The Context Of Middle-Class Frustration

posted at 4:31 pm on January 21, 2010 by

Last night, President Obama gave ABC’s George Stephanopolous his first interview since the Massachusetts special election. Admitting that people were “frustrated” with the results of his administration’s first year, Obama continued:

So the reason I say that we are not surprised by what happened in Massachusetts is because I’m frustrated, too.

I’m frustrated by the fact that over the last decade, we have not seen the kind of progress for middle class families that are needed. That’s what I promised to deliver in the campaign.

It’s not something that I believe we can get done in a year. But it is something that I think we are starting to make progress on.

The part of that statement I’ve highlighted should bring a groan from everyone who’s tired of Obama endlessly blaming his failures on his predecessor. Later in the interview, the President spoke of the “broader context” in which he plans to “move the middle class forward.” I don’t think he sees the context broadly enough. The middle class can trace its frustration much further back than the election of George Bush, or Bill Clinton before him.

The middle class is the great enemy of collectivist politics, under any of its names: progressivism, communism, fascism, or “liberalism.” As far back as Karl Marx, the apostles of collectivism have understood that they must subjugate the middle class before they can claim total victory.

The upper class isn’t a big problem – they don’t have the votes to block a collectivist agenda in a democracy, and they generally find ways to maintain, or increase, their power and wealth under a total State. The power of the State can be extremely valuable to them, for manipulating markets and thwarting upstart competitors. Many of them are willing to trade a little wealth for power, or find moral nourishment in supporting a collective agenda.

The members of the lower class are generally seen as the clients of a collectivist movement, the recipients of the social benefits it promises. Their desperation and anger become fuel for the movement, providing both righteousness and voting power. The collectivist only needs to conceal any hope of finding prosperity beyond the generosity of the State, and keep the lower class convinced that government is the only moral actor in the economy. Review the speeches of Barack Obama, and search for anything that suggests the poor should look anywhere beyond the government and its social programs for salvation.

It’s clear that the middle class is the great enemy of collectivism. Only they have the combination of voting power, money, and economic self-interest to see the growth of government as undesirable, and provide effective resistance. They generally view their interactions with government in a negative light – they’ve all spent time in the Department of Motor Vehicles mausoleum, spent hours wrestling with tax forms, or been slapped with a traffic citation they don’t think they deserved. They understand the inefficiency and emotional instability of government, and instinctively resent its intrusion into their lives. A health-care takeover is the best chance collectivists will ever have of persuading the middle class to vote itself into chains… but for the better part of a century, they’ve been able to hear the hammers of the State ringing on the metal of those chains, in the forges of taxation and regulation.

The middle class is a vast group in a capitalist society, which is one of the things collectivists really hate about capitalism. Its upper reaches include the entrepreneurs and small business owners that bring economic vitality. Virtually every aspect of Obama’s agenda is designed to injure or burden small businessmen, and this is no accident. Despite their angry rhetoric about giant corporations, leftists have little trouble controlling them. They often do business directly with the government, as vendors… and, through lobbyists, as customers. They generally employ members of labor unions, which serve as a de facto arm of Big Government, injecting the agenda of the State directly into the corporate bloodstream. It’s the small business owners and self-employed, along with those who aspire to join their ranks, who are the most difficult to control, and the most likely to muster effective electoral resistance to the statist agenda. The middle class is filled with people who pay attention to the second page of their paycheck stubs.

I realize all of the above sounds terribly sinister… and perhaps you find that appropriate, having reviewed the works of Saul Alinsky and the Cloward-Piven strategy of manufactured crisis. I believe it is crucial to understand that it doesn’t matter if the people engineering a collectivist state have sinister motives or not. In fact, the belief that their intentions make a difference is incredibly dangerous. It’s related to the catechism of the faculty-lounge Marxist, which holds that communism and fascism only failed because bad people were in charge of them. In his interview last night, the President gave this as his reason for pushing so forcefully for his health-care takeover plan:

The reason I tackled healthcare wasn’t because this was my personal hobbyhorse. The reason I tackled it was during the course of the campaign, I traveled all across this country and I kept on hearing heart-breaking stories about families who were bankrupt because they got sick. If they had health insurance, suddenly insurance companies were doing things that were just plain wrong, and were leaving folks in an extremely vulnerable position.

