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How the Progressives Will Win

Throughout the years, the political trends remain the same


BY DR. MARVIN FOLKERTSMA

Karl Marx once commented that voters' choices in a democracy constituted little more than deciding which bourgeois party would oppress them the most. The old misanthrope's views on such matters are usually worth ignoring, but he had a point with regard to American elections since the New Deal, because our two- and four-year rituals in choosing officeholders have affected only the rate that progressive-socialist policies have been enacted, and little more (except in foreign policy, which is a different matter).

Thus, during Democratic administrations, such as those of Lyndon Johnson and Barack Obama, federal government expansion speeds up; during Republican administrations, like that of Ronald Reagan, the rate of growth slows a bit. But trend lines remain the same, until finally the progressive dream of rendering elections irrelevant becomes a reality. Of course, political theatre will continue -- the hoopla, marches, banners, balloons and puerile advertisements -- but none of it will matter. Indeed, elections already have about as much relevance to domestic policy as the two-minute hate in Orwell's "1984," in that they siphon off some of the mass's rage without having any effect on changing the social or political system in the direction that voters want.

This means that all the progressives have to do is to remain patient for a few years. They can snub their noses at those periodic voter rants that are ostensibly about "sending a message to Washington," to a cast of characters who issue commands but hear nothing and care only about their own jobs. Thus, a Republican victory in November 2010 means that the progressive agenda is postponed a short time, perhaps giving American business a small window of opportunity to recover from two years of assaults against free enterprise by the federal government. The economy may recover enough for President Obama to take credit, enabling him to win a second term in 2012, possibly with new majorities in Congress. Then round two begins, with additional huge increases in the size and scope of the federal government, all supported by increased income taxes and a new Value Added Tax to stave off national bankruptcy.

So, the progressive establishment loses a battle -- the 2010 election -- but wins the war, which is ownership of a gargantuan central government that hovers over a defeated and dispirited population.

For their opponents, the sequence is win-lose, and for America and the world it's the extinguishing of the last best hope on earth. American exceptionalism dies, and the country becomes just another senescent welfare state in decline, only bigger.

An apocalyptic scenario for many Americans, to be sure, but one that is based on political realities that many adherents to constitutional government need to learn. For instance, political scientists often refer to an "iron triangle," which consists of a public agency, a private interest group, and a congressional subcommittee. The American social and political system is a colossal version of this, embracing government, media, and academia, a combination that is virtually impervious to change--absent, that is, a political revolution that replaces 90 percent of Congress instead of the paltry five or ten percent turnover that usually takes place. Then the transformation would have to be huge, not marginal, involving, for starters, a reduction of the federal establishment at the same rate of its explosive expansion over the past decade -- in trillion-dollar hunks.

Resistance would be massive and vicious, employing the panoply of public-sector unions and the enviro-IRS regulatory complex, which are to the progressives what the Communist Party and KGB were to the Soviet leadership, and used for similar purposes -- mobilization and intimidation. Media and academia would do their part, accusing progressives' opponents of being heartless, radical, and mentally deranged. And likely this establishment would win, because of its superior organizational skills and virtual monopoly of power at the heights of the American social and political system.

Of course, there's always another election in the offing for the country's disenchanted subjects who still wish to "send a message to Washington." Two-minute hate, anyone?

Dr. Marvin Folkertsma is a professor of political science and Fellow for American Studies with The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College. The author of several books, his latest release is a high-energy novel titled "The Thirteenth Commandment."



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COMMENTS
2 comments posted for this article
toddkreigh
 11/ 5/2010 - 10:17am
   Folkertsma gets it right. Reagan fumed and railed at "big government" every chance he got. All his administration managed to do was slow its growth. Government enjoys steady growth under conservative leadership. It metastasizes under progressive leadership.
   
   Perhaps a continued severe recession or even a turn to actual depression would be what's best for America long-term, i.e., it might help us save ourselves. More than anything, what seems to have energized the conservative base is having their 401K wiped out. Should we return to economic prosperity and halve the unemployment rate, shore up Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid, likely folks would become somnolent again, i.e., no Tea Party rallies for me. Might miss an episode of "Family Guy". I mean, at what point do we get "energized" about government size and overreach? When 80 cents of every dollar we make goes to fund government?
   
   The relationship between the American populace and the political class can be likened to consumers who have two - and only two - choices of laundry detergent, Brand A and Brand B. Neither product will get stains out. So consumers helplessly switch back and forth between the two hoping one will work, and neither one ever does.
   
   So Folkertsma is correct; elections have devolved to a zero sum affair. We go one way for awhile, then the other, but eventually we keep winding up back where we started.
   
   Meanwhile, government keeps growing .. and growing. And when the wishes of the majority cannot be achieved through elections, the only recourse left is revolution.
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Offlogic
 10/27/2010 - 6:44am
   The good doctor's credentials explain his rather bizarre views.
   The "Center for Vision and Values", where he is a "professor of political science and Fellow for American Studies", is a well known front for the Koch Brothers stealth campaign to buy and subvert the political process.
   The Charles G. Koch Foundation's website proclaims: "The mission of the Center for Vision & Values is to create a multi-faceted, interactive learning community to strengthen the faith and freedom foundation of the United States of America and advance liberty around the world".
   Compare that stated aim with the outlandish opinions and ridiculously flawed facts in just the first few paragraphs of Folkertsma's op-ed: progressives = socialists, wanting to render free elections irrelevant, projections referencing "1984", etc. If the Koch's want to finance deception and obfuscation to achieve their own less than admirable political ends, well, they could try to be a little more up-front as to their motives. The UTW could stand to be a little more ethical by disclosing the sponsors of op-ed writers they are shills sponsored by those following the "Big Lie" school of propaganda to further the goals of a family with overtly fascist aims.
   I'm curious as to why Urban Tulsa would have to go as far as Grove City to find such a confused misrepresentation of American progressive politics when any schizophrenic nut-job on the streets of Downtown (or most local Beck-tards) could rattle off a more varied collection of aspersions, lies and vitriol while rabidly flecking the readership with the same quality of spittle provided by Dr. Folkertsma.
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