Our Gleichschaltung: Destroying state government

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Two years ago, we offered an assessment of the Kansas
Legislature with the headline, A sinister session. “The temp-
tation is strong,” we said, “to describe the current session as

the most imperious, presumptuous, bone-headed assembly

in Kansas history … Certainly in more than a century of

legislating, Kansas has known a session that was even more

destructive.

“We just don’t know when it was.”

HOW NAIVE. After more than 40 years of watching legisla-
tive sessions in Topeka, we still had no idea how far the col-
lective intelligence of this group could fall. “Intelligence?”

Incapacity is more like it. This assembly is dominated,

cajoled, whip-sawed, extorted and bullied by ranks of people

– from the governor and Republican leadership to committee

chairmen and their lackeys – who show us almost daily that

they have no idea how stupid they really are.

This legislature is incapable of reasoned deliberation, or, for

that matter, any deliberation at all. Legislation, especially the

repressive kind (the entire state budget, and the frontal attacks

on teachers, the courts and public education, for starters) is

often packaged in parliamentary trickery to avoid committee

hearings or debate by the full House or Senate.

This legislature has become a repository for political hacks,

lackeys for ALEC, sycophants of the cash-laden Koch broth-
ers, tea party nut-bags, John Birchers, anti-abortion psychos,

religious fanatics, and countless other ham-fists who believe

the salvation of dear Ad Astra lies in guns for all, keeping

women barefoot and pregnant and their offspring away from

decent schools, and putting justice up for sale by putting

judges up for election.

When it comes to education, for one example, this legisla-
ture would return us to Dayton, Tenn., to put the moderates

on trial with John Stokes for even thinking to teach evolution,

or thinking at all. They would welcome, with open arms and

closed minds, yet another religious orgy, in which the law

yields to holy writ, the rule of shrill, inane Biblical squawk-
ing, the gurgling of The Rev. Brownback, ad hominem, seek-
ing the almighty to pull us penitents back from the fires of

hell. That’s schooling the old-fashioned way.

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material viewed by others as “harmful” to minors. The legis-

CONSIDER the plans, including:

– Our state budget, sink-hole of the Great Plains, was con-
ceived by a governor who has yet to discover beads missing

from his abacus. He continues to insist that something will

turn up to erase the $300 million and $700 million deficits in

the spending plans his legislative troops are to approve for the

next two years. Lacking any idea how to balance the accounts,

they have committed $3 million to pay an out-state consultant

to resolve the budget shortfalls.

– The great brains of the Legislature, with the governor’s

blessing, have issued $1 billion in revenue bonds to shore up

teachers’ and state employees’ pensions that were robbed to

fill part of the state budget hole. The plan is to sell bonds,

invest the proceeds in the stock market, and watch the profits

roll in. What will roll in, is history’s first Margin Call on a

Ponzi scheme.

– Legislation would prohibit job-related paycheck deduc-
tions, designed chiefly to forbid payroll contributions for

union dues. But language being tricky, the measure affects a

long list of deductions for other purposes, including charitable

and non-profit contributions.

– The House and Senate have blessed measures that freeze

the pay and positions of classified (protected) state employ-
ees. New or replacement employees will be unclassified with

few employment protections. Raises or promotions for cur-
rent classified workers would demand they resign their civil

service protection.

– Special targets are workers with unconventional gen-
der identity or sexual orientation. In February, Brownback

removed civil service protections (ordered by Gov. Kathleen

Sebelius) that prohibit discrimination based on gender or

sexual orientation.

– The Senate has passed a bill that subjects public and pri-
vate school educators to criminal charges for using curriculum
material viewed by others as “harmful” to minors. The legis-
lation is vague, largely without definition, leaving such terms

as “obscene” and “harmful” to the imagination.

– Another bill requires public school district employees to

undergo fingerprint and criminal background checks every

five years. It’s not clear who pays the $50 cost for the inves-
tigation. The measure affects 35,000 certified educators and

27,000 non licensed employees working in districts state-
wide. (Total cost: $3 million.) It was not explained why the

bill is silent on the legions of volunteers and college students

involved with children in local public schools.

– On March 25, Brownback signed legislation that abolishes

the state’s school finance law and replaces it with a system of

block grants that freeze state aid at current levels and subject

additional spending to local property taxes. The plan dooms

nearly every rural school district, leaving budgets dependant

on local taxes. The bill-signing was in secret, with no public

ceremony. The House and Senate passed this historic change

in only 12 days with little or no debate.

– The state budget itself is before the House in a Senate bill,

dissolving any chance for amendment or productive debate

over $14.5 billion in spending.

THE COURTS are the last hope between public schools and

their evisceration. Time and again the district and appel-
late courts have ruled that the Legislature has consistently

and unconstitutionally under-funded the state’s local public

schools.

The governor wants to remake the Kansas judiciary to

his own liking for two prime reasons: first, the courts have

thwarted his and his legislature’s plan to dismantle the educa-
tion system as we know it; second, the courts have ruled that

a wholesale prohibition of abortion in Kansas is not in the best

interest of women, families or the citizenry.

Brownback’s loathing for the courts is well-known. He

has muscled the legislature into granting him sole power to

appoint appellate judges, and seeks a bypass or repeal of the

constitutional amendment that provides the lay-lawyer selec-
tion process for Supreme Court justices. Naming justices, for

the governor, removes the messy obstacle of law from his plan

to rule almost at will.

He’s coming closer. In mid-March, the House Appropriations

Committee made it clear that the state’s judicial budget could

suffer if the courts order the Legislature to spend more money

on schools. The Senate has placed judiciary funding in a bill

apart from the rest of the state budget. The procedure would

allow lawmakers to tie the courts’ funding bill to various

policy changes that would otherwise run as separate legisla-
tion. (Put another way: The governor and legislators suggest

that the judiciary will suffer if court rulings continue to run

counter to their politics.)

THIS LEGISLATURE is content to draft only legislation that

injures certain citizens, harasses groups of them, or harms

their cities and counties.

Meanwhile, the governor is busy liquidating the past,

with all its government beneficence, its grand highways, its

excellent schools with equitable funding, a government that

guaranteed, at least, opportunities for those who want to work,

food for those who would otherwise starve, pensions for the

old and medical care for the sick.

Step by step the governor and his legislature are freeing

Kansans from the shackles of school finance, its statewide

uniform property tax. They are determined to release the citi-
zenry from the burdens of state aid in its many forms, leaving

them to the glories of independence, secure in the comfort

of the state’s religious freedom protection act, the right to

ignore law that withers before a “closely held religious tenant

or belief.”

Before us, thanks to the governor, is our version of

Gleichschaltung, which in an earlier, more evil era, was so

elegantly called the “co-ordination” of the state, or Reich.

The plan was deceptively simple, with the advantage of

cloaking the seizure of absolute power in legality through

“enabling acts.”

Sound familiar?

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– JOHN MARSHALL

 

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