The Chicagoization of America
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
The first urban political machine was named after
a fictional Indian saint unrecognized by any church
and whose name, when pronounced with a Y at the end,
began to strike many as Irish which only further
confused the issue.
The godfather of that machine was another fictional
saint who became Thomas Jefferson's vice president
after successfully rigging an election using a phony
water company that eventually became Chase Bank, was
tried for murder after killing the first Secretary
of the Treasury, was tried for treason after a
conspiracy to make himself King of Mexico and
plotted to convince New England to secede from the
Union.
The urban political machine was born in New York but
died in Chicago. It's no longer a separate entity.
One of the inconveniences of urban life along with
smog, muggings and excessive regulation. The urban
political machine has gone national. It's here. It's
there. It's everywhere.
You may disapprove of New York's soda ban or
Chicago's love affair with gun control or Los
Angeles' pandering to illegal aliens; but what
happens in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and the
rest of the country's blighted metropolises no
longer stays there. You can live surrounded by ten
thousand acres of wilderness on one side and the
deep blue sea on the other and it will still find
you because the urban political machine has gone
national.
The last election was the triumph of the urban
political machine. In 2008, Obama ran as a national
candidate. In 2012, he ran as the figurehead for the
urban political machines and let their voter turnout
and voter fraud efforts carry the day. In 2008, he
tried inspiring people. In 2012, he ran the same
tired campaign run by a hundred corrupt mayors in a
hundred cities who know that they can't lose because
the game is rigged and the voters have no choice.
The urban political machine was born in New York but
died in Chicago. It's no longer a separate entity
from the rest of the country; one of the
inconveniences of urban life along with smog,
muggings and excessive regulation. The urban
political machine has gone national. It's here. It's
there. It's everywhere.
The machine doesn't care about individuals. It only
counts bloc votes. It doesn't care about making life
better for people. Its genius is for finding ways to
make life worse because it knows that it has more
leverage over people looking for the next meal than
over people looking to buy a house in the suburbs.
The political machine doesn't budget; it loots. It
breaks the bank, raises taxes, drives out industries
and rules over a feudal war zone sharply divided
between the rich and the poor.
Reborn in fragmented cities that were multicultural
before it was even a word, let alone a buzzword, the
machine feeds off misery and conflict. During the
1860s, the machine sent German and Irish immigrants
to riot and kill African-Americans to protest the
Civil War. During the 1960s, it sent
African-American mobs to riot and kill to protest
the Vietnam War. The machine does not care about
black or white. It only cares about power.
Power, the machine understands, is division. The
machine is Machiavellian. It plots out segregated
neighborhoods the way that generals deploy
battalions. It promotes violence and suspicion and
then meets with both sides to offer them a truce. It
got big again as the frontier got small and a
thousand peoples crowded into overcrowded cities
speaking a babble of different languages and knowing
nothing except the transplanted micro-communities
that they had brought with them.
The machine built on that. It took as their leaders
anyone who could deliver a bloc vote. And it traded
entitlements for votes. The community leaders became
barons, the machine operators became kings and
everyone else living in narrow streets, meeting in
bursts of gang violence at the boundaries, and
voting in blocs to keep the other side from getting
better access to the goodies offered by the machine,
got to be the peasants.
In 2012, tribal politics became national politics.
The country was divided and conquered. A campaign
run on convincing a dozen separate groups to be
afraid of each other and of the majority made all
the difference, not in some urban slum, but from sea
to shining sea. The country had at last become the
city. And considering the state of the city... the
state of the union does not look good.
Amnesty for illegal aliens is the natural next step
for the machine. The urban machines always wanted
their cities to be big. They never cared if the
people could feed themselves or if they could feed
them. More people meant more votes. More votes meant
more money.
The bigger the big cities get, the more
micro-districts can be carved out, gerrymandered by
race, divided by language, and capable of carrying
more and more of the treasury back home to the
machine. And if the cities can get big enough, fast
enough, then they can outrace their own inevitable
bankruptcies to seize control of the wealth of a
nation. It's the only hope of municipalities bulging
with unfunded pensions, unfundable social welfare
and a next generation of workers that doesn't exist.
Money is not the issue. Urban political machines
have always spent money like water counting on their
cities being too big to fail. Right off City Hall in
New York City sits the Tweed Courthouse, named after
one of the most infamous bosses of the Tammany Hall
political machine. Despite being a modest building,
it cost more four times more to build than London's
Houses of Parliament. Today it houses the
headquarters of the Department of Education which is
spending the city deep into debt. That just goes to
show you that the more things change, the more they
stay the same.
Obama's crazed spending spree is nothing new in big
cities where the debt is sky high and there is no
way to cover it. Detroit is teetering on the verge
of bankruptcy. Chicago is facing a frightening pile
of debt. California's municipalities are taking the
entire state down with them and Bloomberg doubled
New York's debt during his time as mayor.
The urban political machines don't fear bankruptcy.
They embrace it. Crises create more opportunities.
When people are hungry, it's childishly easy to get
them to march round demanding this and that and then
using this and that as cover for even bigger thefts.
Bailouts and recovery programs are rich wells full
of money that can be plundered.
The score was never as big and rich as it was during
the first heady days of Hope and Change. The machine
operators are no longer playing around with a few
billion here or there for urban recovery programs.
Instead they're juggling trillions. The amount of
money at their disposal is mind boggling and so is
their thievery.
Paying it back is not their problem. America, like
Chicago, is too big to fail.
The machine operators live in a world where the
people and the cities are collateral to be borrowed
against. As long as they control governments, they
imagine that there will always be greedy suckers
ponying up a few trillion which the next generation
will pay off and the one after that.
It never occurs to them that the rest of the world
is filled with starving human collateral and the
ruins of old cities. It never occurs to them that
Chicago, Detroit and New York are just places where
people made things and earned a living. And that a
city without an economy is just Somalia or El
Salvador with a lot of tall buildings.
America is now being run by the logic of the urban
machine. The rules on which the cities run are being
applied to the rest of the country when it comes to
gun control, health care and race. The rules broke
the cities and they are breaking the country. And
there is no escaping the rules without breaking the
power of the urban political machine that now
controls the country.