Socialism,
Republican-Style
by
Michael Tennant
by Michael Tennant
"Socialism!":
the rallying cry of Republicans opposing the "stimulus"
bill just signed by President Barack Obama. It was also, late in
the game, the rallying cry of John McCain and his supporters last
fall, especially after the Joe the Plumber incident. They are undoubtedly
correct that this law, and Obama’s plans in general, are leading
us ever further down the road to serfdom, although from an economic
standpoint it’s at least as much fascist as socialist – not that
the distinction matters greatly for the two are the same in principle.
While it’s
good to see some actual GOP opposition to government growth again,
it’s very difficult to take it seriously. Here, for example, is
just a sampling of the socialist programs and policies instituted
and/or supported by a significant number of Republicans, with Ron
Paul frequently being the lone exception:
Social Security.
Republicans may not have started this program, and occasionally
they will speak of its insolvency, but they seem to have no real
problem with its continuation. The best we get out of them is Bush’s
stillborn plan to give those of us forced into Social Security the
option of diverting a small portion of the loot stolen from us into
various government-approved investments. Given the current state
of the stock market, we should be grateful that this plan never
got off the ground. Imagine the bailouts to all the individual Social
Security "investors" who expected to get ever-increasing
returns on their investments! Name the last Republican who spoke
of abolishing, rather than "shoring up" or "reforming"
Social Security.
Medicare.
Not only does the GOP not suggest ridding us of this blatantly
socialist takeover of the health care system; but George W. Bush,
with the support of many members of his own party, pushed through
Medicare prescription drug coverage, the largest new entitlement
program in four decades. Again there is talk of "fixing"
or "saving" Medicare but none of ending it – all while
Republicans try to convince us that they, and they alone, are standing
between us and the Democrats’ plans to nationalize health care.
Welfare.
Yes, we have welfare "reform," but where is welfare repeal?
Add a few mild work requirements to the program, and the GOP is
on board.
Faith-Based
Initiatives. Getting religious charities on the government dole
was another Bush policy that seemed to please much of his base as
long as their preferred charities were the ones robbing the rest
of us. Sure, it meant that those charities had to water down their
messages, but it was worth it to see that "liberal" charities
didn’t get their hands in the till. Proof of the socialist nature
of these programs is that Obama intends to retain
and expand them, in the process forcing charities to distance
themselves even further from their religious underpinnings.
Public Education.
In 1994 the GOP promised to rid us of the Department of Education.
Instead we got Bush’s No Child Left Behind Act, greatly increasing
control of the education system from Washington. Every once in a
while some Republican will timidly suggest school vouchers or tuition
tax credits to allow parents to send their children to the schools
of their choice, but in these programs (especially vouchers) lie
the same dangers for private elementary and secondary schools that
private colleges and universities whose students accept federal
money already have experienced. (See my alma mater, Grove
City College, for a prime example.) In any event, Republicans
seem uninterested in reducing federal control over the education
system. For that matter, when was the last time you heard a Republican
suggest curtailing or eliminating state control of any level
of schooling?
Infrastructure.
Where are the Republicans demanding that Uncle Sam get out of the
road- and bridge-building business? Where are those demanding even
a cutback in such spending? Republican President Dwight Eisenhower
gave us the Interstate Highway System, a fact to which most GOP
stalwarts point with pride. Even scarcer is the Republican at the
state or local level voicing the opinion that perhaps the government
of which he is a part is doing us all a disservice by continuing
to maintain socialist infrastructure to the exclusion of all competitors.
Law Enforcement.
Republicans are always the first to defend the police, the FBI,
and other government agencies whenever any allegations of abuse
or wrongdoing are lodged against them. They have shown great eagerness
to increase local, state, and federal cops’ powers and immunities,
especially if they can use the excuse of fighting wars on drugs
or terrorism. They passed the PATRIOT Act with alacrity when the
opportunity presented itself; and Bush aggrandized, with his fellow
Republicans’ approval, much unconstitutional power to the executive
branch, including the ability to imprison people indefinitely on
the president’s say-so. They even granted retroactive immunity to
telecommunications companies that had assisted the Bush administration
in violating the Constitution by eavesdropping on Americans’ telephone
calls – with the assistance of noted socialist Obama. Give even
the slightest hint that you think law enforcement agencies should
be curtailed or certain criminal statutes repealed, and Republicans
will be the first to denounce you as "soft on crime" or
"with the terrorists." And don’t even suggest that private
security could do a better job than government "security."
Financial
Bailouts. Republicans maintained that the abuses at Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac could have been prevented by better oversight, which
the Democrats opposed. They did not say that these abuses
could have been prevented by abolishing Fannie and Freddie and various
other government loan programs. Bush had, in fact, exacerbated the
problem with his now laughably named American
Dream Downpayment Act of 2003, which allowed people to obtain
mortgages with no down payment and even without mortgage payments
for the first two years. Bush, of course, also stumped for and signed
into law the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which gave the Secretary
of the Treasury $700 billion to hand out at will. Even Obama’s latest
outrage on this front, yet another mortgage bailout, "originated
with a Republican," writes
Ilana Mercer. "Only a week or two back," she explains,
"minority whip Sen. Mitch McConnell proposed a similar scheme
whereby the government would lower home-loan interest rates and
guarantee the loans." One doubts that Republicans would be
crying "Socialism!" had McConnell’s plan come up for a
vote.
The Military.
This undoubtedly is the socialist program most beloved of Republicans.
They may be willing to admit that in all other instances government
is wasteful, inefficient, and bungling and that it usually fails
to solve the problems it sets out to solve while simultaneously
creating new ones; but when it comes to the armed forces, suddenly
all that skepticism melts away into an infatuation worthy of Romeo
and Juliet. Maybe the Pentagon does spend a wee bit too much on
screwdrivers and toilet seats, and perhaps even certain actions
taken by the boys in uniform (such as Abu Ghraib) have negative
effects, but those are aberrations in an otherwise stellar record.
Every good Republican knows that the U.S. military always acts in
the best interest not just of America but of the entire world. As
far as the GOP is concerned, "defense" spending must never
be cut, no matter how out of proportion it is to the actual threats
our country faces or to the spending of the rest of the world; and
one must never, ever criticize the military. To cut the military’s
budget or suggest that it might be just as wasteful, inefficient,
and bungling as the rest of the government is to "hate the
troops" and to "blame America first." One wouldn’t
expect private defense to enter these people’s minds, but few Republicans
are even willing to consider constraining either the Pentagon’s
spending or its adventurism. All other government programs are fair
game for cutting and criticism, but the military is sacrosanct.
One could probably
make a list ten times as long of all the socialist institutions
supported by the very same Republicans who now pose as defenders
of capitalism. They are correct that Obama’s plans are socialist
in nature, but they fail to see – or conveniently forget – that
they, too, are guilty of giving America a huge push down the slope
of socialism. While their opposition to the "stimulus"
is welcome, it’s a bit like Bugs Moran’s criticizing Al Capone for
bumping off his enemies. Unfortunately, we the taxpayers are the
ones who were massacred on this St. Valentine’s Day.
February
24, 2009
Michael
Tennant [send
him mail] is a software developer in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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