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Sunday, March 23, 2008
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Government by Cliche
by Rich Tucker
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If I’ve told you once, I’ve told you a million times: Avoid clichés. Well, all right. At the end of the day they probably won’t do any harm. Still, is it too much to ask that our policymakers present some actual ideas, instead of clichés?

Last week, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., held a news conference to attack President Bush’s economic policies. These days Bush is “more and more like Herbert Hoover, sort of whistling a happy tune as the economy heads south,” Schumer intoned. “The president’s proposals are always a day late and a dollar short.” Hum. Maybe in this, supposedly recession-wracked economy, being only one dollar short wouldn’t be so bad.

Anyway, Schumer concluded, Bush’s “reluctance to roll up his sleeves and deal with this crisis stands in the way of any kind of real recovery. The bottom line, it seems as if the president is on a different economic planet than most Americans.” No doubt. As is Schumer, by the way, since he’s a member in good standing of the world’s most exclusive millionaire’s club, the U.S. Senate.

All right, so Schumer’s speech was a seething nest of clichés. But while sticks and stones may break bones, words will never hurt, right? Still, Schumer’s empty rhetoric highlights a big problem for the Left. While liberals are eager to attack Bush and say our country’s in a recession (it’s an election year, after all) they seem bankrupt of any good ideas of their own.

Consider Schumer’s only substantive comment in his speech. Bush “says he will not do simple things like deal with the foreclosure crisis.” Hold on. Dealing with the foreclosure crisis is likely to be as “simple” as picking the entire NCAA basketball bracket correctly: It’s possible, but it’s not easy.

Schumer highlights a big problem, but offers the wrong solution. “When there is a crisis in confidence of credit, you need the federal government to do things to re-assure people that things will get better,” he says. But history should warn us that when the federal government gets involved, things usually get worse.

You can find numerous examples in the book “That’s Not What We Meant To Do” by scholar Steven Gillon. He reviews some of the big government interventions of the 20th century (welfare reform, mental health reform, affirmative action and immigration) and shows how they triggered unintended consequences. Gillon’s no conservative, but his case studies end up proving the wisdom of the conservative position that less government involvement is usually desirable.

In the 1960s and 70s, “the public saw a direct connection between government ambition and the events that accompanied it: racial violence, the war in Vietnam, student protest, Watergate and economic stagnation,” Gillon writes. “Not only was government unable to solve these problems, but many people believed Washington had accidentally created them in the first place.” Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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oil
i remember the last oil crisis.
congress enacted OPERATION INDEPENDENCE.
the oil companies got huge tax breaks to look for more oil. they could drill in alaska. why, there was so much oil there we were told by the jerks in congress, that we will never have to import another drop of oil. we will export.
Mobil bought Montgomery Wards with their profits.
Then ran it broke. I guess they were looking for oil in the service bays.

i pay about 11 cents gal to the state, 18 to feds, and another 8.75 on top of it all to taxifornia again.

get rid of the overtaxed gas and we will be better off.

adios,
Harvey
Lancaster, Taxifornia
dial 1 for english

Ronald Reagan
Government is not the solution; government is the problem
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