THE LIBERTARIAN
The
Natives Are Restless
by
Vin Suprynowicz
"As
key Democrats and Republicans huddled behind closed doors trying
to break an impasse over a proposed new Tennessee income tax, 2,000
protesters rushed up the Capitol steps, screaming, ‘No means no!’
and smashing a few windows," the Los Angeles Times reported
from Nashville in mid-July.
"It
was a bona fide tax revolt, and it worked. ... The tax-thwarting
protest was the handiwork of two talk show hosts who took to the
airwaves and put out an urgent S.O.S. ..."
Next,
coming on the heels of the successful Tennessee revolt, "Taxpayers
in Tennessee’s parent state of North Carolina held their own protest
... during which they tossed teabags at legislators and gained the
upper hand on Democratic lawmakers who are pushing for a dramatic
tax hike," wrote
Andrew Cline, managing editor of the Carolina Journal,
last week for the National Review online.
"They
just keep raising taxes," Cline quoted one protester, as "About
1,000 North Carolina taxpayers rallied behind the state legislative
building on Tuesday for a ‘Tar Heel Tea Party’ in hopes of halting
in its tracks a nearly $600 million tax increase proposed by the
Democrats who control both houses of the state legislature and the
governor’s mansion."
Is
something happening here? And if so, why is the news so well hidden
by much of America’s print media?
"If
this was a groundswell around the nation to have bottle bills, it
would be the cover of Time magazine, ‘Bottle Bill Mania Sweeps the
Country,’ comments Grover Norquist of the Washington-based think
tank Americans for Tax Reform.
Print
coverage may have been less thorough than broadcast coverage of
these events for three reasons, surmise Mr. Norquist and John Hood,
of North Carolina’s John Locke Foundation, which helped promote
the North Carolina event.
First,
the events are happening far from Washington, D.C., from which many
of the nation’s news desks now operate. It’s easier for the cable
TV networks to pick up colorful footage of protesters dressed as
grim reapers or colonial Minutemen and beam them around the country
in minutes than for deskbound editors to dispatch reporters to seldom-visited
locales like Nashville and Raleigh during the understaffed summer.
Second,
the more hidebound media outlets tend to be pro-government and pro-tax
in their outlook there may be evidencing a subconscious reluctance
to give credence to such groundswells.
And
last, these events are being promoted by talk radio hosts. Some
in the print media are still reluctant to acknowledge the growing
upscale audience of these radio stations in the cell phone era,
and also still look down on them as unworthy competitors "leading
the hunt for the black helicopters."
But
why are the protests happening in the first place?
"In
history class we learned about rising expectations," replies
Mr. Norquist of ATR. "People revolt not when the French king
is at his most Draconian, but when the French king is loosening
up, liberalizing. Then people say, "Well, we want more of this,"
Similarly when we cut taxes we remind people that it’s possible
to cut taxes. ...
Federal
spending has fallen from 22 percent of GNP to 18 percent today,
while the percentage of the nation’s economic output being consumed
state and local spending has grown from 9 to 12 percent over
the past 20 years, Mr. Norquist notes.
"So
thanks to the victory in the Cold War, thanks to welfare reform,
thanks to some restraint from the Republican Congress ...
that’s almost a 25 percent cut in the size of the federal government
as a percentage of the economy. There has been no state that has
done anything close to that level of reform. ..."
"Six
percent of the nation’s GDP is spent on education, and private schools
spend half what government schools do (per student.) So ... you
could drop state and local spending by a quarter just by getting
state government schools as cost-effective as private schools ...
I think that people are coming to demand of state and local governments
the reforms that they’ve seen in the past six years in Washington.
..."
Norquist
identifies Florida, Arizona, Colorado and Texas but not Nevada
under Gov. Kenny Guinn, who he declines to identify as a fiscal
innovator -- as states where Republican dominance in both statehouses
and governors’ mansions could soon bring that kind of cost-cutting
to the local level.
"Tax
reform, tort reform, property rights it’s Reagan and Gingrich
brought down to the local level. After Reagan was elected it took
14 years to have Reaganism take over the House and Senate, and now
that’s finally being pushed down into the state level. ...
"People
are growing impatient, because they’re not seeing those kinds of
reform at the local level. So in those states that are refusing
to reform, that are in fact moving in the wrong direction with new
tax hikes like Tennessee and North Carolina, you’re seeing riots."
Successful
riots.
August
14, 2001
Vin
Suprynowicz [send him mail] is
assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Subscribe to his monthly newsletter by sending $72 to Privacy Alert,
561 Keystone Ave., Suite 684, Reno, NV 89503 or dialing 775-348-8591.
His book, Send
in the Waco Killers: Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998,
is available at 1-800-244-2224.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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