Before Promising To Solve the World's Big Problems, Politicians Should Aim To Fix Potholes
The lonely crusade against government hubris.

Upon election to office, politicians come to believe that they have the wherewithal to solve the world's toughest problems. They usually mishandle the nuts-and-bolts chores they're charged with addressing, yet dream of altering the Earth's climate and eliminating enduring human conditions such as inequality and poverty.
Most pols view themselves as the second coming of John F. Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln, or even Ronald Reagan, when most of us just want public servants who make sure the potholes are filled, the streets are marginally safe, the government budget balances, the trash gets picked up on time, and homeless people aren't defecating in our local park.
The latest example of such governmental hubris comes from the county of Los Angeles which, you know, can't even put an end to alleged gangs among the ranks of its own highly paid deputy sheriffs nor figure out how to run its child-protective services agency in a competent and humane manner. Now county officials want to "solve" the crisis of loneliness.
Before Christmas, the county Board of Supervisors "took on a problem that is typically private and put it in the public eye," The Los Angeles Times reported. "They voted unanimously to ask staffers to research how residents are affected by loneliness and isolation and how the county can help—particularly during a pandemic where in-person contact has been off-limits."
Loneliness is a serious mental-health scourge, but the last part of the above sentence provides insight into the main reason for the current bout of isolation. Governments want to study why we feel lonely and disconnected, but government pandemic rules limited the ability of Americans to socialize with one another as we approach two years of mandated social-distancing rules.
"Loneliness and social isolation can be as damaging to health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day, researchers warned in a recent webcast, and the problem is particularly acute among seniors, especially during holidays," according to the Health Resources and Services Administration. You probably didn't even know that there is a federal agency with such a name, but I digress.
"A Harvard University survey conducted in October 2020 found that feelings of social isolation are on the rise during the pandemic, and that those hardest hit are older teens and young adults—61 percent of respondents felt 'serious loneliness,'" noted a Boston University report. "And social media, where young people live and breathe more than any previous generation, is not helping."
Say it ain't so. I'm not sure what Los Angeles County staffers will add to the debate, but the board might have thought about that scenario when it previously embraced draconian shutdowns rather than more reasonable and flexible pandemic-related restrictions. This is such a government phenomenon—create a crisis, then vow to solve it for us.
Fortunately, the county isn't planning on repeating its mistakes as the Omicron variant emerges, at least not as of this writing. I don't mean to be too hard on county supervisors, who at least acknowledge the pandemic-related policy causes of the Great Alienation. Their intentions are good, but you know what they say about good intentions.
"We didn't mean to do it," Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said during the board meeting. "We don't mean to cause isolation. But we are, in some cases, a part of the problem." Indeed. Government officials don't mean to cause many of the problems they do cause, which is good reason to at least show skepticism next time they want to save us from something.
Do a Google search of "loneliness epidemic" and you'll find multiple news stories, government statements, and academic reports—some even pre-dating COVID-19. A well-known book from 22 years ago, "Bowling Alone," spotlighted the crisis in connectedness caused by trends in family, work, and media.
I don't minimize this issue, but my wife offered my kids the best advice: Get together with friends. Turn off the TV. Log out of Facebook. Perhaps I should put her in touch with county brain trusts. Some issues are beyond the pale of government intervention. Sometimes we have to take control of our lives.
We all play along with the notion that politicians can solve all of our problems, even though we know better. I don't know anyone who has heard, say, Gov. Gavin Newsom's soaring rhetoric and come away thinking he'll really change the Earth's climate—even as he fails to keep his own Employment Development Department from sending billions of dollars in unemployment funds to scammers.
It's not a Democrat vs. Republican thing, either, as GOP politicians have suddenly discovered the supposed crisis of masculinity just as they have long bemoaned troubles in the American family. Politicians are adept at mining votes by identifying societal shortcomings, but their solutions always involve giving them more money and power.
I eagerly await Los Angeles County's report on loneliness, but I still wish county supervisors would spend more time filling the potholes.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Fixing potholes don’t signal virtues. Nor do they result in more people on the dole. Unfortunately, it is exactly what government should be doing.
Nor do they result in more people on the dole.
Where there is a will, there is a way or how I learned never to say never:
1 guy to drive the truck, 2 guys to flag traffic, 2 guy to pour the asphalt, 2 guys to tamp it, 2 guys to re-mark the pavement, 5 guy to supervise the crew, 8 guys to manage the crew supervisors and a union rule dictating 1 crew can only work 1 pothole per day. Hire hundreds of crews to sit around all day waiting for the call from the thousands of dispatchers hired to man the phone banks.
Ahhhh, you've been to Maryland.
Or Massachusetts
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Last summer in Columbus I saw a city crew pouring a new sidewalk. There was like a dozen of them... all working at once! I thought I was dreaming it.
That's the exact topic of this episode - Democrats are FAR too interested in "saving the world" to actually fix any of the actual day-to-day problems that taxpayers face.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-42-democrat-incompetence-the-libertarian/id1574791889?i=1000547052929
Government should clean its room.
Government is a pack rat, a hoarder. Not only will it never clean its room, but anything that it ever takes into its room is never leaving.
Government needs an enema.
Government is the enema of the people.
We're coming full circle. It'll be a couple more years, and probably one hell of a nasty recession, but we're getting there.
"Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem."
-- Ronald Reagan, Inaugural Address, January 20, 1981
He was, and remains, correct on that point.
