by Richard Fernandez in PJ
Media
Crichton observed that Jurassic Park had a real world analogue.
Well-meaning bureaucratic attempts to tune Yellowstone Park’s ecosystem had led
instead to untold
destruction. The problem had its genesis when Theodore Roosevelt visited
Yellowstone in 1903 hoping ”our people should see to it that this rich
heritage is preserved for their children and their children’s children forever,
with its majestic beauty all unmarred.”
By 1934, the Park Service’s efforts to fulfill this wish had
turned Yellowstone into a parody of its former self.
The Park Service did everything they could to increase the number
of elk. The results were predictable. Antelope and deer began to decline.
Overgrazing changed the flora. Aspen and willows were being eaten at a furious
rate and did not regenerate. Large animals and small began to disappear from
the park.
In an effort to stem the loss, the park rangers began to kill
predators, which they did without public knowledge. They eliminated the wolf
and the cougar, and they were well on their way to getting rid of the coyote.
Then a national scandal broke out. New studies showed that it wasn’t predators
that were killing the other animals. It was overgrazing from too many elk. The
management policy of killing predators therefore had only made things worse.
Actually, the elk had so decimated the aspen that now, where
formerly they were plentiful, now they’re quite rare. Without the aspen, the
beaver, which use these trees to make dams, began to disappear from the park.
Beaver were essential to the water management of Yellowstone, and without dams,
the meadows dried hard in summer and still more animals vanished.
The situation worsened further. It became increasingly
inconvenient that all the predators had been killed off by 1930, so in the
1960s, there was a sigh of relief when new sightings by rangers suggested that
wolves were returning. Of course, there were rumors all during that time,
persistent rumors that the rangers were trucking them in. But in any case, the
wolves vanished soon afterward. They needed to eat beaver and other small
rodents, and the beaver had gone.
Pretty soon, the Park Service initiated a PR campaign to prove
that excessive elk were not responsible for the problems in the park, even
though they were. The campaign went on for about a decade, during which time
the bighorn sheep virtually disappeared.
Crichton called it “a cascade of ego and error”. This catastrophe
has been recreated in its essentials on a much vaster scale by the Obama
administration, who finding the American healthcare system to their distaste,
also decided to improve it. In order to accomplish this, shortcuts were made —
for a good cause of course. When the rules proved inconvenient they
waived the rules. When waivers produced further disaster, they waived the
waivers. They are now in the stage of waiving the waivers to waive the
waivers and trucking in subsidies for the insurance companies the way the park
service trucked in the wolves.
Megan McArdle wrote that along the way
Obama’s actions had the accidental effect of destabilizing the legal system
itself. “The White House seems to believe that they are allowed to shinny
around any rule, as long as they wrote it. I’d argue that this is exactly
backward: They have an especial duty to uphold the laws that they themselves
constructed, because if they don’t, why should the rest of us go along?”
That in turn is spawning its own effects.
Mark Steyn asked whether it is seditious to observe that
de facto sedition is taking place. Steyn, a Canadian, writes “it is a condition
of my admission to this great land that I am not allowed to foment the
overthrow of the United States government. … Fortunately, at least as far as
constitutional government goes, the president of the United States is doing a
grand job of overthrowing it all by himself.”
On Thursday, he passed a new law at a press conference. George III
never did that. But, having ordered America’s insurance companies to comply
with Obamacare, the president announced that he is now ordering them not to
comply with Obamacare. The legislative branch (as it’s still quaintly known)
passed a law purporting to grandfather your existing health plan. The
regulatory bureaucracy then interpreted the law so as to un-grandfather your
health plan. So His Most Excellent Majesty has commanded that your health plan
be de-un-grandfathered. That seems likely to work. The insurance industry had
three years to prepare for the introduction of Obamacare. Now the King has
given them six weeks to de-introduce Obamacare.
“I wonder if he has the legal authority to do this,” mused former
Vermont governor Howard Dean.
“I wonder if he has the legal authority to do this?”. That
is the wrong question. The real problem is whether any future Republican
president will be allowed to do the same thing, such as droning American
citizens without due process, canceling contracts at press conferences,
changing the rules of whole industries at the stroke of a pen, or engaging in
harmless well meaning fraud, etc.
The answer to the rhetorical question is obviously “no” since only
a Democratic president named Obama can be allowed to do any such
thing. The still uncomprehended result of making Obama the exception is
that it establishes the rule. After Obama … well there must never be an apres
Obama. Robert Bolt in his play, A Man For All Seasons, captured the dilemma
faced by anyone who would set aside the the rules in dramatic lines he wrote
for St. Thomas More.
“What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after
the Devil? … And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned round on you
– where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted
thick with laws from coast to coast, Man’s laws, not God’s, and if you cut them
down – and you’re just the man to do it – do you really think you could stand
upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I give the Devil benefit of
law, for my own safety’s sake!”
One you establish the rule that there are no rules, it applies to
you too. Well the laws are now flat and the devil is abroad.
Nearly a year ago a friend mused on the impossibility of
challenging the Federal Government and/or Obama. “The Feds,” he said “spends
more in hours than even the largest private American fortunes.” What could not
be anticipated however, was that Obama would create through “a cascade of ego
and error” something actually large and powerful enough to destroy his own
administration. The trillions at the Federal Government’s disposal have created
a Frankenstein monster big enough to challenge its creator.
One commenter at McCardle’s article cannily
observed that it was the downstream consequences of insignificant actions that
hurt Obama the most.
What’s most impressive now is how much Obama will sacrifice for so
little. Any law, any policy, any constitutional principle, any constituency,
and any national interest can be thrown under the bus for short-term political
distraction, on the order of months or even weeks or days. Red line comment got
him on a box on Syria? Just bomb them, without any popular or political
support. Waffling on that fails? Then instead of bombing them, guarantee them
in power and overturn our decades of Middle East policy, without even
consulting anyone. That doesn’t look so hot? Let Iran have nukes as long as
they tell us they don’t. Obamacare doesn’t work? Throw out almost four years of
preparations and any pretense of constitutional government, and throw all
insurance regulators and insurance companies under the bus, just because
approval ratings hit 40%. It profits a man nothing to sell his soul for the
whole world. But for the remote possibility of a 2 point uptick on Gallup this
week?
Watch him just get more and more reckless and erratic as his
popularity continues to plummet. I can’t predict what insanity he will try when
he hits 30%, but we should all fear a cornered president who recognizes no
limits on his power and no duty to uphold his oath.
There’s nothing for it now but to pile expedient on expedient. To
patch the patches. And to do it all without the benefit of source code
control or versions. The media’s version of source control is the Memory Hole.
What happens next is anybody’s guess. Complex systems are
like that, especially when you try to micro-manage them with slow, inaccurate
and lagged feedback systems. As Crichton put it, ”God created
dinosaurs. God destroyed dinosaurs. God created Man. Man destroyed God. Man
created dinosaurs.” And you know the rest.
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