Why People Feel They Need More Government
I. Why People Feel They Need More Government
Most Americans don’t crave bureaucracy. They crave security, predictability, and someone to help them navigate a world that feels increasingly unmanageable. After decades of drift, four forces have shaped the modern dependency mindset.
1. Life has become too complex to navigate alone
Healthcare, taxes, education, technology, housing — everything feels like a maze. When systems become incomprehensible, people naturally look upward for guidance.
2. Local institutions have weakened
Families are smaller. Churches are emptier. Civic groups have faded. Neighborhoods are less connected.
When local bonds weaken, the state becomes the only visible support structure left.
3. Government has spent 80 years telling citizens it will take care of everything
From the New Deal to the Great Society to modern federal programs, the message has been consistent:
“Washington will handle it.”
After generations of repetition, dependency feels normal.
4. People don’t know who else to trust
Corporations feel distant. Local governments feel powerless. Neighbors feel like strangers.
Government becomes the only actor that appears capable of action — even when it isn’t.
II. How Decades of Government Growth Created This Mindset
This isn’t about ideology. It’s about architecture.
1. Every crisis expanded federal authority
Depression. War. Civil rights. Terrorism. Recession. Pandemic. Each crisis added layers of agencies, rules, and expectations.
2. Programs rarely shrink — they accumulate
Once created, agencies:
- hire staff
- build budgets
- justify expansion
No politician wants to be accused of “cutting” anything, so nothing ever contracts.
3. Congress delegates, presidents expand, courts defer
This is the drift:
- Congress writes broad, vague laws
- Agencies fill in the details
- Presidents inherit the machinery
- Courts defer to agency interpretations
The result is a government that grows even when no one votes for it.
4. Citizens lose visibility into who governs them
When power is spread across hundreds of agencies and millions of pages of rules, the average citizen cannot trace cause and effect.
Dependency grows in the dark.
III. The Near-Stalemate of Modern Government
People sense something is wrong, even if they can’t articulate it. The system feels stuck — because it is.
1. Congress is gridlocked
Not because Americans disagree, but because the administrative state now does most of the governing.
2. Presidents rely on executive authority to reinterpret vague laws
This is not execution. It is quasi‑legislation through reinterpretation.
Presidents do this because:
- Congress wrote vague statutes
- Agencies are built to reinterpret
- Courts have historically deferred
The executive becomes a part‑time legislature, and every election becomes a pendulum swing of reinterpretation.
3. Courts referee everything
Because no one else can agree on boundaries.
4. Agencies govern by inertia
They don’t need elections. They don’t need consensus. They just need time.
This is why nothing gets solved. The system is trapped in permanent management mode.
III½. The Blame Game: How Factions Form When No One Is Accountable
When a system becomes so complex that no one can trace responsibility, a predictable cycle begins — one that fractures citizens while leaving the machinery untouched.
1. When no one knows who governs, everyone becomes a suspect
Citizens feel failure but can’t identify the source. So they blame each other.
2. Politicians exploit the confusion
They promise to fix everything — knowing they don’t control the machinery they’re promising to reform.
3. Factions form because blame is the only visible tool left
Left blames right. Right blames left. Populists blame elites. Elites blame populists. Everyone blames Congress. Congress blames agencies. Agencies blame Congress.
The cycle is endless because the architecture never changes.
4. The administrative state becomes an unintentional shield
Not by conspiracy — by drift. Power is so diffused that no single actor can be held accountable.
5. The result: a nation divided, but a bureaucracy untouched
Citizens fight each other instead of fixing the system.
This is the hidden cost of drift: anger replaces agency.
IV. The Fix: A Leaner, More Effective Government
This isn’t about slogans. It’s about functional architecture.
1. Re-anchor agencies under clear statutory limits
No more self-interpreting power. No more mission creep.
2. Require Congress to legislate with precision
If a problem matters, Congress must define it — not delegate it.
3. Restore executive responsibility
Presidents must execute the law — not reinterpret it to create new law.
A Restorationist correction requires:
- Congress writing precise statutes
- Presidents enforcing the law as written
- Agencies losing the ability to redefine their own authority
- Courts ending reflexive deference
This re‑anchors the presidency without weakening it.
4. Rebuild local capacity
Families, churches, neighborhoods, civic groups — the institutions that once carried the moral and social load.
5. Reward success, not expansion
Programs that work should shrink. Programs that fail should end.
This is not “small government.” This is effective government.
V. The Benefits of Reform — Before the Next Crisis Hits
1. Jobs won’t disappear — they’ll shift to productive sectors
A bloated bureaucracy absorbs talent. A leaner government releases it.
2. Social programs won’t collapse — they’ll be rebuilt on solid ground
If we wait until insolvency, we’ll have to rebuild from scratch. If we act now, we can preserve what works.
3. Citizens regain agency
People feel less helpless when they can see who governs them.
4. Government becomes trustworthy again
Not because it does everything — but because it does its things well.
5. The republic becomes resilient
A lean system bends. A bloated system breaks.
This is the Restorationist argument:
We don’t need more government. We need a government that works.