It doesn’t matter if this is his sincere belief, spoken straight from the heart. His health-care plan was still an awful idea that united the country in opposition against the increasingly thuggish and arrogant methods he used to advance it. Those methods are integral to the collectivist enterprise. It will always become thuggish and arrogant, because when all virtue resides in the State, those who oppose the growth of the State become villains by definition. Consider the President’s assessment of his Republican opponents:

My hope was a year ago today when I was being sworn in that reversing that process was going to be easier partly because we were entering into a crisis situation and I thought that the urgency of the moment would allow us to join together and make common cause. That hasn’t happened. Some of it, frankly, is I think a strategic decision that was made on the side of the opposition that… I think that some of it had to do with a sense that the best political strategy was to simply say no.

Here, in a nutshell, is the heads-we-win, tails-you-lose mentality that keeps the State plodding blindly forward, crushing a formerly vibrant economy beneath it. If you don’t answer Obama’s trillion-dollar health-care plan with your own trillion-dollar program, you’re an obstructionist – not an opponent to be debated, but an obstacle to be swept aside. The middle class is frustrated because they understand the basic concept of fiscal responsibility, and they know they – and their children – will be expected to pay for these titanic solutions.

They also know they’ll have very little to say about how the money is spent, because they don’t have the lobbying power of the core Democrat constituencies. They certainly won’t be “controlling” Big Government through their votes. It took a political apocalypse, triggered by an incredible Republican win in Massachusetts, to frighten the Democrats out of ramming their health care plan down America’s throat. How many times can the middle class, composed of individuals trying to live their lives and take care of their families, expect to generate such a powerful shock wave? In the collectivist future, those individuals won’t be waging epic battles to preserve their liberties. They’ll be haggling over percentage increases in their benefits.

The frustration of the middle class is the angry confusion of people who can appreciate the opportunities Big Government denies them. It is the anxiety of those who hear the businesses who employ them relentlessly demonized, while the ruling class is never held responsible for its foolishness, waste, and theft. It is the resentment of people who suffer through disasters that President Obama and his allies regard as opportunities. It’s the hearty distrust of a State, and its media apparatus, that declares every frigid blast of bad economic news to be “unexpected” – but expects us to believe it can predict market fluctuations, technological advances, and even the global climate.

The President says “I have every interest in seeing a unified country solving big problems.” The rest of us have an interest in being allowed to pursue our individual solutions to those problems, according to the liberties our Constitution says belong to us as absolutely as our souls. We can see the wreckage of those “unified” solutions strewn through our past, and littering the rest of the world. Our frustration is born of intelligence and moral strength, not stubborn blindness.

Cross-posted at www.doczero.org.

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Comment pages: 1 2

Brilliant, again, Dr.Z!

You should be giving the SOTU response.

Disturb the Universe on January 21, 2010 at 4:49 PM

Jeez, another one out of the park. I look forward to buying a published collection of your comments.

Dhuka on January 21, 2010 at 5:34 PM

Dr. Zero, I like the way you think, and the way you express those thoughts.

Skandia Recluse on January 21, 2010 at 6:12 PM

Dr. Zero, you definitely should be writing speeches. Great, great job!

deidre on January 21, 2010 at 6:16 PM

Excellent, well written, clear article.

jeanie on January 21, 2010 at 6:58 PM

A published collection of your comments? Where do I send the check?

countrybumpkin on January 21, 2010 at 7:14 PM

Thank you.

And thank you as well to the voters of Massachusetts who have graciously allowed the middle class to be recognized as something more than worker bees of the State. I say graciously as there were no actual shots fired as happened in that local a couple of centuries ago.

Robert17 on January 21, 2010 at 8:42 PM

This is my first post on HotAir (joined months ago.)

Doctor Zero, I have been avidly following you for about a year.

Well done, sir.

