Townhall...
Has
Our “System” Failed, Or Has Our
President
By Austin Hill
October 24, 2011
“The
system has failed.”
Have
you heard this comment lately?
Does it express how you feel about America?
This
one sentence, vague as it is,
nonetheless captures a common sentiment about the current condition of
the
United States.
With
the “occupy” protesters
disrupting civic life around the country and President Obama publicly
bonding
with them, we’re seeing that magical phrase – “the system has failed” –
being
used in increasingly ambiguous ways. So it makes sense that the rest of
us
should ask a couple of important questions: What “system” are they
talking
about? And in what sense has that system “failed?”
At
times it would appear that the
occupiers are decrying our American system of constitutional, elective
and
representative government. “Our voices aren’t being heard,” many of
them will
say, implying that they are being trampled-upon by an abusive
dictatorial
regime.
But
if you probe deeper and ask “what
do you mean by that?,” it often becomes apparent that what the
occupiers are
really saying is “my policy ideas were rejected,” “the election didn’t
turn out
the way it should have,” or “I disagree with the outcome of the
legislative
vote (the congressional rejection of the Obama tax hikes is a perfect
example
of this).”
Thus,
the claim that “the system has
failed” implies a very self-centered, narcissistic view of the world –
“the
system is not producing the policies that I want, so therefore the
entire
system is wrong.”
Another
component to the “not being
heard” claim is the fact that many of the occupiers seem disinterested
in
participating in the processes of making public policy. Pollster Doug
Schoen
recently noted in the Wall Street Journal that while an overwhelming
majority
of the occupiers voted for President Obama in 2008, less than half will
vote to
re-elect him and at least 25% won’t vote at all in 2012.
Similarly,
in a recent interview I did
with occupier “Christine,” the intelligent and articulate 25 year old
gushed on
my daily talk show about how the movement signals a “new awakening”
where
people are “letting their voices be heard.” Yet when I asked, she
couldn’t name
any elected official who represents her in the U.S. Congress, her state
legislature, her city council or school board, and she openly admitted
that she
did not vote in the 2008 presidential election.
At
other times, the occupiers seem to
be saying that our free-market economic system has failed. Some of this
rhetoric implies a very simple, socialistic, “it’s unfair if one person
achieves more than the other” type of mindset. Other occupiers present
more
complex concerns, as does the unnamed Los Angeles occupier who appears
in the
now-famous “WTF is going on?” Youtube video.
“I’ve
been an electrician for ten
years,” the man in the video shouts into a bullhorn. “My wife is a
nurse….we
both have good jobs…and we can’t afford a house…That aint right!...What
is
going on?” he cries.
These
types of frustrations are real
and common. But the angry outbursts suggest a lack of interest in
understanding
important economic concepts like the relative worth of “things” – the
value of
labor, and durable goods, for example – and the variable value of the
currency.
Perhaps
most noteworthy about our
alleged “system failure,” is President Obama implying that he wants to
replace
it. Most of the reaction to the President’s recent interview with ABC
News
focused on the fact that he said, in no uncertain terms, that he is “on
their
side” – on the side of the occupier protesters, that is, and apparently
not on
the side of the rest of us Americans.
However
the more intriguing comments
from the President were mostly un-noticed. “We want to set up a system
in which
hard work, responsibility, doing what you’re supposed to do, is
rewarded,” Mr.
Obama stated, “and that people who are irresponsible, who are reckless,
who
don’t feel a sense of obligation to their communities and their
companies and
their workers, that those folks aren’t rewarded.”
The
President and the protesters may
be shocked to learn this, but our free-market, capitalist economic
system is
already designed to accomplish this, and it does so pretty well – when
it is
truly “free” and competitive. When government refrains from punishing
success
with threats of ever-increasing taxation and regulation, people get
rewarded
for their hard work and responsibility and they’re incentivized to
continue
achieving. And when government allows businesses to compete with each
other,
excellence rises to the top and inferiority is allowed to fail.
President
Obama has pursued policies
that move us in the exact opposite direction. High-achievers are
maligned in
the President’s rhetoric and policy proposals. Mis-managed companies –
failed
banks and car companies in particular – are given “government
bailouts.” And
businesses that meet Barack Obama’s individual, political needs – G.E.,
General
Motors, Solyndra, and Fisker Automotive of Finland, to name a few - are
granted
special privileges and waivers so as to become pre-determined successes.
The
American “system” has not failed –
not our economic system, nor our political system. But many of our
currently
elected government officials need to be replaced, along with many of
their
policies.
Read
this column plus others at
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