https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/...e-back-carter/
‘T 				he ’70s are back!” declares French fashion magazine
 l’Officiel.  No kidding: Prices are up, crime is up, Iranian kidnapping plots  targeting Americans are up. . . . Surely the groovy sounds of disco and a  heady whiff of Hai Karate cannot be far behind. My first political memory is feeling pity for President Jimmy Carter,  who was obviously overmatched by the job and seemed to be universally  loathed for his inability to do much of anything. That was the worst of  the 1970s: gasoline rationing, high unemployment, inflation running so  hot that the price of meat was remarked upon in both a 
Brady Bunch episode  and a Warren Zevon song. (How’s that for pop-cultural omnipresence?)  And in the middle of it all was purse-lipped, dead-eyed Jimmy Carter,  who could not have been a flatter or duller representation of the 1970s  if he had been printed on linoleum.
 
   
  That was the last time I felt pity for a politician.
  
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 Joe Biden will get none, because he should know better. The feckless  Forrest Gump of American politics was there for the 1970s the first time  around: Your grey-bearded correspondent had just been born, fresh-faced  young Donald Trump was facing his first federal housing-discrimination  case (represented in the proceedings by Roy Cohn, of course), Tony  Orlando owned the radio airwaves — and Joe Biden, that carbuncular  encrustation, that lifer, that plodding careerist, that dull wooden  fixture of the Capitol scene, was already getting settled into the  Senate, where he would spend some decades accomplishing precisely squat,  his only achievement having grown old enough and remained white enough  that he could be used as demographic ballast by Barack Obama’s 2008  presidential campaign.
 (Obama — you know, the Netflix guy.)
     
  The big domestic concerns of the 1970s were inflation and crime.  Biden should probably worry about the same concerns in the same order  today: The first could effectively end his presidency in a matter of  months, while the second threatens to undermine the position of his  party going forward — possibly for years.
  NOW WATCH: 
'Inflation Surged to 5.4 Percent in June in Biggest Jump Since 2008'
 			
 			 			 		
	 	 	
 Vice President Kamala Harris, whose political wit is indicated by the  fact that she was the first to be knocked out of a primary that  ultimately was won by the clod she works for, has helpfully underscored  the inflation issue, noting in a recent speech that many American  families are having a hard time with the rising prices of food,  gasoline, housing, electricity, and other necessities. Republicans  agreed (if this were the 
Washington Post, I’d have written “Republicans 
pounced”),  and decried the “hidden tax” of inflation, which they blame on  excessive spending and the specter of excessive spending to come.
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  	    	    	    	   The basic economic theory goes like this: We have had a whole lot of  stimulus, both monetary and fiscal, mostly in response to the  coronavirus epidemic, but Democrats want to keep up those high levels of  spending, establishing a new normal in which federal outlays account  for about 25 percent of GDP — forever. This has happened against an  economic background in which epidemic-related disruptions have left many  goods and raw materials in short supply. When you send a bigger stream  of money to chase a supply of goods that is not expanding in a similar  way (and that in some cases has contracted), then you can expect higher  prices.
     
  There are many responsible economists, including Democrats, who are  worried that serious, problematic inflation is on the way. Even if we  assume that some substantial share of recent price increases has been  driven by short-term supply interruptions that will be in most cases  sorted out in a few months, that still leaves room for real inflation  worries. You don’t have to be a doctrinaire Keynesian to believe that it  is reasonable to have government borrow and spend a bit more during  economic downturns — or to respond to a genuine crisis that has severe  economic effects even if it is not economic in origin — provided that  corrective countermeasures are taken when the economy is booming again.  Contemporary Democrats are committed to exactly one half of that  bargain, ratcheting spending up during emergencies and downturns and  then doing their best to keep it there if and when growth returns to  normal.
    
