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FRONT PAGE CONTRIBUTOR

Not precisely the Quote of the Day, William Murchison edition.

More like the From Your Fingers To God’s Eyes of the Day, William Murchison edition:

Every Easter/Passover ABC returns the old DeMille semi-classic, “The Ten Commandments” for renewed viewing. We all could benefit by watching the Egyptians try to build a city by flogging the Hebrews half to death. It works only up to a point: The point at which the taskmasters reduce the work force to stuporous failure or rebellion. Along comes Charlton Heston. We know the rest of the story.

The pharaohs of the Beltway have a comparably odd way of inspiring ingenuity, inventiveness, vision, sacrifice and risk. It amounts to telling the risk takers, thanks, good work, now hand over. An intuition arises concerning the federal method: Namely, that the risk takers won’t be taking much risk before November in the way of new hiring, business expansion, etc. They will sensibly wait to see the American people’s judgment, delivered at the polls, on their government’s half-baked formula for putting Americans back to work.

We’ll see what the Republicans offer by contrast. It helps to remember that Charlton Heston was a Republican.

It’s all about the jobs this cycle.  A lot of people have been calling the health care debacle a ‘Hail Mary’ pass, which is nonsensical: nobody sane expects a program that takes that much earned wealth and sequesters it away into government purdah to somehow create more wealth.  Government never creates wealth.  It ‘merely’ provides the security – both external and internal – needed for others to create wealth.  A lot of people seem to miss this distinction, possibly because they’ve gotten distracted by the ongoing spectacle of the government using up wealth.  The government’s good at that, and it’s usually personally profitable for an inefficiently small portion of the population… so it sometimes looks like wealth creation.  If you’re not paying attention.

To go back to the football metaphor, a true Hail Mary play for the administration would be an almost-insane break from existing policy on job creation.  Something along the lines of radical corporate tax cuts across the board; zeroing out enforcement budgets for government regulatory agencies; executive-ordering a suspension of enforcement of Sarbanes-Oxley until Congress can revisit the legislation; and firing pretty much the existing executive staff and replacing them with people with actual business experience.  That would be a true Hail Mary play – which would probably fail, because it’s a desperation strategy that focuses on job creation now and ignores everything else.

It would still, however, be preferable to the current administration strategy, which is to throw the football straight up into the air and hope that it doesn’t come down before January.

Moe Lane

PS: Jim Geraghty helpfully explains why you should be careful before you start jumping up and down at the unemployment news… this Friday?  At any rate, the Census is hiring!  For two months.

Crossposted to Moe Lane.

COMMENTS

  • wilfranc

    I heard a month or so ago that the census workers would increase employment, but most people will only hear the headline “Unemployment drops”.

    When you look at a picture done in pointalism, you see the overall image and not the dots.

    The average citizen is not engaged in the study of dots. Most spend their lives taking care of their own needs, and tend to judge economic news on what they see and hear personally.

    Good national economic news for us in Michigan means either one of two things: There is somewhere to move, or someday things may improve here. Michigan is a long way away from economic health, and the mood among citizens seems to be one of resignation (except for govt workers).

  • saltlick

    Jobs. The National Debt. Health care. Social Security. Medicare. The Environment. These can all be “fixed” with a vibrant economy.

    Cheap energy through a massive commitment to nuclear energy and drilling. Low taxes. Policies that encourage innovation. Etc. Etc. Reaganomics.

    Build the foundation for economic growth and we have a better chance of addrerssing all the other problems.

    Voters understand that either the pie gets bigger, or somebody gets less pie.

  • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

    They need to write bills and after having them rejected by Pelosi and Reid take them directly to the public. If they don’t, too many people will continue to believe the Republicans are the party of “no ideas”.

    For those that say the MSM will ignore them, have John McCain be the spokesman. The guy lives for an interview, and right now even he is sick and tired of Obama’s games.

  • http://www.ArchitecturalShots.com mdyou

    …I had the pleasure of seeing many of my Jewish friends and extended family members, many of whom I only see this one time each year.

    Nice people, educated, and accepting of this gentile. Yet, during the entire dinner portion of the evening, I had to endure endless excuse-making for OBambi, and the sentiment that if only the rest of America were as intelligent as they, we wouldn’t be in the mess THEIR WONDERBOY put us in.

    To them, the Tea Partiers are a joke and Netanyahu is an idiot.

    Charlton Heston wouldn’t recognize many of these Jews.

  • Tbone

    ever since, one way or another. Political stupidity seems to be one of the preferred forms of currency.

  • streiff

    let’s not make this theological, okay?

  • Locked and Loaded

    ran for a touchdown – except he got mixed up due to his lack of worthwhile instruction – and he ran in the wrong direction. Worse, he did not run alone. Rather than try to re-direct him to the correct end zone, his whole team gleefully cheered him on and ran with him to celebrate the big score.

    The other team and all the American spectators look on in stunned amazement as this spectacle takes place.

    I wonder, will the referees in the black robes put the points on the board or bring the ball back to the line of scrimmage?

  • jdw4america

    I hope our Jewish brother can forgive it

  • jdw4america

    that didn’t heed the warnings either. They told themselves that the rhetoric was just that…much to their sorrow.

    I hope Israel can hold on until 2012

  • Tbone