Sunday, May 23, 2010

America's new culture war: Free enterprise vs. government control

By Arthur C. Brooks
Sunday, May 23, 2010; B01

America faces a new culture war.

This is not the culture war of the 1990s. It is not a fight over guns, gays or abortion. Those old battles have been eclipsed by a new struggle between two competing visions of the country's future. In one, America will continue to be an exceptional nation organized around the principles of free enterprise -- limited government, a reliance on entrepreneurship and rewards determined by market forces. In the other, America will move toward European-style statism grounded in expanding bureaucracies, a managed economy and large-scale income redistribution. These visions are not reconcilable. We must choose.

It is not at all clear which side will prevail. The forces of big government are entrenched and enjoy the full arsenal of the administration's money and influence. Our leaders in Washington, aided by the unprecedented economic crisis of recent years and the panic it induced, have seized the moment to introduce breathtaking expansions of state power in huge swaths of the economy, from the health-care takeover to the financial regulatory bill that the Senate approved Thursday. If these forces continue to prevail, America will cease to be a free enterprise nation.

I call this a culture war because free enterprise has been integral to American culture from the beginning, and it still lies at the core of our history and character. "A wise and frugal government," Thomas Jefferson declared in his first inaugural address in 1801, "which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government." He later warned: "To take from one, because it is thought that his own industry and that of his fathers has acquired too much, in order to spare to others, who, or whose fathers, have not exercised equal industry and skill, is to violate arbitrarily the first principle of association, the guarantee to every one of a free exercise of his industry and the fruits acquired by it." In other words, beware government's economic control, and woe betide the redistributors.

Now, as then, entrepreneurship can flourish only in a culture where individuals are willing to innovate and exert leadership; where people enjoy the rewards and face the consequences of their decisions; and where we can gamble the security of the status quo for a chance of future success.

Yet, in his commencement address at Arizona State University on May 13, 2009, President Obama warned against precisely such impulses: "You're taught to chase after all the usual brass rings; you try to be on this "who's who" list or that Top 100 list; you chase after the big money and you figure out how big your corner office is; you worry about whether you have a fancy enough title or a fancy enough car. That's the message that's sent each and every day, or has been in our culture for far too long -- that through material possessions, through a ruthless competition pursued only on your own behalf -- that's how you will measure success." Such ambition, he cautioned, "may lead you to compromise your values and your principles."

I appreciate the sentiment that money does not buy happiness. But for the president of the United States to actively warn young adults away from economic ambition is remarkable. And he makes clear that he seeks to change our culture.

The irony is that, by wide margins, Americans support free enterprise. A Gallup poll in January found that 86 percent of Americans have a positive image of "free enterprise," with only 10 percent viewing it negatively. Similarly, in March 2009, the Pew Research Center asked individuals from a broad range of demographic groups: "Generally, do you think people are better off in a free-market economy, even though there may be severe ups and downs from time to time, or don't you think so?" Almost 70 percent of respondents agreed that they are better off in a free-market economy, while only 20 percent disagreed.

In fact, no matter how the issue is posed, not more than 30 percent of Americans say they believe we would fare better without free markets at the core of our system. When it comes to support for free enterprise, we are essentially a 70-30 nation.

So here's a puzzle: If we love free enterprise so much, why are the 30 percent who want to change that culture in charge?

It's not simply because of the election of Obama. As much as Republicans may dislike hearing it, statism had effectively taken hold in Washington long before that.

The George W. Bush administration began the huge Wall Street and Detroit bailouts, and for years before the economic crisis, the GOP talked about free enterprise while simultaneously expanding the government with borrowed money and increasing the percentage of citizens with no income tax liability. The 30 percent coalition did not start governing this country with the advent of Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. It has been in charge for years.

But the real tipping point was the financial crisis, which began in 2008. The meltdown presented a golden opportunity for the 30 percent coalition to attack free enterprise openly and remake America in its own image.

And it seized that opportunity. While Republicans had no convincing explanation for the crisis, seemed responsible for it and had no obvious plans to fix it, the statists offered a full and compelling narrative. Ordinary Americans were not to blame for the financial collapse, nor was government. The real culprits were Wall Street and the Bush administration, which had gutted the regulatory system that was supposed to keep banks in line.