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 Voters like it when Washington spends money on them, but they won’t  like the effects of that spending if gasoline hits $7 a gallon or  mortgage rates go up to 12 percent — or if we have to cut back Social  Security because the cost of financing the national debt has doubled.  Because we sophisticated moderns have never really stopped believing in  god-man government, we tend to exaggerate the effect presidents have on  the economy — but with a Democrat-controlled Congress and a White House  cheerleading for a spending spree that is Augustan in its ambition,  President Biden can expect to be on the hook for every nickel increase  in the price of a can of beans.
     
  Sure, Republicans will be denounced as hypocrites — and not without  cause — for deciding that they care about spending and deficits again  only because Democrats are in power. But if we can’t call it a win when a  politician does the right thing for a self-interested reason, then  there aren’t going to be very many wins in politics at all. Republicans  don’t have to convince Americans to embrace the whole of conservative  economic thinking — they only have to convince Americans that we do not  need to keep up emergency spending measures now that the emergency has  passed, with unemployment relatively low and growth relatively strong.
 What about crime?
  One rare piece of good luck for Republicans: Because they are utterly  uncompetitive in elections in almost every major city in the country  (the largest cities with Republican governments are Jacksonville, Fort  Worth, and Oklahoma City), they get very little blame for the day-to-day  maladministration of urban America. Of course, local Democrats in  places such as Philadelphia and Detroit will always try to find a  Republican — some Republican, 
somewhere — to blame for their useless schools and chaotic streets, but nobody really takes that seriously. (There 
are some smart people with professional obligations to 
pretend  to take it seriously.) For better and for worse, if you want to know  what Democratic governance in the United States looks like as it careers  downwardly toward its logical conclusion, the answer is, roughly, Los  Angeles, where 
housing prices are up by more than 20 percent year-over-year and 
murders are up almost 40 percent.  It’s a remarkable testament to the allure of southern California that  you can knock off that many people without creating enough vacancies to  drive down housing prices.
 Self-conscious conservatives are used to being called racists by  Democrats. It comes with the territory. But there must be many millions  of Americans, including many sensible progressives, who look at the  situations in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, 
Portland, 
Minneapolis,  Cleveland, St. Louis, New Orleans, Dallas, Detroit, etc., and say to  themselves, “No, thanks. I’m all for gay marriage and for raising taxes  on Jeff Bezos, but I don’t want to pay $400 a square foot for housing in  a neighborhood that smells like piss, weed, and the smoke from a Dollar  General that has just been burned down in the pursuit of social  justice.” Right now, the best response that the Democrats have come up  with is to lecture these people that they are racists, too. And though  that’ll work on some of them, it won’t work on all of them. Irving  Kristol famously said that a neoconservative is a “liberal who has been  mugged by reality,” but it may be enough just to get mugged, period.  Even so, Republicans can’t just camp out in the Texas suburbs and sneer  about “New York values” — they have to go where the people are.
      
 
      
  Republicans could and should be making a case for themselves on  crime, one that combines a call for more assertive enforcement where  appropriate and, at the same time, reform and rehabilitation where  appropriate. There’s nothing wrong with saying that we don’t want to  lock people up for smoking marijuana, but we do want to lock them up for  murder, armed robbery, rioting, etc. (Republicans are still against  rioting, right? Hello?) And Republicans should be making that case in  Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, 
Portland, 
Minneapolis,  Cleveland, St. Louis, New Orleans, Dallas, Detroit, etc. In fact, if  the GOP had any sense of drama, the party would hold the Republican  National Convention in Chicago or Baltimore or some other Democratic  dystopia every four years and offer guided bus tours of progressive  failure. Let’s drop George Stephanopoulos off at the corner of  Kensington and Allegheny in Philadelphia and see what happens — it’ll be  a hoot.
 President Biden probably has fond memories of the 1970s. I’ll bet it  was a fun time to be a young senator. But the rest of us cannot afford  to live in the past. One Carter administration was enough.
    				 				 				 			 				
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 								 																											Kevin D. Williamson is a fellow at National Review Institute, the roving correspondent for National Review,