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Scaros: The Deep State is alarmingly real and concerning.

The Deep State: ⁤Real and Troubling

Make no mistake — the Deep State in America is very⁤ real ⁢ and very disturbing.

What’s equally troubling is that many who know the Deep State exists⁢ over-dramatize​ their descriptions of it, and that overkill often leads skeptics to conclude that the Deep ⁤State doesn’t ⁤exist at all.

To be clear, I don’t ⁤believe the Deep⁢ State is a cabal of dastardly villains twirling their ⁤handlebar mustaches as they plot diabolical schemes to take ​over the world. I don’t think they meet in secret mansions‌ on Atlantic islands and strategize about​ establishing a “new world order.”⁢ But Deep Staters do exist, and they’re a big problem.

The Deep State is a bunch of career ⁣hacks who’ve infested the insufferably bloated executive branch and know how to keep presidents at‌ bay.

Too‌ many Americans have limited ⁣themselves to the​ binary choice that presidents​ are either powerless puppets who take‍ orders from the aforementioned‌ secret cabal, or they’re fully in charge of running the country.

But there⁣ is a third, often overlooked possibility: that presidents​ (along with Congress) really are in charge of​ things on⁤ paper, but⁤ the Deep State is so complex, deeply rooted and far-reaching⁣ that it calls​ the shots in ways that the rest of ⁣us — including the president, quite often⁢ — don’t even realize and are almost ⁤helpless​ to control.

Imagine that a college hires a new president for a three-year term. The college is full of career employees ⁢— staffers and‌ faculty members — who have been there for over 10 years, most of whom plan to work another 20. The professors are tenured and the⁢ administrative and maintenance staffs are unionized, so they’re ⁤not going anywhere.

The president (much like the president of the ⁤United States)‍ reports to the board of directors (as the U.S. president‍ reports to the American people), but otherwise⁢ is in charge ​—​ or so it ⁣seems — of everyone else at the college⁣ (analogously, government agencies).

Is the federal government too⁣ big?

When the new​ president decides that⁤ he is going to establish​ weekend ⁣classes, which means some faculty and staff will have to ​give up their Saturdays and Sundays to go to work,⁣ no one challenges ‍him on it directly.

But⁢ the department chairs, who want to keep their faculty members happy ​(and don’t⁣ want to have to ‌work​ on the weekends either), talk to the ⁢individual ‍board members to ‍convince them what a⁢ bad idea it is. Some professors and longtime employees speak with board members​ too.

Consequently, the board, which ultimately makes the decisions even though‌ it is less familiar with ⁣the day-to-day operations of the college, meets⁢ and reverses the president’s proposal for⁣ weekend classes.

This all happened behind the president’s back, and there was nothing evil ‌about it. It wasn’t as if the college employees wanted​ to do‌ something illegal, or wanted to harm the students or‍ the⁤ reputation of the college in any way. It was a simple matter of wanting to sleep in on the weekends.

Also, consider that the president was no one’s puppet. He‍ wasn’t ordered to‍ deliver a‍ speech ⁤condemning weekend classes. He really ⁤wanted them and no employee dared reject him to his face. ​But the‌ employees got their way because they comprise that college’s “deep state.”

Next, let’s suppose ‌the president does realize that his plan ⁣was sabotaged ‌by faculty and‌ staff. His first reaction is to fire them ​all.

Never mind⁢ their tenure and union protections and the⁤ potential lawsuits such a drastic move may generate — if the president fires them, who’s going to do‍ all the work? An institution of ⁣higher ​learning can’t simply‍ fire everyone‍ on ​a Friday afternoon and have replacements ready for Monday morning ‌classes.

And‌ if that won’t⁣ work ⁣at a college, how can⁣ it ‌work for an entire country?

The⁢ president of the​ United ‍States is the ⁣head of the executive branch of the federal government. He’s their boss, ⁢but most of them were there long ⁢before him and will be there once he’s out of ‍office.

In Joe Biden’s case, if it seems like he’s controlling the Deep State⁣ to keep Donald ⁢Trump bombarded with investigation‌ after investigation even as it covers up Biden’s ⁢own wrongdoings, don’t be fooled. ‍It’s not that Biden controls ⁤the Deep ‍State; ⁢it’s that the current​ bunch of Deep Staters know they’re better⁤ off with Biden in office.

If Trump — who, believe it or not, was too gentle​ on this‍ issue while he was president — gets back into office,‌ he’ll dismantle ⁢so many agencies with⁤ a sledgehammer.

The good news is that more and more Americans are becoming aware of⁣ the Deep State, though explanations of it as an anti-American monster sacrifice credibility and turn off objective observers ⁤willing to listen ‍to ⁢reason.

Just like those college employees, the Deep Staters ⁣for the most part don’t⁣ hate America,​ are not working with ⁤enemy nations, do not want “one world order” of totalitarian Marxism, and haven’t committed heinous crimes that they’re now trying to cover ⁤up.

They⁤ are shirking their professional obligations, though. They work‌ for the president — whoever that may be — ​and yet they undermine ‍his authority by doing ‌whatever they feel like doing within⁤ the parameters of their vast bureaucratic labyrinth.

That’s very⁢ troubling, because the American people elect the president (albeit indirectly, through electors); they don’t elect federal bureaucrats, and so the ⁤latter don’t have the right or​ the authority to go against the president’s wishes.

And⁣ that’s what Americans need to‌ understand is what makes the Deep State very real and very disturbing.

The post Scaros: The Deep State Is Very Real and Very Troubling appeared first on The Western Journal.


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