The Cult of the Presidency
Who can we blame for the radical expansion of executive power? Look no further than you and me.
"I ain't running for preacher," Republican presidential candidate Phil Gramm snarled to religious right activists in 1995 when they urged him to run a campaign stressing moral themes. Several months later, despite Gramm's fund raising prowess, the Texas conservative finished a desultory fifth place in the Iowa caucuses and quickly dropped out of the race. Since then, few candidates have made Gramm's mistake. Serious contenders for the office recognize that the role and scope of the modern presidency cannot be so narrowly confined. Today's candidates are running enthusiastically for national preacher'"and much else besides.
In the revival tent atmosphere of Barack Obama's campaign, the preferred hosanna of hope is "Yes we can!" We can, the Democratic front-runner promises, not only create "a new kind of politics" but "transform this country," "change the world," and even "create a Kingdom right here on earth." With the presidency, all things are possible.
Even though Republican nominee John McCain tends to eschew rainbows and uplift in favor of the grim satisfaction that comes from serving a "cause greater than self-interest," he too sees the presidency as a font of miracles and the wellspring of national redemption. A president who wants to achieve greatness, McCain suggests, should emulate Teddy Roosevelt, who "liberally interpreted the constitutional authority of the office" and "nourished the soul of a great nation." President George W. Bush, when passing the GOP torch to his former rival in March, declared that the Arizona senator "will bring determination to defeat an enemy and a heart big enough to love those who hurt." Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, suggests she is "ready on Day 1 to be commander in chief of our economy."
The chief executive of the United States is no longer a mere constitutional officer charged with faithful execution of the laws. He is a soul nourisher, a hope giver, a living American talisman against hurricanes, terrorism, economic downturns, and spiritual malaise. He'"or she'"is the one who answers the phone at 3 a.m. to keep our children safe from harm. The modern president is America's shrink, a social worker, our very own national talk show host. He's also the Supreme Warlord of the Earth.
This messianic campaign rhetoric merely reflects what the office has evolved into after decades of public clamoring. The vision of the president as national guardian and spiritual redeemer is so ubiquitous it goes virtually unnoticed. Americans, left, right, and other, think of the "commander in chief" as a superhero, responsible for swooping to the rescue when danger strikes. And with great responsibility comes great power.
It's difficult for 21st-century Americans to imagine things any other way. The United States appears stuck with an imperial presidency, an office that concentrates enormous power in the hands of whichever professional politician manages to claw his way to the top. Americans appear deeply ambivalent about the results, alternately cursing the king and pining for Camelot. But executive power will continue to grow, and threats to civil liberties increase, until citizens reconsider the incentives we have given to a post that started out so humble.
Minimum Leader
It wasn't supposed to be this way. The modern vision of the presidency couldn't be further from the Framers' view of the chief executive's role. In an age long before distrust of power was condemned as cynicism, the Founding Fathers designed a presidency of modest authority and limited responsibilities. The Constitution's architects never conceived of the president as the man in charge of national destiny. They worked amid the living memory of monarchy, and for them the very notion of "national leadership" raised the possibility of authoritarian rule by a demagogue ready to create an atmosphere of crisis in order to enhance his power.
The constitutional office they designed gave the president an important role, but he'd have "no particle of spiritual jurisdiction," the 69th essay of The Federalist Papers tells us. In Federalist No. 48, James Madison assured Americans that under the proposed Constitution the "executive magistracy is carefully limited, both in the extent and the duration of its powers." Indeed, the very pseudonym the Federalist's authors chose, "Publius," says something about how hostile Founding-generation Americans were to the idea of one-man rule. Publius Valerius Poplicola, a hero of the Roman revolution in the 5th century B.C., was famous in part for passing a law providing that anyone suspected of seeking kingship could be summarily executed.
Never were constitutional limitations more essential than when it came to using military power. Early Americans were no strangers to national security threats; in 1787 the U.S. was a small frontier republic on the edge of a continent occupied by periodically hostile great powers and Indian marauders. Yet the Constitution limited emergency powers and sharply rejected the idea that the president was above the law. "In no part of the Constitution," Madison wrote in 1793, "is more wisdom to be found, than in the clause which confides the question of war or peace to the legislature, and not to the executive department." In any other arrangement, "the trust and the temptation would be too great for any one man." That sentiment crossed party lines. As Chief Justice John Marshall wrote in 1801, "the whole powers of war being by the Constitution of the United States vested in Congress, the acts of that body can alone be resorted to as our guides."
Today Americans expect their president to pound Teddy Roosevelt's "bully pulpit," whipping the electorate into a frenzy to harness power against perceived threats. But the Framers viewed that sort of behavior as fundamentally illegitimate. In fact, the president wasn't even supposed to be a popular leader. As presidential scholar Jeffrey K. Tulis has pointed out, in the Federalist the term leader is nearly always used pejoratively; the essays by Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay in defense of the Constitution begin and end with warnings about the perils of populist leadership. The first Federalist warns of "men who have overturned the liberties of republics" by "paying obsequious court to the people, commencing demagogues and ending tyrants," and the last Federalist raises the specter of a "military despotism" orchestrated by "a victorious demagogue."
Instead of stoking public demands for action, the chief magistrate was expected to resist "the transient impulses of the people" and use his veto to keep Congress within its constitutional bounds. That role didn't require much speechifying. Early presidents rarely spoke directly to the public; from George Washington through Andrew Jackson, they averaged little more than three speeches per year, with those mostly confined to ceremonial addresses. In his first year in office, by comparison, President Clinton delivered 600.
In the early State of the Union addresses to Congress, presidents knew better than to adopt an imperious tone. After his third SOTU, Washington wrote that "motives of delicacy" had deterred him from "introducing any topic which relates to legislative matters, lest it should be suspected that [I] wished to influence the question" before Congress. Yet the deference shown by Washington and his successor John Adams didn't go quite far enough for our third president, Thomas Jefferson, who thought their practice of speaking before the legislature in person smacked of the British king's "Speech From the Throne." Jefferson instead inaugurated a new tradition of delivering the annual message in writing. For 112 years, that Jeffersonian tradition held sway, until the power-hungry Woodrow Wilson delivered his first State of the Union in person.
The 19th century did see presidents occasionally taking independent action of enormous consequences: Jefferson purchased Louisiana without congressional approval, Madison seized West Florida in 1810, Andrew Jackson governed as an irritable populist, and Abraham Lincoln expanded presidential power dramatically throughout the course of the cataclysmic Civil War. Yet taken as a whole, the 19th-century presidency was a pale shadow of the plebiscitary office we know today.
