By David
French
Tuesday,
December 13, 2022
Back
when I was in college, I had a conversation with a car salesman that helped
change my life. My friend had come into some money (he got his real estate
license while still in school and had just made his first big sale), so he did
the responsible thing and immediately decided to go car shopping.
We piled
into my 1985 Chevy Nova and drove to a car dealer. His first target was a
brand-new Mazda RX-7, so he picked the most expensive model on the lot and
asked the (obviously skeptical) salesperson if we could test-drive it.
Reluctantly he gave us the keys, and we took off.
It was a
glorious moment, and my friend was sold. He wanted the car, and he wanted it
now. He pulled back in, handed the salesman the keys, and said, “I want it.”
The salesman took the keys, looked at my friend for a good long while, and said
these immortal words:
“Son,
there’s a difference between wants and needs. You want this
car. You don’t need it. You might want to think more about what you need.”
That’s
not a normal thing for a salesman to say to a 20-year-old who’s about to drop
way too much cash on a car. But it was wise. My friend paused and pondered. He
didn’t buy the car. I paused also and felt bad for egging him on. There is a
difference between wants and needs, and while we shouldn’t always forgo our
wants, we definitely shouldn’t neglect our needs.
I’ve
thought of that conversation many times, most recently when I decided I wanted
a new truck with premium off-road capability. I went back and forth on the
wants/needs scale and decided that the remote possibility of a zombie
apocalypse meant that I did, in fact, need all the off-road capability I could
afford. So I bought the truck. That may not have been the right
call.
In
politics, we confront the want/needs conflict all the time. In democracy we
tend, over time, to get what we want. Our nation’s bloated federal government,
for example, is the result of generations of accumulated wants made real. Even
our dysfunctional Congress is a product of a public that actually seems
to want a “parliament of pundits” (to borrow Jonah’s memorable
phrase). They often like to see their representatives waging the culture war at
the top of their lungs. Americans from both political parties seem to want greater
government intervention in the economic and cultural life of the nation, while
we need less.
The
evidence of the popular desire for more government is everywhere, and the idea
that the two parties have fundamentally different ideas of the ideal reach and
limits of government power seems antiquated. To be sure, they’d use government
power differently, but they’re both in love with the potential of government to
shape the economy and—critically—change the culture.
Let’s
look at government spending. Take a close look at the Treasury Department chart
below. You’ll notice a few trends. First, as a general matter, you see deficits
rise during wars and recession and shrink during peace and prosperity. So
deficits went up after 9/11 and the Afghanistan and Iraq invasions and then
slowly declined until they spiked with the Great Recession.
Deficits
declined again during the slow recovery of the Obama years. But then you see
the pattern break. Deficits went up every single year of the Trump presidency
despite the fact that the American military wasn’t engaged in large-scale
combat and the economy continued its recovery. The economy boomed, and the
deficit grew.
Fiscal
responsibility? Who wanted that?
At the
same time, we saw leading Democratic and Republican governors adopt similar
views of the power of government over speech and culture. This July I wrote a
long piece explaining the shrinking differences between Florida Republicans and
California Democrats, at least when it came to their theories of state power.
For
example, here’s what I wrote about Ron DeSantis:
Discontent with social media moderation policies, he signed a social
media censorship bill that’s been blocked by a federal court of
appeals. Angry at
corporate and academic wokeness, he signed an expansive “Stop WOKE Act” that limits the free speech
rights of private corporations and university professors.
Since I
wrote that piece, a federal court has enjoined key provisions of the Stop WOKE Act, blocking
provisions that apply to private corporations and to public colleges. But
there’s more:
DeSantis has signed legislation that punished Walt Disney for its
political speech,
placed extraordinarily broad and vague
limitations on
teaching sexual orientation and gender identity in public schools, and
prohibited even private employers
from imposing vaccine mandates.
