Mark Steyn with another biting analysis of what is going wrong in the US right now.
In just about his last act as president, George W. Bush has declared Washington, D.C., a federal disaster area.
No, seriously. I’m not setting up some lame-o punchline here, like we used to do a decade back in the good old Monica days: “President Clinton today declared his pants a federal disaster area,” etc. What happened last week was that the Bush administration formally declared a federal emergency in the District of Columbia.
So what was it? An ice storm? A hurricane?
No, it’s the inauguration of his successor. The inauguration is scheduled to make landfall on Tuesday and wreak havoc all night long, as Category Five conga lines buckle highways round town, and emergency busboy crews find themselves overwhelmed as they struggle to clear drained champagne flutes. So the mayor, Adrian M. Fenty, put in a request for more federal money, and, apparently, the easiest way to sluice the cash to him no questions asked was for the president to declare a state of emergency in the District and funnel however many extra gazillions he wants through FEMA – the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
“I don’t know if anybody’s ever done that,” said Dana Perino, the White House press secretary.
Indeed. One reason why nobody’s ever done that before is because a presidential inauguration is not (to be boringly technical about it) an “emergency.” It’s penciled in well in advance – in this case, so well in advance that for years Democrats have been driving around with “1-20-09″ bumper stickers on the back of their Priuses. Emergency-wise, that’s the equivalent of Hurricane Dan Rather wrapped around a lamppost in his sou’wester, hanging there in eager anticipation every night for half a decade. Generally speaking, changes of government are only “emergencies” in the livelier banana republics where this week’s president-for-life suddenly spots the machete-wielding mob scrambling over the palace walls so nimbly he barely has time to dial the Liberian branch of FEMA and put in a request for extra Portapotties and a rope-line management team.
The proposition that a new federal administration is itself a federal emergency is almost too perfect an emblem of American government in the 21st century.
I haven’t been happy with the way the Federal government has been growing for a long time. Including under the Bush presidency. But I suspect that the Bush presidency will look cheap compared to what is about to be unleashed from the newly-minted, all-Democrat-party controlled Washington. The spending spree has just begun. Nancy Pelosi has already announced a “stimulus plan” that is bigger than what Obama was reputedly considering.
The auction has begun.
And we are all going to pay for this management by emergency. Do read the whole thing.
Via Memeorandum.




I have long been skeptical about conservatives forming a new party to challenge and eventually replace the Republican Party (I usually vote Republican even though I have not been a Republican for may years).
But having watched the GOP roll over and play dead for Democrats since the elections, I am re-thinking the conservative party idea. One big, fat, easy target after another (the trillion-dollar pork bill, the sleazy ethics of Eric Holder and Timothy Geithner, the inexperienced Leon Panetta) goes by and not only do Republicans not fight back, in some cases they are helping!
Besides – it’s not like the GOP is going to be around much longer. When you consider the stolen Senate election in Minnesota, the non-election in Illinois, and the unprosecuted efforts of ACORN I don’t see how we can avoid becoming a one-party dictatorship. A conservative party might actually put up a fight rather that set as its top priority getting invited to Obama’s dinner parties.