The solution was obvious: Vote for a new order to expand the powers of government to rein in the dangerous excesses of capitalism.

It was a convincing story. For a lot of panicky Americans, the prospect of a paternalistic government rescuing the nation from crisis seemed appealing as stock markets and home prices spiraled downward. According to this narrative, government was at fault in just one way: It wasn't big enough. If only there had been more regulators watching the banks more closely, the case went, the economy wouldn't have collapsed.

Yet in truth, it was government housing policy that was at the root of the crisis. Moreover, the financial sector -- where the crisis began and where it has had the most serious impact -- is already one of the most regulated parts of our economy. The chaos happened despite an extensive, intrusive regulatory framework, not because such a framework didn't exist.

More government -- including a super-empowered Federal Reserve, a consumer protection watchdog and greater state powers to wind down financial firms and police market risks -- does not mean we will be safe. On the contrary, such changes would give us a false sense of security, especially when Washington, a primary culprit in the crisis, is creating and implementing the new rules.

The statist narrative also held that only massive deficit spending could restore economic growth. "If nothing is done, this recession could linger for years," Obama warned a few days before taking office. "Only government can provide the short-term boost necessary to lift us from a recession this deep and severe. Only government can break the cycle that is crippling our economy."

This proposition is as expensive as it is false. Recessions can and do end without the kind of stimulus we experienced, and attempts to shore up the economy with huge public spending often do little to improve matters and instead chain future generations with debt. In fact, all the evidence so far tells us that the current $787 billion stimulus package has overpromised and underdelivered, especially when it comes to creating jobs.

If we reject the administration's narrative, the 70-30 nation will remain strong. If we accept it, and base our nation's policies on it, we will be well on our way to a European-style social democracy. Punitive taxes and regulations will make it harder to be an entrepreneur, and the rewards of success will be expropriated for the sake of greater income equality.

The new statism in America, made possible by years of drift and accelerated by the panic over the economic crisis, threatens to make us permanently poorer. But that is not the greatest danger. The real risk is that in the new culture war, we will forsake the third unalienable right set out in our Declaration of Independence: the pursuit of happiness.

Free enterprise brings happiness; redistribution does not. The reason is that only free enterprise brings earned success.

Earned success involves the ability to create value honestly -- not by inheriting a fortune, not by picking up a welfare check. It doesn't mean making money in and of itself. Earned success is the creation of value in our lives or in the lives of others. Earned success is the stuff of entrepreneurs who seek value through innovation, hard work and passion. Earned success is what parents feel when their children do wonderful things, what social innovators feel when they change lives, what artists feel when they create something of beauty.

Money is not the same as earned success but is rather a symbol, important not for what it can buy but for what it says about how people are contributing and what kind of difference they are making. Money corresponds to happiness only through earned success.

Not surprisingly, unearned money -- while it may help alleviate suffering -- carries with it no personal satisfaction. Studies of lottery winners, for instance, show that after a brief period of increased happiness, their moods darken as they no longer derive the same enjoyment from the simple pleasures in life, and as the glow of buying things wears off.

The same results emerge with other kinds of unearned income -- welfare payments, for example. According to the University of Michigan's 2001 Panel Study of Income Dynamics, going on the welfare rolls increases by 16 percent the likelihood of a person saying that she or he has felt inconsolably sad over the past month. Of course, the misery of welfare recipients probably goes well beyond the check itself. Nonetheless, studies show that recipients are far unhappier than equally poor people who do not receive such government benefits.

Benjamin Franklin (a pretty rich man for his time) grasped the truth about money's inability by itself to deliver satisfaction. "Money never made a man happy yet, nor will it," he declared. "The more a man has, the more he wants. Instead of filling a vacuum, it makes one."

If unearned money does not bring happiness, redistributing money by force won't make for a happier America -- and the redistributionists' theory of a better society through income equality falls apart.

The goal of our system should be to give all Americans the greatest opportunities possible to succeed based on their work and merit. And that's exactly what the free enterprise system does: It makes earned success possible for the most people. This is the liberty that enables the true pursuit of happiness.

To win the culture war, those of us in the 70 percent majority must reclaim -- and proclaim -- the morality of our worldview.

