The Delta variant is here. The Delta Plus variant is spreading. The Lambda variant has been detected. In a few years, my kid will be pledging the Omicron variant in college. Some people want masks back. Some people want lockdowns. Others want vaccine passports, for which you must show a photo ID to get one, which we all know infringes on rights or did until polling showed most Americans support photo ID requirements for voting. Then Democrats from Stacey Abrams to James Clyburn who, only weeks ago, claimed photo ID caused voter suppression, now deny that was their position.
Many conservatives are convinced the resurgence of COVID is all about expanding government power. The vaccine passports, vaccine mandates, mask mandates, etc. are all part of some sinister plot.
Meanwhile, President Biden and the Democrats went to sleep on June 29, 2021, when the Supreme Court decided the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had no authority to continue an eviction moratorium past its July 31, 2021, end date. Only on July 31, 2021, as landlords prepped for evictions did the Democrats wake up. First, Joe Biden said he did not have the authority to extend the moratorium. The CDC said it did not have the power either. Then, on August 3, 2021, Biden extended the moratorium while declaring he really had no power to extend the moratorium.
The totality of the reality is that our government has electile dysfunction. Our government is inept, incompetent, and incapable of doing its basic functions. The CDC has bungled its guidance, sent mixed messages, and overreacted to a a weekend in Provincetown, MA, that coincided with a large number of gay men in town clustered together in poorly ventilated nightclubs during “Bear Week.”
Around the country, mask mandates are being met with eye rolls. In Washington, D.C., the mayor of the city violated her own mask mandate at an indoor wedding reception. Here in Atlanta, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ mask mandate has been ignored even by the police.
The COVID resurgence is not being used by the government to take control of our lives. The government cannot even control a microscopic organism for which we have a highly effective vaccine to fight it. The government cannot control the people refusing the vaccine. The government cannot control the people refusing to wear masks. The government cannot control its various bureaucrats going on television contradicting each other in a cacophony of confusion.
A government too incompetent to wage war on a virus is too incompetent to exercise any great authority over its population. What we have is theater, increasingly of the absurd, in by the federal government in a vain effort to distract us from its incompetence.
Every time Anthony Fauci gets on television now, he confuses the situation. Francis Collins, the Director of the National Institutes of Health, went on television and advised parents to mask up at home in front of their children. Then he said he misspoke. Rochelle Walensky, head of the CDC, cannot get her organization to make any sense or convey any sense of competence.
Our government has let its public health leaders, who have never faced a global pandemic, suddenly rush to be in charge. They seemingly had no media coaching before hand and are in turf wars for control of messaging and funding stepping over each other. It is rather embarrassing. We are seeing both how much the public health officials have longed for the opportunity to direct our behavior and also just how bad at it they are and how inept at enforcement they are.
Frankly, Americans should accept and embrace the incompetence as a feature, not a bug. The federal government was never meant to control the states or people as it is trying. The strains in the federal electile dysfunction were pre-programmed by the founders. Without congressional action, the bureaucracy eventually implodes and, in any event, the states are supposed to provide a robust response, which most are doing.
Our government is not good at distributing budget appropriations to tenants or landlords; delivering the mail; or fighting a virus. Unfortunately, it looks more and more to be incompetent at preparing for and fighting wars too. A lot of that incompetence has led to a collapse of trust in our institutions. Now the government, with ever more gusto, is trying to compensate for its electile dysfunction with more bureaucracy, more demands, and more inefficiency. Perhaps, instead of trying harder and getting even less, the federal government should step back, prune itself, restructure, and require Congress to lead instead of abdicating its role to unelected and out of touch bureaucrats.
The very simple rule should be that if Congress cannot find consensus, the matter at hand can be left to each of the fifty states to find workable solutions instead of placed with federal bureaucrats. The only cure for the federal government’s electile dysfunction is less nationalization and more federalism.
All well and good Erick, but it seems only Trump, or another like him, has the chutzpah to stand up for the Republic while battling both parties. The swamp is not a function of one party, it is an institutionalized brick wall to protect bureaucrats, their fiefdoms, and bank accounts. Trump, with no need of their aid or desire to be their willing accomplice was forced to fight and slog through the mire for 4 brutal years. To roll the current mess back will take a herculean effort and a majority in Congress willing to fall on their own sword in support of it. It's possible. We've witnessed what one bull in the china shop can do.
Again, you are so right!
Whenever I walk around DC it is disgustingly apparent to me that my tax dollars are supporting many thousands of federal workers, occupying 6-story limestone buildings, who are actively cultivating and executing the dull art of packing 2 hours of honest work into an 8 hour workday while carefully grooming their potential for promotion and always, always counting the days, hours and minutes until retirement. Have no doubt: for most federal employees their primary customer is themselves and there is little or no sense of being servant leaders.
The whole of the conservative movement is founded on this understanding: the federal government is an expensive, clumsy and largely ineffectual and often destructive oaf that should be limited to very few essential responsibilities, e.g., national defense, border security, international diplomacy, etc. It has mangled both our health care and educational industries. And I don't know how we reverse this situation. My guess is that when Donald Trump took office he saw this so clearly that he made it his mission to try and fix it. He "broke the rack", but now we have the worst of the worst in the center of the stench.
Perhaps we will see a big swing to good sense in the 2022 and 2024 elections. I pray that "the Donald" won't run again and have enough faith in America to pass the baton to another able leader- my choices would be Pompeo, Pence, DeSantis or Greg Abbott- who can take up where he left off. What many view as "chutzpah" in Trump, others see as a set of both narcissistic and borderline personality traits. In my view, he manifested both the courage to call out the fetid sickness that is DC, but also the character weakness to make his own flaws so glaringly obtuse as to become the object of well-deserved scorn from his political enemies. If we don't get it right, we may really experience life in America as a Kurt Schlichter novel. We probably don't deserve better, but let's all pray that the Lord grants us "better"!