My PJM colleague Andrew Klavan has just delivered a brilliant performance on PJTV. (What, you’ve not subscribed? Do it now!) “Night of the Living Government” is at once the most rousing, the funniest, and the scariest reflection on big government’s depredations since Ronald Reagan took to the campaign trail. Our government, Klavan says, has become like the zombies out of a horror movie:
[Government] doesn’t start businesses, it doesn’t create wealth, it doesn’t invent anything. It just devours all the stuff that you make. You bar the door against property tax, they come in through a sales tax, you board the windows against income taxes, they reach in through an energy tax.
But surely there are important differences between creatures from the “Night of the Living Dead” and the actions of the U.S. government. Of course there are! In the movie, Klavan observes,
zombies didn’t try to tell their victims being devoured was good for them. They didn’t say: “Let me devour your flesh, it’s patriotic.” Or, “Let me devour your flesh because we all have to make sacrifices.” Or — my favorite — “Let me devour your flesh because I know how to use it better than you do.” Also, when you try to stop the government zombies, when you say “No, zombie, No! Don’t devour my flesh,” they get pissy. “Well, that’s very selfish. You’re being greedy. You’re acting out of self interest.”
This brings us to my favorite part of Klavan’s skit. I like the pallor of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid: they’re every bit as creepy as the Hollywood monsters with which they share the screen. And what about that malodorous atmosphere of liberal guilt? What do you do when your liberal friends decry the “greed of Wall Street,” the “selfishness of Republicans”? You’re supposed to feel guilty. Do you? Klavan can help:
Now it always makes me feel really bad when a politician tells me I’m acting out of self-interest because everyone knows that politicians act out of a radiant love for all mankind. Or wait, maybe it’s an insatiable hunger for power! . . .
And now for the denouement:
Power is what this is all about. Power and Freedom. Every dollar the government takes is one less dollar of freedom for you and one more dollar of power for them. It’s your freedom to choose what you do with the fruits of your labor, whether you buy a TV or donate to charity or build your business or pay down your mortgage. It’s their power to finance make-work jobs and incompetent projects and corrupt programs which they can distribute as they will in order to buy votes and influence. And of course every citizen who feeds on those jobs and projects and programs, who doesn’t pay the taxes but benefits from the taxes paid by others becomes a zombie just like their government masters. Part of the the army of the unproductive undead that’s coming after you.
Klavan’s performance is half dramatic oratory, half Hayekian common sense. It is one hundred percent accurate in its description of what Chief Justice John Marshall warned about when he observed that “the power to tax is the power to destroy.” The moral? There are two: 1. Be afraid, be very afraid. 2. Get mad, then stand up for yourself, and join one of those tea-parties that U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky described as “descpicable and shameful.”





PJM Home

The New Criterion
The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art
Lives of the Mind: The Use and Abuse of Intelligence from Hegel to Wodehouse
Art’s Prospect: The Challenge of Tradition in an Age of Celebrity
Experiments Against Reality: The Fate of Culture in the Postmodern Age
Tenured Radicals, NEW, EXPANDED EDITION FALL 2008! How Politics has Corrupted our Higher Education
Counterpoints: 25 Years of The New Criterion on Culture and the Arts
The Long March: How the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s Changed America
Against the Idols of the Age
Lengthened Shadows: America and Its Institutions in the Twenty-First Century
The Survival of Culture: Permanent Values in a Virtual Age
Physics and Politics, by Walter Bagehot, edited with an
Introduction by Roger Kimball
Pajamas Media appreciates your comments that abide by the following guidelines:
1. Avoid profanities or foul language unless it is contained in a necessary quote or is relevant to the comment.
2. Stay on topic.
3. Disagree, but avoid ad hominem attacks.
4. Threats are treated seriously and reported to law enforcement.
5. Spam and advertising are not permitted in the comments area.
The clause regarding "hate speech" has been deleted because readers criticized it as being too loosely defined. We agreed.
These guidelines are very general and cannot cover every possible situation. Please don't assume that Pajamas Media management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment. We reserve the right to filter or delete comments or to deny posting privileges entirely at our discretion. If you feel your comment was filtered inappropriately, please email us at story@pajamasmedia.com.
11 Comments
1. Sissy Willis:It’s the best ever explication of what the Tea Party Movement is all about:
“Let me devour your flesh because I know how to use it better than you do”
Apr 19, 2009 - 12:37 pm 2. Reddot:Thanks so much for sharing this. It reflects what I hear everyday. It’s always nice to know that others feel the same as you.
Apr 19, 2009 - 1:16 pm 3. Will:A clever post, on the whole.
However, be prepared to have it be completely taken out of context. The way people deal with zombies in the movies, of course, is simply to shoot them. Although violence is no where stated or implied here, I can hear the faux-outrage now….”How dare you compare the government to mindless drones one must shoot…” or some such nonsense.
Or perhaps you’ll be called “racist”….you know….for invoking images of “Thriller” a video made by a black man turned whitish….
Apr 19, 2009 - 1:19 pm 4. Chip:And if PJM wants to stay relevent, it will put the skit on YouTube ASAP.
Apr 19, 2009 - 2:04 pm 5. Sissy Willis:Chip: Exactly so!
Apr 19, 2009 - 2:30 pm 6. Mary Jackson:Wonderful. And it’s worse here in the UK, though if Obama has is way, not forever. Be warned!
Apr 19, 2009 - 2:50 pm 7. “The night of the living government,” coming to a tax-increase near you! « Cliftonchadwick’s Blog:[...] under: Economics, Funnies, Politics — cliftonchadwick @ 4:04 am April 19th, 2009 4:33 am Pajamas Media
Apr 19, 2009 - 9:04 pm 8. Webutante:Agreed, Klavan’s piece is utterly brilliant. It needs wide distribution on YouTube. Then there needs to be comics for kids on the themes of The Night of the Living Government….also, video games so we can begin teaching our children and grandchildren the principles of freedom and limited government.
Apr 20, 2009 - 4:03 am 9. wdriver:And don’t forget that gem of local government – when the citizens vote down a new property tax increase, the local powers-that-be simply reassess one’s property to a higher value, thus circumventing the “No New Taxes” wish of the people.
Apr 25, 2009 - 8:54 am 10. Steynian 349 « Free Canuckistan!:[...] MO’ KIMBALL — “The night of the living government,” coming to a tax-increase near you! …. [...]
Apr 25, 2009 - 2:45 pm 11. “The night of the living government,” coming to a tax-increase near you! by Roger Kimball « The Public Choice Capitalist:[...] “The night of the living government,” coming to a tax-increase near you! by Roger Kimball Today’s article of the day comes from Pajama’s Media: [...]
Apr 28, 2009 - 3:02 pm