Thursday, January 5, 2017

“The new year brings a wake-up call,” The Colorado Springs Business Journal, January 6 12, 2017, p. 18.



NEW YEAR WAKE UP CALL

As you travel back and forth to Denver, as you climb the mountains to the ski resorts, a nagging question doesn’t let go: is it true that some want to “keep CS lame”? Given the dominance of military retirees in the city (ranked second in the country by the Military Times), around 100,000 (20% of the population), so is the conservative ideology they embody. If this is true, what are the implications here and now?

There are two strains that characterize conservative ideology, an economic and a social. Economically this means neoliberal market-capitalism with competition as the engine that drives this train, without government constraints. This also means balanced budgets and the integrity of the business world, transparent and accountable, profit-maximizing with efficiencies that eliminate waste. 

Consistency along this conservative conviction would mean that government policies should not interfere with businesses, so locally this would mean no bloated government entities like the city-owned utilities or all the military bases that are government-funded. 

This also means absolute freedom to pursue one’s economic dreams of prosperity, no matter how they might affect the rest of the community. Forget about controlling pollution or regulating hazardous materials in the air or waterways; forget about telling people what to eat and drink, smoke or listen to. Residents are consumers whose tastes and preferences ought to be left alone by public servants.

When it gets to social matters, the conservative line observed in the 2016 election cycle means laws about abortion, the death-penalty, and reversing whatever social services have been available since the New Deal, privatizing Social Security, abolishing Obamacare, and finding Supreme Court justices that will undo liberal initiatives.

Since most of these concerns are federal, we are left with narrow windows of government intervention into our local social choices, from recreationally smoking pot to letting businesses serve their customers on Sundays (some are state laws, some city). 

So, as another year ends and new one is upon us, what direction will city leaders take? And, more importantly, who are our city leaders? Are they the elected officials, from the mayor to city council members, or more widely understood as those with large real-estate holdings and family wealth? Perhaps both groups should think about their roles not to “keep CS lame,” but turn it around into a vibrant metropolis.

To begin with, decide if CS is the Soviet Union or a modern capitalist city: if it’s the latter, sell the utilities enterprise the way you sold Memorial Hospital. There are experts out there who can run it better and not make us sick from pollution. Besides, with a hefty endowment, you can afford to take care of our infrastructure without raising taxes.

Second, as true conservatives, reduce local regulations, from building codes to recreational pot shops. Let businesses thrive because there is consumer demand, and don’t tell people what they should or should not do. 1984 was a dystopian novel, not a blue-print for CS. Big Brother is still dictating who prospers with the kind of secret “double-speak” Orwell would find amusing.

Third, when old oligarchs of yesteryear still call the shots, when retired military personnel and wealthy enough people run committees and the council, how can young entrepreneurs expect to succeed? Guess what, they move to Denver. Who takes care of training the future leaders of CS? Unfortunately, CS Chamber & Economic Development Corporation is more concerned with the low-hanging fruit of the military-industrial complex than nurturing small businesses.

Fourth, the military-industrial complex has been good to CS, perhaps too good. It’s time to realize that under a new federal conservative regime, military budgets may shrink and waste will be curtailed. What is CS’s contingency plan for decreased military funding? What have we done to cater to those in uniform who live here and are looking for an exciting environment beyond bars? We can’t even fund the Olympic Hall of Fame or a stadium downtown to demonstrate our commitment to athletes, soldiers, and the outdoors.

Finally, if we plan on getting out of the “lame” category with which young people mock our city, perhaps all we need to do is look northward to Denver, a dynamic metropolis with more diverse industries than here, with greater percentage of young people in its population, and with a greater sense of open-mindedness and youthful energy. What’s their secret? 

Two things stand out: first, leadership with a vision (beyond low taxes), and second, recreational pot that has less to do with smoking marijuana than with a mindset that is open and inviting, that lets all citizens, young and old, military and civilian, feel that the city supports their interests. Isn’t this what conservatism stands for?

Raphael Sassower is professor of Philosophy at UCCS. He can be reached at rsassower@gmail.com See previous articles at sassower.blogspot.com

No comments:

Post a Comment