In a 2002 study tracking word usage through two centuries of SOTUs and inaugural addresses, political scientist Elvin T. Lim noted that in the first decades under the Constitution presidents rarely mentioned poverty, and the word help did not even appear until 1859. Nor did early presidents subscribe to the modern notion that it's all "about the children"; they rarely even mentioned the little buggers. But Lim found that "Presidents Carter, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton made 260 of the 508 references to children in the entire speech database, invoking the government's responsibility to and concern for children in practically every public policy area."
George Washington did mention kids in his seventh annual message, lamenting "the frequent destruction of innocent women and children" by Indian raiders. But that was a far cry from Bill Clinton in 1997, who declared in the State of the Union that "we must also protect our children by standing firm in our determination to ban the advertising and marketing of cigarettes that endanger their lives."
Wail to the Chief
A little-remembered vignette from the 1992 presidential race underscores how far we've traveled from the Framers' unassuming "chief magistrate"'"and how infantile our politics have become along the way. The scene was the campaign's second televised debate, held in Richmond, Virginia; the format, a horrid Oprah-style arrangement in which a hand-picked audience of allegedly normal Americans got to lob questions at the candidates, who were perched on stools, trying to look warm and approachable. Up from the crowd popped a ponytailed social worker named Denton Walthall, who demanded to know what George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and H. Ross Perot were going to do for us.
"The focus of my work as a domestic mediator is meeting the needs of the children that I work with…and not the wants of their parents," Walthall said. "And I ask the three of you, how can we, as symbolically the children of the future president, expect the three of you to meet our needs, the needs in housing and in crime and you name it."
One wonders how some of the more irascible presidents of old would have reacted at the sight of a grown man burbling about childish necessities to the prospective national father. Yet under the hot lights of the 1992 campaign, Ross Perot said he'd cross his heart and take Walthall's pledge to meet America's infantile needs, whatever those were. Bill Clinton, being Bill Clinton, pandered. And Bush 41 spluttered through his answer thusly:
"I mean I'"I think, in general, let's talk about these'"let's talk about these issues; let's talk about the programs, but in the presidency a lot goes into it. Caring is…that's not particularly specific; strength goes into it, that's not specific; standing up against aggression, that's not specific in terms of a program. So I, in principle, I'll take your point and think we ought to discuss child care'"or whatever else it is." That wasn't just an example of the Bush family's famous locution problems; it's hard not to stammer when faced with the limitless and bewildering demands the public places on the presidency.
How did we go from a reticent constitutional officer to the modern commander in chief, a figure who continually shifts back and forth between gushing empathy and military bluster, often within the same speech? As Tony Soprano might have put it, whatever happened to Calvin Coolidge, the strong, silent type?
There is no single explanation for the presidency's growth. New communication technologies such as radio and television played a role, as did growing material progress, which made Americans less willing to suffer inconveniences and more receptive to the belief that public problems could be solved with collective action. Yet in each key period of the presidency's growth, we see a familiar pattern: expansionist ideology meeting practical opportunity in the form of successive national crises.
The 100-Year Emergency
Much of what's wrong with American government today can be traced to the Progressive Era, that period of reformist backlash against the Industrial Revolution that dominated the decades surrounding the turn of the 20th century. As the Progressives saw it, if the Constitution stood in the way of necessary reforms, then too bad for the Constitution. "We are the first Americans," a young scholar named Woodrow Wilson wrote in 1885, "to hear our own countrymen ask whether the Constitution is still adapted to serve the purposes for which it was intended; the first to entertain any serious doubts about the superiority of our institutions as compared with the systems of Europe."
The Progressives were "the nearest to presidential absolutists of any theorists and practitioners of the presidency," wrote Raymond Tatalovich and Thomas S. Engeman in their 2003 book The Presidency and Political Science: Two Hundred Years of Intellectual Debate. For the new century's reformers, power wielded for national greatness was benign, checks on such power perverse. The Progressives had no use for the restrained oratorical traditions of the 19th century; it was the president's job to move the masses, unifying them behind calls for bold executive action.
Their model and embodiment was Teddy Roosevelt, whom the Progressive journalist and New Republic founder Herbert Croly described as a "sledgehammer in the cause of national righteousness." When T.R. took the stage at the 1912 Progressive Party convention, he foreshadowed Obama's quasi-religious fervor and McCain's bellicosity, barking, "To you who strive in a spirit of brotherhood for the betterment of our Nation, to you who gird yourselves for this great new fight in the never-ending warfare for the good of humankind, I say in closing.…We stand at Armageddon, and we battle for the Lord!"
The most astute among the Progressives recognized that, given the American public's congenital resistance to centralized rule, a sustained atmosphere of crisis would be necessary to sell the expansion of White House power. Two world wars and one Great Depression did the trick nicely. T.R.'s activist, celebrity presidency heralded the coming of a new sort of chief executive, one who would evermore be the center of national attention, the motive force behind American government. With his expanded power, Roosevelt busted trusts, carried a big stick throughout the Americas with a newly imperial U.S. Navy, and issued nearly as many executive orders as all of his predecessors combined. Woodrow Wilson then proved what Progressives had long hypothesized: that soaring rhetoric combined with the panicked atmosphere of war could concentrate massive social power in the hands of one person. Over the course of his presidency he helped create the Federal Reserve, nationalized railroads, and used the Espionage and Sedition Acts (along with more than 150,000 vigilantes) to carry out the most brutal campaign against dissent in U.S. history.
But it took FDR to eliminate the last remaining vestiges of the modest presidency. Roosevelt used Wilson's Trading With the Enemy Act to shut down all U.S. banks in 1933, grabbed the power to approve or prescribe wages and prices for all trades and industries, and authorized the FBI to spy on suspected subversives. He changed the Supreme Court from a bulwark against presidential overreach to an enabler. By the end of his 12-year reign, FDR had firmly established the president as national protector and nurturer, one whose performance would be judged in terms of what political scientist Theodore Lowi has identified as the modern test of executive legitimacy: "service delivery." In his 11th State of the Union address, FDR conjured up a second Bill of Rights, one whose guarantees would include "a useful and renumerative job" and the "right of every farmer to…a decent living." Depression-era economic controls and war-driven centralization had turned the American system of government, in Lowi's words, into "an inverted pyramid, with everything coming to rest on a presidential pinpoint."
