Reality check
Unlike those excitable countries where the peasants overrun the presidential palace, settled democratic societies rarely vote to “go left.” Yet oddly enough that’s where they’ve all gone. In its assumptions about the size of the state and the role of government, almost every advanced nation is more left than it was, and getting lefter. Even in America, federal spending (in inflation-adjusted 2007 dollars) has gone from $600 billion in 1965 to $3 trillion today. The Heritage Foundation put it in a convenient graph: It’s pretty much a straight line across four decades, up, up, up. Doesn’t make any difference who controls Congress, who’s in the White House. The government just grows and grows, remorselessly. Every two years, the voters walk out of their town halls and school gyms and tell the exit pollsters that three-quarters of them are “moderates” or “conservatives” (ie, the center and the right) and barely 20 per cent are “liberals.” And then, regardless of how the vote went, big government just resumes its inexorable growth.
“The greatest dangers to liberty,” wrote Justice Brandeis, “lurk in the insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well meaning but without understanding.”
Now who does that remind you of?
Ha! Trick question! Never mind Obama, it’s John McCain. He encroached on our liberties with the constitutional abomination of McCain-Feingold. Well-meaning but without understanding, he proposed that the federal government buy up all these junk mortgages so that people would be able to stay in “their” homes. And this is the “center-right” candidate? It’s hard for Republicans to hammer Obama as a socialist when their own party’s nationalizing the banks and its presidential nominee is denouncing the private sector for putting profits before patriotism. That’s why Joe the Plumber struck a chord: he briefly turned a one-and-a-half party election back into a two-party choice again.
While few electorates consciously choose to leap left, a couple more steps every election and eventually societies reach a tipping point. In much of the west, it’s government health care. It changes the relationship between state and citizen into something closer to pusher and junkie. Henceforth, elections are fought over which party is proposing the shiniest government bauble: If you think President-elect Obama’s promise of federally subsidized day care was a relatively peripheral part of his platform, in Canada in the election before last it was the dominant issue. Yet America may be approaching its tipping point even more directly. In political terms, the message of the gazillion-dollar bipartisan bailout was a simple one: “Individual responsibility” and “self-reliance” are for chumps. If Goldman Sachs and AIG and Bear Stearns are getting government checks to “stay in their homes” (and boardrooms, and luxury corporate retreats), why shouldn’t Peggy Joseph?
Again, it seems to me to be self-evident. We absolutely should continue to resist the seemingly inevitable leftward slide every way we can, but nobody should be under any illusions that the fight is anything more than a rearguard action, and any victories we achieve will be small and probably temporary ones. If all we can do is hold it off for a while, well, honor demands that that’s what we do.
Freedom ain’t free, as they say, and it damned sure ain’t easy. And a consequence of our success as a nation is an ongoing effort to make things as easy for ourselves as possible. Steyn concludes:
In 2012, the least we deserve is a choice between the collectivist assumptions of the Democrats, and a candidate who stands for individual liberty — for economic dynamism not the sclerotic “managed capitalism” of Germany; for the First Amendment, not Canadian-style government regulation of approved opinion; for self-reliance and the Second Amendment, not the security state in which Britons are second only to North Koreans in the number of times they’re photographed by government cameras in the course of going about their daily business. In Forbes this week, Claudia Rosett issued a stirring defense of individual liberty. That it should require a stirring defense at all is a melancholy reflection on this election season. Live free — or die from a thousand beguiling caresses of nanny-state sirens.
Melancholy’s the word, all right. Doesn’t mean we ought to despair and let the mindless millions run riot unchecked, of course. It’s merely a reality that has to be faced, that’s all.





For every other (Western) country going this route, they had one thing in common. Loathe though they were to admit it, they always had a rich uncle in the end, who would still earn the wealth that was being globally spread, and would always pay those pesky insurance (defense) bills that everyone preferred to not have to pay, or even think about.
Now, Uncle has decided that he agrees that it is more fun smoke pot and carry big puppets in the street, and rail against "The Man", who is cuurently hiding in his one room aprtment cooking a can of soup.....
.... all this is much more fun than actually busting one's ass for the right to earn that wealth to be spread and to pay those obnoxious insurance bills. Apparently, that is all "someone else's" job. Who that someone else is I cannot fathom, but all these millions of American voters and their dewey-eyed fellow travellers overseas cannot be wrong.
So get to work..... "someone else". Don't let us down. We are expecting a lot from you.
At LOT. So get producing.... whoever you are.