By Ralph R. Reiland on 7.28.09 @ 6:07AM
Arrogance combined with stupidity can be lethal.
"This isn't about me," President Barack Obama asserted recently,
maintaining that his manic push for a vote on health care reform
is all about us.
In fact, the big rush is all about him and his attempt to
hurriedly get his problematic notions on health reform enacted
into law before his quickly falling approval numbers drop him
completely into the cellar.
A recent cover article in USA Today on the growing
qualms about President Obama's policies reported that his overall
approval rating, after six months in office, ranks him "10th
among the 12 post-World War II presidents at this point in their
tenures."
Only the approval ratings of Bill Clinton and Gerald Ford were
worse. Ford's public support took a nose dive after his pardon of
Richard Nixon. Clinton stumbled right out of the chute with his
"don't ask, don't tell" position on gays in the military. That
was followed by putting Hillary in charge of redesigning the
nation's health care system.
Ranking third from the bottom among America's post-World War II
presidents, Obama is behind Republicans George W. Bush, Ronald
Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Nixon and Dwight D. Eisenhower after
their first six months in office, as well as Democrats Harry
Truman, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Jimmy Carter.
More specifically on key issues, public support for President
Obama's proposals on the economy, health care reform and the
overall role of government is in rapid decline.
By 50 percent to 44 percent in a recent USA Today/Gallup poll,
those surveyed disapproved of how Obama is handling health care
policy. On the overall role of government, 52 percent said Obama
is calling for too much expansion in government power and 59
percent said his policies are producing too much government
spending.
On his overall handling of the economy, President Obama's
disapproval rating of 49 percent to 47 percent represents a swift
turnaround from his 55 percent to 42 percent positive rating just
two months ago.
Rather than re-thinking any of his key proposals in the face of
this growing public disapproval, Obama's answer was to try to ram
a health care bill through Congress, as well as a global warming
bill, before the August recess -- even if no one had the time to
even speed-read what's in the legislation.
In his book The Fatal Conceit, Nobel laureate Friedrich
A. Hayek provided some insight into this lethal combination of
arrogance and stupidity.
"The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how
little they really know about what they imagine they can design,"
advised Hayek.
Before the "obvious economic failure of Eastern European
socialism, it was widely thought that a centrally planned economy
would deliver not only 'social justice' but also a more efficient
use of economic resources," wrote Hayek. "This notion appears
eminently sensible at first glance. But it proves to overlook the
fact that the totality of resources that one could employ in such
a plan is simply not knowable to anybody, and therefore can
hardly be centrally controlled."
In other words, Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama just don't know
enough -- can't know enough -- to design or run a complex
economy. It's not just that neither of them has even run a
successful hot dog stand. The problem is that there are too many
millions of transactions in an economy, too many interactions and
unintended consequences, for any one person or any single
committee to understand -- even if they all went to Harvard.
The "fatal conceit" is that they think they are able to shape the
world to match their collectivist visions.
The good news is that we know what works. What's delivered the
goods to the greatest number of people in world history --
delivered unprecedented levels of both freedom and prosperity --
is economic freedom, individual initiative, self-interest,
competition, voluntary exchange, private property, decentralized
and spontaneously self-organized markets and highly limited
government.
What hasn't worked is government coercion and centralized
planning, or, as Hayek put it, "the deliberate arrangement of
human interaction by central authority based on collective
command over available resources."
It's a basic economic lesson that President Obama seems not to
have learned.