The frustration of the middle class is the angry confusion of people who can appreciate the opportunities Big Government denies them. It is the anxiety of those who hear the businesses who employ them relentlessly demonized, while the ruling class is never held responsible for its foolishness, waste, and theft. It is the resentment of people who suffer through disasters that President Obama and his allies regard as opportunities. It’s the hearty distrust of a State, and its media apparatus, that declares every frigid blast of bad economic news to be “unexpected” – but expects us to believe it can predict market fluctuations, technological advances, and even the global climate.

The above is a perfect paragraph.

Fuligin on January 21, 2010 at 8:47 PM

It is the anxiety of those who hear the businesses who employ them relentlessly demonized, while the ruling class is never held responsible for its foolishness, waste, and theft. It is the resentment of people who suffer through disasters that President Obama and his allies regard as opportunities.

The rest of us have an interest in being allowed to pursue our individual solutions to those problems, according to the liberties our Constitution says belong to us as absolutely as our souls.

Amazing.

JCred on January 21, 2010 at 8:51 PM

Doctor;

You write with a clarity and turn of phrase that can only remind us of William F. Buckley.

This, as are your other posts, is an amazing analysis.

massrighty on January 21, 2010 at 10:15 PM

the increasingly thuggish and arrogant methods he used to advance it. Those methods are integral to the collectivist enterprise. It will always become thuggish and arrogant, because when all virtue resides in the State, those who oppose the growth of the State become villains by definition.

not an opponent to be debated, but an obstacle to be swept aside.

The President says “I have every interest in seeing a unified country solving big problems.” The rest of us have an interest in being allowed to pursue our individual solutions to those problems, according to the liberties our Constitution says belong to us as absolutely as our souls. We can see the wreckage of those “unified” solutions strewn through our past, and littering the rest of the world. Our frustration is born of intelligence and moral strength, not stubborn blindness.

Excellent, as always.

beachgirlusa on January 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM

Exactly right!!!
You said it the way I wish I could. Terrific article.

elclynn on January 22, 2010 at 9:01 AM

Scott Brown’s win has, I believe, energized the middle class. Now we see that we can make a difference. Our voice has finally been heard, and we will not be silenced.

Your analysis is spot-on, Doctor Zero. I think this is one of your most important essays to date. Keep them coming.

4Freedom on January 22, 2010 at 9:10 AM

Excellent analysis as usual.

aps on January 22, 2010 at 1:28 PM

Damn Doc, that is a stand out in works filled with stand outs!

I’m sending links to all I know!

JusDreamin on January 22, 2010 at 2:50 PM

Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.
C. S. Lewis

Laura on January 22, 2010 at 2:59 PM

This is the quote that gets me… and it’s not the “so busy getting stuff done” although that’s a real joke…

And, you know, If there’s one thing that I regret this year, is that we were so busy just getting stuff done and dealing with the immediate crises that were in front of us, that I think we lost some of that sense of speaking directly to the American people about what their core values are and why we have to make sure those institutions are matching up with those values.

Yes, Mr. President, speak to us about what our core values are. Just tell us what they are. This isn’t about LISTENING and trying to understand what our core values are and why they aren’t matching up with your policies. Speak, and it shall be done.

Under any other circumstances, I would have said this was a subtle mistake and he didn’t mean it that way. But it’s pretty clear how he, his cronies, and the dems view the country now. They’re not interested in listening. They just want to tell us how it is while they legislate according to THEIR core values.

Daggett on January 22, 2010 at 2:59 PM

The above is a perfect paragraph.
Fuligin on January 21, 2010 at 8:47 PM

Agreed.

Buy Danish on January 22, 2010 at 3:01 PM

Seems to me the only “core values” shown by Obama is “I WON”. Now listen to me and do as I say.

elclynn on January 22, 2010 at 3:13 PM

Another outstanding piece.

There’s one thing that bugs me, though.

If we conservatives are so much smarter than leftists, why hasn’t Doctor Zero been nabbed yet by some for-profit publication that can offer him or her a nice fat paycheck for these gems?

leilani on January 22, 2010 at 3:20 PM

The reason I tackled healthcare wasn’t because this was my personal hobbyhorse. The reason I tackled it was during the course of the campaign, I traveled all across this country and I kept on hearing heart-breaking stories about families who were bankrupt because they got sick.

