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Tuesday, May 21 2013
National Security
ON May 29, a New York Times article depicted President Barack Obama as deciding case by case on secret drone-strike assassinations, personally poring over photos of prospective targets. Just three days later, a second article pulled the veil on the secret...
GETTING GOVT OUT OF WAY
OUR biggest political division is the war between the empty places and the crowded places. It's natural. People who live in crowded places tend to appreciate government. It's the thing that sets boundaries on public behaviour, protects ...
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GETTING GOVT OUT OF WAY

OUR biggest political division is the war between the empty places and the crowded places. It’s natural.

People who live in crowded places tend to appreciate government. It’s the thing that sets boundaries on public behaviour, protects them from burglars and cleans the streets.

If anything, they’d like it to do more. (That pothole’s been there for a year!) The people who live in empty places don’t see the point. If a burglar decides to break in, that’s what they’ve got guns for. Other folks don’t get in their way because their way is really, really remote.

Who needs government? It just makes trouble and costs money.

The Tea Party is so Empty Places.

Do you remember that Tea Party rally in Washington last year over the budget crisis? (That would be the spring budget crisis as opposed to the many other seasonal versions.) “Nobody wants the government to shut down,” began Representative Mike Pence of Indiana, diplomatically. “Yes we do!” cried voices from the crowd.

The Empty Theory made a lot of sense when the country was full of isolated farms, but it lost its mojo when the farmland filled up with suburbs and we elected a long series of presidents who were, to one degree or another, Modified Crowded.

But now Empty is making a comeback, less an expression of physical reality than a state of mind. People living on Social Security and Medicare in a 400- unit condo development built with federal subsidies can march to their congressman’s town-hall meeting and demand that he get government out of their hair.

Lately, I’ve been fascinated with Texas, the perfect exemplar of the New Empty. The population of Texas is approaching 26 million, mostly urban-suburbanites. But many of them believe they’re on the lone prairie. “Ask my students,” a professor at Texas A&M University told me. “They all associate themselves with the country. They’re living a myth. They think of Texas as open wide, but 80 percent of the people in Texas live in one of the major metropolitan areas.” Texas is so Tea Party. Democrats haven’t won a statewide race there since 1994. Dick Armey, the former House majority leader, was one of the Tea Party’s organisational founders. Ron Paul was a kind of intellectual godfather. Rick Perry hails from an area in West Texas nicknamed ‘The Big Empty.’ So, on the one hand, it seemed appropriate that Mitt Romney nailed down the presidential nomination there. On the other hand, the support seemed a little less than full-throated. Perry, who maintained his perfect record of election victories by making his name miraculously disappear from the ballot, told The Texas Tribune that he was super-enthusiastic about his party’s nominee. Then he noted that “we really don’t have an option here.” Romney may be conservative, but he’s hopelessly Crowded Places. You may remember the cringe-inducing moment in 2007 when he started bragging about his prowess as an outdoorsman. (“I purchased a gun when I was a young man. I’ve been a hunter pretty much all my life.”) Inquiring minds checked the hunting licenses in all the places that Mitt had at some point called home and determined that he’d never applied for one. “I’ve always been a rodent and rabbit hunter,” he amended. “Small varmints, if you will.” Supporters describe this as a harmless bit of self-dramatisation to emphasise Romney’s strong commitment to gun rights.

Although actually, when he ran for the US Senate and served as governor, he appeared to be very enthusiastic about gun control.

(We could do this sort of thing all day. Having Mitt Romney as a presidential candidate is going to be one long Where’s Waldo on the issues front.) But until he dropped out of the race, varmint hunting was the dog on the roof of Romney’s 2008 campaign. When he was leading Massachusetts, Romney tried to make the state’s programmes work better. Now he seems to be going for the lonely-but-throbbing heart of the Empty Places credo, which focuses much less on fixing government than simply getting rid of it.

Last week, he announced that the country doesn’t need “more firemen, more policemen, more teachers.” When that turned out to be overkill, Mitt backtracked, saying that localities pay for popular public employees like firefighters while, as president, he’d be dealing only with the unloved federal work force. (We have not really heard much about which of those workers he wants to see go. Social Security administrators? Park rangers? I’m putting my money on bank regulators and Securities and Exchange Commission enforcers.) This fall, the Republican Party is going to be running on the Empty Places war cry, and it’s ironic that Mitt Romney’s supposed to be the one to lead the charge. Maybe he’ll one-up Perry and find four federal agencies to promise to close. Maybe he’ll bag a deer. Or a moose.

They’re serious this time around.


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