Blogs > Liberty and Power > Conformity Continues in Frostbite Falls

Jun 10, 2008

Conformity Continues in Frostbite Falls




Despite extremely rare, and totally unexplainable, spurts of rebellion, such as the election Jesse Ventura, the ideological default in my home state of Minnesota is the grinding conformity of nanny statism. Most folks there still believe that government actually works, that is if the right people are running things, and is"our collective voice."

A recent illustration is this story about a new Minneapolis law prohibiting vehicles from idling more than three minutes except in traffic. No doubt while wagging her finger, City Council member Sandy Colvin Roy lectured that cars no longer need a more than a minute to warm up. Does this include the people in them too?

When it comes down to it, my bet is that Roy reflects the dominant view in the state. Most Minnesotans would readily risk pneumonia for themselves rather than be branded as selfish troublemakers. Those who stoically endure frostbite, after all, are more likely to become good citizens, as any Minnesotan will tell you.



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Craig J Bolton - 6/11/2008

I use to think that we in the Wild Wild West [aka Arizona] were different - that most of us had a pot of warm tar and an old feather pillow sitting on the back porch reserved for any politico that would get too far out of hand.

Sad to say that was before "The Great Crusade To Send Them-There ILLEGALS Back Where They Came From" which, along with the Terrorist Under Every Bed Paranoia. That combination seems to have converted most Arizonans into devout yahoos, cowards and lovers of the Nanny State.

Save me from THEM, Oh Governor Whats-Her-Name!




David T. Beito - 6/10/2008

Sad to say you are right...though the Ventura vote gives me hope that deep down there is some trace of resistance.


Robert Higgs - 6/10/2008

Your post causes me to recall a hilarious segment of "Prairie Home Companion" in which the show was being broadcast from a Southern city (which one I've forgotten). At the beginning of the show, Garrison Keillor went on and on about how much the performers always enjoy doing the show from the South: the people there are so warm and friendly. Then, fearing that he might have laid it on too heavily, he insisted with great sincerity that he really meant it: "southern hospitality" is not a myth.

Up in Minnesota, he observed, we say we're glad to see you, but we don't really mean it.

When Minnesotans affirm that government is a good thing and that people would be better off with more of it, however, they really do mean it.