I wrote this earlier and posted it somewhere else about someone who was outraged about building the new Vikings stadium instead of spending "the money" on other stuff, but here it is:
Sorry but I think this line of argument is a little bit off the mark,
and is a bad way to look at political choices in general. It's not like
there is some magical pot of money out there that can either go to
bridges or a stadium. Rather there's funding streams that could go to
the stadium or nothing else. Remember the City's share of the funding
came from dedicated restaurant taxes and such NOT the general fund. In
fact, the State Legislature has always traditionally controlled these
funds and said pretty much (and this is both DFL and GOP folks talking)
that the money could go to a stadium or nothing at all, fixing bridges
or hiring fire fighters simply was never in the cards for the money
that's going to the stadium. The question thus was never should we
invest in bridges or stadiums, it always was should the Vikings stay or
should they go? Or perhaps even broadly should the NFL leave resulting
in us spending a lot of money (more than the stadium deal) to get them
to come back some time in the future (just ask Houston or Baltimore how
much fun that was)? Political choices are always defined by the art of
the possible and often times political choices can be unfair and limited
in what is possible.
To paraphrase a great post by Matt Yglesias where he was talking about
Max Weber's "Ethic of Responsibility" in foreign policy, I'd say a lot
of what goes wrong in Minneapolis progressive politics is a refusal to
adopt an ethic of responsibility in politics. That is people want to
make the "right" choices regardless of their impact in the real world.
Instead, too many progressives seem to want to orient themselves in a
way that expresses a
sense of moralized outrage. So if some policy proposal isn't completely
pure in all aspects and results that political choice is inherently
wrong, because what’s important in City Government is to be
on “the right side” in some maximal way. Anything less is some kind of
grand betrayal of our sacred progressive values. The problem is
that what’s needed, from the Mayor's and City Council's point of view is
public policy that does in fact make conditions in Minneapolis better
not an allocation of bonding funds that expresses high ideals and a
grand sense of purpose. Indeed, the history of our City is filled with
noble intentions resulting in disaster. And we see this a lot in
Minneapolis politics, people get mad at MPD Chief Dolan because he's not
doing enough about police brutality even when the Police Union is always complaining he is going to far. Or
folks want an independent city library system with great services when
the real choice is between having open libraries under the Hennepin
County system or no libraries open at all.
Corruption and feathering of nests is immoral, but
the pursuit of laudable goals in an unrealistic and destructive manner
doesn’t help anyone either.
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