Thanks to Doug
A Very American Distrust
By Alan Caruba
Barack Obama has crashed headlong into a wall of distrust. If he had
any understanding of American history he would know why, but his sole
interest is himself and he proved that by writing not one, but two
memoirs.
The men
who waged the American Revolution and then met in secret to write the
U.S. Constitution all shared a distrust of government. They understood
government was necessary, but they wanted to keep a federal government
small and ensure that most powers resided in the individual states and
in "the people."
For most of American history, the federal government was small. Its
main function was to maintain armies and navies to protect its
sovereignty and its commercial interests. Early presidents encouraged
the exploration of the continent and its populating by the many
discontents who arrived seeking a better life than the
George Washington and other former revolutionaries were most fearful of
what he called "factions" and what we now call political parties, but
it didn't take long for such parties to emerge because it is the nature
of men to come together around commonly held beliefs.
The wonder is that, despite serious differences on how the nation
should be run, the parties traded power back and forth, new presidents
were elected without rebellions (other than the Civil War!), and the
conduct of the people's business progressed smoothly. Some policies
worked. Others did not. Pragmatism was and is the order of the day.
What people understood in the early years of the republic was that
government was not intended, nor expected to take care of them from
cradle to grave. The Constitution is an enumeration of the many things
government is not supposed to do. The process by which legislation gets passed is deliberately slow so people have the time to be heard.
President Obama has come smack up against a very American tradition and
attitude. It is the distrust of a central government or, for that
matter, any government. Obama arrived in the highest office in the land
understandably convinced that his gift of oratory would provide a
smooth road toward his goals. His party had solid control of the
Congress…or so they thought.
To the degree that his campaign was a remarkably successful charade
intended to hide his lack of any real experience to be President and to
hide his true intentions, one can understand why Obama now feels
buffeted by the system that has served Americans well since 1776.
Americans do not want to turn an excellent health system over to the
government and especially to a government that was not been able to
function well in the wake of a monster hurricane; a government whose
existing Medicare and Medicaid programs are not only insolvent, but
have $36 trillion in unfunded liabilities; a U.S. Postal Service that
lost $7 billion last year; and Amtrak that has never shown a profit
since it was created in 1970.
All the smoke and mirrors of the campaign have been replaced by the
reality that the President and the Congress work for US. We decide the
kind of programs We want and We discard those that don't work. We may
be equal before the law, but that's where it ends. Those that work hard
expect to enjoy the benefits of that work and resent those who live
parasitically off of them.
The days of infinite borrowing and spending are over. Both political
parties share blame, but the party whose principles have always been
about fiscal prudence will benefit most in the coming elections.
The national spending spree is over. Everybody knows this except Obama and the Democrats in Congress.




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