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Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Bill Murchison :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Return Of Big Government
by Bill Murchison
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Just for beans, I Googled "free enterprise," then clicked on "news." Results: 11,303. Tried the same thing with "private business." This time: 131,097. Ah, but "news" with "federal government" as the search item: 272,332.

You see? When it comes to public interest and attention during this moment of economic strain, Washington, D.C., the distributor of income, seems easily to outstrip business, the creator of the income marked for distribution. "Seems," I said. A Google search "proves" nothing. It merely suggests what many people are talking about -- such as our national lurch toward central direction.

The present perception is one we might characterize as relief that Congress and the White House have consented to restore happiness and good livin'.

We focus on government, partly because its check-writing authority is so large, partly because, due to that authority, Americans wait longer and more intently than they used to for the federal government to tell them what to do.

My point? Not that government wouldn't receive universal opprobrium for failing to help out; rather, that, as quickly as possible, government should stop helping, and then reverse course. Back to the past! Bigger government than we had, when the Obama administration began, we plainly don't need. In economic affairs, private reliably beats public.

The great myth presently circulating among us, threatening to ossify into reality, is that for the mess we're in we can mainly blame the deregulatory policies of the past couple of decades, along with tax cuts during the Bush years. Such policies (according to the myth-makers) embody the wild and crazy notion that those who create the money in the first place, through investment and work, are entitled to the largest share of it, and that redistribution of resources by government (including money available for bonuses) is a lousy idea.

Repudiating those notions is in large part what the "stimulus" bill is about. Taxes don't get raised for the present, but Congress and the White House create from thin air vast new spending programs that someone has to pay for at some point, through tax increases, inflation, or, likelier, both. Meanwhile, where does the new spending go? Where Congress says it goes, with minimal regard to need or merit: mostly just to the politics of the budget-writers.

True, that's how the politics of spending always has worked. It's more the size the commitment (nearly $800 billion) than the novelty of it that disturbs. Federal spending, which accounts for 21 percent of the national wealth, is headed toward 30 percent. If you like Big Government, you're in luck. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Murchison is a senior columns writer for The Dallas Morning News and author of There's More to Life Than Politics.
 
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©Creators Syndicate ©Creators Syndicate
Allow me to retitle
" The Rerun of even Bigger Government "
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It seems to me though, they finally got a jolt, and realize they may have, after all their years of lying, stealing, and promoting criminal conduct from the top to the lowliest welfarer, have taken it to the brink of implosion.
Now, they panicked, and blew it again, to the tune of a reportedly wasted blind 350-700 billion, but it seems to me the jolt already wore off - and they concocted over 1,000 pages near instantly, of the slow rolling communist implementation they most all have backed for so long, with this new giant gouging leap forward.
So, all is well.
Their big save is nothing more than another barfing hurl, 100 times faster than formerly considered appropriate.
Ahh, it's almost time to move onto the next apocalyptic death knell that will destroy the world and all it's inhabitants forthwith.
Anyone want to guess what the next world ending scenario is ?

Republican fiscal policies DO work
Don't let liberal bolsheviks write the history books! Republican fiscal policies only fail when compromised by socialist donkeys!

The free market works, capitalism works, freedom works. The opposites of these either do not work or work poorly, enriching only bureaucrats and subsidizing sloth and class envy.

Housing crisis? No Republican woke up in the 1970s saying, "Let's give poor people houses even if they can't afford them!"

One more time! The free market works, capitalism works, freedom works; they have every time they've been exercised. They only fall short when sabotaged by RINOs or subverted by socialist donkeys.

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