The ideological extremism of David Brooks

On May 19, 2012, in Barack Obama, Congress, Health Care, by WhittleseyObyrne184

[Posted by Karl] The latest column from David Brooks attempts to diagnose the fiscal crisis in Europe and the growing fiscal threats in America: [M]any voters have come to regard their desires as entitlements. They become incensed when their leaders are not responsive to their needs. Like any normal set of human beings, they command their politicians to give them benefits without asking them to pay. The consequences of this shift are now obvious. In Europe and America, governments have made promises they can’t afford to fulfill. At the same time, the decision-making machinery is breaking down. American and European capitals still have the structures inherited from the past, but without the self-restraining ethos that made them function. The American decentralized system of checks and balances has transmogrified into a fragmented system that scatters responsibility. Congress is capable of passing laws that give people benefits with borrowed money, but it gridlocks when it tries to impose self-restraint. Of course, there are many Americans who still have an ethos of self-restraint.  Those Americans have elected people to the House and Senate in an attempt to restrain and reform the entitlement state.  And David Brooks has metaphorically compared them to Nazis , uninterested in governance. How does Brooks square that circle?  By assuming that the problem is gridlock, which he blames on the tougher position the right is now taking as the fiscal cliff draws ever closer. (I know; it’s just craaaaazy of the right to do this, amirite?) Mind you, the big-taxing, so-called “balanced approach” to addressing sovereign debt problems is failing where it is being tried in Europe.  The wingnutty wingnuts at the OECD and the IMF already knew it would fail, and that solutions which rely overwhelmingly on controlling spending work.  Yet Brooks bitterly clings to the center-left establishment mindset that has led America to the situation he now despairs. Jonah Goldberg addresses this ideology in The Tyranny of Clichés : If I say we need one hundred feet of bridge to cross a one-hundred-foot chasm that makes me an extremist. Somebody else says we don’t need to build a bridge at all because we don’t need to cross the chasm in the first place. That makes him an extremist. The third guy is the centrist because he insists that we compromise by building a fifty-foot bridge that ends in the middle of thin air? As an extremist I’ll tell you that the other extremist has a much better grasp on reality than the centrist does. The extremists have a serious disagreement about what to do. The independent who splits the difference has no idea what to do and doesn’t want to bother with figuring it out. Goldberg does not identify centrism as an extreme ideology, but the quoted example (and others given in the book) graphically demonstrate it can be at least as impervious to logic or data as any other ideology.  Anyone who finds those examples a straw man should consider the very real examples compiled by the NYT’s Ross Douthat : It wasn’t the Tea Party that decided to create two new health care entitlements (Medicare Part D and Obamacare) just as America was about to go over a fiscal waterfall. It wasn’t kooks and reactionaries who got the European Union into its current mess . It wasn’t the radicals of the left and right who risked the global economy on a series of disastrous real estate bets, or locked our government into a permanently symbiotic relationship with the banking and financial sectors, or created a vast labyrinth of unaccountable bureaucracies in the hopeless quest for perfect security from terror attacks. And to bring things up the present day, it wasn’t the more “extreme” members of the Senate — be they Jim DeMint and Tom Coburn on the right, or Bernie Sanders on the left — who just voted for more short-term spending and tax cuts without any plan to pay for it. ***[W]hat Jesse Walker has dubbed the “the paranoid style in center-left politics” *** seems like a rather odd response to a political moment in which nearly all of our overlapping crises are the result of disastrous misgovernment at the center ***. The Tea Party’s politics are not my politics, but the movement has virtues as well as vices, and at the very least it represented a possible alternative force at a time when our politics desperately needs alternatives, whether right-wing or left-wing or something else entirely, to the policies that have led us to our present pass. Nothing good may come of it, but an awful lot more ill has come from politics-as-usual of late than from grassroots populism. Brooks and his ilk are a particularly odious sort; they have urged and pursued a ruinous course of misgovernment, all the while deluding themselves that they are not extreme and demonizing the people who are not responsible for the West’s current malaise. –Karl

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Morning Briefing for May 18, 2012

