Saturday, November 13, 2010

An Independent view - 2

Sometimes election outcomes are exquisite. This time voters resuscitated republicans and slapped democrats on the side of the head – needed actions I'd say – putting professional politicians on notice. Nearly perfect! (If only a viable, organized, third party had emerged, but alas no.) Because both parties are not yet honorable, I don’t believe much of what their principals or media reps have to say. At the federal level, I view the vortex of fiscal (taxes, budgets, debt)—policy (government overreach) – and vision (individual liberty vs. state-mandated “freedom” and “equality”, aka “fairness”) as the central problem of our time. Just what did the 2010 voting do? You have to step back and look at the big picture.
Don’t waste time considering whether tea and republican parties get along, or whether conservatives and moderates survive as democrats. These are distractions used to fill television time and print space. Resolution will come with time. Rather consider this. Federal government is stalled for a couple of years. There will be a lot of flailing by participants practicing their posturing, but not much will occur in this vortex. Actions will occur on the periphery and the central paralysis will have its greatest impact in the states, particularly California and New York and states similarly comprised.
In CA and NY voters achieved a sublime accomplishment at precisely the right time. They left in charge the principals who created the highly unstable budgetary situations existing therein. It’s perfect karma. In California and NY, voters stuck with what got us here (perhaps the democrats successfully demonized opponents.) Perfect. Now democrats are responsible for cleaning up the messes they have created – as it should be. If I were a republican strategist in these two states, I’d leave state governance to the democrats until the state fiscal problems were solved. I’d concentrate on city, town, village and county politics and build the grass roots in the stinking manure spread everywhere by hapless state machines. If republicans (or a third party) act honorably at the local level, in a couple of generations, there would not be a democrat left in these states.
Voters elsewhere have said to residents of CA and NY, go for it, but don’t come to us for help, because we chose a different path. This week Arnold called an emergency session because the CA budget crisis is worse than anticipated. I’d bet the actual figure is worse than the stated $25B. In CA and NY states we’ll see what democratic control delivers to “fix” the problems. These are two experiments that I will watch with almost morbid fascination. High income families are already leaving, taking incomes with them, so higher taxation will only increase the flight. Here’s a solution progressives in CA might consider – a state takeover of the entertainment industry – it’s a big cash cow and those actors make way too much money. NY could do a similar thing to the financial industry. That’s a joke. I reject state control of any business but my cynicism has reached a level at which it would not surprise me to see these fanciful actions seriously considered.

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