>From the Unbelievable to the Passé

Posted By Victor Davis Hanson On September 30, 2010 @ 1:41 pm In
Uncategorized | 36
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>From time to time I stop and wonder how the unbelievable can become the
accepted. Let me list four arbitrary, but still representative, examples of
what I mean.

1) Embracing unworkable statism.

Everywhere one looks statism is a failure. Contrast resource-rich Venezuela
with Chile. Juxtapose Cuba to Colombia. Of course, compare Dark Age North
Korea with the 21st-century South. Look at the UK in 1954 and 1990.

They are rioting in Europe not to embrace socialism, but in petulant fashion
to find someone somehow to pay for it — as if “they” and “them” are partying
in some remote Aegean island, with vaults of stashed euros.

Whether hard communism or soft socialism, statism does not work. We all know
why — it goes against human nature, rewarding mediocrity and punishing
merit, professing egalitarianism for the masses, while the operators of the
system, whether the old Soviet apparatchiks or the new crony EU Brussels
bureaucrats, satisfy their appetites like capitalists. Ultimately, it is
simply like coasting on a bike uphill. The last hard peddles are simply not
enough to push the bike and rider over the hill: finally the brilliant small
manufacturer, the lean contractor, the enterprising farmer, the
late-into-the-night engineer — they cannot carry any longer the clerk, the
auditor, the regulator, the tax man, and the bureaucrat who wish not merely
to piggy-back onto the biker, but to try to stop his peddling even as they
demand to get over the crest.

Yet we are finishing a second year of absorbing banks, insurance companies,
auto manufacturers, and the health care system, borrowing trillions to
redistribute in new entitlements, with more lust for equality of ends
notions like cap and trade and immigration amnesty. Any House member who
went along with all this and lives outside a blue-gerrymandered district or
San Francisco or Chicago cannot run on the Obama agenda.

The entire statist protocol polls well below 50%. Past leftist candidates
like Michael Dukakis, John Kerry, George McGovern, or Walter Mondale could
not get elected on their visions; those who did (Carter and Clinton) either
imploded after a single term or triangulated and so found a way to a
two-term presidency despite never getting 50% of the popular vote.

Statism versus free markets is about as easy to understand as the difference
between Singapore and Greece, and yet here we go again. This weird suicidal
statist impulse seems for Obama to trump almost every other consideration:
he may well destroy the Democratic Party for a decade just when it was
recovering; he has so terrified private enterprise that trillions of dollars
in capital are simply sitting out his first two years, waiting for the end
of his congressional majorities, and hence his agenda to implode.

All this goes on as Obama sees the EU running away from precisely what he
wishes to implement, while at home a high-tax, high-entitlement,
redistributive economy like California has managed to destroy the most
richly endowed human and natural landscape — agriculture, tourism,
high-tech, oil and gas, Hollywood, Napa Valley, Silicon Valley — in the
nation. And yet here we continue down into the abyss.

2) Higher education. 

Most of what we are told about universities is untrue. America’s reputation
for higher learning excellence (in business, sciences, medicine,
engineering, and finance) is despite not because of the humanities and
social sciences. Current research in the liberal arts (the portfolio the
English or sociology prof is tenured on) increasingly has almost no
relevance to the general public or applicability to teaching or even
scholarly merit.

Diversity is Orwellian: the university is the most politically intolerant
and monolithic institution in the country, even as it demands the
continuance of tenure to protect supposedly unpopular expression. Even its
emphases on racial diversity is entirely constructed and absurd: Latin
Americans add an accent and a trill and they become victimized Chicanos;
one-half African-Americans claim they are more people of color than much
darker Punjabis; the children of Asian optometrists seek minority and victim
status.

Meanwhile on the labor front, liberal faculties prove far more illiberal
than K-Mart. Part-time faculties now account for 40% of the units offered at
many universities, earning 30-40% of the wages per unit of full professors,
and mostly without benefits. There is no outrage from those who customarily
damn CEOs from the lounge. Tuition rises faster than both inflation and the
cost of health care, and yet the twin promises of a BA degree are no longer
kept: today’s graduates are not so likely to get a choice job, and are not
certified as literate in English or competent in math.

At some point, all this cannot go on, and we will have the academic version
of September 15, 2008 — as parents no longer choose to take on $200,000 in
debt to send their children to 4-year liberal arts schools, in which they
will be likely indoctrinated that they should oppose the very American
institutions that created the wealth and freedom that fuel their colleges
and pay their faculties.

We have in a way already reverted to the sociology of the 19th century of an
elite and a non-lettered mass, but without its benefits. One-hundred years
ago, very few went to college. Only a well-schooled elite did, as the rest
learned through the school of hard knocks. (My grandfather never went to
college, but used to chant to me when I came home from college his
high-school Latin “amo-amas-amat” as he irrigated the vineyard at 82.) Today
we try to graduate almost everyone, in the process ensuring that for 4-6
years they are not apprenticing at anything other than Starbucks, “The
Poetics of the Low-rider,” and university psycho-dramas over dating and
oogling. I wonder whether today’s entering freshman is any better educated
than someone in 1890 who was farming at the same age. I note that 50% of
incoming freshmen at the CSU system must take remedial math and English. I
suppose the new Obama student loan take-over in part is designed to protect
the status quo, ossified university that staffs his administration and
provides the fire for so many of his agendas.

