Endless scandals and screwups: Simply the result of too much Big Government?

Little-Acorn

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Jun 20, 2006
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Liberals have been telling us for decades (or longer) that government is the best instrument for providing "social justice", righting wrongs, and making up for deficiencies. Since those things abound in any human society, their response it to constantly grow government, assign it to clear up problems here, regulate there, and restrict in another place. In this way, we will wind up with a better society.

Yet now we have had an opportunity to examine closely how that is working out. And it's not a pretty sight. Three different groups in our government have flatly messed up recently - and it's the liberals themselves who tell us that this is so. The acting chief of the IRS said flatly that "We are doing horrible customer service here."

It is NOT a result of leaders who have done the wrong thing, guided government the wrong way. In every case, the leftists themselves tell us, the leader of the particular section, had nothing to do with it. It was NOT the result of the policy for that section. Every time, it is low-level underlings who have screwed up, who have done something other than what their managers intended.

And this should not be a surprise to us, those same liberals tell us. One of President Obama's senior advisers, came out and said flatly that there is no way the President could have been aware of the various things that were going wrong. "You know, we have a large government. Part of being president is there’s so much beneath you, that you can’t know because the government is so vast.", he said.

Time and again, the reasons why things have gone wrong, is because managers could not know what was going on in their own departments. The acting Chief of the IRS said that he knew nothing about what his agency was doing while targeting conservatives - he only found out through news reports. Even the President has said more than once that he knew nothing about various events until he saw the news.

Are we beginning to see what the the most basic problem is, in large central government? It is made of nothing but offices staffed by ordinary people, with no particular expertise in doing what they are doing. The people who did so much wrong in the IRS, were not top-flight accountants - they were basically low-level bureaucrats. Those who dropped the ball in Benghazi, were not our top diplomats or politicians, they were underlings who did not pass on messages or made a bad decision on whether to dispatch a rescue mission that was ready and waiting. The top guy at Justice did not sign off on the warrant to seize AP phone records, it was someone lower, who obviously goofed and violated the reporters' 1st amendment rights - something the top guy would never have done.

Liberals from the President on down are telling us straight out, that the problem is that government is too big. And that's why so much is going wrong: It is impossible, they tell us, to control all those people in all those offices.

Conservatives have been saying this for years, of course, if not for generations. But now that the big-government advocates themselves are finally agreeing... shouldn't we start listening? And doing something about it?

It's time to start cutting back on government. For the simple reason that growing government is creating more problems than it is solving. EVERYONE involved, is telling us so. Is there anyone left, anywhere, who is not saying the same?

It is unanimous, at last. Time to get rid of Big Government. The very people who brought it to us, are now telling us that they cannot control it, and had nothing to do with the repeated screwups, violations of our rights, and even deaths that have resulted directly from the unweildy ponderousness of the government.

I'm convinced. Is there anyone left who isn't?

So, what do we do about it?
 
The bigger government gets, and the more power given to higher levels of government, the less accountable it becomes to the people.
 
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LO2eh6f5Go0]Tim Hawkins - The Government Can - YouTube[/ame]
 
The centralization of power has been going on since Day One of our Republic, and it is far past time to back up a ways.

The more centralized the power, the more easily that power is captured by special interests with a lot of money.
 
Republican House Speaker John Boehner announced today that the GOP will vote to repeal the USAPATRIOT Act as many times as it takes because Obama is a Marxist tyrant who is abusing his big government Sharia authority.
 
Some people would like to pretend that influence peddling and lobbyists are at the heart of our problems which is bull. The fact is that our bloated bureaucracy has become inefficient and government feels that it does not have to account for its actions and this is our most pressing problem.

Wherever you look this is evident:

State Department inspector general issues alert over $6 billion in contracting money - The Washington Post

IRS wastes billions in bogus claims for Earned Income Tax Credit - Washington Times

Sadly our politicians seem to feel it's their money. "You didn't build it" is increasingly their attitude.

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The state legislatures would then be doing their own preemption.

So let's come up with a better solution.
 
Republican House Speaker John Boehner announced today that the GOP will vote to repeal the USAPATRIOT Act as many times as it takes because Obama is a Marxist tyrant who is abusing his big government Sharia authority.

:cuckoo:
 
Some people would like to pretend that influence peddling and lobbyists are at the heart of our problems which is bull. The fact is that our bloated bureaucracy has become inefficient and government feels that it does not have to account for its actions and this is our most pressing problem.

If the central government was not given the power, then a bureacracy would not be built up around that power.
 
An elected official who lives 24/7 in the same geographical location which he serves is going to be far more acutely in tune with the people of that district than one who spends most of his time in Washington, D.C., and the people will be more able and willing to make sure he knows exactly how they feel.
 
Some people would like to pretend that influence peddling and lobbyists are at the heart of our problems which is bull. The fact is that our bloated bureaucracy has become inefficient and government feels that it does not have to account for its actions and this is our most pressing problem.

If the central government was not given the power, then a bureacracy would not be built up around that power.

You my want to read the 10th Amendment of the US Constitution (part of the Bill of Rights): "powers not granted to the federal government by the Constitution, nor prohibited to the States, are reserved to the States or the people."

The central government was not given the power it encroached upon it.
 
Not counting the government's investment in the failed ACA portal the federal government seems to be pissing "their" money away on software in other areas as well:

"Based on common inefficiencies we see in the private sector, we estimate that the US government wastes up to $2 billion per year, or 25 percent of its annual $8 billion software budget, on shelfware (unused software), under-utilized software, and non-optimized management of software licenses."

Software License Optimization: New GAO Report Finds Widespread US Federal Government Waste in Software Spending

Don't you love it?

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Is it possible that government is too big and that our bureaucracy has become bloated and inefficient?:

"The federal government has no idea how many tax dollars it’s wasting on redundant federal programs every year—but it’s likely in the neighborhood of $45 billion."

"That’s according to the Government Accountability Office, which identified more than two dozen new areas of inefficiency and overlap in its annual report to Congress. This is on top of the more than 160 redundant areas that the GAO has identified in its three previous reports."


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/45-billion-wasted-redundant-federal-184700536.html

What do you think those other 160 areas are?

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