Posted on 02/11/2013 10:36:43 AM PST by Kaslin
Biblical scholar Chris Rock breathed the spirit of a Pauline epistle last week, as he urged children to meekly submit to their parents: The president and the first lady are kinda like the Mom and Dad of the country, Rock said. And when your Dad says something, you listen. And when you dont, it will usually bite you in the ass later on.
Wait he wasnt urging submission to mom and dad, but to Caesar as if he were mom and dad.
If youve managed to keep your last meal down, it gets worse. Because, when you reject the parental ministrations of progressive government, you orphan yourself. Or, shifting from patriarchal metaphors to relevant vocabulary, when you reject the smothering blanket of progressivism, the Left insists you are rejecting the very concepts of government and civilization.
Overly harsh accusation? Hyperbolic partisan rhetoric? No. Have you ever heard a liberal play the Somalia card? You dont like government controlling health care? Government micromanaging Americas diet? Government choosing industrial energy sources, grocery bags or household light bulbs? What?! Do you want to live in Somalia? You say you believe in lassez faire? Really? Do you fancy undeveloped, malarial Africa?
Its their go-to card. Rather than defend the absurdities and excesses of the modern American state, they accuse critics of advocating barbarism. They know they couldnt win a straight debate about what we actually want our government to do, so its always the false choice: Embrace Big Brother or submit to anarchy.
Happens all the time.
A while back in a Colorado senate hearing, I questioned the need for an intrusive new regulatory scheme in a long-established industry. The witness sniffed back at me: Well, some businesses would love the libertarian ideal of no regulation at all.
I see. Question the next bureaucratic power grab and youre demanding a seven-decade rewind, to the land before administrative rule.
Last week, speaking to a group of executives jointly with the former Speaker of Colorados House of Representatives, I criticized increased federal spending, and the incumbents odd dictionary that defines balance as all tax increases and no spending cuts.
My friend and opponent retorted that the right level of taxing and spending for many conservatives is zero; we just need to strangle government and move on.
Yes, if we think borrowing 40% of spending is too much, trillion dollar deficits are too big, and $16 trillion in express ledger debt is stifling now and especially to our children and grandchildren, then we are demanding the abolition of the state.
And, in too many debates to count on social networks, any argument about the increasing federal bite in personal earnings, in GDP, and in American productivity draws a trite retort about the value of roads, schools, parks, and police and fire protection.
The most recent such doe-si-doe was just yesterday (today, as I write) with a former reporter for a major regional newspaper, now a press flack for a government agency. As we arm-wrestled over the size and reach of government, he challenged: if Im so opposed to socialism, then how can I countenance the Interstate Highway System established by the Republican luminary Dwight D. Eisenhower?
Well. If anything is to be done collectively, I guess theres no reasonable objection to everything being done collectively.
Like Peter Sellers, Im mad as hell. Unfortunately, theres no escape from continuing to take it. But if I could get in all their faces at once, boy would it feel good to rant
No, Mr. Rock, the president is not my Daddy. I have a family and intimate relations that I treasure, and a government with constitutional limits that I respect. The two relationships arent analogous.
No, Mr. Regulator-Cheerleader-legislative-witness, questioning the value of new regulations is not advocating a return to the Wild West, anarchy, or law of the jungle. Thats not what supporters of liberty and limited government want. We want government that enforces the norms of civilized behavior: you cant punch me, and I cant cheat or defraud you.
You see the difference? We dont want government that thinks it knows better than consumers and producers what should be produced, bought, or sold. We just want government to be a neutral referee and keep us from abusing each other in the process of our transactions.
Thats the gist: Government is a peace protector and rule enforcer, not a big-biceped coach and mentor. If you want government to be a quarterback that steers people and resources toward good opportunities, and deflects them from bad choices, you are a progressive statist, whether right or left.
But, if you want government to be a sheriff, that takes a dim view of people hurting, cheating, or forcing their neighbor, then you are a defender of liberty and limited government: Freedom except when fist hits nose.
Finally, if you argue that challenging the permanent 20% jump in spending and the relative size of the federal government weve experienced with this administration is tantamount to rejecting roads, schools, police and fire protection, youre either ignorant or dishonest.
Weve had all those public services for many decades in America, even back when the federal bite on our wealth was a fraction of what it is today. Indeed, virtually all the parade of civilized glories is state/locally funded and delivered. Uncle Sam has no call to justify his 25% lien on national wealth based on the vital local services our states provide for much, much less.
Can we debate what we actually need constitutional government to do? Or is that too nuanced for liberals?
;-\
It's been so long ago for me, I'll have to wait about 3.5 years and ask my then 48 year old daughter if that's young or not.
You are correct. I can’t put my finger on it, but whatever it is that makes leftists and conservatives think differently, (or one “feel” and the other think), also makes most conservatives horrible at framing the debate. Actually, I don’t give the left enough credit, because in today’s society, their thinkers are framing the debate, setting the narrative, etc, and thought rather than emotion must go into that. It really aggravates me, but at the same time, I wouldn’t want to see staunch conservatives become better at debate by becoming more “nuanced” and losing their staunch principles. A very few conservatives have managed to control the debate on our terms without “nuancing” their positions. People like John Derbyshire are few and far between, and he’s not strictly conservative.
bump
Eeeez’s not my dog.
So, he think his “baby daddy” is in the white house.
0bammy b ur MacDaddy.
Zee monkey, he iz zee businessman. I am just an atrtiste.
Chris Rock is worth 70 million according to the internet. That is a lot of f u money so he can say anything he wants and he does. Last time he made people laff was years ago. I remember him in New Jack City which is a classic
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