All That Darned Conservatism
By Randall Hoven

Did you realize that we conservatives got all we wanted and that's what screwed 
up just about everything, from hurricanes and Iraq to the global financial 
meltdown?  That's a rapidly-developing propaganda theme being disseminated in 
the Big Media. Case in point: Thomas Frank (What's the Matter with Kansas?) in 
the Wall Street Journal.


  "Over many years of ascendancy, conservative Republicans have filled 
government agencies with conservative Republicans and proceeded to enact the 
conservative Republican policy wish list -- tax cuts, deregulation, 
privatization, outsourcing federal work, and so on.

  "And as a consequence of these policies our conservative Republican 
government has bungled most of the big tasks that have fallen to it. The rescue 
and recovery of the Gulf Coast was a disaster. The reconstruction of Iraq was a 
disaster. The regulatory agencies became so dumb they didn't even see the 
disasters they were set up to prevent. And each disaster was attributable to 
the conservative philosophy of government."


If Mr. Frank really believes this, then one of us is crazy.  But I don't think 
he believes it.  I think he's in the tank for Barack Obama and wants to use the 
megaphone of the WSJ to put some meat on Obama's bones of "the last eight 
years."


You can read his whole article, and you'll find no shred of evidence to support 
any of his claims.  His logic is simple -- and flawed.  It goes like this.


  a.. Republicans are conservative. (Flawed premise number one.) 
  b.. Republicans have ruled in recent years. (Flawed premise number two.) 
  c.. Everything wrong in that time is therefore due to conservatism. (The good 
old post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy, even if based on good premises.)


Republicans are conservative

We conservatives wish Republicans governed with any conservatism.  There were 
some tax rate cuts in 2001, but that's about the sum total of the conservative 
"wish list" that was enacted under George W. Bush.


And how about those tax cuts?  In 2006, the federal government took in more 
money, after adjusting for inflation, than it ever had in its history.  While 
it was "only" 18.4% of GDP, that still beat the 1960-2000 average of 18.2%.  
And those making over $200,000 per year, or the top 2%, paid 47% of all 
personal income tax .


As a conservative, I can tell you that historic levels of federal revenue were 
not on my wish list.  Nor was a tax code so progressive that 2% of filers pay 
almost half of all income taxes.  Could Mr. Frank, as a non-conservative (one 
could presume), please tell us how much the federal government should take in?  
Is the most in history not enough?


And that's as good as it gets, conservative agenda-wise.  I see Mr. Frank did 
not bother even listing "spending cuts" in his so-called conservative wish 
list.  I'm a conservative who reads lots of conservative stuff, and I don't 
recall seeing much in the way of calls for "outsourcing federal work."  But 
every conservative I know wants the government to cut spending.  And every 
conservative I know is pretty irritated that the exact opposite happened under 
George Bush.


As for deregulation and privatization, what is Mr. Frank talking about?  I'm 
sure that somewhere in the byzantine world of government, some regulation was 
changed or something might have been privatized.  But the general trend has 
been the exact opposite.  In 1999 the federal register published 73,880 pages 
of regulations.  In 2004 it was 78,851, or almost 5,000 more pages of 
regulations.  And whatever was privatized, our government still managed to 
spend 20.3% of GDP in 2006 versus 18.4% in 2000.  If we privatized anything, it 
was overwhelmed by un-privatizing a net 1.9% of our economy (about a quarter of 
a trillion dollars).


To be blunt, we conservatives did not get a damn thing on our real wish list.  
Instead we got more government spending, prescription coverage under Medicare, 
No Child Left Behind, Campaign Finance Reform, increased minimum wage, etc., 
etc.  And we conservatives believe that is the problem!


Republicans Have Ruled?


George W. Bush has been President since January 20, 2001, or almost the last 
eight years; that is true.  But the President can only sign the budgets 
Congress gives him, and he can only fill high-level positions with people 
approved by the Senate.


On June 6, 2001, Jim Jeffords jumped from the Republican party and the Senate 
jumped to Democratic control with him, for almost two years.  And both houses 
of Congress have been in Democratic hands the last two years.  For those four 
years in between, the Democrats had enough Senators to filibuster anything, and 
they used that power freely.  But with Republicans like Chafee (now endorsing 
Obama), Collins, Snowe and Specter, the filibuster was not always necessary.


The US Senate has been the final resting place of virtually every 
"conservative" initiative in the last eight years, yet the birthplace of such 
non-conservative monsters as Campaign Finance Reform and Comprehensive 
Immigration Reform.


By the way, at the end of 2006, just before the Democrats took over Congress 
again, the unemployment rate stood at 4.4% and real GDP had averaged 3% annual 
growth in the previous four years.  Did you get the change you wanted?


Everything Wrong Is Due to Conservatism


In what way was the "rescue and recovery of the Gulf Coast" a "disaster"?  Our 
military and Coast Guard pulled thousands of people out of harm's way.  
Virtually all fatalities were due to the initial hurricane and immediate 
flooding, having nothing whatever to do with a federal government response, and 
just about everything to do with a Cat-4 hurricane hitting a major population 
center built below sea level.  What we saw on TV was a mess at the Superdome, a 
place where people who had been told to leave the city were told not to go.


