Little statesmen
by David Benjamin
“A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.”
— Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance
PARIS
— As I observe, from a nation where health care is universal, simple,
cheap and far more healthful that the free-market medical blackmail that
afflicts and sickens the United States, I think of a question not
asked.
A handful of reactionaries in the U.S. Congress are
“standing on principle” against the Affordable Care Act, passed by
Congress in 2010. The media wizards who cover issues of national
life-and-death as though they were NASCAR events, ask lots of questions
about who’s going to do what, and when, and whose ox is gonna get gored
when that happens or doesn’t happen.
But the question they never
ask of either side in the latest stalemate is “What principle?” What
exactly are all these blowhards standing their ground for?
Now,
when President Obama defends his position, I can clearly discern hints
of actual principle. He says the government needs to keep running
because it’s responsible — for providing public employees with the
livelihood they earn for delivering a vast array of services for which
the American people are paying.
“Responsibility” is a principle.
The President reminds the tea-party fringe that Obamacare, passed by Congress, is the law of the land.
“It’s the law” is also a principle.
Obama
defends the necessity of preserving “the full faith and credit of the
United States.” America, like everyone else, buys stuff on credit. The
debt-ceiling increase is a periodic measure, passed routinely by
Congress (and currently overdue), to make sure that the U.S.A. pays the
check for stuff — approved by Congress — that America has already
bought.
“The full faith and credit of the United States,” a
principle enshrined in the Constitution, is as clear, fixed and
inflexible as the Ten Commandments.
So, what are the competing
principles? What are the arguments against “responsibility,” “the rule
of law” and the “full faith and credit” of the U.S.A.?
Obviously, it’s hard for the Right to argue against responsibility. Republicans tend to pontificate ad nauseam about the “responsibilities” of the poor, the young, the swarthy, the homeless, the wretched refuse of our teeming shore.
The
closest our tea-party types can get to staking out a principled
position is to claim that Obamacare will be bad for people. This isn’t
supported by the many objective studies that predict it will be good for
people. But until it’s up and running, either position boils down to
speculation. We do know for certain, based on experience, that the
current U.S. health care system is a bureaucratic hell that toys with
the lives of the sick while sentencing countless patients to an early
death — over nickels and dimes — at a rate that would inspire envy in
Hannibal Lecter.
Occasionally, a Republican blurts out the
paradox that haunts the right wing, as did Michelle Bachmann when she
said, “Obama can’t wait to get Americans addicted to the crack cocaine
of dependency on more government health care.”
Bachmann admits,
unintentionally, that Obamacare was a good idea when it was conceived by
conservatives at the Heritage Foundation and first implemented by a
conservative governor of Massachusetts. But conservatives can’t support
it now because it’s identified with that uppity black bastard in the
White House.
I know. Not exactly a principle. But it has the ring of honesty.
There
is — perhaps — a principle lurking beneath the surface of GOP
intransigence. It applies to both Obamacare and the debt ceiling. If
stated simply, it would be, “Obamacare is the law but we won’t obey. We
got bills but we won’t pay ‘em.” If this is the point, what Republicans
are up to is civil disobedience, a form of principled resistance that
evokes Thomas More, Jean d’Arc, Crispus Attucks and John Brown (all
killed), not to mention Henry David Thoreau, Mohandas Ghandi, Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr., (who all went to jail) and James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner and Viola Liuzzo (again, killed).
I’m
not suggesting that anti-Obamacare firebrands like Ted Cruz, Rand Paul
and Mike Lee should be murdered by night-riding vigilantes and buried in
an earthworks dam in Mississippi. But if tea-party heroes are serious
about civil disobedience, shouldn’t they embrace the consequences?
Shouldn’t we send in the State Police to hose ‘em down, cuff ‘em up and
drag ‘em to the drunk tank? Don’t they deserve the same civic martrydom
afforded to civil disobeyers like Eugene V. Debs, Rosa Parks, John Lewis,
the Berrigan brothers and the Solidarity Singers?
If these
zealots don’t suffer for making us all suffer, then what principle
applies? If they go unpersecuted for flouting the law, what do they
stand for? Is “principled opposition” to Obamacare and the debt ceiling
just the Tea Party’s way of proving that they can moon the President and
get away with it?
Or is all this high-blown rhetoric a “foolish
consistency,” a stubborn position that immunizes its advocates not only
from consequences, but from the necessity of receiving more information,
pondering it and risking a change of mind?
When Emerson’s
composed the “foolish consistency” passage in Self-Reliance, he also
wrote: “With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do. He may
as well concern himself with his shadow on the wall. Speak what you
think now in hard words, and to-morrow speak what to-morrow thinks in
hard words again, though it contradict every thing you said to-day. —
'Ah, so you shall be sure to be misunderstood.' — Is it so bad, then, to
be misunderstood?… To be great is to be misunderstood.”
Saturday, October 5, 2013
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