War was the health of the presidency during the long twilight struggle against the Soviet Union as well. "The worse matters get," Harry Truman's adviser Clark Clifford told him in 1948, "the more is there a sense of crisis. In times of crisis, the American citizen tends to back up his president." During the Cold War, presidents used the all-purpose rationale of national security to justify spying on their political enemies. Richard Nixon might have been the most notorious abuser, with a series of dirty tricks and flagrant offenses that led to his downfall, but his predecessors also wielded the presidential bludgeon with gusto. When American steel companies raised prices in 1962, John F. Kennedy declared privately that "they fucked us, and now we've got to fuck them," then (along with his attorney general, brother Bobby) ordered up wiretaps, Internal Revenue Service audits and early-morning raids on steel executives' homes. During the 1964 presidential race, Lyndon Johnson used the CIA to obtain advance copies of Barry Goldwater's campaign speeches, and the FBI to bug Goldwater's plane.
In the pre-Watergate age of the heroic presidency, public trust in government was at its height, and mainstream scholars lauded the presidency as an earthly manifestation of the living God. As political scientist Herman Finer put it in 1960, the office was "the incarnation of the American people in a sacrament resembling that in which the wafer and the wine are seen to be the body and blood of Christ." The president, Finer said, was "the offspring of a titan and Minerva husbanded by Mars."
I Hate You; Don't Leave Me
After Vietnam and Watergate, America's intoxication with the imperial presidency ended with a crushing hangover. A newly aggressive press and assertive Congress produced serial revelations of the executive abuses that blind trust had enabled. In the bicentennial year of 1976, Idaho Sen. Frank Church's Committee to Study Governmental Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities summed up the damage:
"For decades Congress and the courts as well as the press and the public have accepted the notion that the control of intelligence activities was the exclusive prerogative of the Chief Executive and his surrogates. The exercise of this power was not questioned or even inquired into by outsiders. Indeed, at times the power was seen as flowing not from the law, but as inherent, in the Presidency. Whatever the theory, the fact was that intelligence activities were essentially exempted from the normal system of checks and balances. Such executive power, not founded in law or checked by Congress or the courts, contained the seeds of abuse and its growth was to be expected."
During the Eisenhower 1950s and the JFK/LBJ 1960s, the newly ascendant conservative movement coalescing around Barry Goldwater and William F. Buckley's National Review was the most potent source of criticism of the imperial presidency. "Others hail the display of presidential strength…simply because they approve of the result reached by the use of power," Goldwater wrote in his 1964 campaign manifesto. "This is nothing less than the totalitarian philosophy that the end justifies the means."
But enticed by the long-awaited prospect of an "emerging Republican majority" and turned off by the journalistic and congressional attacks on Nixon, conservatives learned to stop worrying and love the executive branch. During the post-Watergate reform era, two senior Gerald Ford White House aides named Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld fought tooth and nail against what they felt were dangerous shackles on the executive branch, supported by a conservative commentariat that refocused its ire on the Democratic Congress and the left-leaning press. "I didn't like Nixon until Watergate," National Review stalwart M. Stanton Evans once quipped.
Although Americans finally recovered their native skepticism toward power after Vietnam, Watergate, and the revelations of the Church committee, we never reduced our demands on the executive branch. The lesson we seemed to have learned from the legacy of abuses was to trust less, ask more. In 1998 the Pew Research Center noted that "public desire for government services and activism has remained nearly steady over the past 30 years." Two years later, a report on a survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government put it pithily: "Americans distrust government, but want it to do more." The spirit of Denton Walthall lived on in the years leading up to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Superman Returns
The Bush administration's extraconstitutional innovations in response to those attacks are by now all too familiar. John Yoo, David Addington, and other members of the president's legal team constructed an alternative version of the national charter, a "neoconstitution" in which the president has unlimited power to launch war, wiretap without judicial scrutiny, and even seize American citizens on American soil and hold them for the duration of the War on Terror'"in other words, indefinitely'"without ever having to answer to a judge.
Conventional accounts of the post-9/11 imperial presidency emphasize the role of dedicated ideologues within the administration, men and women who had long believed that post-Watergate America had swung the pendulum too far back, jeopardizing national security. There's good reason for that emphasis, but the "cabal of neocons" narrative risks obscuring the role that public demands have played in driving the centralization of power.
In his 2007 book The Terror Presidency, Jack Goldsmith, the former head of the president's Office of Legal Counsel, describes the prevailing atmosphere within the executive branch after 9/11, one where the president's men were acutely aware that all eyes were on the commander in chief. What is he doing to keep us safe? What more is he prepared to do?
Goldsmith, a dissenter from the Bush administration's absolutist theories of executive power, often clashed with Dick Cheney's deputy David Addington, the hardest-driving supporter of those theories. But Goldsmith understood why Addington was so unrelenting: "He believed presidential power was coextensive with presidential responsibility. Since the president would be blamed for the next homeland attack, he must have the power under the Constitution to do what he deemed necessary to stop it, regardless of what Congress said."
That dynamic can lead to enhanced presidential power even in areas far removed from the War on Terror, as was demonstrated in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. In business or in government, responsibility without authority is every executive's worst nightmare. That was the political reality facing the Bush administration in late summer 2005, when New Orleans was under water and desperate for assistance. As Colby Cosh of Canada's National Post put it at the time, "the 49 percent of Americans who have been complaining for five years about George W. Bush being a dictator are now vexed to the point of utter incoherence because for the last fortnight he has failed to do a sufficiently convincing impression of a dictator."
To be sure, the administration deserved plenty of blame for bungling the disaster relief tasks it had the power to carry out. But it soon became clear that the public held the Bush team responsible for performing feats above and beyond its legal authority. One almost had to feel sorry for Michael "Heckuva Job" Brown(ie), the disgraced former Federal Emergency Management Agency head, when he was obliged on Capitol Hill a month after the hurricane to inform an irate Rep. Chris Shays (R-Conn.) that in our federalist system, the FEMA chief has no power to order mandatory evacuations, or to become "this superhero that is going to step in there and suddenly take everybody out of New Orleans." "That is just talk," Shays responded. "Were you in contact with the military?"
For a president beleaguered by public demands, seizing new powers can be an adaptive response. Small wonder, then, that the Bush administration promptly sought enhanced authority for domestic use of the military. Although few in the media noted the historical moment, the president received that authority. On October 17, 2006, the same day he signed the Military Commissions Act denying centuries-old habeas corpus rights to "enemy combatants," the president also signed a defense authorization bill that contained gaping new exceptions to the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, the federal law that restricts the president's power to use the standing army to enforce order at home.
The new exceptions to the act gave the president power to use U.S. armed forces to "restore public order and enforce the laws" when confronted with "natural disasters," "public health emergencies," and "other…incidents"'"a catchall phrase that radically expands the president's ability to use troops against his own citizens. Under it, the president can, if he chooses, fight a federal War on Hurricanes, declaring himself supreme military commander in any state where he thinks conditions warrant it. That's the kind of executive power grab that happens when the public demands that the president protect Americans from the hazards of cyclical bad weather.
