Obamacare and the Legacy of Progressivism
Putting Government in the Hands of Bureaucrats and "Experts"
The suspense is over and it is inevitable that the monstrous medical care bill will become law. There is no way to sanitize this thing, period. It is the ultimate “Progressivist” legacy.
Paul Krugman, perhaps the most visible “Progressive” today, supports this bill because it vastly expands the scope of the state in our lives. Like most “Progressives,” Krugman believes many things about a state controlled by people he supports. Among the “Progressive” beliefs are:
- “Experts” should decide what is best for everyone;
- The executive branch of government must employ “experts” who can make rules for everyone else;
- Governmental executives (i.e., President of the United States) should not be impeded by legislators, most of whom are not “experts,” and who fail to have the interests of everyone in mind, unlike the “experts” of the executive branch;
- Therefore, the legislative branches of government should defer to the executive branch, provided the “right kind of people” are in the executive’s chair.
Few people actually know everything that exists in this long and convoluted bill. However, that is unimportant, for in the end, the executive branch and its bureaucracies, not Congress, will interpret what the bill contains.
Most people still have the civics book ideas in their heads regarding law and the three branches of government. Americans are taught from grammar school on that the federal government has three branches: Congress, the Executive Branch, and the Federal Courts. According to the civics lessons, Congress makes the laws, the Executive Branch carries out the laws, and the Federal Courts interpret the laws.
That “model” of government disappeared even before the Progressive Era gripped the country a century ago, but it gained in strength during the Great Depression. “Progressives” such as Theodore Roosevelt and Herbert Croly, believed that people had become so advanced through “science” that they no longer needed to be subjected to the messy and (to them) “chaotic” processes of private markets and legislative debate. The “experts” already knew what needed to be done, and anything done by legislatures and markets to delay the directives of the “experts” should be swept away.
Thus, Krugman can write the following, which is fully consistent with the Progressive ethos:
Now consider what lies ahead. We need fundamental financial reform. We need to deal with climate change. We need to deal with our long-run budget deficit. What are the chances that we can do all that — or, I’m tempted to say, any of it — if doing anything requires 60 votes in a deeply polarized Senate?
Translation: We need government action, not legislative debate. The legislative branch just gets in the way of what we need. (I do find it curious that a person who had advocated the most irresponsible spending in the history of the country now says we must “deal” with the “long-run budget deficit.” What he really means, of course, is that we have to raise taxes through the roof.)
Krugman need not fear, however, for the Obama administration really did not need this bill to take over medical care. Remember the 2009 GM/Chrysler bailouts? They came entirely through the executive branch, while in 1980, Congress had to pass legislation to aid Chrysler. In other words, the financial and regulatory role of Congress has shrunk massively even in the past 30 years.
Likewise, the EPA recently re-interpreted (with permission from the U.S. Supreme Court) the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments to include carbon dioxide as a “dangerous pollutant.” The original law had no such language, but the EPA simply identified a new pollutant, and it legally can impose “solutions.”
In the end, the bill will be whatever the White House wants it to be. The ultimate legacy of “Progressivism” is that political debate no longer matters. The medical bill was bad legislation and everyone knew it, which was why the political tension was so great. However, now that Congress has given it permission to determine our medical futures, the Obama administration will waste no time imposing oppressive and costly new rules upon us, even if they are not contained in the actual bill Congress passed.










Comment by Painesright on 23 December 2009:
In the 1980′s, an ex-KGB officer and Russian defector, Yuri Bezmenov, did his absolute best to warn Americans about radicals from the 1960′s who were slowly converting America to a Marxist country using an overt process called “Ideological Subversion”.
It has nothing to do with a conspiracy theory or grand new world order. It is overt, out in the open, in your face.
There are 4 stages to Ideological Subversion:
1. Demoralization
2. Destabilization
3. Crisis (we are at the beginning of this stage)
4. Normalization (which is anything but normal).
This progressive cancer has been growing over the last 40+ years and is close to destroying our country.
Please take time to watch this short interview. It features Yuri Bezmenov describing exactly how Ideological Subversion works (it should sound eerily familiar).
Video (Forward to 2:10 if limited on time):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeMZGGQ0ERk
There was also an excellent recent 2009 American Thinker article about Mr. Bezmenov and Ideological Subversion:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/08/from_russia_with_no_love.html
Please share the video with everyone you know. It has over 120,000 views, but it needs to have 100 million.
People need to realize that we got to this sorry point in our country’s history by design, not by accident.
Comment by Donald M. Coder on 26 December 2009:
Boring. We know all this. We are a democracy and we, the voters, have voted to return to serfdom. You know this and we all know this. We want controllers to redistribute our money and to take care of our health. We cannot do this ourselves. The decision has been made. Let’s get on with the final step. But then there is China! Here I find people who love freedom, individuality, and market economy. China is replacing America. The people are ready and eager and they will do it well.
Pingback by Week in review « Craig W. Wright on 26 December 2009:
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Comment by Tommy Cung on 28 December 2009:
Donald M. Coder: “China is replacing America” I’m sorry, what naive. I ‘m sure the Chinese people love freedom, individuality, but their govt doesn’t. You know the Chinese govt doesn’t even brother to use non-lethal crowd control. They just jailed one of the Tienanmen Square protester again, this time much longer (probably planning to slowly poison him in jail and make it seem like cancer). I have not yet seen any political party/power in history that has freely given up power for the benefit of it’s citizens.
For the US, with all these new non-lethal crowd control technologies, it’s going to be very tough for a revolution. It’s more like American becoming like China with more govt control. America isn’t china yet, we can still vote the imbeciles out of office.
The main problem of healthcare in both America, European, and everywhere in the world is the lack of doctors and also the lack of basic medical knowledge of the general population. The lack doctors is due the problems in the current education models or the way that it is being funded by the govt. If basic business models of supply and demand were at work, there should be a near saturation of doctors, since the demand for more doctors started decades ago.