02/26/2025 Trump Is Not Destroying
Institutions; That’s What FDR Did William L. Anderson
Once upon a time, in a land known as Washington, DC, the experts wisely
governed the people, and the people were happy. Everything from the
nation’s nuclear arsenal to the Internal Revenue Service was run with
precision and, most of all, trust. The happy people trusted the experts
to always do the right thing which they did.
But one day, all of that changed for the worse when the Bad People came
to this happy land and turned everything upside down for no good reason
than just to be mean and bad. Declares Brooke
Harrington of Dartmouth College in the
New York Times:
In the weeks since President Trump unleashed Elon Musk’s initiative,
the Department of Government Efficiency, on our federal institutions, it
has profoundly destabilized basic systems we count on to make our society
function.
Harrington continues:
It’s as though the current administration is running Franklin
Roosevelt’s first 100 days in reverse: Instead of rebuilding institutions
and public trust at a moment of national peril, it seems to be trying to
unravel both and is creating a moment of national peril.
This threatens to destroy what’s left of Americans’ faith in
government. Moving fast and breaking things the Silicon Valley motto
that appears to inspire Mr. Musk and his DOGE initiative is
“potentially
wreaking havoc,” as Senator Ed Markey and Representative Don Beyer
recently wrote, on federal systems that ensure our physical and economic
survival.
Unfortunately, Harrington isn’t finished with this hagiographic
depiction of the government that existed just six weeks ago:
This promises to be a tough way for Americans to learn a critical
fact too often overlooked that one of our country’s greatest and
least-appreciated assets has been public faith and trust in a variety of
highly complex systems staffed by experts whose names we’ll never know.
In fact, high levels of trust used to be one of our superpowers in the
United States: specifically, that meant trust in our government to
operate with reasonable competence and stability, and without the kind of
corruption that has hobbled other societies.
The key national asset was trust in the system overall, rather than
in any individual or elected official. For decades, academics and polling
companies
have
measured this with the question “How much of the time do you think
you can trust the government in Washington to do what is right?”
Though that trust declined significantly as a result of the Vietnam
War, it
remained high enough that our country could regain stability and
prosper after crises like the Covid pandemic, from which our peer nations
struggled to recover. This was driven in part by faith in the
competence and integrity of our civil service and federal
institutions.
She answers her rhetorical question with:
Trust in government to do what is right, at least most of the time,
is a form of wealth call it civic capital that breeds prosperity on
many fronts. Anything that threatens that trust weakens our society and
economy.
In reading this fairy-tale view of the bloated behemoth known as the
federal government, it is clear that a Harvard education and an academic
Ivy League resume do not mean that those which have them can think
critically. Instead, the reader is presented with a make-believe
portrayal of government that looks like something from a Disney
production.
It is hard to know where to begin when doing a critical read of this
article. First, it reflects the views of a progressive True Believer who
worships in the Church of the Progressive Expert in which the
bureaucratic technocrat should be making decisions for everyone else.
Writes Thomas Leonard, himself an “expert” in the history of
progressivism:
How did this [technocratic “good society”] come to pass? In briefest
summary: the rise of expertise and statism. The Progressive Era marked a
new, intimate and reinforcing relationship between the state and the new
sciences of society (especially economics), while progressive economic
science increasing [sic] averted to statism in its answers to the leading
question of the day, “what should be the relationship of the state to the
economy?” The role of the political economist changed in the Progressive
Era from that of scholar writing to influence public opinion (and,
indirectly, policy making) from that of academic providing expert policy
counsel directly to policy makers or, in fact, serving as a policy maker
in government positions created to accommodate expertise.
If there is a giveaway sentence in Harrington’s hagiography, it is
the one in which she claims that “trust in government” was the key to
this country’s recovery from covid. Yet, if anything describes how the
majority of Americans responded to the government’s response to the
pandemic, it was
distrust. True, progressive elites
blamed the distrust on the Great Unwashed Masses that refused to get
“fully vaccinated” or
wear masks even in intimate moments, and they
believed that had those “deplorables” just done what Blue State
governors and bureaucrats told them to do, there would have been a
half-million fewer deaths, which is a highly-questionable
assertion.
We do know now that the mass lockdowns and school closures ordered by the
so-called experts have had
disastrous effects on both educational development and mental health
of school children, despite the fact that school-aged children were not
nearly as vulnerable to the covid virus as were older adults with other
serious health conditions. However, it was not concern for students that
drove school closings, but rather the
politics of the public school teachers’ unions, which are a major
financial contributor to the Democratic Party. In other words, raw
politics drove school closings and other covid policies, not the medical
wisdom of the “experts,” as Harrington imagines.
In calling Trump the “reverse” FDR, Harrington claims that President
Franklin Roosevelt was simply restoring “trust” to US institutions, but
in reality, he was transferring constitutional authority from Congress to
the executive branch along with confiscating wealth and property from
owners of private property. Apparently, Harrington confuses the
accumulation of raw state power with a restoration of trust. The New Deal
was not a “restoration” project but rather a series of policies that
undermined the trust relationships that are necessary for an economy to
thrive. Indeed, much of FDR’s anti-business rhetoric was aimed at
convincing Americans to lose trust in everything else but
government.
Furthermore, her claim that DOGE is undermining “trust” is contradicted
by the fact that DOGE investigators have uncovered evidence that the
Biden administration betrayed trust by creating multi-billion-dollar
slush funds to hand taxpayer money to politically-connected people
and organizations. Likewise, while Harrington wants us to believe that
all USAID moneys were spent providing medical care and food to poor
people overseas, much of the agency’s appropriations were
spent on private non-profit organizations and paying for favorable
coverage from US journalists and their organizations.
While one can disagree with the tactics of Elon Musk and Donald Trump and
question DOGE’s long-term effectiveness, Harrington’s simple-minded
approach ignores the fact that the Biden administration engaged in the
corruption of institutions ranging from the courts and law enforcement to
national security No doubt, the typical NYT reader ignores Biden’s
transgressions and enthusiastically believes Harrington.
Although many of Harrington’s observations are almost amusingly naïve, it
is clear that she represents an elite constituency that believes it never
should be out of powerand people who are not like her should have no
political influence at all.
Writes Leonard:
…progressives’ views, in fact, can be seen to exemplify an illiberal
tendency in American progressivism, which manifests in the tension
between the progressive desire to uplift oppressed groups, and the
progressive desire to socially control groups seen to be a threat to the
social and economic order. Social control of inferior groups, like all
eugenic thought, opposed the moral equality of human beings – indeed, it
is predicated upon human hierarchy.
For now, she and her kind have little political control over the
federal government. One hopes that will be the case for a long time.