2009 and Beyond
To understand is not to excuse: No president should have the powers President Bush has sought and seized during the last seven years. But after 9/11 and Katrina, what rationally self-interested chief executive would hesitate to centralize power in anticipation of crisis? That pressure would be hard to resist, even for a president devoted to the Constitution and respectful of the limited role the office was supposed to play in our system of government.
In the current presidential race, none of the major-party candidates comes close to fitting that description. Aside from the issue of torture, there's very little daylight between John McCain and George W. Bush on matters of executive power. For her part, Hillary Clinton claims she played a key role in her husband's undeclared war against Serbia in 1999. "I urged him to bomb," she told Talk magazine that year. In 2003 she told ABC's George Stephanopoulos: "I'm a strong believer in executive authority. I wish that, when my husband was president, people in Congress had been more willing to recognize presidential authority."
Barack Obama has done more than any candidate in memory to boost expectations for the office, which were extraordinarily high to begin with. Obama's stated positions on civil liberties may be preferable to McCain's, but would it matter? If and when a car bomb goes off somewhere in America, would a President Obama be able to resist resorting to warrantless wiretapping, undeclared wars, and the Bush theory of unrestrained executive power? As a Democrat without military experience, publicly perceived as weak on national security, he'd have much more to prove.
As Jack Goldsmith put it in his 2007 book, "For generations the Terror Presidency will be characterized by an unremitting fear of attack, an obsession with preventing the attack, and a proclivity to act aggressively and preemptively to do so.…If anything, the next Democratic President'"having digested a few threat matrices, and acutely aware that he or she alone will be wholly responsible when thousands of Americans are killed in the next attack'"will be even more anxious than the current President to thwart the threat."
Law professors Jack Balkin of Yale and Sanford Levinson of the University of Texas at Austin are both Democrats and civil libertarians, so they take no pleasure in their prediction that "the next Democratic President will likely retain significant aspects of what the Bush administration has done." Indeed, they write in a 2006 Fordham Law Review article, future Democratic presidents "may find that they enjoy the discretion and lack of accountability created by Bush's unilateral gambits."
Throughout the 20th century more and more Americans looked to the central government to deal with highly visible public problems, from labor disputes to crime waves to natural disasters. And as responsibility flowed to the center, power accrued with it. If that trend continues, responses to matters of great public concern will be increasingly federal, increasingly executive, and increasingly military.
In the years to come, many Americans will find that the results of executive action are not to their liking. And if history is any guide, they'll respond by vilifying the officeholder and looking for another man on horseback to set things right again.
In The Road to Serfdom, economist and political philosopher F.A. Hayek chastised the "socialists of all parties" for their belief that "it is not the system we need fear, but the danger it might be run by bad men." Today's "presidentialists of all parties"'"a phrase that describes the overwhelming majority of American voters'"suffer from a similar delusion. Our system, with its unhealthy, unconstitutional concentration of power, feeds on the atavistic tendency to see the chief magistrate as our national father or mother, responsible for our economic well-being, our physical safety, and even our sense of belonging. Relimiting the presidency depends on freeing ourselves from a mind-set one century in the making. One hopes that it won't take another Watergate and Vietnam for us to break loose from the spellbinding cult of the presidency.
Gene Healy, a senior editor at the Cato Institute, is the author of The Cult of the Presidency: America's Dangerous Devotion to Executive Power (Cato), from which this essay was adapted.
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Presidents are celebrities selected by vast numbers of voters based upon less real information than is available in a typical 15 second beer commercial (less filling versus tastes great).
Healy has it exactly right, and it's great to see it on this month's cover.
So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign? Actually, not even the presidential campaign at this point -- the freaking primaries. (Looking at you, Weigel.)
Such overwhelming coverage carries an implicit message: The presidency is Very, Very Important, and we think that's the way it should be. If it were presented with more of a watchdog vibe -- like, keeping a wary, cynical eye on the public's misguided hype -- the coverage volume would make sense. But it's not. It's presented the same way the rest of the media presents it: as an unquestioned really big deal.
So long as we treat the presidency like a powerful monarchy, we're going to get wannabe monarchs trying to be really powerful. I don't think that's what libertarians want.
Such overwhelming coverage carries an implicit message: The presidency is Very, Very Important, and we think that's the way it should be. If it were presented with more of a watchdog vibe -- like, keeping a wary, cynical eye on the public's misguided hype -- the coverage volume would make sense. But it's not. It's presented the same way the rest of the media presents it: as an unquestioned really big deal.
So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign? Actually, video bokep not even the presidential campaign at this point -- the freaking primaries. (Looking at you, Weigel.)
I blame American Idol. Not because of any causative theory to speak of, but just because it's there.
that's right
by:Bokep Jav Video
This is all George Washington's fault.
Americans, left, right, and other, think of the "commander in chief" as a superhero, responsible for swooping to the rescue when danger strikes.
Well, James Norcross was both president and a superhero.
(reference explained here)
This is all George Washington's fault.
"He'll save the children, but not the British children...he's coming, he's coming, he's coming!"
Healy has it exactly right, and it's great to see it on this month's cover.
So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign? Actually, not even the presidential campaign at this point -- the freaking primaries. (Looking at you, Weigel.)
Such overwhelming coverage carries an implicit message: The presidency is Very, Very Important, and we think that's the way it should be. If it were presented with more of a watchdog vibe -- like, keeping a wary, cynical eye on the public's misguided hype -- the coverage volume would make sense. But it's not. It's presented the same way the rest of the media presents it: as an unquestioned really big deal.
So long as we treat the presidency like a powerful monarchy, we're going to get wannabe monarchs trying to be really powerful. I don't think that's what libertarians want.
As a species, we may be hard wired for hierarchy.
As a species, we may be hard wired for hierarchy.
In other news, Edward says something that is not completely retarded.
This *must* be a set-up for something stupid. I can just feel it.
He killed his sensei and never said why.
Shit.
I know shit's bad right now, wid'all that starvin' bullshit. And the duststorms. And we runnin' out of french fries and burrito coverin's.
But I got a solution.
Now I understand everyone's shit's emotional right now, but listen up.
I got a three point plan to fix everything.
Number one: we got this guy Not Sure.
Number two: he's got a higher IQ than any man alive!
And number three: he's gonna fix everything.
I give you my word as president.
He's gonna fix all the problems with the dead crops; he's gonna make them grow ~again~.
