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"Good
Government: a Hit or a Myth?"
Published
15 August 2002
(word
count: 750)
Sunday
is my day to knock back in the recline-o-matic, sip on a glass of sun
tea, and lazily browse the local gazette.
All was tranquil until I sipped and reclined my way to an
editorial page offering by Neal Gabler (Senior Fellow at the Norman Lear
Center at USC) entitled “Mr. Businessman goes to Washington.”
That’s
when I nearly inhaled an ice cube.
There
are two great myths about government, asserts the Senior Fellow.
Myth one: government is inefficient, bloated and wasteful.
Myth two: politicians are more interested in serving themselves
than serving the good of the nation.
If
these are myths, Hagar the Horrible must be a real live Viking knocked
back in a recline-o-matic somewhere reading me.
“Government
can be tremendously efficient,” he further alleges, and as proof
invites us to “consider Medicare.”
That’s
when I snorted sun tea through my nostrils.
Big
government, it seems, is a big hit with Neal Gabler.
“Alas,” he frets from his tea-stained presence in my Sunday
paper, “if you subject these myths to even the slightest scrutiny, you
realize that neither of them is true.”
After
wiping my nose and blotting the newsprint with the sleeve of my robe, I
decided to accept Mr. Gabler’s offer.
First, I subjected his claims about Medicare’s tremendous
efficiency to my slightest scrutiny.
Specifically, I slightly scrutinized an essay by Robert
Moffit of The Heritage Foundation.
The upshot of his commentary is this: when Hagar’s Aunt Ingibjörg
qualifies for Medicare she may not qualify for a doctor.
That’s because ever more doctors are tossing in their sanitary
paper towels, refusing to accept new Medicare patients.
Why?
Here are some reasons cataloged by Moffit:
Medicare’s complex pricing system, the need to spend an hour on
Medicare paperwork for every four hours of patient care, practically
incomprehensible regulations, “a system of central planning and price
regulation in which bureaucrats control nearly all aspects of the
financing and delivery of medical services,” and “mountains of red
tape, sluggish and inappropriate payments for services provided, fears
of retaliation for even accidental book-keeping mistakes.”
Either
nobody informed doctors that “government can be tremendously
efficient” or Senior Fellow Gabler has never been a doctor with
Medicare patients.
But
there must be some big government programs that are big hits, right?
Not according to a news release from the Libertarian Party, which
invites our slightest scrutiny of the following: the Education Department has spent $550 billion since 1980 but student
ACT and SAT scores are still lower than in 1970; the Department of
Energy was created in 1977 to stabilize prices and promote energy
independence from those blankety-blank A-rabs, yet neither has happened;
and (shades of Medicare) VA hospitals are so bad that 90 percent of
eligible veterans choose private health care instead.
Having
refilled my tumbler with tea and ice cubes, I trained my slightest
scrutinizing upon the second myth, that our elected ones are more
selfish than selfless.
The
problem here was trying to whittle down the examples.
Like the rampant pork barrel splurging by politicos of both big
government parties. Like
congressmen repudiating their self-imposed term limit pledges to run yet
again for office. As it
turns out, this second “myth” is neatly summed up in a single issue,
one that the nation’s incumbents baptized “Campaign Finance
Reform” but which detractors have universally anointed
(metaphorically, not with sun tea) “The Incumbent Protection Act.”
John
Samples of the Cato Institute, the prestigious libertarian think tank,
observed (without snorting sun tea through his nostrils) that the
champions of campaign finance reform “hit an anti-democratic triple:
they made future elections even less competitive, weakened political
parties, and ran roughshod over our constitutionally protected freedom
of speech.”
Eric
O'Keefe and Aaron Steelman sum up the ultimate effects of campaign
finance reform in Cato Policy Analysis No. 279 thusly: “Congressional
leaders have proven themselves adept at pursuing reforms that stifle
electoral competition and perpetuate their own rule.
Is it, then, a bit naive to expect them to repeal those measures
and open up the political system? Yes. The current system serves them well. They have what most
rulers only dream of – immense power with nearly complete protection
from competition and accountability.”
So
now we've created a new paradigm: a myth that isn't a myth is a Neal
Gabler myth.
My tranquil Sunday afternoon having been
irreparably soured, I've decided to confine future cursory scrutinies to
the funny pages. Hagar the
Horrible is a myth I can really get into.
-
by Garry Reed
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