The choice 6
An editorial in the Wall Street Journal titled The Welfare State and Military Power shows why redistributive domestic policy necessarily leads to the decline of power. In other words, socialism weakens the nation. And that is what Obama and the Democrats want to do. As we have reiterated (see below, The two-horse rider and Obama’s grandiose equivocation), it is a choice between liberty and power (and, we should add, prosperity) on the one side, or collectivism and decline (and impoverishment) on the other.
Has the moment of decision come and gone with the election of Obama? Has America already freely chosen to be unfree?
Or is it coming now with the push to nationalize health care, put the economy under government control, and begin the disarmament of America?
If now, which way will America choose to go?
Here’s an extract from the WSJ article:
Welfare spending [in Europe] has crowded out defense spending. The political imperative of health care and pensions always trumps defense spending, save perhaps in a hot war. Europe may never again be able to muster public support for a defense buildup of the kind the U.S. undertook to end the Cold War in the 1980s, or even the smaller surge after 9/11.
The tragic irony of this year is that Democrats are rushing the U.S. down this same primrose entitlement path. With ObamaCare certain to eat up several more percentage points of GDP as it inevitably expands, we will take a giant step toward European social priorities.
For many Democrats, this is precisely the goal. Many Europeans, such as those at the Financial Times, will also welcome America’s relative decline. But we doubt the American people fully understand what such a gilded entitlement cage means for our national vitality, or for our ability to defend U.S. interests at home and abroad. …
President Obama’s domestic agenda may well mean that his successors lack the option to deploy 100,000 troops to Afghanistan, or to some other future trouble spot. This is the way superpowers lose their superiority.