In physics, a unified field theory
is an attempt to explain with a single hypothesis the behavior of
several fields. Its political corollary is the Cupcake Postulate, which
explains everything , from Missouri to Iraq, concerning
Americans’ comprehensive withdrawal of confidence from government at all
levels and all areas of activity.
Washington’s response to the menace of school bake sales illustrates progressivism’s ratchet: The federal government subsidizes school lunches, so it must control the lunches’ contents, which validates
regulation of what it calls “competitive foods,” such as vending
machine snacks. Hence the need to close the bake sale loophole, through
which sugary cupcakes might sneak: Foods sold at fundraising bake sales
must, with some exceptions, conform to federal standards.
What has this to do with police, from Ferguson, Mo., to your home town, toting
marksman rifles, fighting knives, grenade launchers and other combat
gear? Swollen government has a shriveled brain: By printing and
borrowing money, government avoids thinking about its proper scope and
actual competence. So it smears mine-resistant armored vehicles and
other military marvels across 435 congressional districts because it can .
And
instead of making immigration policy serve the nation’s values and
workforce needs, government, egged on by conservatives, aspires to
emulate East Germany along the Rio Grande, spending scores of billions
to militarize a border
bristling with hardware bought with previous scores of billions. Much
of this is justified by the United States’ longest losing “war,” the one
on drugs. Is it, however, necessary for NASA to have its own SWAT team?
A
cupcake-policing government will find unending excuses for flexing its
muscles as it minutely monitors our behavior in order to improve it, as Debra Harrell,
46, a South Carolina single mother, knows. She was jailed for “unlawful
neglect” of her 9-year-old daughter when she left her, with a
cellphone, to play in a park while she worked at a nearby McDonald’s.
Resistance
to taxation, although normal and healthy, is today also related to the
belief that government is thoroughly sunk in self-dealing,
indiscriminate meddling and the lunatic spending that lards police
forces with devices designed for conquering Fallujah. People know that
no normal person can know one-tenth of 1 percent of what the government
is doing.
In Federalist Paper 84,
Alexander Hamilton assured readers that, although the proposed
Constitution would increase the power of a distant federal government,
this government would be inhibited by scrutiny: “The citizens who
inhabit the country at and near the seat of government will, in all
questions that affect the general liberty and prosperity, have the same
interest with those who are at a distance, and . . . they will stand ready to sound the alarm when necessary.” Not now, when five of the nation’s richest 10 counties,
ranked by median household income, are Washington suburbs, parasitic
off the federal government. The people who write the regulations of
school lunches must live somewhere.
Darin Simak,
a first-grader in New Kensington, Pa., who accidentally brought a toy
gun to school in his backpack, turned it in to his teacher. School
administrators then suspended him because the school has a
“zero-tolerance policy.” What children frequently learn at schools is
that schools often are run by biological adults incapable of
commonsensical judgments.
“We can’t allow toxic things to be in our schools,” said a spokesman
for the Texas school district that confiscated the suntan lotion of a
10-year-old who then became sunburned on a school trip. Students, the
spokesman explained, “could ingest it. It’s really a dangerous
situation.” Not as dangerous as entrusting children to schools run by
mindless martinets.
Contempt for government cannot be hermetically sealed; it seeps into everything
. Which is why cupcake regulations have foreign policy consequences.
Americans, inundated with evidence that government is becoming dumber
and more presumptuous, think it cannot be trusted to decipher foreign
problems and apply force intelligently.
The
collapse of confidence in government is not primarily because many
conspicuous leaders are conspicuously dimwitted, although when Joe Biden
refers to “the nation of Africa,” or Harry Reid disparages the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision as rendered by “five white men”
(who included Clarence Thomas), Americans understand that their
increasingly ludicrous government lacks adult supervision. What they
might not understand is that Reids and Bidens come with government so
bereft of restraint and so disoriented by delusions of grandeur that it
gives fighting knives to police and grief to purveyors of noncompliant
cupcakes.
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