Recent unemployment figures reveal the daunting dimensions of the job crisis. Unemployment stands at 10.2 percent, and
underemployment -- those who have given up looking or who have taken part-time jobs -- is at a mind-numbing 17.5 percent: almost one in five. In this greatest crisis since the Great Depression, many Americans are becoming desperate -- watching bills mount, facing foreclosures and giving up hope.
Alarm bells may be sounding for the American people, but not -- it seems -- for President Obama and Democratic congressional leaders. Instead of making jobs their urgent priority, they have launched a wild-eyed, budget-busting crusade to remake America's health care system. They are doing this at a time when two-thirds of Americans say they are happy with their current health care, and in a way that will paralyze job creation and act as a massive drag on the economy for years to come.
To get a handle on this, you've got to get inside the heads of the political class now running Washington. For this purpose, there's no more insightful guide than economist Thomas Sowell's 1995 classic, "The Vision of the Anointed."
The "anointed" -- who today include Obama, Pelosi, Reid and Co. -- are an intellectual and political elite infatuated by their own exalted status. They are convinced of their brilliance and superior abilities, but most of all of their moral righteousness. From this elite's perspective, Sowell explains, "problems exist only because the rest of us are not as wise or caring, or imaginative and bold, as they are."
For the anointed, public policymaking is a forum for moral preening -- a chance for ostentatious display of the benevolence in which they take such pride. It's also a vehicle for their will to power, as they strive to radically restructure American society despite the resistance of ordinary folks.
The anointed like to appeal to noble-sounding goals like "social justice." But their schemes to "fix" society always transfer power and decisionmaking authority from individuals and families to the central government -- dominated by people like themselves. In the vision of the anointed, writes Sowell, "Public policy-making is to be seen as ego gratification from imposing one's vision on other people through the power of government."
Obama and Co.'s health care crusade is a case in point. The almost-2,000-page bill raced through by House Democrats on a Saturday night transfers control over one-sixth of our economy to a vast new government bureaucracy, and invests an Orwellian-named "health choices commissioner" with power to shape millions of Americans' life-and-death decisions.