By Jeffrey Lord on 11.18.08 @ 6:09AM
Once again the ideology of "something that works."
"A good catch word can obscure analysis for fifty
years."
-- Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Obama era comes clearer.
The President-elect, says the President-elect himself on CBS'
60 Minutes, believes in an administration centered on
the principle of "something that works."
This bromide always sounds appealing to the unwary. It has that
fairy tale intrigue. Not too hot, not too cold. J-u-u-u-s-t
right. A little left here, a little right there. Middle, sort of.
Centrist, don't ya know?
Except of course, this idea never turns out to be either center
or, as it is also frequently touted, new. It is -- shockingly! --
nothing more than old-fashioned liberalism afraid to advertise.
It is, as the saying goes, what it is.
In a week which sees the cover of Time magazine
photoshopping Barack Obama into Franklin Roosevelt, accompanied
by the appropriately reverent paen to the New Deal and a
blossoming New Liberal World Order by liberal journalist Peter
Beinart, one can only -- well -- laugh. Why not just cut to
the chase and do Obama and Joe Biden as the con men Robert
Redford and Paul Newman portrayed in the classic Oscar-winner
The Sting?
All of this, from Obama's musings about "something that works" to
the quivering anticipation at the sight of the New Deal born
again is nothing less than the kind of hype usually reserved by
members of the Flat Earth Society for their own peculiar
fantasies.
Think for a moment of the greatest claims trumpeted for the
vaunted philosophy of "something that works." From the New Deal
to the Great Society, from FDR to LBJ and Jimmy Carter (Carter
apparently serving as the Obama first term), the results are
nothing if not striking failures. There's Social Security,
perpetually on track for bankruptcy if it is not hurriedly
"fixed" yet again. Medicare, which Mr. Beinart praises without
quite explaining the American people may not be aware this too is
racing along briskly to Fannie Mae-style financial disaster.
Ah yes, Fannie Mae. The New Deal chestnut designed as a financial
institution but quite inevitably transformed by the Clinton
administration into a welfare agency under the catchwords
"affordable housing." You remember Fannie Mae. The fuse that lit
the financial implosion that is, as we speak, upending the lives
and fortunes of millions of Americans and, for that matter,
non-Americans. The list of results from this "something that
works" philosophy is long. LBJ alone listed 207 cherished results
in his memoirs, results that generally go under the catchwords
"Great Society." The cost, we know decades later, was trillions
and neither "Great" nor, in many situations, much of a society
either. (Think of pre-Katrina New Orleans or pre-Giuliani New
York.)
Then wrap your mind around the results that began appearing when
Ronald Reagan finally brought a halt to this "something that
works" idea in 1981. Even with George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton
unable to resist some tax hikes, the Reagan idea kept on rolling,
producing over forty million jobs between August of 1981, when
taxes were cut, and September of 2008, when the fuse lit by FDR's
Clinton-modified Fannie Mae exploded. Here are some of the more
well-known products the American people responded to between 1981
and today:
Microsoft, Blockbuster, Dell computers, Apple computers, the DVD,
the VCR, the iPod, cell phones, Martha Stewart Living, Fox News,
Amazon.com, talk radio, Harpo productions (Oprah Winfrey's empire
of TV: films, books and a magazine) and DreamWorks studios
(Steven Spielberg).
Tax dollars required for start-ups? Zero. All were the product of
dreams and private capital. Private capital that in turn has
provided good jobs and, yes, health care for thousands of
employees. Private capital that, if the Obama team were to
breathe new life into the ghost of the New Deal, would vanish
into more Fannie Mae-style black holes and Bridges to Nowhere.
Private capital that would be sucked up from countless less
famous but equally valuable small businesses across America.
Businesses that are in fact the economic backbone of our
communities.
The Obama idea behind doing "something that works" is, as
Time acknowledges, nothing if not the new New Deal in
both fact and form. What goes unmentioned by Mr. Beinart and his
editors is that FDR's penchant for experimenting effectively
unstabilized the American economy for a full decade. Markets
crave stability and FDR proudly promised none. He tried
"something that works" with currency and exchange policy,
agriculture, utilities and the gold standard, to name but a few.
The last policy was so erratic no less than the famed economist
John Maynard Keynes described FDR's work as "the gold standard on
the booze." According to Amity Shlaes, author of the current
bestseller The Forgotten Man, one fine morning FDR
informed his advisors he was raising the gold standard by
twenty-one cents. Why? Said FDR in a classic "something that
works" response: "It's a lucky number because it's three times
seven."
Sound familiar?
This is the kind of economic philosophy behind Barney Frank's now
infamous statement that he was willing to "roll the dice" with
Fannie Mae.
There is no new thinking coming to America in January if the
president-elect and his media cheerleaders are to be paid heed.
There will be no effort to realize that government-induced
environmental standards or labor rules are sucking the prosperity
from the Big Three automakers' already very bad business model.
There will be no new look at the actual economic effect after
decades of New Deal laws like labor's prized Wagner Act (which
has effectively given the United Auto Workers their now clearly
devastating and unchallenged run of Detroit for decades). There
will be no rethinking of why Medicare fails yet Martha Stewart
succeeds or why Social Security limps as Microsoft cruises.
The reason the idea behind "something that works" will never be
challenged is that "something that works" is itself always forced
to cover the tracks of old and very much failed policies
constructed in the same way for the same reason: it just sounds
so politically good. As astutely understood by Justice Holmes,
catch phrases like the "New Deal" and "something that works" can
obscure tough analysis for decades.
The problem for President-elect Obama and his friends is that
decades after the post-New Deal era have in fact gone by. To
re-offer the New Deal in 2008 is just the same Old Deal.
What's "something that works" really all about? What is this cry
for a new New Deal? As a new generation is about to learn, it is
nothing more than the policy of the con job.
Stay tuned for The Sting. The sequel.