That’s
what big-government culture war looks like. Indeed, a key sign of the
conservative shift on civil liberties is the embrace of laws purporting to ban
critical race theory in
red-state legislatures across the land. A focus on restricting speech is a huge
flip. Previous red-state legislative efforts focused on protecting free speech on campus, not punishing the expression of
ideas that Republicans find offensive.
But if
Gavin Newsom vs. DeSantis is our nation’s “inevitable culture war,” as Ross Douthat argued in a
compelling New York Times piece this October, then don’t look
for Newsom to have a fundamentally different view of state power than DeSantis.
California has demonstrated that it is just as happy as Florida to use coercive
state power against the state’s political enemies:
California Democrats have launched their own frontal attack on the First
Amendment, one that matches or exceeds Gov. DeSantis’s in both intensity and
scale. In 2018 the Supreme Court struck down its effort to force pro-life
pregnancy centers to advertise for free and low-cost abortions. In 2021
it struck down California’s mandatory
donor disclosure laws.
It rejected California restrictions on religious free exercise five separate times during the pandemic.
I can go on. California has required churches to provide
abortion coverage in
their group health plans. It has imposed prohibitions on state-funded or state-sponsored travel to states that possess
policies regarding LGBT citizens that it deems discriminatory.
And yet
our nation’s spending spree and our political class’s love affair with state
power is working out very poorly for our republic. While the most recent inflation reports show improvement, our nation
is still suffering under the worst wave of price increases in generations, and
it’s hitting families hard. And the weaponization of government in our cultural
conflicts fuels many of the most contentious debates of our time.
Last
week my friends at More in Common released the results of a yearlong survey of American attitudes about the “history wars”—the conflicts
over teaching American history in public schools. The results were both
encouraging and discouraging. The encouraging part is easy to
state—it turns out that Americans across the political spectrum are broadly united about how to teach history.
Our differences are much smaller than we think.
The vast
majority of Republicans, notwithstanding the headlines you see, want schools
to teach about the ugliest chapters of American history, and they want schools
to teach about the distinct histories and experiences of America’s marginalized
communities. The vast majority of Democrats want to teach the founding
documents as advancing freedom and equality. They do not want to make students
feel personally responsible for the sins of the past.
The bad
news is that Republicans and Democrats are very wrong about each other.
Democrats don’t think Republicans want to teach America’s sins or about the
unique histories of oppressed groups. Republicans don’t think Democrats want to
teach about the virtues of the founding documents, and they believe that
Democrats want students to feel personally responsible for American failures.
At the same time, More in Common found that Democrats and Republicans really don’t like each other. The data in this chart should concern us all:
These
findings mirror the findings in a previous More in Common survey that found American partisans
consistently view their political opponents as more extreme than they truly are
across a whole host of issues, including controversies related to race, sex,
guns, and immigration.
Now let
me ask you this—if Americans (especially highly partisan Americans) are in the
grips of ignorance and animosity, is this the time to be increasing the
role of government in American life? I can certainly see the temptation. After
all, if you hate your opponents enough, then one of the key messages of
nationalist conservatism—“reward friends and punish enemies”—has a certain inherent appeal.
But I’d
argue the opposite. I’ve long been a classically liberal free-market
conservative both because of my respect for human dignity (a state that
protects liberty preserves human rights) and because of my knowledge of human
limitations (people are inherently flawed and can’t be trusted with
concentrated power). The animosity of our present age is amplifying our
limitations, and as it amplifies our limitations, it decreases my willingness
to hand more authority to the state.
As I
think back to that car salesman, his words were wise, but his approach was
incomplete. He told us about the difference between wants and needs, but he
didn’t sell us on our needs. He let us leave without pointing
us to something else, something better.
That’s the task of the moment. Liberty, humility, and respect for individual dignity are good products, worth selling. Tens of millions of Americans want the government to do more at the exact moment when we need it to do less, and if we can persuade them to change their wants to match their needs, then perhaps we’ll have a chance to move past this moment of extreme partisan pain.
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