Break Up the Nest

Kudos to Senators Josh Hawley (R, Mo.) and Marsha Blackburn (R, Tn.) for attempting to really drain the swamp.  Their bill, S. 2672, would move “90% of the positions in 10 Cabinet-level departments out of D.C.”  What a great idea: break up the place!  The thought occurred to me some time ago as the Trump-collusion imbroglio was gaining steam and I was reading Geof Shepard’s “The Real Watergate Scandal” on my Kindle.  Come to think of it, a real state depression in DC wouldn’t be such a bad thing for the country.

Blackburn and Hawley.

All those minions scurrying about DC have created a world all their own.  The progressives of the late 19th century assured us that the halcyon days of good government would be upon us if only more power was deposited in the hands of degreed professionals who were educated to treat all of reality as a matter for “science”.  In other words, people like themselves.

Ironically, they ignored the implications of the “science” of people both as individuals and in large groups.  People are simultaneously self-serving and altruistic, and not in equal measure – usually to the detriment of altruism.  As a collective, they create a distinct society with its own norms and expectations.  It’s a world unto itself.

The skyline of Washington, D.C., including the U.S. Capitol building, Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial, and National Mall, is seen from the air, January 29, 2010. (Saul Loeb/AFP)

A trip into the world of the Watergate scandal sheds light on the brave new world of this administrative state.  Let’s examine 3 prominent characters in the now bastardized but popular version of the story: Clark Mollenhoff, Mark Felt, and Bob Woodward.

Mollenhoff was a DC reporter and well-connected lawyer and friend of presiding judge John Sirica (Sirica is another of these networked DC folks).  Not only was he well-connected, he got a position in the first year of the Nixon White House.  His ambition to have direct access to Nixon and be Nixon’s premier sage was thwarted by learning that he would have to work under Haldeman and Ehrlichman.  The job didn’t last much longer than a year.  He becomes another of the disgruntled operatives – one among many thousands populating the District – roaming about looking for outlets for their scorn.  In clearly improper, if not illegal, ex-parte meetings with Sirica, he would fill that coveted role of “sage”.

Clark Mollenhoff

Mark Felt, ex-Associate Director of the FBI, is another example of a person with stymied high aspirations.  Passed over for the FBI directorate – it was handed to L. Patrick Gray – he simmered as second fiddle.  He willingly became an espionage agent for Bernstein and Woodward as “Deep Throat”.

Former FBI official W. Mark Felt arrive at federal court in Washington 9/18 for the continuation of his trial on charges of approving illegal break-ins during the Nixon Administration.

Finally, what about Bob Woodward?  He made his name in DC circles as an aide to Admiral Thomas Hinman Moorer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.  His connections would be useful in his second career as WaPo muckraker.

Carl Bernstein, left, and Robert Woodward, who pressed the Watergate investigation, in Washington, D.C., May 7, 1973. (photo: AP)

What to make of all this?  The country is governed in a bog-like slough of cliques, the excessively ambitious, and self-serving inter-relationships.  If you’re an outsider from Ashtabula, beware!

Trump, does this sound familiar?

Forget all that stuff about rule by the people.  Progressives bequeathed to us a government of an unaccountable nomenklatura.

That’s right, Blackburn and Hawley, we have no realistic recourse but to break it up!  Break it up, and do so quickly.

 

RogerG

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