Unfortunately, we often fail to do this. Instead, we sound unabashedly materialistic. We talk about growth rates, inflation and investment, while the 30 percent coalition walks off with the claims to happiness and fairness. (According to Obama, for example, we need to restore "fairness" to our tax code by increasing taxes on the wealthy and exempting more people at the bottom from paying anything.)

The irony is that it is the 30 percent coalition, not the 70 percent majority, that is fundamentally materialistic. What do they consider the greatest problem of poor people in America? Insufficient income. What would be evidence of a fairer society? Greater income equality. For the leaders of the 30 percent coalition, money does buy happiness -- as long as it is spread evenly. That is why redistribution of income is a fundamental goal and why free enterprise, which rewards some people and penalizes others, cannot be trusted.

The 70 percent majority, meanwhile, believes that ingenuity and hard work should be rewarded. We admire creative entrepreneurs and disdain rule-making bureaucrats. We know that income inequality by itself is not what makes people unhappy, and that only earned success can make them happy.

We must do more to show that while we use the language of commerce and business, we believe in human flourishing and contentment. We must articulate moral principles that set forth our fundamental values, and we must be prepared to defend them.

This defense is already underway, in a disorganized, grass-roots, American kind of way. Protests against the new statism have flared around the nation for more than a year. And while some have tried to dismiss the "tea party" demonstrations and the town hall protests of last summer as the work of extremists, ignorant backwoodsmen or agents of the health-care industry, these movements reveal much about the culture war that is underway.

Just compare the protests in America with those in Europe. Here, we see tea partiers demonstrating against the government's encroachment on the free enterprise system and protesting the fact that the state is spending too much money bailing out too many people. Why are people protesting in Greece? Because they want the government to give them even more. They are angry because their government -- in the face of its worst economic and perhaps existential crisis in decades -- won't pay the lavish pensions to which they feel entitled. There's no better example of the cultural difference between America and Europe today, yet it is toward European-style social democracy that the 30 percent coalition wants to move us.

Fortunately, it is hard to dismiss the voice of the voters in some of our most recent electoral contests. Scott Brown won the late Ted Kennedy's Senate seat from Massachusetts in January by declaring himself not an apparatchik Republican but a moral enthusiast for markets. "What made America great?" he asked. "Free markets, free enterprise, manufacturing, job creation. That's how we're gonna do it, not by enlarging government." His cultural pitch for free enterprise hit just the right chord, even in liberal Massachusetts. It struck at the heart of the 30 percent coalition's agenda for America.

Brown's victory -- and Rand Paul's triumph in Kentucky's Republican Senate primary last week, for that matter -- are but warning shots in the burgeoning culture war. The most intense battles are still ahead.

To win, the 70 percent majority must come together around core principles: that the purpose of free enterprise is human flourishing, not materialism; that we stand for equality of opportunity, not equality of income; that we seek to stimulate true prosperity rather than simply treat poverty; and that we believe in principle over power.

This final idea is particularly challenging. In Washington, a lot of people think they know how to win. They say what is needed are telegenic candidates, dirty tricks and lots of campaign money. To them, thinking long-term means thinking all the way to 2012. In other words, they talk only of tactics, parties and power.

They are wrong. What matters most to Americans is the commitment to principle, not the exercise of power. The electorate did not repudiate free enterprise in 2008; it simply punished an unprincipled Republican Party.

But political turmoil can lead to renewal, and the challenges of this new culture war can help us mobilize and reassert our principles. The 2008 election was perhaps exactly what America needed. Today there is a very real threat that the 30 percent coalition may transform our great nation forever. I hope this threat will clear our thinking enough to bring forth leaders -- regardless of political party -- with our principles at heart and the ideas to match. If free enterprise triumphs over the quest for political power, America will be the stronger for it.

Arthur C. Brooks is the president of the American Enterprise Institute and the author of "The Battle: How the Fight Between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America's Future."

Friday, May 21, 2010

Immigration and The Welfare State

The simple truth about illegal immigration

May 20th, 2010, 11:12 am · 32 Comments · posted by Mark Landsbaum

On the matter of illegal immigration, ideally, people should be permitted to do whatever doesn’t infringe on another’s God-given rights. In fact, in most cases, this greater freedom results in greater benefits for everyone concerned.

Employers should be free to hire whomever they want. Employees should be free to seek work wherever they want. National borders impede this free-market concept by impeding immigration – but that’s not really the problem. Instead, our immigration problem stems from built-in institutional evils.