And that ain't all!
"And I ask the three of you, how can we, as symbolically the children of the future president, expect the three of you to meet our needs, the needs in housing and in crime and you name it."
Did anyone else hear the voice of Mr. Van Driessen here?
"This is all George Washington's fault."
Bastard just had to be too damn good at the job.
"On October 17, 2006, the same day he signed the Military Commissions Act denying centuries-old habeas corpus rights to "enemy combatants," the president also signed a defense authorization bill that contained gaping new exceptions to the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, the federal law that restricts the president's power to use the standing army to enforce order at home."
The 2007 changes to the PCA and the Insurrection Act were repealed in the 2008 defense authorization act. Does Reason have editors or fact checkers for this crap? Does anyone who works at Reason even have a high school fucking diploma? Healy is either a liar or doesn't know shit about PCA and federal emergency response law. Which is it?
Reason sucks.
As a species, we're also "wired" to be extraordinarily violent and unabashedly xenophobic. Don't make the 'is' an 'ought' though.
Easy there, John. The bit about a high school fucking diploma is a little over the top, but I'm glad you saw Healy's error and commented on it; I admit I wouldn't have thought to check that myself.
Reading this article reminded me of my anarchist days: the idea that bad government comes from bad men, as opposed to excessive governmental power, is about as politically astute as Disney's "Robin Hood".
So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign?
I think reason the opposite of sucks, but I'm with Tom on this one. Please, more cosmotarian, too-cool-for-school leather-jacketed, used to be in a rock band and still know a bunch of struggling musicians in L.A.'s rock scene, acerbic, ironic, cynical detachment from the Presidential Horse Race. Please.
Hey, Bush isn't the only one to have grabbed power and not let go
Zac,
I assume they have a high school diploma but that was such an elementary mistake.
Would Reason prefer a runaway Congress? The problem is not the Presidency the problem is a governmen that is too powerful. If you look at the history of the last 100 years and the rise of federal government power, all three of the branches share about equally in the blame.
A unitary exectutive is not always a bad thing. Somethings ought not to be run by committee. The issue is what do we want the federal government doin and what do we not want it doing.
Please, more cosmotarian, too-cool-for-school leather-jacketed, used to be in a rock band and still know a bunch of struggling musicians in L.A.'s rock scene, acerbic, ironic, cynical detachment from the Presidential Horse Race. Please.
(Three Stooge's voice): "Hey! I resemble that!"
This was an excellent article. I especially enjoyed the comparisons with the presidencies of old. For God's sake, 3 speeches a year!? I'd be tempted to vote for any bastard who promised that.
It takes 5000 words to say that the role of the President has greatly expanded since the founding of the Republic.
I guess there's not much happening in world right now.
The 2007 changes to the PCA and the Insurrection Act were repealed in the 2008 defense authorization act. Does Reason have editors or fact checkers for this crap? Does anyone who works at Reason even have a high school fucking diploma? Healy is either a liar or doesn't know shit about PCA and federal emergency response law. Which is it?
We discovered our error about two seconds after the issue was printed, and there is a correction in the July issue. Healy is not a liar, and I graduated from Lakewood Senior High School with a 3.3 grade point average in 1986.
It takes 5000 words to say that the role of the President has greatly expanded since the founding of the Republic.
Sigh. Another stupid and pointless comment devoid of even the hint of substance. But then I guess someone that laments a 5000 word essay on an important topic as too long for his trivial sound-bite tastes isn't the person to look to for anything of substance. Daniel, seriously, stop embarrassing yourself.
As a species, we may be hard wired for hierarchy.
We are hard wired with emotive patterns adapted for tribal survival. There is a strong tendency towards impersonal dominance/submissive relationships from which arises a strong tendency to hierarchy.
We are also hardwired to seek maximal return for minimal effort.
We are not hardwired for moral principles making such a matter of awareness and choice.
"The explanation of this, to us, strange phenomenon is that both these institutions were for centuries thought of as ultimate remedies in extreme difficulty or danger. If Parliament was sitting or the Navy at sea it meant that something was up. The gradual acceptance of emergency as a normal condition of life is the mark of political sophistication, distinguishing us from our rough and simple-minded forebears. All of us in the mid-twentieth century know that when a government qualifies its acts or powers with the noun 'emergency' it means to persist in them for a very long time."
- from Ollard's biography of Sir Robert Holmes (and it's safe to say the third sentence in the extract was written with tongue firmly in cheek)
According to AP, Obama camp has scheduled a meeting with Christie Todd Whitman, former Gov. NJ, frmr EPA sec. Additionally, the website obamawhitman2008.com was purchased just yesterday... might be an interesting wrinkle...
John,
That repeal was "pocket vetoed" by the President. I don't (and haven't) learned enough about the pocket veto, so I can't say what it all means. More investigation to take place...
Tom - "So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign?"
The fact that the next president will have so much power is exactly why it's so important. If we were voting for a president with an 18th- or 19th-century level of power, the campaign wouldn't merit so much attention.
The fact that the next president will have so much power is exactly why it's so important. If we were voting for a president with an 18th- or 19th-century level of power, the campaign wouldn't merit so much attention.
Which is why I qualified my comment to note that a watchdog sort of role would be understandable for a libertarian magazine. As it stands, the subtext in Reason's coverage seems to be that the presidency is supposed to be important and powerful. (As opposed to "well, other people want to make the presidency really powerful, so we're keeping tabs on this dangerous reality.")
In other words, the Reason coverage seems to instinctively buy into the powerful-presidency notion, rather than treat it with skepticism.
In other words, the Reason coverage seems to instinctively buy into the powerful-presidency notion, rather than treat it with skepticism.
I disagree. The presidency doesn't gain power because we (or Reason) pay attention to it, it's powerful because we give it power.
The Presidency already has great power, therefore it's important.
It's too bad that Healy only now provided us with this enlightening historical context. If more reasonable, independent voices from the Right had been present earlier in the Bush Administration, perhaps Bush and his enablers would have shown a little more restraint and better judgement.
Alas, Healy's argument only serves as an historical footnote to the end of Bush's abusive presidency.
While I agree that all the events listed in the article are bad .. aren't things a bit different and Better than 100 years ago?
With an unchangeable document governing the masses, and thousands of people bickering in democracy, nothing would ever be accomplished in Washington. And yet, you likely scathe the government for not being able to adapt to change such as technology.
As well, the idea that the government and in particular the president has significant power over the people is as old as the constitution itself. Thomas Jefferson himself predicted the power shift to corporations.
