The protests in Wisconsin represent a split in American politics.
Not a split between Republicans and Democrats, but between those
who believe that the government should continue expanding, and
those who see the continued expansion of governments as the
greatest threat to their political and economic freedoms. This is
not just a debate over budgets, it is a battle over political
power, and it is the countrys most fundamental split since the
Civil War.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp3.bp.blogspot.comQLugwHyiPL4TWMj7I26FIAAAAAAAAEacTIO0RB7QtQks320protestax.jpg
border0 alt width320 height206 divThe combination of abuses of
power by an out of touch liberal party, an economic recession and
growing insecurity about Americas future have touched off something
that is more than a taxpayers revolt. Instead its turning into a
showdown over the nature of government itself.Money is the engine
of government. Tax revenues are meant to to fund the operations of
government only through the decisions of elected officials. Which
is why public officials who want to expand the size and scope of
government need an electoral base of support. That electorate is
created using wealth redistribution. Taxpayer money is siphoned off
to a redistributive electorate, which delivers mass votes and
campaign contributions. Theres no way to halt the expansion of
government, without taking on the redistributive electorate.That is
whats happening in Wisconsin. Public sector unions are one half of
a political trust. They elect candidates and then negotiate
contracts with them. The generous contracts turn into union dues
which turn into contributions to the candidates. Its a big circle
of corruption that goes round and round again. And it has brought
states like California to their knees.Bigger contracts mean bigger
budgets which mean bigger taxes and less jobs. In order to keep
paying off the unions, states strip themselves of everything but
minimum wage and union jobs. Small businesses collapse. Big
businesses outsource. Less jobs mean more workers on the dole, and
a smaller tax base. Everyone gets poorer, except the skeletal
workforces on the state payroll, and their contractors. The
taxpayers will complain that the country isnt what it used to be,
but they will go on hoping for a better tomorrow.Call it Planned
Poverty. Planned Poverty works as long as the economy keeps
growing, politicians can keep manufacturing budgets that keep their
state just ahead of imploding. Its done through a thousand tax
hikes and fees, and financial gimmicks that hide the red ink. Like
a beat up old car clunking down the highway, theres still forward
momentum. But when the economy implodes, so does the whole mess.
Suddenly theres no more money. But the redistributive electorate
still has to be paid. The only way out is either massive tax hikes
or a showdown with unions.Wisconsin union leaders would rather see
thousands of union members lose their jobs, than risk losing their
power and privileges. Some union members understand this and
covertly support Governor Walkers budget. But many others have
gotten too used to the system. They dont understand that their
union bosses and the democratic party have been exploiting them as
ruthlessly as any employer would. Its been a velvet gloved
exploitation, setting them up as a privileged class so that the
party and the union leadership could keep robbing the public. Now
the leadership and the party expect them to go out, scream and
threaten the reformists who want to take away the power and
privileges of the bosses.Public sector unions dont just create
higher end niche jobs for their membership, they shrink the
available pool of nonunion jobs. As successful predators they are
at the top of the food chain, but their predation has also wiped
out everything below them. Like wolves who have overhunted a
territory, they have no more competitors and nothing for them to
eat. In an economic crisis, that leaves their membership with few
options. You either work for the government in some capacity, or
you dont work at all.divimg classalignleft styleborder 0pt none
srchttp2.bp.blogspot.comuMMNFLxAt8cTWMkd7X01MIAAAAAAAAEag2APVhdtK8s320wishit.jpg
border0 alt width320 height235 divThis is the situation that most
of the various redistributive electorates are in right now. They
have been living in gilded cages. The wealth redistribution they
have been benefiting from has impoverished their cities, counties,
states and the country as a whole. The longer it has gone on, the
fewer options they have outside the gilded cage. Some have never
worked in the private sectors. Others have never worked at all. And
thanks to them, there are fewer available jobs anyway.Living in the
gilded cage means benefiting from a corrupt system thats
bankrupting the country. But their patrons have been hammering into
their heads that they are not living in the gilded cage, the
taxpayers are. The message they are getting from bosses, community
leaders and politicians is that they are the victims. The poor
unfortunate victims of the rich or of racism, and that its up to
them to fight for whats theirs. When actually they are the
political mercenaries of a corrupt system, and their benefits and
privileges pale besides those of the higher ups on the ladder above
them.Those who believe that government must continue expanding, for
selfish or ideological reasons, have the redistributive electorate
as their final line of defense in any conflict with taxpayers.
Every regime has a ring of supporters who enjoys the benefits of
being close to those in power. During the riots in the Middle East,
their governments bring out those supporters into the streets. That
is whats happening in Wisconsin. The unions have gone from being a
revolutionary force, to being a counterrevolutionary force, an army
of angry goons used to silence dissent by an angry public.While the
promoters of expanding government would like to frame this as a
clash of class and race, its neither. Its a struggle over the
nature of government. The economic crisis took place not because
Wall Street wasnt being regulated enough, but because
redistributive policies had glutted Wall Street with bad loans. The
market was reselling bad commodities, but it didnt originate those
commodities. Like trees covered in rotten fruit, every state is
full of its own bad commodities, bad deals and bad policies. And
unprecedented numbers of Americans have recognized where the
problem lies and what needs to be done about it.This is not a war
between the rich and the poor. For the most part it is a civil war
within the middle class. The American middle class is shrinking and
endangered. Too many Americans can foresee a day when, as in George
Orwells 1984, the remaining middle class consists only of
government employees. And if government continues expanding, that
is exactly how it will be. The choice is between a small subsidized
middle class and a larger unsubsidized middle class. That is also
what the taxpayers revolt is really about.Both the left and the
right agree that the middle class is endangered, but they differ on
the solution. The left wants more government intervention, the
right wants less. But it is not just a question of jobs, but of
what jobs. Small business against lifetime employment. The free
market against the nanny state. Manufacturing against the
humanities. The rural against the urban. Underlying the political
argument is the cultural argument. Will America follow Europe or
stick with its roots.img classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp2.bp.blogspot.comvHZ80XQng5ITWMkinVnN4IAAAAAAAAEakaaeVvZMW7AEs320TeapartyProtest.jpg
border0 alt width240 height320 Obamas victory lit the fuse of the
taxpayers civil war. The Republicans had failed to present a
meaningful alternative, and when the party crumbled, a grass roots
movement gained force. Its adherents understand that their economic
survival depends on cutting back government. On taking away its
power to constantly raise and spend money, and its drive to
regulate everything. Once they had pushed past the elites of the
media and the political kingmakers to be heard, the progovernment
forces pushed out their armies of the redistributive electorates,
the people who had been cashing their checks for years and could be
counted on to challenge one revolution with a counterrevolution of
their own.At stake is the simple question of freedom. Political
freedom originates inextricably from economic freedom. There is no
political independence without economic independence. A government
that begins to tightly restrict economic freedoms will eventually
also restrict political freedoms. The redistribute electorates are
the greencoats of big government. They are the beneficiaries of the
destructive economic policies and their final line of defense. If
they go on as they are, then they will bankrupt the system. Like
Romes Praetorian Guard, they will appoint new emperors who will do
what they say regardless of the consequences.No fundamental change
is possible without confronting and defeating them. The taxpayer
has lost battle after battle to them. We lost California. We cant
afford to lose Wisconsin.
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