Milton Friedman made this point some years back: “You cannot simultaneously have free immigration and a welfare state.”

It follows that you can’t build a fence high enough, or round up enough illegal immigrants to deport, or punish businesses with fines enough to discourage billions of people from seeking something for nothing.

Most of the world lives in conditions that make the lives of the U.S. poor look utterly extravagant.

One of our colleagues yesterday made the obvious – yet rarely confronted – observation that the cost of providing just one student an education in California runs as high as $15,000 by some estimates. What father of four children wouldn’t do whatever he could to provide his four children with the equivalent of $60,000 in free tuition – every year – rather than let them grow up in squalor and in a Third World country where they probably won’t get any kind of an education?

What mother wouldn’t prefer to have her child born in the U.S. with the guarantee of lifetime health care (substandard as it’s likely to be under ObamaCare) rather than in some backward nation where it’s as likely as not the kid would be dead by age 5?

When you add up everything the U.S. provides at no cost to people who don’t have much income – health, education, welfare, food stamps, subsidized housing - we’re fortunate we’re insulated by two massive oceans or else billions of people would be flooding across the borders to take advantage.

That doesn’t even take into consideration the additional lure of jobs, which are vastly more plentiful here than in impoverished nations. Or the elevated comforts of paved roads, no sewage in the streets, relative safety from marauding criminals and all the other benefits of the U.S. lifestyle.

As long as we as a nation provide stuff for free, people who don’t have that stuff will come here to get it.

You can’t deport them fast enough, or build a wall high enough to discourage people lured by freebies paid for by the American taxpayer. The only way to permanently solve that problem is to permanently end the welfare state. Turn off the spigot and they’ll stop coming here for free drinks.

What do you say?


Thursday, May 13, 2010

Stop The Bleeding

U.S. posts 19th straight monthly budget deficit


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States posted an $82.69 billion deficit in April, nearly four times the $20.91 billion shortfall registered in April 2009 and the largest on record for that month, the Treasury Department said on Wednesday.
Wed, May 12 2010

It was more than twice the $40-billion deficit that Wall Street economists surveyed by Reuters had forecast and was striking since April marks the filing deadline for individual income taxes that are the main source of government revenue.

Department officials said that in prior years, there was a surplus during April in 43 out of the past 56 years.

The government has now posted 19 consecutive monthly budget deficits, the longest string of shortfalls on record.

For the first seven months of fiscal 2010, which ends September 30, the cumulative budget deficit totals $799.68 billion, down slightly from $802.3 billion in the comparable period of fiscal 2009.

Outlays during April rose to $327.96 billion from $218.75 billion in March and were up from $287.11 billion in April 2009. It was a record level of outlays for an April.

Department officials noted there were five Fridays in April this year, which helped account for higher outlays since most tax refunds are issued on that day.

But for the first seven months of the fiscal year, outlays fell to $1.99 trillion from $2.06 trillion in the comparable period of fiscal 2009, partly because of repayments by banks of bailout funds they received during the financial crisis.

Receipts in April -- mostly from income taxes -- were $245.27 billion, up from $153.36 billion in March but lower than the $266.21 billion taken in during April 2009.

Receipts from individuals, who faced an April 15 filing deadline for paying 2009 taxes, fell to $107.31 billion from $137.67 billion in April 2009.

The U.S. full-year deficit this year is projected at $1.5 trillion on top of a $1.4 trillion shortfall last year.

White House budget director Peter Orszag told Reuters Insider in an interview on Wednesday that the United States must tackle its deficits quickly to avoid the kind of debt crisis that hit Greece.

(Reporting by Glenn Somerville, Editing by Diane Craft)© Thomson Reuters 2010. All rights reserved.

Where To Start?

Cutting Government Down to Size

Sen. Tom Coburn (R.-Okla.) came charging into the U.S. Senate six years ago determined to gun down the most dangerous issue facing the country:
uncontrolled government spending and debt.

He put delaying holds on countless spending bills, angering many of his colleagues. He offered an untold number of budget-cutting amendments to block, reduce or eliminate spending. He has fought, condemned and stomped on just about every waste-ridden bill to come before the Senate so many times that Democrats call him “Dr. No,” a name he considers a badge of honor.