Having the power in corporations is not akin to placing the power with the people. Corporations are not people, or are they made up of people. They are only legal structures of hierarchy, for which no person or entity can be held accountable. Not only is the power not with the government, but it is not with the people working for said corporations.
Regrettably, I believe we need a powerful president, if only to help prevent inevitable collapse of our government. Atrocities such as those listed in the article are merely remnants of mistakes in governmental organization and checks and balances. If a government is unable to change itself, mistakes will be made until the government has to be uprooted. I do not see this ability in the legislative branch, and not in the current Supreme Court, so President Obama will have to do.
Thanks for reading.
The raise of presidential power beyond the means anticipated in the Constitution is only a relflection of the growth of government as a whole. Our national government was supposed to be a very modest affair. Now it builds the roads, schools the children, takes care of the poor, runs a retirement program, operates a health care program for the old and maybe soon for everyone, regulates business and trade, etc... As we have turned more of our lives over to the government it only stands to reason, or against it, that the president will have more power and fame,
Sorry Tom, I should have taken your qualifier more into account with my comment.
In any case, Reason treating the presidency as a big deal isn't an endorsement of the situation. If anything, I would think they've just accepted it, knowing there isn't much you can do about it, besides voting.
@Sog
"As we have turned more of our lives over to the government..."
Many of you talk as if you were alive when the constitution was written. I suggest that without this so-called nanny state we wouldn't have the ability to read and post freely on this website - we would likely be confined to physical labor. But we we're born American and many of us had the evil help of our government or our dreadful parents. You act as if you were to live with the fish and wolves, but rather you get on about it, you all whine in the luxury of your cushy American condo.
~just adding a bit of good ol' devil's advocacy~
Um, yeah, Chris.
The growth of the presidency into an imperial institution is to be expected - people want "leaders" they want a Messiah, they do cling to authority figures. It is easier to identify with a human being than an incoporeal idea or notion (thus the extraordinary appeal of Christianity as opposed to Judaism, or even Islam). Therefore, we project our national desires onto one man - the President. The genuis of constitutional monarchy is that it allows a non-political person to absorb the affection of the nation, and to embody the spirit of the nation, without directing those affections towards political ends - there is a reason Hitler hated monarchy, if the Kaiser was still on the throne, Hitler could never possibly have been the Fuehrer of the German nation. The founding fathers were genuises, but even they may not have appreciated the "soft" power that has enabled mere politicians to exercise such command and authority as modern presidents have done.
God Save the Queen anyone?
"Man will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest."
- Denis Diderot
When a president pretends to be both we are in grievous trouble.
"Would Reason prefer a runaway Congress?"
We already have that - and have for a very long time.
"The problem is not the Presidency the problem is a governmen that is too powerful. If you look at the history of the last 100 years and the rise of federal government power, all three of the branches share about equally in the blame."
I agree. Healy goes on and on about the transformation of the presidency as if it was a singular phenomenon and not part of a commensurate increase in the power and scope of the other two branches of government.
The Supreme Court initially blocked a lot of FDR's "New Deal" as being unconstituional but they finally caved in to it and the government has been on a runaway power grab ever since.
When disaster strikes, people want an efficient and centralized response. Otherwise when time is good, they want less government so as not to impede theie enjoyment of the good life. You just can't have it both way all the time. It is naive to think that life, liberty and justice can be perfectly ensured simultaneously and without compromise. It is just not how the real world works- let everyone get on the plane freely and without scrutiny mean that some are going to lose their lives.
Great Article! One I hope is read by a heady amt.
I agree. Healy goes on and on about the transformation of the presidency as if it was a singular phenomenon and not part of a commensurate increase in the power and scope of the other two branches of government.
That's true. But the growing exaltation of the presidency has a distinct and particularly glaring cast to it, because it involves a single human being. The selection of senators and judges hasn't been imbued by Americans with the same romance and theater that is increasingly attached to the selection of presidents.
It's not that the transformation of the presidency is a singular phenomenon; it's that it's a more vivid symbol.
They are only legal structures of hierarchy, for which no person or entity can be held accountable.
Tell that to Enron. Or their accountants.
Their law firm did get off scott free. Which is one reason I've hired them for my company.
I suggest that without this so-called nanny state we wouldn't have the ability to read and post freely on this website - we would likely be confined to physical labor.
Because nothing good happens unless the government does it.
When disaster strikes, people want an efficient and centralized response.
Well, which is it? An efficient response, or a centralized response? At the scale where FEMA operates, you can't have both.
You have an excellent point, Ben; the head of government should not also be head of state... it gives him far too much political cover.
and thousands of people bickering in democracy, nothing would ever be accomplished in Washington.
And this is a bad thing...how?
It is naive to think that life, liberty and justice can be perfectly ensured simultaneously and without compromise.
That's right. Life liberty and property can only be ensured by destroying life libertty and property.
It makes one wonder if the Constitution is an unworkable document in practice. Or to be a little more generous, perhaps it works only during good times. The first war, famine, natural disaster, etc. to come along results in human nature contriving to render it (the Constitution) as merely a guideline.
Chris, what the hell?
Having the power in corporations is not akin to placing the power with the people. Corporations are not people, or are they made up of people. They are only legal structures of hierarchy, for which no person or entity can be held accountable. Not only is the power not with the government, but it is not with the people working for said corporations.
Corporations don't have "power". As has been hammered home in threads previous, Safeway can't take my property, arrest me for smoking weed, restrict my speech etc. Only through a willing and receptive government can Safeway engage in this activity. Corporations may want power over their own customers, or even their communities, but they can only acquire it through well greased government official. Because government officials have increasingly absolute power over our lives through both legislative and regulatory process, those same politicians become attractive targets for corporate largesse. Remove the power of regulatory life and death from politicians, and there's no lever of power to wrap your hand around.
So this statement:
Regrettably, I believe we need a powerful president, if only to help prevent inevitable collapse of our government.
Makes almost no sense whatsoever. Our government is doing anything but collapsing, Chris. It's expanding to the point where there is going to be nothing but government.
With a more powerful president, it doesn't even come into the fore of your conscienceness that the president would be a powerful ally to have in ones court? That the incentive to apply pressure on said president to implement a coroporate agenda would only become more intense?
R C Dean wrote:
"...Because nothing good happens unless the government does it...."
Haven't we already established that socialism does not work? Look at the current earthquake disaster in China or the deadly heatwave a few years ago in France. Like Katrina, there is no amount of government effort that could produce results that pleases everyone. We in this country have such an unrealistic expectation on the ability of our givernment to be on constant standby for every possible scenarios like 9/11 or Katrina. It is just not going to happen. People need to start beganving like adults and take personal responsibility to ensure the safety of themselves and their own family.