Just as the Katrina mess should be blamed on a hurricane and not on 
"conservative policies", Iraq reconstruction problems should be blamed on 20 
years of rule by the psychotic Saddam Hussein.  The Iraqi infrastructure, other 
than Saddam's palaces, had been neglected ever since Saddam assassinated his 
way to power 20 years before.  The security situation was a little dicey 
because Saddam's "police", rather than serving and protecting, raped, killed 
and tortured Iraqi citizens.  There was a rape room in almost every police 
station, with the busiest one in the Baghdad Central Police Academy.  Such 
thugs do not go gently.


How can Mr. Franks so glibly, with no evidence whatever brought to bear, blame 
the Iraqi reconstruction difficulties on conservative policies?  What 
"conservative" policies?  The one of using only 150,000 troops?  The one of 
insisting on Iraqis running Iraq, under a constitution and fair elections?  The 
one of spending billions of our own dollars in Iraq?  Would a 5-year occupation 
under a US viceroy and 500,000 troops have been the "liberal" policy?  Would he 
have preferred Harry Truman's "liberal" solution used on Japan in 1945 - two 
atomic bombs?  Again, what is Mr. Franks talking about?


Deregulation and the Financial Mess


When it comes to blaming the current financial mess on "deregulation", Mr. 
Franks is not alone.  Barack Obama did just that in the most recent debate.


How did we manage to deregulate the world, from Germany and Britain to Belgium 
and Iceland?  Are you telling me that a minor change to Glass-Steagall signed 
into law by President Clinton in 1999  ultimately caused Iceland to go bankrupt 
in 2008?


The very liberal Village Voice  places the blame of the housing mess very 
squarely on the shoulders of Andrew Cuomo, President Clinton's Secretary of 
HUD.  Hint: he did not "deregulate."


And when it came to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac failing, which started the whole 
snowball, it was Republicans who were clamoring for stricter regulation and 
oversight, and Democrats fighting them tooth and claw.  Here was Barney Frank 
in 2003:


  "These two entities, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are not facing any kind of 
financial crisis.  The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure 
there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable 
housing."


You can also see on YouTube how those Democrats treated the regulators.


Thomas Frank said in the WSJ, "The regulatory agencies became so dumb they 
didn't even see the disasters."  I think he mixed up the regulators, who did 
see disasters coming, with Barney Frank, the Congressional Black Caucus and 
other defenders of Fannie Mae.


Conversely, John McCain co-sponsored (with three other Republicans) the Federal 
Housing Enterprise Act of 2005, a bill "to address the regulation of secondary 
mortgage market enterprises" and which passed committee.  McCain then made an 
impassioned plea on the floor of the Senate to pass the Act , beginning this 
way:


  Mr. President, this week Fannie Mae's regulator reported that the company's 
quarterly reports of profit growth over the past few years were "illusions 
deliberately and systematically created" by the company's senior management, 
which resulted in a $10.6 billion accounting scandal.


The bill was killed on the Senate floor.


Three of Fannie Mae's top executives were sued by the government for misstating 
earnings.  According to the Washington Post:


  The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight sued the former executives 
in 2006, seeking to recoup more than $115 million of compensation the agency 
said they received while Fannie Mae's earnings were misstated, plus penalties 
that could have exceeded $100 million.  [Franklin] Raines, former chief 
financial officer J. Timothy Howard and former controller Leanne G. Spencer 
were fighting the charges.

  ... OFHEO Director James B. Lockhart III said the former executives 
"improperly manipulated earnings to maximize their bonuses . . . misleading the 
regulator and the public."


Also according to the Washington Post , the executives settled the suit.


  Raines had agreed to forgo stock, cash and other benefits worth $24.7 million 
in exchange for dismissing the charges against him... Former chief financial 
officer J. Timothy Howard agreed to a settlement OFHEO valued at $6.4 million 
-- $5.2 million in stock options -- and former controller Leanne G. Spencer 
agreed to pay $275,000.


I'm not seeing a lot of "conservative policies" in action here.  In fact, 
Barack Obama apparently still gets housing advice from Franklin Raines.  Can 
you imagine if John McCain took advice from a former Enron executive?  At least 
the government didn't bail out Enron, nor did Enron's failure lead to the 
bankruptcy of Iceland.


Back to Basics

The Federal Reserve Act was enacted in 1913 to manage monetary policy.  
Seventeen years later a recession was turned into the Great Depression, largely 
due to mismanaged monetary policy.  Despite the lousy monetary policy, Hoover's 
tax increases and Smoot-Hawley protectionism, all anything but free market 
solutions, Democrats were successful in blaming the Depression on the free 
market.


Now, some 75 years later, government at all levels in the US takes up almost 
40% of our economy.  Federal regulations took up 2,620 pages in 1936, the 
middle of the New Deal.  In 2004 those regulations took up 78,851 pages.  
Government has become ever larger and more intrusive and the free market has 
been smothered almost to death, with no let-up in the last eight years.


How can you blame the "free market" when it doesn't even exist?  What does 
exist is a government that only Kafka could understand and only Marx could 
love.  (For the conspiracy minded, get a load of a 1922 New York Times article.)

And how do Thomas Frank, Barack Obama and the rest of the Democrats plan to fix 
it?  More government, of course.


Randall Hoven can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or  via his web site, 
kulak.worldbreak.com.

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http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/all_that_darned_conservatism.html
 at October 10, 2008 - 07:29:32 PM EDT 
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