It does seem that America can’t even tie its own shoelaces anymore so this piece by Michael Graham at NH Journal hit home. I emailed him if we could cross-post his piece entitled “GRAHAM: Solve Gun Violence? America’s Pols Would Rather ‘Fight’ Than ‘Fix” with this:
…Yes, emphasis mine. And you are right, it isn’t about the Post Office. I’ve come to realize that that rest of it is necessary to support the claim (which I believe to be true) that we can’t fix anything anymore for the reasons you state plus much more.
His response was yes: “All NHJournal and InsideSources content is available for republication — with attribution. Flattered you found it worth a re-read! Continued success.”
I’ll bold the part that was in my email…and let’s see if you think the same. I’ve also taken the liberty to emphasis other parts as well and added a few thoughts as well.
Watching the heart-wrenching scene of sobbing parents mourning school children lost to senseless violence, Americans are asking ourselves once again: “Why can’t we fix America’s gun violence problem?”
As an angry parent, fed-up political junkie, and sick-and-tired citizen, I’ll tell you why:
Because we can’t fix anything.
Fix America’s gun problem? There are an estimated 400 million guns in America right now in the hands of a nation with a culture of violence going back at least 300 years. And we’re going to “fix” mass shootings and gun crime?
Folks, we can’t even fix the post office.
Everybody knows America’s postal service is an obsolete anachronism from the pre-internet era, that driving around house-to-house six days a week to put pieces of paper into a metal box is a ridiculous waste of time and money. But just weeks ago we “fixed” it by committing more than $100 billion in taxpayer dollars to keep the rickety system running.
The point is not to pick on your local postal workers. The point is ending Saturday mail delivery should be simple. It is a picayune problem in our world of COVID, Ukraine, and school shootings.
But our politics are so broken we can’t get that done. And you want to solve the problem of gun crime?
America at the moment is out of the problem-fixing business. We’d rather “fight” than “fix.”
One reason is our lack of faith in our would-be “fixers.” As we learned the hard way during the COVID-19 era, America’s current crop of “elites” — the technocrats, bureaucrats, and politicians who are supposed to be in the solution business — are lousy at their jobs.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention might have many fine abilities, but “controlling and preventing disease” isn’t among them. The Food and Drug Administration’s mishandling of COVID tracking and testing made the pandemic worse, not better.
And the political class demonstrated again and again, from mask mandates to school lockdowns, that it is impervious to data. Did it matter that keeping kids at home was an educational disaster that set back a generation of disadvantaged children? Not a bit.
It was far more important for our elites to virtue signal than problem solve.
And can you blame them? Where is the evidence that American voters are even interested in problem-solving?
Who are two of the hottest fundraisers in American politics right now? The far left’s Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) and the far right’s Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (MTG). Both spout streams of extremist nonsense – from Modern Monetary Theory to “Jewish Space Lasers” – and the checks keep pouring in. Primary candidates covet their endorsements.
Setting aside how awful their ideas are, do either of these two even want political solutions? They’re fighters, not fixers.
Take the southern border crisis, for example.
One of the hope-inspiring stories emerging from the horrors of Tuesday’s crime is that the murderer was stopped by a Border Patrol agent who acted without waiting for backup.
Confronting school shooters isn’t technically a problem Customs and Border Patrol (CPB) agents are supposed to solve, but he did it anyway – and at the risk of his own life. The irony is his day job is to work on a problem we won’t let him and his fellow agents solve – the chaos at the border.
Is the border problem difficult to solve? Perhaps. But compared to fixing gun violence, it’s middle school math.
But are we “fixing” it? Is there any prospect of even considering a serious solution for our lawless, chaotic border?
No. Instead, we’re using a COVID health regulation to temporarily hold back a wave of migration the Biden administration knows is coming – and that is on top of April’s highest number of CPB “encounters” ever in a single month.
People – it’s a border. It’s not something impossible, like building a self-sustaining Mars colony or figuring out how to get your teens off Tik Tok. All 193 member states of the United Nations have borders, and few of them have the mess we do.
You want a relatively secure border? Put up some more walls, punish businesses that hire illegal immigrants, and deport people who aren’t supposed to be here. Then make it easier for legal immigrants to come here and eventually become Americans.
It won’t be perfect or impervious, but it will work. We just have to get it done.
Except – we are never going to do it. Team AOC will never accept deportations for immigration enforcement; Team MTG opposes immigration and businesses will stop writing checks to politicians if they lose their cheap labor.
And besides, there is a lot more political power from chants of “No More Deportations” and “Close the Border!” than from “We came up with a reasonable, bipartisan compromise that solved the long-term problem!”
What can we do about gun violence? Very little. But until we can stop fighting, stop turning political disagreements into character assassinations, stop declaring political compromise a crime — until we can stop making a virtue out of our willingness to commit rhetorical violence in the name of our petty partisanship — we won’t fix anything.
He’s not wrong, you know, in a lot of that. I would have added the insanity of all of our overlapping and entirely pointless and at-odds-with-each other Laws and our joke of a regulatory system of overburdening policies and silly checklists to the point of being the most inane and stupid stuff you could think up.
And each one gobbles up time, talent, and lots of capital for not much bang for the buck. I used to do business consulting and mapping how business actually accomplish their tasks – versus how they THOUGHT things were being done. We have too many agencies, too many bureaus, too many offices to have much efficiency at all…
…unless the over purpose IS to slow things down and make Govt overlords of the minutia in anything we try to accomplish. Years ago, I could just go out and burn some of the dead wood that’s on my property – now, it’s do this, do that, and don’t you dare think about this other thing. Lowest common denominator, once again.
Just look at gas cans and Government STILL hasn’t bothered to realize that those that are striving to win Darwin Awards ought to be allowed to do just that instead of making rest of us miserable AND spilling more gas than we ever did.
But that’s considered to be a “fix”.
Graham has it right – politicians have lost the trust we once had in them. And that is the main problem. When they are off fighting instead of governing properly (e.g, stay in their lanes, observe boundaries, and remember THEY serve US instead of the other way around), more and more, the bureaucrats have become the Government we deserve.