Or to be a little more generous, perhaps it works only during good times.
Hence the statement that governments must now operate in a continuous crisis mode.
and thousands of people bickering in democracy, nothing would ever be accomplished in Washington.
It reminds me of the episode of the Simpsons where the comet is heading toward Springfield and the Senate is about to pass a bill to save Springfield but one senator attaches a $30 million rider "to support the perverted arts."
"All in favor of the amended Springfield-slash-pervert bill?"
In unison, "Nay".
Kent Brockman, who is reporting on the story, then says, " I've said it before and I'll say it again: democracy simply doesn't work."
Ok, so why do you wacko's on the right always support the worst abusers, Nixon, Cheney, the current Idiot in the White House? Spare me.
Nixon, Cheney, the current Idiot in the White House? Spare me.
Oh for a sec I thought you were referring to the H&R regulars. I think you meant to post here: http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/*/index
Always willing to help a lost soul.
It makes one wonder if the Constitution is an unworkable document in practice. Or to be a little more generous, perhaps it works only during good times. The first war, famine, natural disaster, etc. to come along results in human nature contriving to render it (the Constitution) as merely a guideline.
This is an excellent point. As a libertarian (with a lower-case l), I am always complaining to people about how the Constitution is being trampled on. I usually get ignored. Is my complaining valid?
To put it another way, assume that we somehow found politicians who we knew would scrupulously follow the Constituion, to the letter, and then elcted them. Would it work? Would our country flourish? Would it collapse? Would nothing much change? What do you guys think?
Doesn't anyone know how successful our Constitution is?? It's the oldest Constitution still in place for over 20 years. Yes, it's been added to but not changed. It's successful...you start messing with what the Founding Fathers' created that works and it's the beginning of the end!
Yes, it's been added to but not changed. It's successful...you start messing with what the Founding Fathers' created that works and it's the beginning of the end!
The constitution hasn't changed, its interpretation has.
PLEASE COMPARE THE TIMELINES OF THE RISE OF MULTI-NATIONAL CORPORATIONS,THAT CONTROL INTERNATIONAL MONOPOLIES OF TRADE AND GOODS,
TO THE RISE OF A POTUS'S POWERS.
THE LOBBYISTS FOR THESE MULTI-NATIONALS HAVE ALREADY BOUGHT AND PAID FOR THE US CONGRESS.
A POPULIST POTUS IS NOW PERCEIVED TO BE THE PEOPLE'S HERO (MORE LIKE THE LAST CHANCE).
MAKES ME WANNA LIGHT A NOVENA FOR ST. JUDE, THE PATRON SAINT OF LOST CAUSES.
Gene,
Well-written, as usual. But no mention of Samuel or Machiavelli.
Best,
Corbin
Paul, what the hell?
Corporations don't have "power".
You are actually alive today, aren't you? I mean you're not a ghost from 150 years ago?
Wake up boy. The government is merging with the corporate universe precisely because corporations do have so much power.
But the merger isn't happening, as you say, "because the corporations have bought the politicians". Nice conspiracy theory though.
The problem of modern corporations is a glaring hole in the libertarian universe. Because libertarians don't see the problem. Because "corporation" looks like "capitalism" to libertarians.
Capitalism only works when business is run by rational actors. But when the last of the one-man empires went "public", upon the deaths of people like Howard Hughes, the rational actors started getting shoved off the stage. [tell the Democrats not to worry though, the shoving is almost completely done and over by now]
Problem: corporations are not run by rational actors who are motivated by rational self interest. Corporations are run by comittees, who worship The Near-Future God (next quarter's stock market results). If the numbers look bad, the big brass have their golden parachutes.
The people who make the real decisions in corporate America today, don't have their asses on the line anywhere near to the degree that people like Howard Hughes did. They make the decisions but are largely insulated from real responsibility. It's the laid off employees who pay the real price for f*** ups.
Howard Hughes told congress where to go, when it needed doing. When was the last time you heard that a board of directors had done anything even close? Comittees do not tell the government where to go. They tell the governent "well, okay".
This whole arrangement in modern corporate America has eliminated rational self interest from the running of corporations, almost as effectively as socialism.
But I suppose if you're a true blooded libertarian you'll tell me that these incompetent corporations will die on the free market.
What you don't understand is that they won't die. Not because they shouldn't, but because all their competitors are just like they are. Who's going to put them out of business?
Or do you think YOU can compete with Safeway? How close to being a real competitor do you think you're going to get, before your empire has become part of the "publicly owned" corporate universe -- upon which, you will be the same kind of beast you started out trying to slay?
The "market" doesn't work today like it did 200 years ago, or even 100 years ago. Wake up.
The "market" doesn't work today like it did 200 years ago, or even 100 years ago. Wake up.
And the solution to this problem that you have so insightfully pointed out is.....???
willful censorship by OMISSION re not one MENTION of Republican Candidate for President Congressman Ron Paul.
the writer, Mr Welch and the posters above hop/skipped/jumped judiciously around mentioning Dr. Paul and his message of freedom and liberty AND CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT and his 30 YEAR warninig of Executive Branch tyranny and the GOP condoning it, calling for it and enacting it.
Thanks for continuing the shell game.
It's interesting that Gene's article have brought both the Paul-bots and the leftist fans of the imperial Presidency to Hit'n'Run. I'd be curious to know which sites are linking the article.
Where in the Constitution does it say that it is the Federal government's responsibility to respond to natural disasters or has the right to collect income tax? The latter alone would have given our Founding Fathers an instant heart attack! To think that we can some how sustain the spirit of the Constitution in its original form is a childish idealism. In fact, this much revered piece of paper has been manipulated so many times to suit the social agenda of the moment. In the 60's it was manipulated to suit the feminist and civil right movement when those ideas became popular. As Americans, we want to see our system of government rests on rock solid ideals and foundation where in reality such ideals and foundation shifts continuously along popular line. I'm sure all of our founding fathers will be rolling in their graves should they have the opportunity to read our so-called Constitution in its current form. Believing that our Federal government should literally operate within the words of the Constitution is like believing that the Noah's ark is a real boat sitting somewhere on top of a mountain in Turkey waiting to be discovered by the truly faithful. Nut! Get real people and be thankful you have the luxury in this country to whine about silly things like this. This country is not in trouble until the day when a guy like Ralph Nadar becomes the front runner in any election. Then you know people are REALLY pissed.
Ebenezer:
WTF?!!!
Wake up boy. The government is merging with the corporate universe precisely because corporations do have so much power.
