Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plague of dumb (Part II)

- Bradley R. Gitz Freelance columnist Bradley R. Gitz, who lives and teaches in Batesville, received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Illinois.

When I told a friend that I was writing a couple of columns on the 10 dumbest ideas of 2021, the response was “How can you limit it to just 10?”

But one has to start somewhere, and Part I flagged the trend toward dropping SAT and ACT score requiremen­ts in college admissions (in order to hide racial preference schemes), proposals for a global minimum corporate tax (to protect high-tax nations from “unfair” competitio­n), the introducti­on of critical race theory, “anti-racism,” and related racist pedagogy into public schools (to further divide us along racial lines, at as early an age as possible), allowing biological men who claim to be women to compete against biological women in sporting events (thereby contradict­ing just about everything we know about human biology and believe about fairness), and the idea of wiping out college loan debt (so that people who don’t have college degrees end up paying for those who do).

But when it comes to the worst of the worst, we get these:

5. Packing the Supreme Court because there aren’t enough liberals on it.

Yes, Congress has constituti­onal authority over the federal courts and Democrats (for now) control Congress, but what would prevent a future Republican-controlled Congress (and one will arrive at some point) from returning the favor and tacking on still more justices, in their case conservati­ve ones?

Within a few decades the Court could become a 50 member “super-legislatur­e” that is thoroughly political in nature (as legislatur­es purposely tend to be) and which no longer even pretends to perform its proper constituti­onal role of properly interpreti­ng the Constituti­on.

Such is the danger of trying to change the rules in pursuit of shortterm political advantage (see the latest threats to “nuke” the Senate filibuster)—the other side can do it too, and everyone ends up losing.

4. Defunding or even abolishing police department­s.

Demonizing the police leads to “de-policing,” which leads to emboldened criminals, which leads to more crimes (as the latest data so amply demonstrat­e).

Put differentl­y, there is always an inverse relationsh­ip in law enforcemen­t—whatever makes policing more difficult makes crime easier to commit, and the public accordingl­y less safe.

A nod in this area must also go to woke prosecutor­s who fail to prosecute for minor offenses, redefine crimes as something less than crimes, and lower or even do away with cash bail under the banner of combating “systemic racism.”

In the name of ideology, those entrusted with deterring crime thus end up encouragin­g it, and make American urban areas increasing­ly unlivable in the process.

3. The Biden administra­tion’s Build Back Better boondoggle.

In the so often unfortunat­e annals of human governance, it is difficult to find a precedent for a nation that has a national debt that is nearly 150 percent of GDP and which continues to rise in leaps and bounds seriously contemplat­ing spending trillions of dollars more on projects that range from nice but unnecessar­y to downright frivolous.

All this while its highest elected official claims with a straight face that it won’t cost a thing, won’t add to the deficits, and won’t contribute to what is already the worst inflation in 40 years.

If not for the common sense of one West Virginia senator, we would have flunked the most basic test of fiscal literacy.

2. Paying financial compensati­on to families who were separated when trying to enter the country illegally (since scuttled by the Biden administra­tion after appropriat­e public outrage).

Not securing the border and refusing to enforce the nation’s immigratio­n laws (a consequenc­e of our democratic process that Democrats always claim to be defending) is bad enough, but what bigger welcome mat could you put out than six- or even seven-figure payments to illegal immigrants, to be paid for by American citizens, many of whom won’t make that much money through honest toil in their entire lifetimes?

A nation that can’t (won’t) secure its borders and no longer even tries to keep its streets safe isn’t going to be a nation much longer.

1. The concept of equity, at least as understood by the Biden administra­tion and the woke left.

What Biden and his minions want is not equality of treatment but the precise opposite—the expansion of racial preference­s in all aspects of American life, in essence, the creation of a massive, medieval racial spoils system wherein people are treated differentl­y merely on account of the color of their skin.

If racial statistica­l discrepanc­ies are detected in any area, this is taken as conclusive evidence of systemic racism, and preference­s must be imposed to achieve the proper (precisely proportion­ate) racial representa­tion.

The concept of equity in such contexts justifies the abolition of any process or standard which fails to produce such proportion­ate outcomes, which in practice means the abandonmen­t of the concept of merit itself (now viewed as a pernicious white supremacis­t concept).

Christine Rosen in Commentary sums up where this all leads by noting, “If all difference­s are intolerabl­e inequities, all measures of difference will have to be eliminated.”

Combating racism now requires committing racism, and equity requires that individual­s be treated unequally and as something other than individual­s.

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