When Israeli Chief of Staff Brig. Gen. Dan Halutz
said, "Nothing is safe [in Lebanon]," he was only stating the obvious.
"[It's] as simple as that," he said. Lebanese ports, air and sea,
power plants, television stations, bridges, roads, neighborhoods, and homes,
even fleeing families, women and children, all came under Israeli attack. No
one would assume, assuming they were thought of at all, that 25,000 Americans
citizens in Lebanon would be magically spared the violence of aerial bombardment.
If only for their sake, surely the president of the United States could bestir
himself to call for the horror to stop.
Only he couldn't.
Perhaps in the midst of the G-8 summit, somewhere in all the excitement of
nation-building and grandiose schemes to rid the world of evil, Bush might have
a moment of clarity: "Hold your fire, boys! There are Americans there!"
Only he didn't.
A cynic might have even expected that a nationalist president would call for
a halt to the war-making long enough for at least his own countrymen to find
their way out, and then turn his back while the carnage played on out. Bush
did turn his back, but on Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora instead, who
had asked Bush to pressure Israel for a cease-fire. Bush apparently only muttered
something ambiguous, that Israel should "limit the impact on civilians."
So with Americans at risk in Lebanon, the president wouldn't rein in his client
state. He did, however, find time to tell Syria that it should rein in its client,
Hezbollah. It's a textbook illustration of Goyette's Second Law.
In its simplest formulation, Goyette's Second Law states that a government
performs its legitimate functions in a manner inversely proportional to the
degree to which it busies itself in unauthorized activities. For example, once
the responsibility of defending American citizens devolves into defending American
"interests," which of course can mean everything and anything, American
forces are soon spread across the globe while the people themselves become increasingly
vulnerable. If the U.S. government is found lecturing foreign nations, the Chinese
or any others, on how best to manage their currencies, you can bet that the
value of the U.S. dollar has been in free fall. It's Goyette's Second Law. Is
the Bush administration engaged in defining or defending the borders of Iraq?
Then you can be sure our own are in a state of virtual neglect.
By extension and in practice it can be readily observed that all illegitimate
government activities generate consequences that provide pretexts for still
further unauthorized activities. If the U.S. government is in turmoil about
public obesity, there can be no doubt that some illegitimate government program
(subsidization of corn syrup production, tariffs on more efficiently metabolized
sugar, the propagation of industry-driven "food pyramid" charts and
diet recommendations) will be found to be complicit.
Once you begin to notice Goyette's Second Law in action, you will be astonished
at its universal application. If the government is instructing you on how to
flush your toilet, floss your teeth, or frost a birthday cake ("Write to
Pueblo, CO 81009"), somewhere a memo on foreign pilots who wish to learn
how to steer jumbo jets – but not how to land them – or a presidential briefing
on an impending attack is going unread.
You will find that Goyette's Second Law is a great predictive device. Wonder
how much confidence to place in the conduct of American elections? Are only
U.S. citizens being allowed to register? Are the ballots properly secured, the
votes accurately tabulated? To the extent the government is involved in "exporting
democracy" and overseeing foreign elections, you may rely on domestic elections
being accordingly compromised. Watch as the government assumes increasing responsibility
for your financial affairs, for you can be sure that it is closing in on bankruptcy
itself! And with a moment's thought you will even discover the corollary that
explains why each of America's least literate presidents has liked to call himself
"the Education President."
Goyette's Second Law can be prescriptive as well. That is, it describes what
may be done for desired outcomes. If Americans were to come to their senses
and wish nostalgically for the peace and prosperity our founders envisioned,
they would acquaint themselves with the doctrine of legitimate and enumerated
powers and even familiarize themselves with the 9th and 10th
Amendments. Government is not improved by rearranging bureaucracies, earnest
"good government" types or Washington's endless seminars on governmental
efficiency. It is improved by restricting its sphere of activity. Then the efficiencies
take thought for themselves.
In the present crisis, instead of exercising such influence as he has for the
safety of Americans caught in the crossfire, which at least can be considered
within the sphere of national responsibilities, Bush instructs others halfway
around the world about the use of their influence in regional conflicts no business
of his own. His confused sense of responsibilities and priorities will diminish
America's influence and what reserves of goodwill toward America persist. As
of this writing, seven Canadians are reported killed in Lebanon. Americans are
too soundly asleep to note the abandonment of their fellows. But elsewhere,
Bush's cavalier dismissal of pleas for a cease-fire will not go unnoticed.