and CNN’s Lou
Dobbs. Lou got the story wrong. He blamed Buffalo’s decline on free
trade and China. The truth is, he’s got cause and effect reversed.
China didn’t cause Buffalo’s decline but Buffalo’s lack of competitiveness
due to big government has opened markets to Chinese companies that
are more efficient.
The
main significance of foreign competition a better term than
"free trade" because we don’t have free trade is
that it forces localities like Buffalo to get their acts together
or face oblivion. In that sense, foreign trade and competition not
only benefit the consumers in Buffalo struggling to survive in an
over-taxed economy, but are spontaneously allied with them in their
war against the political class. The Sun’s story was much
better but you’ll have to pay to see it. Darn those greedy capitalists
always trying to sell you something.
The
local politicians had threatened residents with a "red budget"
which would have gutted much of county government if the sales tax
was not increased by an additional one percent to a ghastly 9.25
percent, to pay for the ever-increasing costs of Lyndon Johnson’s
campaign promise, known in Orwellian-speak as "Medicaid."
If LBJ had told the truth, he would have called it Health Care Union-aid.
Anyway,
the voters called the politicians' bluff and said, okay, slash away.
They outsmarted the politicians because they knew that the dreaded
red budget was their only way to send a message to the politicians
in Buffalo, Albany, and Washington that the party’s over. You could
say the parties are over: same thing. "There isn’t a dime’s
worth of difference" between them.
The
politicians pulled out the Bill Clinton handbook and threatened,
seriatim, to eliminate the most popular and visible county functions:
libraries, parks, and snowplowing. Did the residents choke like
Newt Gingrich? No, they weren’t fazed. Bring it on, they said. So
the politicians are scrambling in embarrassingly chaotic fashion
to cut $100 million and hundreds of jobs from the budget. The populists
haven’t flinched yet; rather, they responded by crossing the barricades
to go sledding at beautiful Chestnut Ridge Park. Go ahead, arrest
us; make our day!
Although
this revolt so far has only defeated a rise in the sales tax, all
agree that it’s just the beginning and we will seek out many more
programs and positions and salaries and pensions and benefits to
cut.
We
are forming a think tank, Free
Buffalo, to propose just such cuts and to bring power back from
distant
capitals and return it to
the people and to the person! Free Buffalo’s first policy
paper will be about Medicaid, the disastrous program that has swallowed
up ever more millions each year and caused county governments to
collapse around the State of New York. Here’s an excerpt:
"Like
all government interventions into the free market, Medicaid causes
distortions and inefficiencies and the waste of resources, ultimately
creating a state of affairs less satisfactory that the one it
replaced, and one not predicted, anticipated or advertised by
its proponents."
A
populist coalition is coming together with Primary
Challenge recruiting private sector newcomers to kick the incumbents
out of power in November. A popular website, Speakupwny.com
has served as a base of operations for the revolt and organized
a successful online petition against the tax increase.
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Bauerle
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The
local media, responding to market incentives, has joined the movement
and in some cases, like Tom
Bauerle, has led it. Even the formerly limousine liberal Buffalo
News is changing with the times, reviewing my book (which criticizes
the News) and publishing my op-ed piece announcing Free Buffalo.
WBEN radio (including Bauerle
and broadcast legend Sandy Beach) and Channel
2 have been outstanding.
Normally,
the laws of rational ignorance and rational apathy explain why the
victims of big government do little to change things. Yet, there
are certain historical moments like this one in Buffalo when sheer
anger and frustration serve to suspend the operation of these logical
principles.
I
hinted at such a development in my book, Political
Class Dismissed, in the essay, "What’s Wrong With Buffalo:
A Rothbardian Analysis," published in May:
As
noted earlier, while the growth of government gradually damages
the economy, the remaining market element continues to produce
enough wealth to avert that level of desperation needed to drive
radical change. Is there any escape from this treadmill? Is Buffalo’s
only hope for change that we first endure a Great Leap Forward
into full socialism with its resulting poverty, starvation, and
despair? Wouldn’t it be easier to read about Stalin and Mao and
Pol Pot than to live under them? Talk about political bosses!
Leaving aside that unlikely and unpleasant scenario, unless the
people of Buffalo and Erie County wake up, they and their
children and their grandchildren will face death-by-a-thousand-cuts
economic torture at the hands of the ruthless local political
machine for decades to come.
Let
me close on a positive note. Though Buffalo, once a world-class
economy, has fallen behind, the world has been slow to grasp the
true cause of prosperity individual liberty. Other cities,
regions and countries have moved ahead of Buffalo merely because
they are slightly less unfree than we are. Neither history nor
geography nor present economic conditions place a limit on our
future. If we can stop the political class from siphoning off
our wealth, economic and human capital will flow in so fast that
the only problems will be what to do with all that wealth and
all those talented people.
Ironically,
it is the radical nature of my vision that gives Buffalo a chance
to leap ahead of the competition. Sloughing off the failed but
comfortable status quo will take courage and daring, rare commodities
in human affairs. That is why philosopher Brand Blanshard called
courage the "best loved virtue." We admire courage,
Blandshard wrote:
[B]ecause
it is the antidote to the emotion that is at once the deepest,
the most universal, and the most disagreeable known to man,
the emotion of fear.
Presently,
Buffalo is mired in mediocrity, stagnation and fear. There is
fear of change, fear of new ideas, and fear of freedom, which
is, in the end, fear of life itself. This fear is continually
exploited by the ruling elite, which tells us: everything is fine;
everything is under (our) control. Sell us your political souls
and we’ll take care of you. But the last 40 years say otherwise:
the political elite take care of themselves; to hell with everyone
else.
The
power elite controls the present. They have built a seemingly
invincible Berlin Wall around our freedom. The future, however,
will belong to those who have the courage and daring to choose
individual freedom and the free market. The future will belong
to those who have the insight, the foresight and the courage to
say: "Political class: dismissed!"
We
Buffalonians have begun to dismiss the political class. Tom Bauerle,
referring to the County Executive, said it best: "Mr. Giambra,
tear down that wall!"
February
25, 2005
James
Ostrowski is
an attorney in Buffalo, New York and author of Political
Class Dismissed: Essays Against Politics, Including "What’s
Wrong With Buffalo." See his website at http://jimostrowski.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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