But potholes are caused by Climate Change, and we can't fix potholes until we fix Climate Change!
Freezing and thawing, my man. If we eliminate the freezing, we eliminate the thawing. Ergo, no more potholes. Climate change ain't all bad.
That's not what The Science says.
Government - "Everyone stay home, social distance, and don't meet in person."
Government - "Why is there an epidemic of loneliness? We gotta do something!!"
Government - "Kids have to stay at home and not participate in team sports."
Government - "Why is there an epidemic of juvenile obesity? We gotta do something!!"
And "do something" inevitably means "raise taxes and spend the money on a big government-run program that will be administered by my spouse/mistress with contracts to my donors and kickbacks to my brother-in-law; I'll make my dough by insider trading".
When the government breaks your legs only the government can be trusted to supply the crutches
Mayor Turner of Houston made filling potholes his campaign slogan a few years back and he won. He then basically did it once he was elected and while not beloved, he is generally "a liked by most" mayor of the 4th largest city in the nation.
Yeah, we're all a little ronery.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEaKX9YYHiQ
The politicians want to focus on "world problems" because they can't fix smaller problems. With big, vaguely defined problems it's much easier to move the goalposts and blame failures on the Kulaks hoarders and wreckers. See Covid.
Was it Domino's Pizza that ran the adds saying they were filling potholes? Seemed like a good marketing idea, but a smoother ride would not improve their inedible pizza.
You must live in Shitville, because Domino’s in my highly populated census designated place has very good pizza.
‘ "We didn't mean to do it," Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said during the board meeting. "We don't mean to cause isolation. But we are, in some cases, a part of the problem."’
What do you mean “you didn’t mean to?” The policies are an accident, or you weren’t even aware you were making tradeoffs when you passed them?
You can just come out and say, “We knew there would be a mental health cost to our policies, but we were so scared of COVID that we took the risk.” That’s the most generous way to look at it.
Foreseeable consequences are never accidental.
They usually mishandle the nuts-and-bolts chores they're charged with addressing, yet dream of altering the Earth's climate and eliminating enduring human conditions such as inequality and poverty.
PLEAASSSEEEEE fix the damn potholes.
Ann Arbor, MI area roads are terrible with potholes and roads that are warped to the point that they're worse than parking lot speed bumps, in 55 mph zones. Where's all that trillions of infrastructure money and gas taxes going? Oh, blue side of the state, nevermind.
No shit. Govt often fails in its most fundamental jobs, yet a lot folks want to give those same people even more authority. Worse, they want to give those people authority in a subject they know little about.
>>most of us just want public servants who make sure the potholes are filled
we had a mayor Laura Miller who literally and millennial-literally did a fantastic job with the pothole filling but at the same time rejected deals to have the Cowboys and Rangers build in Dallas instead of Arlington ... many of the potholes are back.
Being a mayor used to be about making sure potholes got fixed and trash was collected. Now it’s become a progtard virtue signaling contest to be the most fossil fuel/gun/hate speech free zone. In fact, I am not surprised that they are ignoring potholes because they are anti-car.
This is the local political version of "clean your room".
The public schools have been closed here all week beyond just the two snow days we had. Fortunately our kids go to a small Christian school that managed to open. For the public school kids, they are getting “virtual” instruction, which means they are given assignments to do and can meet with a teacher during office hours (whatever that means) and somehow this is counted as a full school day. Lots of parents are puzzled and pissed, but they will continue to elect the same school board idiots who refuse to even consider charter schools. Ditto our mayor who is vacationing in Spain while the city crews did almost nothing to clean up the snow and canceled trash pickup for a week, he keeps blaming the floods we’ve had on global warming and not the fact that the storm drains are clogged and nothing has been done to fix the flooding infrastructure in 50 years. But somehow all he needs to do is mentioned climate change, gun control and pose for photo ops with kids, and voters forgive and forget.
Then there’s our soon-to-be ex governor Ralph “Coonman” who sat on his hands while folks were stuck in their cars on I-95 for almost 24 hrs. But why should he care? Democrats only respond to the pajama class nowadays, and they don’t have to drive or send their kids to public schools.
Shit, idiot Democrats blamed the fiasco on Governor-elect Youngkin, never mind that he's not actually the Governor yet.
Most pols view themselves as the second coming of John F. Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln, or even Ronald Reagan
I agree. Let's shoot them already.
"We didn't mean to do it," Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said during the board meeting. "We don't mean to cause isolation. But we are, in some cases, a part of the problem."
Zelda Now cut that out!
https://youtu.be/1l2hqoBHA5o?t=131
Pols DON'T believe they can solve global problems, and they don't believe they can't. They don't CARE whether they can.
What they care about is giving the appearance that they COULD and WOULD solve such problems and, if in any way possible, that they HAVE, or ALMOST have, and would have if not for ...
No they shouldn't. The function of government is to defend liberty not fill potholes. Is this a libertarian magazine or not?
The scope of the federal government goes so far beyond what it should be doing (very limited) to the point it does nothing well or efficiently. But the only thing the Democrats talk about is doing more. How about do the things you're doing now right? Because you're not.
Who would have thought that "social distancing" would result in isolation? Truly, this is a most unexpected outcome!
Public roads carry much more traffic and much heavier traffic than the roads in private communities. I’m happy to criticize government, but that’s a silly comparison.