Las Vegas Review-Journal

Think small — it’s better for everyone

By limiting size, we limit damage

- By LARRY ELDER CREATORS SYNDICATE

The scandals surroundin­g the Obama administra­tion come down to one common theme: that the ever-growing size and scope of our federal government gives it enormous power over virtually every aspect of our lives, power that in the wrong hands can be used to reward supporters, exact revenge and punish enemies. In education, health care, transporta­tion, energy, disaster relief, welfare, commerce, work and salary rules, and on and on, the federal government plays an outsized role completely inconsiste­nt with the Founding Fathers’ notion of a limited government that allows maximum personal liberty.

In 1900, government at all three levels — federal, state and local — took about 10 percent of the people’s money. It now takes nearly 50 percent.

On what basis should Americans — especially those who did not vote for Barack Obama — feel that the president will guard their interests, especially when apparently vindictive actions have been taken under his watch?

The Internal Revenue Service admits to, and has apologized for, targeting conservati­ve groups. The second article of impeachmen­t against Richard Nixon accused him of using the IRS to pursue political enemies. Incredibly, the IRS commission­er of the office in charge of tax-exempt organizati­ons from 2009 to 2012 — when the conservati­ve groups were targeted — is now the director of the IRS Affordable Care Act office, responsibl­e for ObamaCare tax compliance.

The Justice Department, in apparent violation of policy, subpoenaed the phone records of as many as 100 reporters without notifying their employer, The Associated Press. And the DOJ subpoenaed the phone records of a Fox reporter, as well as the phone records of his parents.

Every president fights with the media, whose job descriptio­n supposedly requires them to serve as watchdog over government. It is why the First Amendment protects freedom of the press. But how many administra­tions have openly and repeatedly stated contempt for a particular news channel, the way Obama and his aides have publicly attacked the Fox News Channel?

Early in his administra­tion, Obama complained, “I’ve got one television station entirely devoted to attacking my administra­tion.” He told Rolling Stone: “The golden age of an objective press was a pretty narrow span of time in our history. Before that, you had folks like (William Randolph) Hearst who used their newspapers very intentiona­lly to promote their viewpoints. I think Fox is part of that tradition — it is part of the tradition that has a very clear, undeniable point of view. It’s a point of view that I disagree with. It’s a point of view that I think is ultimately destructiv­e for the long-term growth of a country that has a vibrant middle class and is competitiv­e in the world.”

Fox News is “ultimately destructiv­e”?

Then-White House senior adviser David Axelrod said that Fox News Channel was “not really a news station” and that much of the programmin­g is “not really news.” Similarly, former White House Communicat­ions Director Anita Dunn said about Fox: “We don’t need to pretend that this is the way that legitimate news organizati­ons behave.”

A few days later, calling Fox “a wing of the Republican Party,” Dunn said: “They take their talking points, put them on the air; take their opposition research, put them on the air. And that’s fine. But let’s not pretend they’re a news network the way CNN is.”

How despicable do Democrats find Republican­s? A recent CNN poll found 76 percent of Democrats still believe President George W. Bush “deliberate­ly misled” the country into the Iraq War. And Obama defenders say Bush “used” the IRS to “target” the NAACP. What’s the answer? Let’s agree that neither side thinks much of the goals and motives of their political opponents. Let’s agree that the bigger the government, the more money and power it takes from its citizens. So where does this leave us? It takes us back to a founding principle of this country: limited government. By reducing the size of government, we limit the amount of damage “the other side” can do when in charge.

It isn’t that smaller government is more trustworth­y or transparen­t. Among other attributes, a smaller government allows the commander in chief to focus on job one — that of protecting the American people against enemies. For both Obamahater­s and Bush-haters, a smaller government reduces the amount of influence and control the “wrong side” has over the other. A win-win.

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