The administration and
Congress put the finishing touches on the monstrous Homeland Security
bill last week, creating the first new federal department since
the Department of Defense at the end of World War II. Laughably,
the new department has been characterized as merely a "reorganization"
of existing agencies, even though I notice no department was abolished
to make up for it! One thing we can be sure of in this world is
that federal agencies grow. The Homeland Security department,
like all federal agencies, will increase in size exponentially
over the coming decades. Its budget, number of employees, and
the scope of its mission will EXPAND. Congress has no idea what
it will have created twenty or fifty years hence, when less popular
presidents have the full power of a domestic spying agency at
their disposal.
The frightening details
of the Homeland Security bill, which authorizes an unprecedented
level of warrantless spying on American citizens, are still emerging.
Those who still care about the Bill of Rights, particularly the
4th amendment, have every reason to be alarmed. But the process
by which Congress created the bill is every bit as reprehensible
as its contents.
Ironically, many in Congress
who usually champion limited government were enthusiastic supporters
of the largest federal expansion in 50 years. Twenty years ago
President Reagan revitalized conservatives across the country
by appealing to their Goldwater roots, promising to slash the
size of government and eliminate whole departments. Yet the promise
of a smaller government went unfulfilled, and today Congress passes
budgets even larger that those of the Clinton years.
Of course the Homeland
Security bill did receive some opposition from the President’s
critics. Yet did they attack the legislation because it threatens
to debase the 4th amendment and create an Orwellian surveillance
society? Did they attack it because it will chill political dissent
or expand the drug war? No, they attacked it on the grounds that
it failed to secure enough high-paying federal union jobs, thus
angering one of Washington’s most powerful special interest groups.
Ultimately, however, even the most prominent critics voted for
the bill.
The
lesson learned from the rush to create a Homeland Security department
is that the size and scope of government grows regardless of which
party is in power. The federal government now devours a whopping
40% of the nation’s GDP, the highest level since World War II
and a massive new department can only make things worse.
The Homeland Security bill provides a vivid example of the uncontrolled
spending culture in Washington, a culture that views the true
source of political power your tax dollars as unlimited.
November
26, 2002