
“The longest government shutdown in US history!”
Apart from perfunctory stories about failed congressional votes to end it, that’s really all you’re hearing right now from mainstream media lately about the partial “shutdown” of the US Department of Homeland Security.
Wow! More than two months! Headed for three! It’s starting to sound like auctioneer patter: “Two, three, can I getta four, four, who’s bidding four, I’m looking for four …”
OK, so it’s dragging on. And on. And on.
But is there really anything else to notice about it? Anything that rises to the level of “news?”
Yes and no.
That is, yes, there’s something else newsworthy about it, which is that there’s really not much to notice about it.
For a little while, politicians managed to hype the negative effects of the “shutdown” by annoying air travelers.
Airport “security” gropers and oglers were “forced” to work without pay (scare quotes because they were always free to quit and go find productive jobs in the private sector), instead of getting sent home, permanently, so that airports and airlines could provide cheaper, more effective, and less annoying private-sector “security screening.”
After politicians figured out that taxpayers were even MORE annoyed by having to wait in line longer to get felt up and hear orders barked at them, US president Donald Trump invented a workaround and the paychecks started arriving again.
Better for air travelers, worse for the claim that the “shutdown” portends apocalypse.
What we HAVEN’T seen is any noticeable uptick in threats to the “security” of the “homeland.”
No hijackings.
No bombings.
No “national security” related hostage situations.
Just life, as usual, minus paying out big bucks for a useless bureaucracy that we got along just fine without from 1789 through 2002 … and can clearly get along just fine without now.
Even starting a war with Iran wasn’t enough to give DHS anything visibly productive to do. Political and media hysteria over supposed “Iranian sleeper cells” quickly dissipated after it turned out that those cells either don’t exist or didn’t set their alarm clocks.
Any sane policy discussion, at this point, should center around how quickly DHS can be defunded permanently and abolished entirely.
My more politically astute friends tell me that “there just aren’t enough votes in Congress to pass that kind of bill.”
But there aren’t enough votes in Congress to fund DHS either.
I guess that will have to be good enough.
Thomas L. Knapp (X: @thomaslknapp | Bluesky: @knappster.bsky.social | Mastodon: @knappster) is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.
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