The Editors - NRO
* * *
What we learned from Hurricane Katrina: No matter what
happens, it’s never the governor’s fault.
What we’ve learned from the contaminated drinking water
in Flint, Mich.: It’s always the governor’s fault.
A bit of background first:
Flint has relatively high
levels of lead in its drinking water, a cause for legitimate concern. This is a
result not so much of the source of its drinking water, the Flint River, as of
the city’s failure to treat the water, which, without the proper additives,
leaches lead and other contaminants from pipes.
Prior to and separate from the current water crisis,
Flint was in a state of financial ruination. In one of the most liberal cities
in the United States, Flint’s Democrat-dominated government did what
Democrat-monopoly governments do in practically every city they control: It
spent money as quickly as it could while at the same time carpet-bombing the
tax base with inept municipal services, onerous regulations, high taxes, and
the like.
Flint is nothing more than a miniature Detroit. And
Detroit is what Democrats do.
As a result of this, a bankrupt Flint entered into a
state of receivership, meaning that an emergency manager — or emergency
financial manager, depending upon Michigan’s fluctuating fiscal-emergency law —
was appointed by state authorities and given power to supersede local elected
officials in some matters, especially financial ones.
The contamination happened while Flint was under the
authority of an emergency manager who, though a Democrat, had been appointed to
the post by Michigan’s Republican governor, Rick Snyder.
(He was, in fact, the most recent in a long line of
emergency managers, Flint having failed for years to emerge from its state of
fiscal emergency.)
Flint is nothing more than a miniature Detroit. And
Detroit is what Democrats do.
Because the Democratic emergency manager was appointed by
a Republican governor, the people from whom one expects cheap theatrics of this
sort have declared the situation in Flint to be a Republican scandal.
(*GUFFAW*)
Not so fast...
Before the appointment of the (Democratic) emergency
manager, Flint’s elected mayor and city council (Democrats) had decided to
sever the city’s relationship with its drinking-water supplier, which was at
the time the Detroit water authority.
(Flint intended to join a regional water authority that
would pipe water in from Lake Huron, a project that was scheduled to take three
years to come online. In a fit of pique, Detroit - a city under unitary
Democratic control - immediately moved to terminate Flint’s water supply,
leaving the city high and literally dry.)
Flint is nothing more than a miniature Detroit. And
Detroit is what Democrats do.
At this point, somebody — no one will quite admit to
being the responsible party — decided to rely temporarily on the Flint River.
(*PURSED LIPS*)
The Democrats in the city government deny responsibility
for this; so does Darnell Earley, the Democrat who served as emergency manager.
Earley says that the decisions to terminate the Detroit deal and rely
temporarily on the Flint River “were both a part of a long-term plan that was
approved by Flint’s mayor, and confirmed by a City Council vote of 7–1 in March
of 2013 — a full seven months before I began my term as emergency manager.”
* BUT... WE'RE STILL TALKING DEMOCRATS...
"PROGRESSIVE" DEMOCRATS...
Meanwhile, Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality
— no hotbed of covert Republican activity — seems at the very least to have
suppressed worrisome findings about Flint’s water supply, and may have done
worse than that.
* OH! BUT WAIT! THERE'S MORE!
The federal Environmental Protection Agency — whose
Democratic chief was appointed by our Democratic president — knew for months
that there were concerns about Flint’s water, and did nothing.
* AND... DID... NOTHING...
In sum:
The Democratic government of a Democratic city destroys
that city’s finances so thoroughly that it must go into state receivership...
A Democratic emergency manager signs off on a consensus
plan to use a temporary water source; the municipal authorities in that
Democratic city responsible for treating and monitoring drinking water fail to
do their job; a state agency whose employees work under the tender attention of
SEIU Local 517 fails to do its job overseeing the local authorities; Barack
Obama’s EPA, having been informed about the issue, keeps mum. Republican
scandal.
* YEP! PRETTY MUCH SUMS THINGS UP!
Governor Snyder, of course, does bear some responsibility
here and, to his credit, has acknowledged as much. No, no reasonable person
expects the governor to show up in Flint with a white glove and personally
eyeball what the local water-treatment plant is up to, but the people he
appointed did an insufficient job. It is ironic, given the tenor of the
denunciations, that Governor Snyder is as guilty of excessive bipartisanship as
of any other offense: In his desire to keep Flint under the watch of an
emergency manager with whom the locals were comfortable — a Democrat — he may
have overlooked better candidates with more thorough-going approaches to
reform.
(If you’ve followed Flint’s history of nearly criminal
misgovernance, you know that what was needed was more iron fist and less velvet
glove.)
* BUT...
Flint is nothing more than a miniature Detroit. And
Detroit is what Democrats do.
So while those who fault Governor Snyder are not entirely
wrong, what is deeply dishonest is the story put forward by such people as the
filmmaker Michael Moore, who enjoys pretending to be from gritty, blue-collar
Flint (he actually hails from an affluent suburb nearby), that this is,
somehow, the result of the Republican approach to government or conservative
governing ideas.
That is absurd.
Flint is a mess made by Democrats, made worse by the
Democrats in Detroit, and ignored by the Democrats in the White House.
The worst that can be said of the Republican on the scene
is that he failed to save the local Democrats from the worst effects of their
own excesses.
But that is the Democrats’ approach to calculating the
chain of responsibility: Go up the ladder or down, as needed, until a
Republican is located, or a private firm, in which case capitalism can be
blamed.
* YEP...
The Democratic monopolies in Flint, Detroit,
Philadelphia, Cleveland, Newark? Somehow, somewhere, there’s a Republican
responsible for that, even if he has to be brought in on an overnight flight
from Oklahoma.
1 comment:
This retelling of the Flint Michigan water problem was awesome! I laughed...and cried...and laughed again. It was epic fun. Great job. You've definitely have mad skills in writing.
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