3) Technology.

I remember as a little boy going to the Big Fresno Fair to see the
“picto-phone,” huge monstrosities that we were told one day would allow us
to phone and simultaneously see the other person on the other end of the
line. Then quietly in the 1970s all that disappeared and the idea became
Edsel-like.

But wait — suddenly without as much as a whimper one can Skype across the
globe for free. Is not that a revolution in the human experience that has
transpired without notice?

The current technological revolution is stealthy like that. The advancing
pace of change is geometric but not the human reaction to it, which devolves
to quiet indifference. So we look at terrorists in Waziristan from Las Vegas
and decide in judge/jury/executioner fashion whether the big face on the
screen lives or dies that nano-second. And sigh? I fly to an airport, have a
minute, and access over 60 million words of the corpus of ancient Greek
literature in between flights. Big deal?

The strange thing is that none of this has been quite factored into
fossilized metrics that supposedly quantify the standard of living, poverty
rates, GDP, etc. In the grocery line not long ago, two teens were chatting
in Spanish to relatives by iPhone in distant Mexico. Are they impoverished
or enjoying a privilege exclusive to royalty just forty years ago? Today’s
Kia is more comfortable and electronically sophisticated than the Rolls and
Bentley of just 20 years ago — and available to drive off to anyone with a
credit card for the down payment. Surely, our social and political
barometers of success and failure have simply not caught up to the
technological revolution, more like horse-and-buggy calibrations trying to
quantify gasoline engines.

4. The Plutocratic party?

I cannot fathom how the Democratic Party became run by those who live lives
nothing remotely similar to what they profess. Yes, I know the
Roosevelt-Kennedy tradition of limousine liberals, but today’s chasm between
word and deed is stunning — and never remarked on. Are we to believe that
prep-schooled and Ivy Leagued millionaire Barack Obama is the blue-collar
face of the Democratic Party, while one of twelve children John Boehner is
some sort of J.P. Morgan insider rich man? No wonder that Obama must fake
his cadences, bowl, and try to eat cabbage instead of arugula.

The Al Gore, John Kerry, Nancy Pelosi, George Soros phenomenon is baffling.
The best I can make of it goes something like this. Once someone makes
enough money truly to be exempt from worries over taxation (but even Kerry
proved that $1 billion does not quite end the impulse to dodge sales taxes),
or is deeply burrowed within government so that almost everything is free or
subsidized, then some sort of human desire to help the “other” kicks in as a
sort of penance for the enjoyment of privilege.

How could Barack Obama, community organizer par excellence, send his kids to
Sidwell Friends? How does Bill Gates, Sr. tour the country, hectoring to
re-impose inheritance taxes? Did Al Gore need the extra Montecito home or
John Kerry the $7 million yacht (cf. “I do think at a certain point you’ve
made enough money”)? Why did the Clintons shake down corporations for gifts
to their DC home and Bill’s library?

Stranger still is this new Democratic emperor/bread-and-circus alliance. The
very wealthy promise largess to the poorer on the premise that both despise
the culture of the aspiring, the one in condescending disdain, the other in
bitter envy. Jimmy Carter laments, near life’s end, the unfairness of it
all, as the ignorant never appreciated his godhead. John Kerry wails about
how a slogan or two misled us from his message. Obama re-channels the poor
clueless clingers trope from the Ground Zero mosque to the upcoming
election. “What’s the matter with Kansas?” is the gnashing of the well-off
who cannot understand why the less well-off don’t join them in
redistributing their far smaller incomes.

The final irony? Lost in all this sanctimonious moralizing by the Bill
Maher/Michael Moore/George Soros left is that there is redistribution going
on constantly. In every extended family someone has done pretty well. What
happens? He loans money to cousins. She puts up a nephew in the extra
bedroom, gives a lot to her church, pays for bats at Little League, takes
her daughter’s fellow Brownies to pizza, or co-signs the nephew’s car loan.

The upper-middle-class is not greedy, but they do have three reservations
about the Obama pie-slicing: they want to have a little  say in the
distribution; they better than Obama know how much they can afford to give;
and they sense that something for nothing is not a neutral act, but a sort
of evil in creating dependency and destroying initiative — all for that
selfish feeling of benefaction among elites that comes from handing out
someone else’s money.

No, I cannot quite believe how quietly and without audit America’s moneyed
and cognitive elites became such hectoring populists — with the constant
assumption they could still live, school, work, and marry largely among like
kind — oh so distant from the objects of their concern.

  _____  

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