The number of gears in the government machine greased by
taxpayer money is staggering. Currently, the US government
has 15 major departments, with over 450 supporting and independent
agencies. The breadth and depth of these alphabet soup bureaucracies
is astounding. Did you know there is a government agency called
the Office of Minority Health (OMH)? Are minorities’
physiologies different than the rest of the US population?
I mean, don’t ALL Americans have the same concerns with
health issues? Who knew? This illustrates the ongoing specialization
and redundant creation of myriad organizations spawned by
a nanny government. Pick an issue, any issue, no matter how
small or insignificant, and – poof! – our progressive
government creates ex nihilo another government ancillary
to appease the sheeple’s concern that something is being
done to address it.
Merely wasting taxpayer money, and ensnaring citizens with
new regulations – regulations put in effect without
congressional review by said agencies – would be bad
enough. But a more sinister trend is occurring among these
multitudes of government organizations – the accumulation
of personal power. Newly appointed Secretary of the State,
Hillary Clinton, is currently pursuing to widen the power
to the State department before taking office. Ms. Clinton
proposes a bigger budget, additional envoys, and a greater
role in economic affairs. Her justification?
Mrs. Clinton’s push for
a more vigorous economic team, one of her advisers said, stems
from her conviction that the State Department needs to play
a part in the recovery from the global financial crisis. Economic
issues also underpin some of the most important diplomatic
relationships, notably with China.
So our government, which has ripped off trillions in US citizens’
tax dollars via bailouts and the Federal Reserve, without
accountability, now wants to assist in repairing the international
financial crisis through the State Department? Under "Whitewater"
Hillary Clinton? Ok, now if that isn’t the official
starting gun for the worldwide apocalypse, nothing is.
This latest development, along with the recent clash between
Biden and Cheney on the role of the Vice Presidency, confirms
my growing suspicion that the departments in the US government
are shifting from a vertical hierarchy to a horizontal network
of competing agencies: a system otherwise known as a polycracy.
A unique mutation of this polycracy includes the appointment
of "Czars" – Drug Czar, Car Czar, Health Czar,
Cyber Czar, et al. – all of whom become the proverbial
too many cooks that spoil the broth. The habit of government
to throw more money at a problem is nothing compared to its
obsession to spawn whole litters of power-wielding appointees
and boards to advise the advisors of the advisory committees.
More ominous is that many agencies are given carte blanche
for the unrestricted carry of firearms listed on John Lott's
blog. They include Internal Revenue Service agents, Health
and Human Services Department, and the Environmental Protection
Agency. What, the EPA, armed? Why, so they can shoot litterbugs
and non-recyclers? I do agree the Health and Human Services
Department should carry guns – so they can mercifully
give the coup de grace to those citizens who have suffered
under their mediocre, "good enough for government work"
care.
At the risk of abusing Goodwin’s Law, this expansion
of US departmental power is reminiscent of the polycratic
system in the Nazi government. According to "The Hitler
State" by Martin Broszat, the Third Reich government
resembled an "Organizational Jungle" of competing
agencies. Historian Ian Kershaw makes the case that Hitler
either sought or unconsciously allowed this "Political
Darwinism" to take place to kill off the weak factions
and to keep the stronger ones at each other’s throats
– to occupy them from making a power grab for Hitler’s
position. Only in such an environment could a virtually unknown,
weak-chinned, bespectacled chicken hawk with metagaming Machiavellian
skills rise to power and control both the internal security
police and the State Praetorian Guard. And no, I am not referring
to Dick Cheney, but Heinrich Himmler. But I can forgive the
reader for mistaking one for the other.
In the Third Reich’s polycracy, Field Marshal Hermann
Goering’s decision to field 30 infantry divisions with
Luftwaffe personnel was not a desperate effort to provide
more ground troops to fight the invading allied armies, but
provide him with the muscle to hold his claim as designated
heir to the Reich if and when Herr Adolph kicked the bucket.
Employing scarce technically trained air personnel as infantry
cannon fodder was a "Grosse" waste of Germany’s
decreasing military resources. Yet Goering knew that in the
resulting power vacuum following Hitler’s death, he
would have to compete with Himmlers’s SS, as well as
other Nazi polycracies, to secure his position as the new
Führer. The current Tom Cruise flick, Valkyrie, is based
on the attempted coup by German Colonel Stauffenberg to assassinate
Hitler to save Germany from fiery Gottdamerung. Had the Stauffenberg
plan succeeded, there was a possibility that a civil war would
have erupted in Germany, with Wermarcht under Erwin Rommel
fighting for governmental control. With the ongoing accumulation
of power in individual US agencies, it is not difficult to
imagine a similar political struggle occurring within our
own government departments. While it is far-fetched to think
a firefight would develop between competing US agencies, say
for example between the IRS and the ATF, there would be few
of us that would not pay good money to watch it. I know I
would.
The evolution of our government organizations into a polycratic
system is another warning sign that the checks and balances
outlined in the Constitution by the Founding Fathers are being
discarded. The increase of power and resources given to appointees
and departments, instead of addressing the nation’s
various ills, produces counter-productivity and jealous infighting
among them. It leads to individuals carving out niches of
personal power for their own agendas and benefit. One need
to only study the history of the first Director of the FBI,
J. Edgar Hoover, and see how he used that agency as his own
personal intelligence gathering and blackmail cartel. Should
this growing polycracy within the US government continue unchecked,
citizens will be subject to an increasing schizophrenic government
having turf wars with itself – all in the name of supposedly
promoting the general welfare of its citizens.