Hiding behind 'common sense' and 'fairness'
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I very much liked the suggested point-counterpoint opinion pieces on the front of the Outlook section in today鈥檚 Washington Post. Actually it was not so much a debate with pro-one side vs. the other arguments, but rather a one-two-punch critique of the rhetoric used on both sides.
First, University of Virginia history professor that the GOP鈥檚 talk of 鈥渃ommon sense鈥 when it comes to fiscal responsibility really has little to do with striving for 鈥渃ommon good鈥 type strategies. Her central thesis (emphasis added):
Once democracy is established and consolidated, common sense is rarely a match for the messy and complicated business of governing. No matter how many times politicians invoke the term today, there can be no such thing as a single, simple, common-sensical solution to the problems confronting the nation. The mind-boggling complexity of the issues surrounding climate change, economic recovery, multiple wars and, yes, federal and state budget deficits outstrips the authority of common sense either as the basis of workable policies or as a critique of those already on the table.
The divisions in American public opinion also pose a challenge to 鈥渃ommon sense鈥 rhetoric. The federal budget and the family budget are decidedly different beasts. Once we get past the level of real common sense 鈥 as in 鈥渄on鈥檛 put your hand in the fire if you don鈥檛 want to get burned鈥 鈥 one person鈥檚 common sense is generally another鈥檚 misguided thinking.
The political appeal to common sense is thus best understood not as a call for clearheaded solutions but rather as a form of pandering 鈥 an effort by pundits and politicians to channel real popular anger and to lather voters with collective flattery. Calls for common sense like Beck鈥檚 or Palin鈥檚 start from the premise that the hard-working majority can instinctively tell right from wrong. That their enemies 鈥 self-serving Washington politicians, greedy Wall Street bankers, immoral Hollywood entertainers, out-of-touch scientists and 鈥渆xperts鈥 鈥 cannot be trusted. (After all, these are the elites who got us into the mess we鈥檙e in.) And that it鈥檚 time for the rest of us in the majority to 鈥渦nite鈥 and apply our 鈥渋nnate common sense,鈥 in the words of Beck, to the real issues confronting the world.
And to her right (on the Outlook front page), that the Democrats鈥 emphasis on achieving 鈥渇airness鈥 through higher taxes on the rich doesn鈥檛 exactly encourage the 鈥渟hared sacrifice鈥 (for the 鈥渃ommon good鈥) needed for bipartisanship in deficit reduction. It really perpetuates the hyperpartisan, 鈥渃lass warfare鈥 type of talk that gives each side an excuse to keep disagreeing. In fact, Brooks鈥 main point is that with all that talk about raising taxes on the rich as being 鈥渙nly fair,鈥 eventually even us only-middle-class-less-than-$250,000-a-year people start to think that taxing only the rich is unfair. Why? Because as Americans, we believe in opportunity and not just luck. As Brooks puts it:
If opportunity in America is a sham 鈥 if the system is rigged and some people get the breaks only for reasons of luck, birth, or discrimination 鈥 then merit is fictitious and redistribution brings greater fairness. But if America is an opportunity society 鈥 if you have the chance to work harder, get more education and innovate 鈥 then rewarding merit is fair, and it is fair for some to make more money than others.
Personally, I would like to believe that someday I can make over $250,000 a year and not be 鈥減unished鈥 for it, just as much as I hope that if (鈥漷here but for the grace of God go I鈥) I were to actually fall into hard times (through bad luck), the social safety net will be there to catch me. (And incidentally, I had no idea the ) As a (generously-defined) 鈥渕iddle-class鈥 person I am willing to pay higher taxes and accept lower benefits, as long as those sacrifices I鈥檒l be called to make are broadly shared with others in society who can also afford to make them. That鈥檚 the 鈥渟hared sacrifice鈥 view that I actually believe a lot of Americans feel is 鈥渇air.鈥
But right now we鈥檙e far from achieving 鈥渃ommon good鈥 and 鈥渟hared sacrifice鈥 solutions, because our politicians are too busy hiding behind these words of 鈥渃ommon sense鈥 and 鈥渇airness鈥 in accusing the other side of being unreasonable. Fundamentally, the gulf between the two political parties in their views on the appropriate roles of government (and hence the best way to reduce the deficit) seems enormous right now. The quality of the conversation is going to have to improve before the necessary compromises on policy materialize.
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