So does that give Obama the right to ruin health insurance for the 80% of us who would NOT be bankrupt if we got sick? Or to cut Medicare benefits for the elderly, who are more likely to be sick than the rest of us?

And what about those who didn’t buy health insurance when they could afford it, then got sick and went bankrupt? What about the poor already eligible for Medicaid, who didn’t bother subscribing to it? Is that the taxpayers’ fault?

Most of these problems could be solved by:

1) Caps on medical malpractice awards, which would reduce insurance costs to doctors, with savings passed on to patients. This could also entice more bright young people to become doctors, and increase enrollment at medical schools.

2) Enabling consumers and corporations to purchase health insurance across state lines, eliminating state monopolies and lowering costs.

3) Enabling the establishment of private for-profit health-care co-ops, which would enable the self-employed and small businesses to buy health insurance at lower large-group rates.

4) For the poor without health insurance (<2X poverty line) provide a government allowance (on a sliding scale by income) for the purchase of private health insurance, paid for by a slight increase in the Medicare tax. They can then either buy health insurance, or put the money in their pockets, and if they get sick, too bad.

5) Other than the Medicare tax increase, for the rest of us with private health insurance, leave us alone.

Steve Z on January 22, 2010 at 3:21 PM

I always look forward to Doctor Zero time. Well said as always!

In fact, the belief that their intentions make a difference is incredibly dangerous.

Very true. And what’s often missing from today’s debate is that law and process matters. GM is failing? Let Uncle Sam become their owner. Never mind that they already HAVE owners. AIG having problems? Give them money, without a bill authrozing it. Then deny bonuses to people who earned them according to a contract. Not everything that helps people is just. Stealing from a Rockefeller to feed a pauper is wrong, regardless of how Rockefeller got his money. And the further government wanders from the restrictions of the law, the closer it gets to the arbitrary whim of a dictatorship.

One thing Obama said was correct, though. He was elected at least partially on anger at the government. And Scott Brown was elected for similar reasons. But Obama’s statement ignores the fact that he turned his back on the “hope and change” that many Americans wanted. His betrayal of promises for more transparency, less partisanship, and less influence by special interests are PRECISELY why his approval ratings are dropping.

hawksruleva on January 22, 2010 at 3:22 PM

Vote the lyin, corrupt, tax evadin, wealth destroyin, capitalist hatin, free enterprise destroyin, crapweasals out!
ALL OF THEM before they ram this thing and exert control over all of us!

1-19-2010 the beginning
11-02-2010 the solidifying
11-03-2012 VICTORY and FREEDOM?

dhunter on January 22, 2010 at 3:23 PM

2) Enabling consumers and corporations to purchase health insurance across state lines, eliminating state monopolies and lowering costs.

Steve Z on January 22, 2010 at 3:21 PM

I’ve been wondering. Doesn’t that erode the power of the individual states? Or is there a Federal law that can be removed without harming the ability of individual states to set standards for health care?

Personally, I think all health care should be left to the states to handle as they wish. If Massachusetts wants Romneycare, good for them. They can learn the harsh lesson of economics on their own.

hawksruleva on January 22, 2010 at 3:25 PM

It’s always a pleasure to read Doc Z’s posts.

The only thing BO understands about the middle class is that it needs to be destroyed. To that end he works tirelessly.

He does not understand this country and the millions of people who make it work. One only has to listen to him preachin’. That’s all he does. That’s all he can do. When I hear him I cringe and wonder who the he// he thinks he’s talking to.

We’re not the down-and-out folks he catered to as a community organizer during the day while he socialized with Hyde Park leftist elites in the evening.

We’re not stupid people who want or need his help, nor do we need an arrogant punk like Barry attempting to control our lives.

I’ve seen people listening to him, and the looks on their faces tell it all. It’s pure disdain and disgust. He insults us daily, and he has no idea that he is constantly making a fool of himself.

