MyFox
 

Ivyman68's Blog

by Ivyman68

Last Post 10 days, 17 hours Ago


Talking Versus Doing

By DAVID BROOKS Published: May 20, 2008 New York Times

In 1965, Mancur Olson wrote a classic book called “The Logic of Collective Action,” which pointed out that large, amorphous groups are often less powerful politically than small, organized ones. He followed it up with “The Rise and Decline of Nations.” In that book, Olson observed that as the number of small, organized factions in a society grows, the political culture becomes more divisive, the economy becomes more rigid and the nation loses vitality.

If you look around America today, you see the Olson logic playing out. Interest groups turn every judicial fight into an ideological war. They lobby for more spending on the elderly, even though the country is trillions of dollars short of being able to live up to its promises. They’ve turned environmental concern into subsidies for corn growers and energy concerns into subsidies for oil companies.

The $307 billion farm bill that rolled through Congress is a perfect example of the pattern. Farm net income is up 56 percent over the past two years, yet the farm bill plows subsidies into agribusinesses, thoroughbred breeders and the rest.

The growers of nearly every crop will get more money. Farmers in the top 1 percent of earners qualify for federal payments. Under the legislation, the government will buy sugar for roughly twice the world price and then resell it at an 80 percent loss. Parts of the bill that would have protected wetlands and wildlife habitat were deleted or shrunk.

My colleagues on The Times’s editorial page called the bill “disgraceful.” My former colleagues at The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page ripped it as a “scam.” Yet such is the logic of collective action; the bill is certain to become law. It passed with 81 votes in the Senate and 318 in the House — enough to override President Bush’s coming veto. Nearly everyone in Congress got something.

The question amid this supposed change election is: Who is going to end this sort of thing?

Barack Obama talks about taking on the special interests. This farm bill would have been a perfect opportunity to do so. But Obama supported the bill, just as he supported the 2005 energy bill that was a Christmas tree for the oil and gas industries.

Obama’s support may help him win Iowa, but it will lead to higher global food prices and more hunger in Africa. Moreover, it raises questions about how exactly he expects to bring about the change that he promises.

If elected, Obama’s main opposition will not come from Republicans. It will come from Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill. Already, the Democratic machine is reborn. Lobbyists are now giving 60 percent of their dollars to Democrats, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. The pharmaceutical industry, the defense industry and the financial sector all give more money to Democrats than Republicans. If Obama is actually going to bring about change, he’s going to have to ruffle these sorts of alliances. If he can’t do it in an easy case like the farm bill, will he ever?

John McCain opposed the farm bill. In an impassioned speech on Monday, he declared: “It would be hard to find any single bill that better sums up why so many Americans in both parties are so disappointed in the conduct of their government, and at times so disgusted by it.”

McCain has been in Congress for decades, but he has remained a national rather than a parochial politician. The main axis in his mind is not between Republican and Democrat. It’s between narrow interest and patriotic service. And so it is characteristic that he would oppose a bill that benefits the particular at the expense of the general.

In fact, in this issue, McCain may have found a theme to unify his so far scattershot campaign. He has always been an awkward ideological warrior. In any case, this year may not be the best year for Republicans to launch a right versus left crusade. But McCain has infinitely better grounds than Obama to run as a do-what-it-takes reformer.

He has a long record of taking on not only the other party, but his own. In the current Weekly Standard, the brilliant young writer Yuval Levin suggests that McCain put reforming America’s decrepit governing institutions at the center of his presidential race.

Levin points out that the health care system, the immigration system, the regulatory system and the entitlement system all need reforms. Instead of talking about personal honor or perpetual tax cuts, McCain should focus relentlessly on modernization.

In fact, Monday in Chicago, McCain declared: “In all my reforms, the goal is not to denigrate government but to make it better, not to deride government but to restore its good name.”

Obama, sad to say, failed the farm bill test. McCain may have found a theme for a nation that has lost faith in its own institutions.

3 Comments |  Add a Comment

Member Comments Total Comments: 3
Page 1 of 1
Dak413 read my blog view my photos
Jun 11, 2008 | 7:33 PM

being someone that grew up with farming back in the day when there were many small farmers , most had a section or less {640 acres}, they did reasonably well, untill the '70's and due tothe fact the government at that time backed the oil companies in their so called shotage and doubled the price of gas , at the time I lived near Spokane, Wa, every abandoned station in spokane had full tanks, and there was long lines at the pumps, and the tank farm in the Spokane Valley, whih was large, had every tank full, one night a tanker came in with a load, and unloaded it on the ground, cuz all the tnks were full just a couple years later the farm euiptment manufacturers, claimed shortGE even tho there wasn't, and the price of farm machinery tripled, , that was the demise of the small farmer , enter corporation farming, the big farms wwere buying out the small ones with the price support checks, cuz they didn't need them , and still don't !!

Dak413 read my blog view my photos
Jun 11, 2008 | 7:46 PM

I doubt many in congress have the slightest idea about farming, due to the fact few of them have ever done any physical work , but since the 30's dems have subsidized farmers , and still do, I doubt many understand why even , while the corporate farms are getting rich, they still pay barely minimum wage , and wonder why , noone wants to work there, a farm worker has no with holding accept for SS, so if ya think farm workers are paying income tax, guess again, so there again is another area, that farmers make money off everyone else, cuz they don't with hold for taxes, which is attractive to illegal workers, cuz they aren't gonna file either , another area the illegal hurts the rest of the country , so is their any elected officials in the Dem party that votes for these huge farm bills for any other reason, than campaign doantion, it is doubtful !!!

philmcgroin read my blog
Jun 12, 2008 | 9:21 AM

If our government would stop paying farmers to NOT grow crops, we would have plenty of food and mabey a little extra money to help with other problems in this country. It's the most wasteful bunch of crap to pay someone to let their land sit idol, when they could be growing food on it. Pass that Farm bill!!!!

Page 1 of 1


Write your comment below:




Ivyman68

I am a native Texan. Whether I express a liberal, moderate, or conservative viewpoint depends on the topic being discussed. I enjoy talking with people who are able to discuss differing opinions without being hateful or mean spirited. I like to have my beliefs challenged. I like to challenge the beliefs of others.

Member Since: 2/1/2008