On May 18, 2012, in Barack Obama, by BerneyOscar180

RedState Morning Briefing May 18, 2012 Go to www.RedStateMB.com to get the Morning Briefing every morning at no charge. 1. Barack Obama: A Composite Kenyan 2. Romney/RNC almost catches up with Obama/DNC in April. 3. Gov. Scott Walker might have been right – leads Barrett by 6 4. Media Trackers Uncovers Massive Ballot Irregularities in Montana ———————————————————————- 1. Barack Obama: A Composite Kenyan The Breitbart Crew has done the world a very valuable service in finding a 1991 biography of Barack Obama from his literary agent claiming he was “born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia and Hawaii.” Our own Jeff Emanuel also pointed out a 2004 Associated Press article that began, “Kenyan-born US Senate hopeful, Barrack Obama, appeared set to take over the Illinois Senate seat after his main rival, Jack Ryan, dropped out of the race on Friday night amid a furor over lurid sex club allegations.” I do not believe Barack Obama was born in Kenya. I don’t think it matters even if he were born overseas because his mother was an American citizen. I’m not going to debate it with the cult of birtherism. But the Breitbart Crew has, only a few days after the Obama White House was caught editing the biographies of other Presidents on the White House website to insert Barack Obama into their Presidential legacies, done an invaluable service in highlighting two very important issues. Please click here for the rest of the post. 2. Romney/RNC almost catches up with Obama/DNC in April. The New York Times reported this morning that the combined raised total for Romney and the RNC was $40.1 million in April, with Romney having $61.4 million in the bank: in comparison, Obama/the DNC raised $43.6 million. Barack Obama’s own cash on hand for April – it was $104.1 million at the end of March – and we probably won’t be told it until the Sunday deadline, or possibly a little later than that. Though, to be fair, Romney and the RNC haven’t submitted their latest fundraising reports to the FEC, either. Also: while I give points to the NYT for mentioning that this was a significant jump from Romney’s March haul of $12.6 million, they might have kept comparing apples-to-apples and included the RNC’s March fundraising total ($13.7 million). Or noted that the Democrats’ $43.6 million number for April represents a drop from March’s $53 million. Then again, I suppose that there’s a narrative in place. Please click here for the rest of the post. 3. Gov. Scott Walker might have been right – leads Barrett by 6 It looks like Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker might have been right last month when he said would win the recall fight. Three recent polls have found Governor Walker at 50 percent and leading Democrat Tom Barrett. Please click here for the rest of the post. 4. Media Trackers Uncovers Massive Ballot Irregularities in Montana In at least two counties in Montana, the home of a competitive U.S. Senate race that could tip the balance of power in the upper chamber, massive mail-in absentee ballot irregularities have been uncovered by Media Trackers Montana, a non-partisan investigative research organization with operations in five states across the country. In Broadwater county alone, where Sen. Jon Tester received only 35 percent of the vote in the 2006 general election, up to 600 erroneous mail-in ballots have been reported. Over a dozen Billings-area voters have complained that they received incorrect ballots. Yellowstone county officials have also reported numerous complaints from voters receiving the wrong ballot. And to top it all off, even a sample ballot available to individual voters on the Montana Secretary of State’s website is incorrect (this particular ballot allows the voter to select a state representative in two separate districts — districts 68 and 83). A majority of Montana voters are expected to vote by mail this November. Please click here for the rest of the post.

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Morning Briefing for May 18, 2012

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Via WFB: The chairman of First Solar, a company that received approximately $3.1 billion in federal loan guarantees under President Obama’s green energy initiative, said Wednesday that the majority of the jobs created by the company have been overseas. Speaking at a hearing of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, First Solar chairman

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Video: First Solar Chairman Tells Congress Majority of Jobs Created Using Obama’s $3.1 Billion Loan Guarantee Were Overseas…

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Ouch: Obama’s Budget Defeated In Senate 99-0…

On May 16, 2012, in Barack Obama, by LauderbaughHarsha435

His budget also received zero votes in the House, so not a single Democrat in either chamber was willing to vote for Obama’s plan. The Senate vote would have been 100-0 if Senator Kirk wasn’t recovering from a stroke. Via Washington Times: President Obama’s budget suffered a second embarrassing defeat Wednesday, when senators voted 99-0

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Ouch: Obama’s Budget Defeated In Senate 99-0…

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Senate to Hold Budget Votes Today

On May 16, 2012, in Barack Obama, by DocEG44

The Democratic-controlled Senate hasn’t passed a budget in 1,113 days and that is unlikely to change today. But senators are scheduled to vote on five different budget proposals, four of them proposed by Republicans.Senate Democrats did not agree to a budget of their own. There are a few interesting questions: How many Senate Republicans, if any, oppose the Paul Ryan budget from the left? There will be a few GOP senators who vote against it because it doesn’t balance the budget fast enough. Will any say it goes too far? Does anyone vote for Barack Obama’s budget? The president’s budget failed to record a single vote in the House and looks likely to be shut out again in the Senate. Democrats will probably want to avoid a scenario where Republicans can subject the Obama budget to prolonged debate and amendments. How many votes will conservative alternative budgets by Rand Paul, Pat Toomey, and Mike Lee get? These senators have all pushed to balance the budget more rapidly than the Ryan plan. Will any of their alternatives gain any traction? The biggest question is probably how long we can run the federal government without a real budget. My guess is we’ll have to wait at least until after the November elections.

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Senate to Hold Budget Votes Today

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