January 31, 2025 Transitioning the Federal
Workforce into Farmhands J.B. Shurk
I was reading one of James Howard Kunstler’s exquisite essays when I
stumbled upon a
hilarious
conversation in his comment section. Discussing President
Trump’s turbocharged criminal alien relocation efforts, a reader named
Mitch observed, “People keep asking who’s going to man the grills, pick
the crops, clean the houses when all the illegals get deported. We
have lots of useless government-paid parasites that could fill those jobs
nicely. They’re educated, speak English, and currently produce
nothing but obstacles.”
Bandit replied, “But bureaucrats don’t do work. They wouldn’t have
a clue how to do anything useful, and I’m sure they don’t have the mental
capacity to learn.”
Il faut savoir noted, “Working on farms is hard and
demanding. We have produced SOFT generations, heads down on their
cell and social media, and have hyped their worthless degrees as big
deals. Getting some time on the farms and doing hard hand labor
would not only get them in shape, but show them what the true value of
work means.”
Finally, Beth Nicolaides dreamed, “I’d like to see a new IRS hire picking
lettuce.” (Me, too, Beth!)
I think this online conversation gets to the nub of the most pressing
crisis in America: there has been a decades-long disconnect between the
vast government bureaucracy and the American people whom that bureaucracy
purportedly “serves.” When President Wilson first empowered a
permanent administrative state to handle the “business of governing,” he
envisioned an educated workforce immune from the day-to-day passions of
politics but uniquely qualified to direct the operations of the American
state. That was at best a naïve dream and at worst a calculated
strategy to deprive the American people of their democratic powers and
elevate a faculty lounge of Wilson clones as a new noble class.
(When it comes to academics, it’s difficult to know whether their love
for impractical theorizing or narcissistic god complex is the root cause
of their real-world failures.)
Without any doubt, the steady expansion of the federal government over
the last hundred years has been an unmitigated disaster. From its
inception, Wilson’s “modern” bureaucracy became a home for scarcely
camouflaged Marxist-socialists who wished to burrow inside the federal
government and “transform” America’s Constitution from within. They
sabotaged Americans’ interests and undermined Americans’ individual
liberties. By hook or by crook, they constructed a hiring system
that prevents their subsequent removal. No matter how poorly they
perform or how malicious their intent to damage the United States, bad
government workers remain employed.
“Rule by mediocrity” has created a widening gulf between the American
people and their government. It has enabled a few million
bureaucrats to work around the will of voters. It has effectively
transitioned America from a representative republic to a “blob”-ocracy
that listens to and represents only the blob. Consequently,
Americans see their government as something separate from themselves an
exotic beast that has grown in spite of the Constitution’s explicit
limitations.
Adding insult to injury, none of Wilson’s dreamy benefits materialized
from the construction of a “professional” government. Elevating
“experts,” he insisted over a century ago, would allow the federal
government to react quickly to domestic problems and foreign
challenges. “Smart” people who were well trained for the tasks at
hand would be equipped to overcome any difficulty at a moment’s
notice. Do those descriptions remind anyone of the federal
government?
It’s been four months since Hurricane Helene devastated the southern
Appalachians, and FEMA still can’t find western North Carolina on a
map. The Pentagon wasted billions of dollars over the last four
years fighting “climate change” and “white supremacy” while fast-tracking
delusional men with fake breasts into positions of command.
California which prides itself as a kind of premier “laboratory” for
the federal government cut its firefighting budget, stopped executing
controlled burns of dangerously combustible brush, and diverted record
rainfalls into the Pacific in order to save a “sacred” fish. When
wildfires predictably destroyed parts of L.A., California’s inept
“laboratory” of “professional bureaucrats” were not smart enough to
understand that empty fire hydrants had been the city’s undoing.
Instead, the “experts” blamed their own incompetence on “global
warming.”
Those are just three well known examples of lethal bureaucratic
failures. An honest auditor could start making a list of
government-created crises, and the list would never end. Because
most of the government’s auditors are equally incompetent (or corrupt),
the “professionals” who monitor all the other “professionals” rarely see
anything wrong. Negligent supervisors breed government malfeasance
exponentially. Like a hydra-headed monster, as soon as one
bureaucratically engineered problem is fixed, ten new problems take its
place! (For those keeping score at home, this is why President
Trump recently
fired a score of inspectors general whose investigatory faculties
appeared crippled by willful blindness.) Rather than proving
themselves skilled managers capable of deftly executing solutions, as
Wilson promised, the permanent bureaucracy operates the “business of
government” at a glacial pace. During the “reign of experts,” Uncle
Sam has demonstrated remarkable flexibility only in his uncanny ability
to stick his head up his own derrière.
The online commenters whom I quoted at the beginning of this essay
articulate our predicament adroitly. After a century of
bureaucratic expansion, we have millions of unnecessary employees who
greatly overvalue their own contributions to American society and
remain oblivious to the reality that non-government workers are the
country’s only essential workers. People who grow, build, move, and
fix things are the lifeblood of our nation. Government bureaucrats
are leeches who drain that blood in the form of taxes and senseless
rule-making so that hacks with few skills can pretend to be
“professionals.” Professionals in what?Who
knows? Even most of the “experts” realize that they are
expert only at doing little and getting paid.
After President Trump’s executive order forcing federal workers back into
the office, Wilson’s “professional government” ran to social media to
shriek about the horrors of having to put on pants and function as
adults. Who would watch their children? How would they
ever be able to work that second job that they do when they’re pretending
to work their federal jobs? How can they be expected to rejoin
their coworkers when it’s been only five years since the beginning of
COVID? If you watch enough of these videos online, it is
impossible not to conclude that a substantial percentage of the federal
workforce do absolutely nothing to justify their burden to American
taxpayers. They are the
definition of dead weight.
Unsurprisingly, many of these federal parasites are advocating for
sabotage of the Trump administration. The clever writers over
at Twitchy have
highlighted a lengthy post from an intelligence officer who describes
in detail how federal workers can undermine the president while hiding
behind a pretense that they are doing their jobs “by the book.” The
fact that unelected bureaucrats feel so untouchable that they publicly
incite subversion is sufficient evidence that the administrative state
should be dismantled and disbanded. As one commenter properly
concludes, “if they are not going to do their jobs in an apolitical
manner ... they should be treated like political appointees and forfeit
the protections of the civil service.”
The administrative state is a giant python that chokes the Constitution
and swallows the American people whole. It should be
destroyed. If it cannot be destroyed, it should be chopped into
little pieces and dispersed across the frontier wilderness of
Alaska. If Congress and the courts prevent federal workers from
being terminated, then President Trump should set them to better
tasks. He’s already
“
immediately halted” the hiring of IRS agents. Now it’s time to
do as Beth Nicolaides suggests above and send remaining IRS agents into
the fields to pick lettuce. Transitioning the federal workforce
into farmhands would give bureaucrats a chance to earn an honest
living.