Cody1991 on January 22, 2010 at 3:28 PM

Thank you again, Doctor. You express things in way that I can only dream about and envy.

oldleprechaun on January 22, 2010 at 3:38 PM

The goal of any leftist is the elimination of the middle class.

jukin on January 22, 2010 at 3:41 PM

If the GOp is serious about being the party of liberty they MUST fight the 1.9 trillion increase in the debt ceiling. fight it with all they got. They must place a muzzle on the feeding trough of big government. if they do not they are no better than the libs

unseen on January 22, 2010 at 3:46 PM

unseen on January 22, 2010 at 3:46 PM

AMEN!

Make this the Dems real Waterloo.
Take away their ability to spend us into sevitude for that is surely what they are doing.
There are many ways to bring this country down and subject the middle class to Government rule and Socialism.

HealthScare is one but spending us and our kids into servitude to pay off the states debt is another!
It Must End!

dhunter on January 22, 2010 at 3:51 PM

The clarity of your analysis greatly enhances the understanding of the significance of our peril.
There is a great value in thoughtful watchmen like yourself explaining and encouraging those of us that are engaged in these struggles of individuals against the evil and out of control machine that ironically seeks to control us.
The charter of “negative liberties” and our own vigilance are the important weapons going forward. Insightful arguments like yours, DZ are like armor piercing rounds.
Excellent! Again!

ontherocks on January 22, 2010 at 4:05 PM

Our frustration is born of intelligence and moral strength, not stubborn blindness.

The Left like to categorize the middle class as unimaginative and locked into a particular mindset, whatever suits their purposes. The Left is drawn to stereotypes and group-think.

The middle class is diverse and creative. Striving to be upwardly mobile necessitates thoughtfulness, planning, determination and ambition. It only stands to reason that statist elites despise us. They need us to pay their bills, fund their entitlement programs without ever rewarding us – for anything. We are expected to work hard, foot the bills and expect nothing in return.

Barry and his crowd are fools like all the socialists who came before them.

The question in my mind is whether or not Americans will call a screeching halt to this, or will we become a carbon copy of the UK?

Cody1991 on January 22, 2010 at 4:08 PM

We are not worthy, Dr. Z.

Brilliantly said and as always happens after reading your post, my I.Q. just went up another 10 points. You sir, should be read by all and then we would all be a little smarter!

texgal on January 22, 2010 at 4:18 PM

You, Dr. Zero, have a rare grasp of the ideas behind events. Well done, sir.

In the collectivist future, those individuals won’t be waging epic battles to preserve their liberties. They’ll be haggling over percentage increases in their benefits.

They had better gear up to do so, or there will be no benefits to haggle over.

JDPerren on January 22, 2010 at 4:22 PM

Fantastic as usual, right up there with VDH, Steyn and Sowell.

echosyst on January 22, 2010 at 4:29 PM

It is the anxiety of those who hear the businesses who employ them relentlessly demonized, while the ruling class is never held responsible for its foolishness, waste, and theft.

It’s more than that. It’s not just the businesses that are being demonized — it’s us. We’re the ones doing the work the lefties say is so horrific. We’re the ones supposedly denying people healthcare. We’re the ones supposedly making the inner-city schools into prisons with overnight furloughs.

Screw that noise. We’re the ones paying taxes. We’re the ones who will LOSE OUR HEALTHCARE if this crap gets passed. We’re the ones who keep our eyes on our schools, to prevent them from descending into the politically-correct abyss. We’re the ones who pony up to the charities after every disaster.

An attack on business isn’t an attack on the fictional person created by incorporation; it’s an attack on the employees, customers, and suppliers of that business.

Crawford on January 22, 2010 at 4:29 PM

Review the speeches of Barack Obama, and search for anything that suggests the poor should look anywhere beyond the government and its social programs for salvation.

No offense, but I wonder if Obummer is thinking of adopting Haiti?

SWChance on January 22, 2010 at 4:34 PM

Thank you again for your insight and crisp prose.

