And now, a few words from Camille Paglia. In a recent
interview with the Spectator she touched on some important current issues.
Among them, off the top, her explanation for Donald Trump’s erratic presidency.
She does not attribute it to evil or to self-interest, but
points out, as I have done before, that Trump did not arrive in Washington with
a well-honed and well organized political machine. He picked up a number of
political types, but one suspects that he did not really trust them… because he
had never worked with them. Trust is earned, not conferred.
Paglia sees a minus and a plus to the Trump erraticism:
Yes, that’s a fair description. It’s partly
because as a non-politician he arrived in Washington without the battalion of
allies, advisors, and party flacks that a senator or governor would normally
accumulate on the long road to the White House. Trump’s administration is
basically a one-man operation, with him relying on gut instinct and sometimes
madcap improvisation. There’s often a gonzo humor to it — not that the US
president should be slinging barbs at bottom-feeding celebrities or jackass
journalists, much as they may deserve it. It’s like a picaresque novel starring
a jaunty rogue who takes to Twitter like Tristram Shandy’s asterisk-strewn
diary. Trump’s unpredictability might be giving the nation jitters, but it may
have put North Korea, at least, on the back foot.
And then, the deep state. Paglia believes that the deep
state exists. She believes that an entrenched bureaucracy exercises
enormous power, mostly in the interest of maintaining its power:
The deep state is no myth but a sodden, intertwined
mass of bloated, self-replicating bureaucracy that constitutes the real power
in Washington and that stubbornly outlasts every administration. As government
programs have incrementally multiplied, so has their regulatory apparatus, with
its intrusive byzantine minutiae. Recently tagged as a source of anti-Trump
conspiracy among embedded Democrats, the deep state is probably equally
populated by Republicans and apolitical functionaries of Bartleby the Scrivener
blandness. Its spreading sclerotic mass is wasteful, redundant, and ultimately
tyrannical.
I have been trying for decades to get my fellow
Democrats to realize how unchecked bureaucracy, in government or academe, is
inherently authoritarian and illiberal. A persistent characteristic of
civilizations in decline throughout history has been their self-strangling by
slow, swollen, and stupid bureaucracies. The current atrocity of crippling
student debt in the US is a direct product of an unholy alliance between
college administrations and federal bureaucrats — a scandal that ballooned over
two decades with barely a word of protest from our putative academic leftists,
lost in their post-structuralist fantasies. Political correctness was not
created by administrators, but it is ever-expanding campus bureaucracies that
have constructed and currently enforce the oppressively rule-ridden regime of
college life.
Interesting points-- especially her observation that
civilizations in decline often choke on their own bureaucracies.
Bureaucratic behavior tends to spring up in organizations of all types. A CEO of my acquaintance referred to the need to "play whack-a-mole" to suppress outbreaks of dysfunctional bureaucracy. Not all leaders do this, of course, but at least in the private sector those who fail to do so will find themselves at a competitive disadvantage relative to those who do so effectively.
ReplyDeleteI consider Camille a national treasure. A smart, strong woman – the kind that's supposed to frighten men. She probably frightens Leftist women a whole lot more.
ReplyDeleteAlso, thoughts on bureaucracy from Peter Drucker:
ReplyDeletehttps://chicagoboyz.net/archives/36645.html
I recall reading that firing a government employee is nearly impossible. Deep state is one result.
ReplyDelete