Presented for
your dining and dancing pleasure—“In
IRS Scandal, Echoes of Watergate” by George Will:
The burglary
occurred in 1972, the climax came in 1974, but 40
years ago this week—May 17, 1973—the Senate Watergate hearings began
exploring the nature of Richard Nixon’s administration. Now the nature of
Barack Obama’s administration is being clarified as revelations about IRS
targeting of conservative groups merge with myriad Benghazi mendacities.
This
administration aggressively hawked the fiction that the Benghazi attack was
just an excessively boisterous movie review. Now we are told that a few wayward
souls in Cincinnati, with nary a trace of political purpose, targeted for
harassment political groups with “tea party” and “patriot” in their
titles. The
Post reported Monday that the IRS also targeted groups that
“criticized the government and sought to educate Americans about the U.S.
Constitution.” Credit the IRS’s operatives with understanding who and what
threatens the current regime.
Jay
Carney, whose unenviable job is not to explain but to explain away what his
employers say, calls the IRS’s behavior “inappropriate.” No, using the salad
fork for the entree is inappropriate. Using the Internal Revenue Service for
political purposes is a criminal offense.
It remains to
be discovered whether the chief executive is guilty of more than an amazingly
convenient failure to superintend the excesses of some executive-branch
employees beyond the Allegheny Mountains. Meanwhile, file this under “What a
tangled web we weave”:
The IRS
official in charge of the division that makes politically sensitive allocations
of tax-exempt status said Friday that she learned from news reports of the
targeting of conservatives. But a draft
report by the IRS inspector general says this official was briefed on the
matter two years ago.
An
emerging liberal narrative is that this tempest is all the Supreme
Court’s fault: The Citizens United decision—that corporations,
particularly nonprofit advocacy groups, have First Amendment rights—so burdened
the IRS with making determinations about who deserves tax-exempt status that
some political innocents in Cincinnati inexplicably decided to begin by
rummaging through the affairs of conservatives. Ere long, presumably, they
would have gotten around to groups with “progressive” in their titles.
Remember, all
campaign “reform” proposals regulate political speech. And all involve the IRS
in allocating speech rights.
Liberals,
whose unvarying agenda is enlargement of government, suggest, with no
sense of cognitive dissonance, that this IRS scandal is nothing more sinister
than typical government incompetence. Five days before the IRS story
broke, Obama,
sermonizing 109 miles northeast of Cincinnati, warned Ohio State
graduates about “creeping cynicism” and “voices” that “warn that tyranny
is . . . around the corner.” Well.
He stigmatizes
as the vice of cynicism what actually is the virtue of skepticism about the
myth that the tentacles of the regulatory state are administered by
disinterested operatives. And the voices that annoy him are those of the
Founders.
Time was,
progressives like the president 100 years ago, Woodrow Wilson, had the virtue
of candor: He explicitly rejected the Founders’ fears of government. Modern
enlightenment, he said, made it safe to concentrate power in Washington, and
especially in disinterested executive-branch agencies run by autonomous,
high-minded experts. Today, however, progressivism’s insinuation is that
Americans must be minutely regulated because they are so dimwitted they will
swallow nonsense. Such as: There was no political motive in the IRS targeting
political conservatives.
Episodes like
this separate the meritorious liberals from the meretricious. The day after the
IRS story broke; The Post led the paper with it, and, with an institutional
memory of Watergate, published a blistering editorial demanding an Obama
apology. The New York Times consigned the story to page 10 (its front-page lead
was the umpteenth story about the end of the world being nigh because of global
warming). Through Monday, the Times had expressed no editorial thoughts about
the IRS. The Times’ Monday headline on the matter was: “IRS Focus on
Conservatives Gives GOP an Issue to Seize On.” So that is the danger.
If Republicans
had controlled both houses of Congress in 1973, Nixon would have completed his
term. If Democrats controlled both today, the Obama administration’s
lawlessness would go uninvestigated. Not even divided government is safe
government, but it beats the alternative.
For your ironic reading pleasure: the Nixon Articles of Impeachment watergate.info/impeachment/ar…
— David Burge (@iowahawkblog) May 14, 2013
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