TXUS on January 22, 2010 at 4:35 PM

The fact that you don’t acknowledge the slavery and imperialist destruction inflicted on native populations to achieve your “middle class” means you’re raaaaciiiissst!

/

Just had to get that out of the way. You know that’s the first place the left will go in response. Anyway, I think you hit the nail on the head DZ.

TheUnrepentantGeek on January 22, 2010 at 4:39 PM

+7%… Doc! Spot on!

Seven Percent Solution on January 22, 2010 at 4:44 PM

Thank you Doctor Zero.

To read your piece is equivalent to a Masters Degree in Political Science and Economics. Well Done.

highninside on January 22, 2010 at 4:53 PM

Doc Zero, if you are not collecting a paycheck for writing this kind of stuff, you should be.

Excellent, cogent article.

riverrat10k on January 22, 2010 at 4:56 PM

If we conservatives are so much smarter than leftists, why hasn’t Doctor Zero been nabbed yet by some for-profit publication that can offer him or her a nice fat paycheck for these gems?

leilani on January 22, 2010 at 3:20 PM

I have a feeling he/she writes for a living. Maybe this is the stuff the editors won’t touch? Just my opinion.

riverrat10k on January 22, 2010 at 5:02 PM

speaking directly to the American people about what their core values are

What a presumptuous, insulting, clueless dreg of a president you are. Our core values are beyond your comprehension – and you are not qualified – nor welcome to speak to me about them – as you are as far removed from them as you are from the American dream. – Just go away – and leave us alone.

P.S. – Doc, your expressed thoughts coincide with mine 100% of the time. But you are vastly superior in articulating – and I admire greatly your writing talents. Thanks for keeping up the good fight!

Oopsdaisy on January 22, 2010 at 5:12 PM

All right. Who is this guy. He’s too good of a writer to just some random blogger. My first thought was Mark Levin, but he’s too calm. Steven DenBeste?

Sefton on January 22, 2010 at 5:14 PM

Wow! If you have never read any other work – my fellow Americans, you MUST read this and do it 4 times! Not a single word in this piece has any taint of falsehood.

Cinday Blackburn on January 22, 2010 at 5:17 PM

I don’t consider myself middle class; I’m well below the median income in my state (about half the median to be exact), but despite all the talk from the liberals about helping those in need and helping the middle class, and putting the burden on the wealthy, not one of the stimulus programs or other economic programs have helped me.

I have not seen one cent in economic stimulus in my pocket book despite the hundreds of billions spent. But, lord knows that I will be paying for it even though I never received a benefit. And that’s the thing that frustrates me the most and the reason I will never vote for a democrat.

I have no doubt most Americans feel the same way. All this money spent for nothing. Well… not for nothing, obama’s friends are making a lot of money, but it will be the middle class and others paying for this corruption.

ThomasB. on January 22, 2010 at 5:31 PM

Everyone else has already expressed how I feel about your writing, Dr. Zero.

Let’s just say you are missing your calling by being buried in the Green Room. Your understanding and articulation need a much wider audience.

You are the master of perspicuity!

PrincipledPilgrim on January 22, 2010 at 6:11 PM

SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALODOCIUS, Dr Z!!!

I remain a proud member of the middle class: a stubborn foe to those who would become a Ruling Class…

…an erstwhile “Sick, Twisted Freak”….

…a proud “Dittohead”…

…and, when circumstances demand it, an enthusiastic supporter of Tea Partys!!

In short, I an an American: DON’T TREAD ON ME!!!

Write on, Z!!!

landlines on January 22, 2010 at 6:31 PM

Wow! If you have never read any other work – my fellow Americans, you MUST read this and do it 4 times! Not a single word in this piece has any taint of falsehood.

Cinday Blackburn on January 22, 2010 at 5:17 PM

This comes as close to perfection as anything that is possible in this flawed world.

Dr. Z, I think a task to which your skills would be well suited would be to produce a Conservative Manifesto. Name it what you will.

Something with a hierarchical structure to it the way text books are written, only shorter. A framework of principles whose themes can be viewed at a glance. I think it would go viral.

Geochelone on January 22, 2010 at 6:53 PM

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