Now he finds himself on President Obama’s politically inspired, dubiously worthwhile commission to come up with ways to cut trillions of dollars from a mountain of debt. Coburn is outnumbered on the commission by a hand-picked majority of big spenders, but is coming well-armed with a detailed list of outdated, needless, unaffordable, fraud-ridden programs, agencies and expenditures that he has shoved under their noses, suggesting that these cuts would be a good place to start before even thinking about raising taxes.

$350 billion

“I hope this commission concludes it is time for politicians in Washington to make sacrifices. The American people are already sacrificing enough. Families should not be forced to pay higher taxes in order to help politicians avoid tough choices when the federal government is wasting at least $350 billion a year,” Coburn told HUMAN EVENTS.

That’s the preliminary amount of wasteful, ineffective, duplicative spending Coburn has uncovered in his oversight work on the budget.

Other budget experts familiar with his proposals say the full figure is much higher than that, though Coburn has given the panel a comprehensive agenda of cuts and eliminations that, when combined with long-term reforms in entitlement programs, would push savings far beyond the $350 billion figure.

In 1984, the Grace Commission, under orders from President Reagan to expose waste, fraud and abuse throughout the U.S. government, concluded that at least one in every three dollars in federal spending was wasted. Today that would amount to about $1.2 trillion.

Obama’s 18-member commission was just getting started last month when Coburn gave each member a thick, black binder filled with hundreds of billions of dollars worth of candidates for the axe. His office refuses to give out copies to the press, not wanting to be seen as bashing the panel in the media, but commission members say Coburn is pushing his proposals vigorously and will be a major force to be reckoned with in the commission’s deliberations.

Coburn’s list of waste in Washington is the result of six years of combating over-spending in committees and on the Senate floor. Those who are familiar with his anti-spending battles say the programs he has targeted for the commission are ones he has been railing against for a long time. Here are some choice examples from Coburn list of targets that are among the hundreds of billions of dollars in savings he wants the deficit panel to recommend to Congress.

Congressional Spending Earmarks
• $1.9 million for Connecticut’s Pleasure Beach water taxi service.
• $380,000 for a recreation and fairgrounds area in Kotzebue, Alaska.
• $3.8 million for the Old Tiger Stadium Conservancy in Detroit.
• $1.8 million for swine odor and manure management research in Ames, Iowa.
• $1.2 million for total rat eradication on the Palmyra Atoll in Hawaii.
• $750,000 for continued celebration and commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the voyages of Henry Hudson and Samuel de Champlain.

National Science Foundation Studies
• $188,206 to ask the question, “Why do political candidates make vague statements, and what are their consequences?
• $11,825 to study “Prime Time Politics: Television News and the Visual Framing of War.”
• $143,254 to evaluate whip counts by party leaders in Congress to determine the impact of party leaders in the legislative process and how successful party leaders are at mobilizing support for party programs.
• $50,000 to hold a conference on the effect of youtube.com on the 2008 election.
• $678,000 to study Internet social networking sites including Twitter and Facebook in an effort to “measure public happiness.”

Department of Education
Congress dished out $64.2 billion to the Department of Education for fiscal 2010, a nearly 10% increase over the previous year. But Coburn found much of this money is wasted by a bureaucracy that is notorious for its inefficiency and overlapping programs—230 duplicative programs at last count and more than $10 billion in waste, fraud and mismanagement.

Department of Energy
Congress gave this department, which produces no energy but adds to its costs, $26.4 billion in fiscal 2010, after more than doubling its budget by another $34 billion under the economic stimulus bill the year before.

Rife with waste, fraud and mismanagement with at least 17 programs duplicating one another, the Energy Department handed out $5 billion last year for state-run weatherization projects, a massive increase over the $227 million of the previous year—a spending binge that contractors described as “winning the lottery.”
Worse, it was later found that a “vast majority” of states were not spending the money they were given.

But even all of the money spent by these and the other agencies and Cabinet departments pales when compared to the mountain of unfunded liabilities for entitlement programs that will have to be reined in if we are ever to curb the government’s mounting national debt, which is currently $12.1 trillion, or $39,000 for each man, woman and child in the country.