The government isn't chasing corporations, the corporations are chasing government. Of course there's a merger. What part of my previous message did you utterly and completely fail to read? Talk about waking up. The regulatory state is asking for corporate donations every time new legislation or regulation is passed.
The problem of modern corporations is a glaring hole in the libertarian universe. Because libertarians don't see the problem. Because "corporation" looks like "capitalism" to libertarians.
Wow. WOW! Hey guys, get a load of "Ebenezer". He's another one of those... oh, let me guess "progressives" which has become horribly confused between corporatism and capitalism. If he actually bothered to understand capitalism, he'd realise that the two have nothing to do with eachother.
The corporate state, as you and I are both talking have little to do with capitalism. But I have to admit I wasn't prepared to deliver a 100 level primer on capitalism in this thread.
Start with this article for a decent introduction: http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0411e.asp
Comittees do not tell the government where to go. They tell the governent "well, okay".
Uhm, ok, I'm not sure what you mean by this, but I'll comment.
Modern corporations not only embrace, but ask congress for legislation and regulation (in return for hefty campaign contributions) because often its found that said regulations thin out the market of smaller competitors, and shores up market share for existing players. If regulation is initially proposed by government and fought by corporations, a way of watching this in action is to watch the change from opposing regulation turn to acceptance and even embracing said regulation. Someone in the board room figured out how to make money on it, and strangle the smaller startups. You might do some reading on the rapid embrace of regulation of baby formula advertising by the two largest formula manufacturers.
This whole arrangement in modern corporate America has eliminated rational self interest from the running of corporations, almost as effectively as socialism.
"Rational self interest". Hmm. Interesting choice of phrase. I have self interest. By definition, it is an interesest held only by myself, but yet you can define it as rational or irrational. How then, can it be called "self interest" if I can't not only define the interest, but its rationality? We'll just let that one go.
But I suppose if you're a true blooded libertarian you'll tell me that these incompetent corporations will die on the free market.
Not a corporation that has successfully merged with government. See "too big to fail doctrine". Smaller corporations that have not merged successfully with government do fail. This is why large corporate america so despises capitalism.
So please, don't come here and preach about the evils of capitalism, then buttress it with a diatribe about large, publicly traded corporations and "public/private partnerships". We'll engage you for a while, but you'll be chucked into the dustbin of progressives that repeatedly try to conflate the corporate state with capitalism.
Seems to me Ron Paul would be a great person to fix this problem. Too bad Reason tried to destroy his presidential bid instead of promote it, and CATO has just simply ignored it entirely.
Of course this is the story of the libertarian movement over the last 40 years - destroying each other while the Republicrats march forward unabated.
Well said Paul. Corporations are held in check by the will of the people by how well they perform. It is rare to see a corporation deliberately do risky or unwise things simply because its executives don't care since they have golden parachutes anyway. Corporations attempt to merge with government, understandably, because thats where the concentration of both money and power are.
Healy has it exactly right, and it's great to see it on this month's cover.
So, how do Reason and Hit & Run reconcile this with their own massive, breathless coverage of the presidential campaign? Actually, not even the presidential campaign at this point -- the freaking primaries. (Looking at you, Weigel.)
Such overwhelming coverage carries an implicit message: The presidency is Very, Very Important, and we think that's the way it should be. If it were presented with more of a watchdog vibe -- like, keeping a wary, cynical eye on the public's misguided hype -- the coverage volume would make sense. But it's not. It's presented the same way the rest of the media presents it: as an unquestioned really big deal.
So long as we treat the presidency like a powerful monarchy, we're going to get wannabe monarchs trying to be really powerful. I don't think that's what libertarians want.
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Such overwhelming coverage carries an implicit message: The presidency is Very, Very Important, and we think that's the way it should be. If it were presented with more of a watchdog vibe -- like, keeping a wary, cynical eye on the public's misguided hype -- the coverage volume would make sense. But it's not. It's presented the same way the rest of the media presents it: as an unquestioned really big deal.
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It has been said that we get the kind of leaders we deserve. As Gene Healy points out, we have been demanding that the president do more and more, so we effectively have an elected king. How long is it before we make it an official monarchy? Not long if we continue on this path.
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Hero worship seems to be inherent in human societies. Examples include Caesar, Jesus, Muhammed, Washington, Lenin, Mao, Reagan, and now Obama. The framers of the U.S. Constitution were correct, we need to restrain this impulse, and stop demanding an imperial presidency. All people make mistakes, and people with nearly unlimited power make mistakes that hurt multitudes of people
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It has been said that we get the kind of leaders we deserve. As Gene Healy points out, we have been demanding that the president do more and more, so we effectively have an elected king. How long is it before we make it an official monarchy? Not long if we continue on this path.
I can remember hearing alex jones discussing this. He was right then and still is now.
Please update this post with your latest research into this fascinating subject. The US is now full of corruption!
Hello:
The 19th century did see presidents occasionally taking independent action of enormous consequences: Jefferson purchased Louisiana without congressional approval, Madison seized West Florida in 1810, Andrew Jackson governed as an irritable populist, and Abraham Lincoln expanded presidential power dramatically throughout the course of the cataclysmic Civil War. Yet taken as a whole, the 19th-century presidency was a pale shadow of the plebiscitary office we know today.
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"Rational self interest". Hmm. Interesting choice of phrase. I have self interest. By definition, it is an interesest held only by myself, but yet you can define it as rational or irrational. How then, can it be called "self interest" if I can't not only define the interest, but its rationality? We'll just let that one go.
But I suppose if you're a true blooded libertarian you'll tell me that these incompetent corporations will die on the free market.
Not a corporation that has successfully merged with government. See "too big to fail doctrine". Smaller corporations Audi A4 that have not merged successfully with government do fail. This is why large corporate america so despises capitalism.
Wow. WOW! Hey guys, get a load of "Ebenezer". He's another one of those... oh, let me guess "progressives" which has become horribly confused between corporatism and capitalism. If he actually bothered to understand capitalism, he'd realise that the two have nothing to do with eachother.
Great article. I think I've run into each type during my career. I just recently had someone call out of the blue, quickly describe a confusing marketing/e-commerce project while stating they have estimates from all over the world and they need the project as soon as possible. Needless to say, I avoided this prospect. Aside from the time or two that I didn't get paid, I'd say the worst experience I had was while I was subcontracting and had to deal with a "Picky Pickerson" type. I ended up doing something like 30 revisions only Citroen C3 to have that contact leave the company and to learn that her boss never saw a thing. I was Fiat 500 being paid hourly so I didn't lose anything but my time and my patience.
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