Federal
System Best
by
Charley
Reese
The
core political argument in our country, from the very beginning,
was between federalists and nationalists. The federalists wanted
a loose confederation, while the nationalists wanted a strong central
government.
The
nationalists, of course, won out, but even though they won, I still
think they are wrong. A strong central government won't work for
us any more than it worked for the former Soviet Union. Our country
is too big and too diverse for one set of federal bureaucrats to
govern it successfully.
Ever
since the federal government got involved in public education, for
example, the system has been growing larger, more expensive and
less effective. The reason is that there is no cookie-cutter plan
for national education that will work.
The
key to education is a teacher and students, but a teacher who is
free to use his or her own judgment and subjective skills. In today's
educational bureaucracy, teachers have been virtually stripped of
any and all opportunities to make any decisions at all. They are
all stuck trying to follow one of these cockamamie plans that roll
out of the federal bureaucracy and colleges of education.
Anybody
who has ever served in the military knows that centralization creates
a rigid bureaucracy, and that's true in the civilian sectors as
well. Bureaucrats, like teachers, are stripped of all initiative
and judgment by a flood of rules and regulations. The federal bureaucracy
is so bloated that a lot of people really have nothing useful to
do, but they show up because the pay is pretty good.
Thomas
Jefferson made an important point in arguing for the federalist
system of state's rights. He said apathy could kill a republic,
and the only way to avoid apathy is for the voters to be able to
see that their votes actually make a difference. The best way to
do that is to have the power down at the local level.
Many
people have run for local school boards only to discover that they,
as elected members, have virtually no discretionary authority to
do anything. Every conceivable action is covered by laws and rules
and regulations and court orders that either mandate it or forbid
it. In recent decades, state governments have taken power away from
local governments, and the federal government has taken it away
from state governments.
That's
why we often hear that complaint that Jefferson so dreaded: "It
doesn't seem to matter whom I vote for. I get the same government
and the same policies."
What
that really tells us is that the real power is not in our elected
officials but in the private sector, which funds their campaigns
and often dictates their policies, at least insofar as their policies
impact the private sector's interests.
I
confess, I don't know how to undo what we've done. How do we persuade
the federal government to divest itself of some of its power? How
do we persuade state governments to leave most of the decisions
to local governments? How do we persuade people to pry themselves
loose from their TV sets and computers and actually participate
in government?
Probably
the process will just continue as it is until it implodes. That
is what happened in the Soviet Union. Bureaucracy and party decrees
got so far removed from reality that everything collapsed. If that
happens to us, at least our children or grandchildren will get a
chance to start over.
If
they do, I hope they follow the model of Jefferson and James Madison
and keep the power close to the people at home. That is the only
way a true republic can work. The Founding Fathers gave us a good
system, and we've messed it up.
February
24, 2004
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2004 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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