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| Current Trend By Norman E. Hooben | 
Achieve Ye This Goal
by Mark Stein
I’m also issuing a new goal for America,” declared  President Obama at his State of the Union on Tuesday. We’ll come to the  particular “goal” he “issued” momentarily, but before we do, consider that  formulation: Did you know the president of the United States is now in the  business of “issuing goals” for his subjects to live up to?
Strange how the monarchical urge persists even in a  republic two-and-a-third centuries old. Many commentators have pointed out  that the modern State of the Union is in fairly obvious mimicry of the Speech  from the Throne that precedes a new legislative session in British  Commonwealth countries and continental monarchies, but this is to miss the  key difference. When the Queen or her viceroy reads a Throne Speech in  Westminster, Ottawa, or Canberra, it’s usually the work of a government with  a Parliamentary majority: In other words, the stuff she’s announcing is  actually going to happen. That’s why, lest any enthusiasm for this or that legislative  proposal be detected, the apolitical monarch overcompensates by reading  everything in as flat and unexpressive a monotone as possible. Underneath the  ancient rituals — the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod getting the door of  the House of Commons slammed in his face three times — it’s actually a very  workmanlike affair.
The State of the Union is the opposite. The president  gives a performance, extremely animatedly, head swiveling from left-side  prompter to right-side prompter, continually urging action now: “Let’s start  right away. We can get this done. . . . We can fix this. . . . Now is the  time to do it. Now is the time to get it done.” And at the end of the speech,  nothing gets done, and nothing gets fixed, and, after a few days’  shadowboxing between admirers and detractors willing to pretend it’s some  sort of serious legislative agenda, every single word of it is forgotten  until the next one.
In that sense, like BeyoncĂ© lip-synching the National  Anthem at the inauguration, the State of the Union embodies the decay of  America’s political institutions into a simulacrum of responsible government  rather than the real thing, and a simulacrum ever more divorced from the real  issues facing the country. “Over the last few years, both parties have worked  together to reduce the deficit by more than $2.5 trillion,” said the  president. Really? Who knew? “Now we need to finish the job.” Just one more  push is all it’ll take.
What’s he on about? The annual “deficit” has been over  a trillion for every year of Obama’s presidency. The cumulative deficits  have, in fact (to use a quaint expression), increased the national debt by $6  trillion. Yet Obama claims Washington has “reduced the deficit” by $2.5  trillion and all we need to do is “finish the job.” Presumably this is a  reference to allegedly agreed deficit reductions over the next decade, or  quarter-century, or whatever. In other words, Obama has saved $2.5 trillion  of Magical Fairyland money, which happily frees him up to talk about the  really critical issues like high-speed rail and green-energy solutions. These  concepts, too, exist mainly in Magical Fairyland: If you think Obama-approved  taxpayer-funded “high-speed rail” means you’ll be able to board a train that  goes at French or Japanese speeds, I’ve a high-speed rail bridge to Brooklyn  to sell you.
Take, for example, the “goal” Obama “issued”: “Let’s  cut in half the energy wasted by our homes and businesses over the next 20  years.” What does that even mean? How would you even know when you’ve  accomplished that “goal”? What percentage of energy used by my home and  business is “wasted”? In what sense? Who says? Who determines that? Is it 37  percent? Twenty-three percent? So we’re going to cut it down to 18.5 per cent  or 11.5 percent by 2033, is that the “goal”?
Barack Obama is not the first president to “issue”  “goals.” John F. Kennedy also did, although he was more mindful of the  constitutional niceties:
“This nation should commit itself to achieving the  goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning  him safely to the earth.”
That’s a goal! No wiggle room. A monkey on the moon  won’t count, nor an unmanned drone. We need an actual living American  standing on the surface of the moon holding Old Glory by December 31, 1969.
Whoever’s writing Obama’s speeches these days either  has a tin ear — you don’t “issue” goals, you set them — or he has a very  refined sense of the ersatz nature of contemporary political discourse.  Old-school monarchs issued “edicts.” One thinks of King Charles the Bald in  his Edict of Pistres in a.d.  864, announcing among other things that henceforth selling a horse to a  Viking would be punishable by death. No doubt the odd equine transaction  slipped through the regulatory net, but historians seem to agree that the  sale of mounts to Norsemen certainly diminished. And more to the point his  courtiers would have thought Charles the Bald was an even bigger schmuck than  they already did if, instead of an edict, he was issuing a new goal to reduce  the sale of horses to Vikings by 50 percent by the year 884.
These days, the edicts are issued by commissars deep in  the bowels of the hyper-regulatory state, and most of them are, like King  Charles, a little too bald in their assumptions of government power to be  bandied in polite society. So, in public, the modern ruler issues goals,  orders dreams, commands unicorns. People seem to like this sort of thing. No  accounting for taste, but there we are. “America moves forward only when we  do so together,” declared the president. I dunno. Maybe it’s just me, but the  whole joint seems to be seizing up these days: The more “activist” Big  Government gets, the more inactive the nation at large.
But the president’s sonorous, gaseous banalities did  serve notice that the Republicans don’t want to get too far behind on his  “goals.” He’s right that Washington “moves forward” like a pantomime horse  lurching awkwardly across the stage and with the Republicans always playing  the rear end. A “bipartisan” agreement means that the Democrats get what they  want now and Republicans at some distant far-off date. Try it: New taxes and  government programs now, alleged deficit reduction of $2.5 trillion a decade  hence. Illegal-immigrant amnesty now, alleged rigorous border enforcement the  day after tomorrow. Washington has settled into a comfortable pattern:  instant gratification for spending binges that do nothing for any of the  problems they purport to be solving assuaged by meaningless commitments to  start the twelve-step program next year, or next decade, or next century. No  other big spender among the advanced democracies lies to itself about the  gulf between its appetites and its self-discipline.
“Tonight, let’s declare,” declared the president, “that  in the wealthiest nation on earth . . . ” Whoa, hold it right there. The  “wealthiest nation on earth” is actually the Brokest Nation in History. But  don’t worry: “Nothing I’m proposing tonight should increase our deficit by a  single dime.”
“Should”? Consciously or not, the president is telling  us his State of the Union show is a crock, and he knows it. Under Magical  Fairyland budgeting, Obama-sized government “shouldn’t” increase our debt.  Yet mysteriously it does. Every time. Because, in a political culture  institutionally incapable of course correction, that’s just the way it is.
— Mark Steyn,  a National  Review columnist, is  the author of After America: Get Ready for Armageddon.  © 2013 Mark Steyn
See also: Pundit & Pundette The faux must go on

There is a rule to remember about Obama:
ReplyDeleteIf his mouth is open, he is lying.