Posted on 02/08/2009 4:55:36 AM PST by Kaslin
The bad news is that its as ugly as many of us expected it would be.
The good news is that Americans are questioning it, and in many cases, rejecting it.
The it Im referring to is the huge expansion of governmental power in Washington. Its the kind of power that was promised from candidate Obama - - and, of course, it was promised to be all for our own good - - and is now been wielded by his fellow Democrats in Congress and by his administration. And for those who truly believe that government employees and agencies can and should solve all of ones problems (and for those of us who actually know better), the first few days of the Obama presidency have been quite an eye-opener.
The government hand-out bill thats currently being tossed around in the Senate - - the one that even Congressional members themselves only jokingly refer to any longer as an economic stimulus bill - - is a life-lesson in itself. The version of this bill that Speaker Nancy Pelosi produced in the House of Representatives was so wasteful, so welfare-like, so pet-project, so non-simulative that even her fellow Democrats in the Senate found it to be distasteful, and declared after the House vote that they could not support it.
Only a few weeks ago, President Obamas stated intentions of a stimulus bill were to devote an enormous sum of taxpayer dollars to repairing, enhancing, and expanding Americas infrastrucutre - - roads, bridges, public buildings, and so forth - - with the belief that this spending would create work opportunities, and thus, stimulate the broader economy.
Today, estimates indicate that a meager 3% to 7% of the roughly $800, 000,000,000.00 spending spree has anything at all to do with Americas infrastructure. Worse yet, the infrastructure projects that actually are stipulated in the bill are so misguided, even the New York Times was prompted last week to publish a story about how Japans two decades-long spending orgy on infrastructure has done nothing to boost its national economy.
It must be quite a heady experience to be a governmental official - - to be able to control so much of other peoples money - - and to be able to spend it as you see fit, even if its not the way you promised that you would spend it. And by every indication, much of the new Administration and Congress is made up of a special breed of person who is not only comfortable breaking promises, but is also skilled at ignoring the most inconvenient of laws.
Consider that no less than four such officials personally selected by President Obama to serve in his Cabinet have been embroiled in scandal, and most of these have been forced to step-down. The first to fall was New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, chosen to head up the Department of Commerce, but then was discovered to be under federal investigation for allegedly granting government business contracts in his home state in exchange for campaign donations.
Then came the succession of three Cabinet nominees who, as it turned out, had all dodged the I.R.S. and had failed to pay their taxes adequately and on-time. Among this select crowd was, ironically, Nancy Killifer, the person chosen by President Obama to be the first-ever Chief Performance Officer of the U.S. Government, the person who would ensure our governments efficiency and who would seek to eliminate government waste.
And of course, the irony among ironies - - there is our new Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Mr. Geithner is the one scandal-plagued Cabinet nominee who did not withdraw his nomination merely because he failed to manage his personal finances correctly. Today, Geithner is the tax dodger who oversees the entire I.R.S.
Is the scandal, and corruption, and conflict of interest that is so flagrantly on display in Washington right now a phenomena unique to Democrats? Absolutely not! Republicans have known their share of such misgivings. At the very least, an intellectually honest person would have to admit that while Congressional Democrats may have begun the modern-day art of earmark spending, the Republican-controlled Congress of the Bush-era most certainly perfected the art.
The difference between Democrats and Republicans in this regard is, largely, a philosophical difference, but it is a profound difference nonetheless. Contemporary Democratic thought insists that as long as power is concentrated in the hands of the correct people, with the correct ideas about how to wield that power, then there is no limit to the goodness that government agencies and programs can bring about.
Historic Republican thought has, until recent years, insisted that increased concentrations of power in the hands of governmental agents tends to corrupt even the best of intentions.
Today, we have a President who believes that the U.S. Constitution is flawed, because of its focus on what government cannot do to U.S. citizens, rather than focusing on all the wonderful things that government CAN do for citizens. And he is well underway with his efforts to do many wonderful things to us all, even as his well-intended plans continue to go sour.
It is time for Republicans to return to their historic philosophical underpinning. America must re-discover a healthy skepticism of governments wonderful things.
Exactly. This is why Obama is president today. Conservatives were abandoned and the trough feeders saw Obama as the natural extension of the last eight years of profligate spending. They thought, "Hey, if that's the way we're going might as well go all the way!"
By not holding Bush and the pub Congress's feet to the fire for their liberal spending the so called Republicans opened the door to this.
“Today, Geithner is the tax dodger who oversees the entire I.R.S.”
Appointed by the Marxist, racist, kenyan fuhrer who occupies the WH.
Bush my have cracked it open, But nancy the b*tch is running a D9 thru it. They will go too far, people are all ready getting tired of their bull sh*t spending.
When the Republicans finally return to embrace their conservative roots, (which the b*tch is helping everytime she opens that mouth) We had better have solid people up there.
It’s important to pin this one on it’s author, ‘Nine Percent Nance.’
Let’s make sure we do! :)
Chief Performance Officer
For cry’in out loud don’t we already have an agency for this? Isn’t it called the GAO?
What the hell is going on here? Just what we need more agencies.
Oh, I am just so frustrated!
I heard one reporter say, I do not have the link, that the white house jobs, overseeer, czar, controller, checker, etc,etc has doubled in people. There are the normal appointments and for every one of those he has appointed someone else to see to them.
The "official" government of agencies, cabinet, and so forth will be essentially a false front to distract and divert attention away from the real power brokers in the West Wing.
George Washington said of government: "Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master." (Slightly different versions of that are on the web--some say "troublesome servant" or use a different adjective but the message is the same.) For Obama, George Washington is just another one of those dead white slaveowners who didn't look like himself.
"The it Im referring to is the huge expansion of governmental power in Washington. Its the kind of power that was promised from candidate Obama..."
It's the kind of power sought by Saul Alinsky, Lenin, Stalin, and Mao too.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.