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Gene Healy: Abolish the DHS

By: Gene Healy
Examiner Columnist
August 25, 2009

Does "time with my family" ever actually mean "time with my family" in Washington? Tom Ridge gave the standard resignation line when he stepped down as Secretary of Homeland Security shortly after the 2004 elections, but last week he revealed that there was much more to the story.

In a forthcoming book, Ridge complains that the weekend before Election Day, Bush administration officials leaned on him to raise the color-coded threat level. Dismayed, Ridge refused the demand, and concluded he needed to resign. "I wondered," Ridge writes, "Is this about security or politics?"

That's a question we ought to ask about DHS as a whole. Since its creation in 2003, the department has done little to provide genuine security and much to encourage a pernicious politics of fear. We'd be better off without it.

The Homeland Security Advisory System is a case in point. Even before Ridge's revelation, two separate studies showed that Bush received a boost to his approval ratings with each escalation of the terror threat level. The warning has been raised above yellow ("elevated") 16 times, but it's never been lowered to blue or green, the bottom rungs on DHS's Ladder of Fear. Yet, with Spinal Tap logic ("this goes to 11!") the department insists on keeping all five levels.

The department itself is a dog's breakfast of 22 federal agencies brought together in the hope of providing better coordination on a common mission. But turf battles left key antiterror agencies like the FBI out of the reorganization, and DHS finished last or next to last on every measure of employee morale in a 2006 Office of Personnel Management study.

The truth, as analyst Jeffrey Rosen points out, is that DHS is 'an institutional money pit that has more to do with symbols than substance." Indeed, a congressional investigation in 2008 documented some $15 billion in failed contracts that have run wildly over budget or been cancelled before completion.

Many of the contracts that DHS considers a success have funded a growing federal assault on privacy. The fishing village of Dillingham, AK (pop. 2,400), is too small for a streetlight, but thanks to a homeland security grant, it now has 80 surveillance cameras.

The town of Ridgely, MD (pop. 1,400), got a grant for cameras as well. "It was difficult to be able to find something to use the money for," said Ridgely's police chief, but "if you don't ask, you aren't going to get a thing."

Other homeland security grants have gone toward the development of the Transportation Security Administration's "nude scanner," which should add a whole new level of indignity to the airport security line experience, in which we're already poked and prodded, and warned not to joke about the poking.

True enough, even if DHS were abolished, it wouldn't make government much smaller. Most of the department's 200,000 employees work for agencies--Customs, the Coast Guard, INS--that would survive DHS's closure. (Though we could at least stop work on the hideous, 38-acre, $4 billion Nebraska Avenue Complex currently being built in Southeast DC).

Shuttering DHS would be largely symbolic; but symbolism matters. Down to its very name--an "abhorrently un-American, odiously Teutono/Soviet term," in the words of James Fallows--the Department of Homeland Security has stood for bureaucratic centralization in an atmosphere of permanent crisis.

In this season of angry town hall meetings, liberals have taken to defending the recent overwrought DHS memo warning about "Rightwing Extremism." But for all his faults, "No Drama" Obama has resisted the temptation to boost his popularity by stoking domestic terror fears or goosing the threat level. But, as his popularity falls, that option may look increasingly attractive.

In July, DHS secretary Janet Napolitano announced the formation of a bipartisan commission to review the terror alert system, perhaps seeking political cover to scrap it in its current form. That's good news. But one wishes Congress had the political will to scrap the department as a whole.

Once upon a time, some 15 years ago, "reform" meant trying to get rid of useless, liberty-threatening cabinet departments. If the GOP ever recovers that spirit, they could do worse than starting with the DHS.

Examiner columnist Gene Healy is a vice president at the Cato Institute and the author of "The Cult of the Presidency."




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

DanT

Aug 25, 2009

The author conveniently left out the fact that we have had no more terrorist attacks--planty of attempts, though--since DHS was created. Wonder why that is?

Liberal moron...

 

dj

Aug 25, 2009

To DanT,
The author is a vice president of the Cato Institute, and therefore is probably a devout libertarian. Just because you disagree with someone, that does not mean that they are either liberal or a moron.