Coburn told the Senate that Social Security is expected to begin running a deficit in six years and in just seven years, Medicare—riddled with relentless fraud—will not have enough funding to pay all of its expected benefits to a wave of baby-boomers who soon be retiring, Coburn told the Senate.

But instead of scaling back on spending, Congress has increased it significantly, approving appropriations bills that are fatter and more waste-ridden than ever before—driving the government deeper into debt.

“This year’s deficit is expected to reach $1.5 trillion, which would mark the third straight record annual deficit. The administration projects the deficit will remain above $1 trillion in 2011 and will not drop below $739 billion over the next decade,” Coburn said in a recent speech.

“The federal government is now borrowing 43 cents for every dollar it spends. Some $4.8 trillion of the $9 trillion in debt that the government will likely accrue over the next ten years will be interest,” he says.

President Obama’s National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility & Reform is not expected to finish its work and produce a report to Congress until December. But Coburn says Congress should not wait until then to tackle uncontrolled spending and deficit-reduction.

“Congress does not need to wait on this commission to begin making the hard choices needed to restrain spending and reduce the burden of debt on the next generation,” he told HUMAN EVENTS.


Saturday, May 1, 2010

A Pseudo-Constitutional Census

The Annoying Census Ad Campaign

Here are three examples:

First is “A Musical Take on Mailing it Back,” or, as I call it, “What I’m pretty sure everyone over the age of 60 thinks of my generation.” I’ll interpret the words for you: “We need a resolution. The solution: evolution. To be a part of this movement. It’s evolution.”

Then the androgynous voice of the chorus chimes in with, “We can’t move forward, until you mail it back.” This idea of “progress” which defined the 2008 election pervades this commercial: join the “movement” and be part of the “change.” No thanks, I’ll pass. Especially if it means I have to listen to more of this.

Next we learn how to “Make Your Dream Community a Reality.” Here, a little girl creates a cartoon Mayberry out of Play-Doh, while the narrator reminds you that your very own dream community really is possible, if you would just spend 10 minutes filling out the Census. Apparently, it doesn’t take hard work and dedication to responsible citizenship by an entire local population to make a truly good place to live. It only takes a commitment by everyone to fill out the Census, so that their representatives can decide for them how to redistribute tax dollars to meet their every need.

In the third Census commercial, we find ourselves on the wrong end of a bullhorn on “A March to the Mailbox.” At the other end of the bullhorn is a man with a mustache. But he is more than one man (so he tells us): he speaks for his community, and his community wants its “fair share of funding.” That funding will be used to build better schools for the kids, to build better roads for his neighbor, and for “making healthcare better.”

The Census Bureau created a page on their website called “Census in the Constitution: Why Jefferson, Madison and the Founders Enshrined the Census in our Constitution.” The website quotes Article One, Section Two of the Constitution, where an “Enumeration” of the peoples of the United States was ordered to be taken “within every subsequent Term of ten Years, in such manner as [Congress] shall by law direct.” The purpose of the Census, as the Bureau defines it, was to “use that count to determine representation in the Congress.” They’re right. That is the purpose. Of course that’s not in the TV ads, because who really wants to fill out the Census so representation can be apportioned correctly? The language used in these ads is important, and is a symptom of a deep-seeded dependence on, or at least an unconscious acceptance of, federal spending on entitlements.

America’s Founders are able to offer some wisdom as to our present situation. The Federalist Papers, the authoritative interpretation of the Constitution as written by its very creators, addresses “The Total Number of the House of Representatives” in “Federalist 55.” The author, likely James Madison, makes this prescient remark: “Nothing can be more fallacious than to found our political principles on arithmetical principles.”

The Census, judged according to its own ad campaign, is doing just that: allowing the data gathered to determine where and how taxpayer dollars are apportioned for various government programs. There are no principles to be considered here, my dear Madison, only political priorities.

The Federalist Papers
do not address how taxpayer money should be apportioned to localities in accordance with the results of the Census, and I think it’s safe to assume that this was not mere oversight. Our Founding Fathers would undoubtedly roll over in their sacred graves if they heard how the Census, a device intended to serve the needs of a people in a constitutional republic, is being promoted as “A tool. [To make] an impact” on the ways we as citizens view the legitimate role of government in our lives. And they would roll over again if they had to listen to that awful song. Thank goodness the next Census is a decade away.