 

FedWatcherOne

Aug 25, 2009

You write above"Though we could at least stop work on the hideous, 38-acre, $4 billion Nebraska Avenue Complex currently being built in Southeast DC"
Nebraska Avenue is in NW DC. If something is being built in Southeast DC it certainly isn't on Nebraska Ave. Perhaps the writer should consult a map of the District before he pontificates further. FWO

 

George

Aug 25, 2009

For your reading enjoyment.

 

Freedonian

Aug 25, 2009

I think that if you really start looking into the reasons why the airlines are in tough times and gasoline prices are so high is that Americans do not want to go through the BS that DHS and TSA put them trough when they fly. The terrorists won! ... Americans are afraid of them and are sacrificing their freedoms because of what happened on 9/11, when will the crowd inside the beltway figure that out??

 

Steve

Aug 25, 2009

The examples about waste above are universal throughout government. There are far worse things in the 'stimulus bill' alone. So, getting rid of DHS will not change that at all.

In addition, the book by Ridge and the claims made about the politicization of that process are largely overblown. Karl Rove had a nice refuation in the Wall Street Journal this past week on it, demanding an apology. That entire issue was investigated ad nauseum with no evidence that the threat level was politicized.

Yes, adding a layer of bureaucracy to existing bureaucracies probably doesn't help- the merger should have been more like a corporate merger, with intermediate layers being moved out (but that doesn't happen in goverment).

This article is simply a barely supportable rant unbecoming work by the CATO Institute.

 

DC Dave

Aug 25, 2009

FedWatcherOne:
Mr. Healy could have clarified the new DHS HQ that is being built in indeed Southeast DC at the old St. E's complex. However, as a FedWatcher, you would know that DHS's current HQ is Nebraska Ave in northwest DC by American univ. However, what Healy was referring to is correct, a massive $4B complex in Southeast DC. FedWatcherOne, perhaps you should pontificate less often.

 

KC

Aug 25, 2009

To DJ: I agree with your comments about disagreement - whether liberal or libertarian, a moron is a moron.

 

I Agree

Aug 26, 2009

With the absence of the FBI in Homeland Security, and its unique ability to gather intelligence, I do not believe that the forming of a Department of Homeland Security has improved the nation's security posture. Since its inception, specialization has been lost by the component agencies. We have all become jacks-of-all-trades, doing passable work at various tasks. Additionally, since 2003, the Department has wasted millions of dollars of taxpayers' money on uniform changes, logos, patches, etc. to feed the egos of bureaucrats in Washington, instead of placing the money where it really matters. Combining our agencies was akin to combining the armed forces, and expecting a better result from the mix. DHS, as it presently exists, is definitely a monetary sinkhole. DanT, there have been no attacks -- thanks to the FBI.

 

Jim

Aug 26, 2009

That there is even one apologist for this bloated, privacy-killing, rights-trampling bureaucratic nightmare straight out of the the USSR is a pitiful commentary on the people who currently inhabit the so-called 'Land of the Free'. The Founders are spinning in their graves.

 

Offenbach

Aug 26, 2009

I doubt the GOP has anything other on its mind than its blind support of Israel. Remember when the "conservative" Ronald Reagan pledged to - if we would just vote for him for president - abolish the Department of Education? Last time I checked, it was still with us.

 

Eric

Aug 26, 2009

DanT, I guess that the FBI's PR and propaganda machine is still working well. As they were the primary agency responsible for national security prior to 2003, who in the FBI was held accountable for their abject failure to detect and prevent the September 11, 2001 attacks?

 

Scott

Aug 27, 2009

I don't know what circle of Bozos came up with this monstrosity. It's a bad script and a bad name (Homeland) to go along with this bureaucratic joke. Many pathetic Congressmen circled the wagon on this thing. I'd feel a lot better if they set up delousing stations to keep us "safe" from pestilence being transported into the country, instead of probing laptops for copyright violations and hassling people. Again, it's just part of the "enforcement" mentality--like swatting at a few bees to keep the billions of others from stinging you. Stupid, useless concept that just erodes our freedoms to give an illusion of protection. I reject it. And there is no Homeland Constitution, sorry.

 

mr.outback

Aug 29, 2009

DHS is nothing more than a bunch of chicken hawks with a ego problem, it should be defunded and eliminated. the CONSTITUTION is my homeland security, enough said..

 


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