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Tuesday, March 4, 2025

One Man's "Art" Is Another Man's Tax Dollars

 



Friends, 60 years ago President Lyndon Baines Johnson decided it would be a good idea if the federal government paid for "art".  The government was paying for pretty much everything at the time, so why not?  Well, it will come as no surprise to the readers of this blog that, when government decides to "fix" a problem (was "art" ever a problem, in itself?), it generally creates an even bigger mess.  Today we are treated to MAGA Jack's perspective on the issue, based on rigorous research and sound conservative principles.  He believes it is time for the American people to disinvest themselves from the arts, particularly as federal funding has been used, all too often, not to edify the American people, but to digust and denigrate them.  If you agree, he encourages you to contact your Congressman, as he has his, or to take other forms of direct action to make sure your voice is heard.

 

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Dear Congressman Langworthy: I urge you to advance, from your position on the DOGE Subcommittee, ending all Federal funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. I am confident you agree that taxpayer funds should be expended only on necessities and nearly universally supported items (eg. battlefields and National Parks and monuments). Too, politically biased organizations and individuals should not be afforded tax payer support. The NEA violates both of these popular principles. 

The NEA's budget for 2024 was $207,000,000. In its "Strategic Plan for FY2022-2026" NEA expressed the following as one of its objectives: "Building on initiatives which seek to advance systems change through the arts . . . ." This strongly suggests a prime purpose of political advocacy rather than art for its own sake.

Because of the many regional differences in this extensive country it is wrong to require the Federal  taxpayer to fund local arts efforts. Let localities support them if they choose. They are best at serving the preferences of their regions. Why should Texas taxpayers pay for a dance program in the Bronx or "street painting"(?!) in Massachusetts? 

400+ artists and their advocates have together vehemently excoriated President Trump's EO ending of DEI and expansive gender claims as they apply to the NEA. A recent quote from one of them:"Trump and his enablers may use doublespeak to claim that support for artists of color amounts to "discrimination" and that funding works of trans and women artists promotes "gender ideology" . . . but we know better: the arts are for and represent everybody" 

But NEA grants do not represent everybody; often they still generate works expressing hostility to many Americans (eg Christians, with blasphemous works already well known, such as "Piss Christ" and Madonnas splattered with elephant dung).  By definition, NEA grants support certain localities and often certain "protected groups". 

Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby once opined, quite accurately: "The NEA consistently rewards novelty over quality. Its grant recipients are often distinguished  by . . . intolerance toward traditional standards and art forms . . . in favor of radical politics, victim chic and anger". 

A state by state, grant by grant list of the NEA grants given in 2024 is readily accessible online; here are some frivolous, wasteful and/or politically biased examples:

To Arizona: $75,000 to support Dia de los Muertos. In a heavily Hispanic state this very popular holiday receives more than enough local and private celebration.

To "Living Streets Alliance ": $90, 000 to support "community activities and traffic calming interventions in Tucson AZ". This includes "murals and traffic calming street painting projects" What? Floral lane markers to assuade the anguish of those traumatized by conventional lane markings?

To "Arts Center of the Capital region": $60,000 to support a grant program to individual artists" in Troy, N.Y . To whom and for what? 

To Essex Co. Mass. $125,000 "to support a series of community design charettes, transit guides and artist designed improvement for the transit system of Essex Co."

To MIssourii: $20, 000 to support a production of La Cage aux Folles. This was an enormously financially successful show in many localities. Why did this require a Federal grant?

To New Jersey Theatre Alliance: a grant "to support equity based professional development for artists and arts administrators."  We know by now what vindictive bias is meant by the word "equity"; it was enough to justify a Presidential EO proscribing it. 

To Bronx, N.Y: $40,000 to support "a program for street dancers to develop choreography, train in freestyle techique and build performance skills".

None of these and the many, many more like them on the NEA list are at all necessary or widely supported by Federal taxpayers.

Interestingly, in all the state lists the following statement is to be found among the projects listed, not as one might expect, cited as an overall objective: "to support arts programs, services and activities associated with carrying out the agencies' NEA approved strategic plan". This suggests any manner of  unspecified projects, some of which might garner intense public criticism.  I have tried, unsuccessfully, to access these "NEA approved strategic plans".
 
Some time ago, in support of an 8-1 Supreme Court ruling, then Justice O'Connor wrote: "the First Amendment protects artists' rights to express themselves as indecently and disrespectfully as they like but it does not compel the government to fund such speech". I believe it had ruled on a suit by NEA advocates protesting admonitions directed at the NEA for sponsoring unspeakably obscene, contemptuous and having as their only purpose profound offense, works such as "Piss Christ" (a crucifrix dipped in urine), a Madonna pelted with elephant dung, a depiction of Santa's elves having sex and a performance by a nude woman smeared with chocolate and spewing hatred of men. 

I think the NEA learned little from the outrage these projects generated. It has only exercised just enough euphemistic restraint as it thinks necessary to avoid scathing and, to NEA staff, antiintellectual carping from the ignorant public which they nonetheless expect to pay for what they deem "art". 


Its time for such elitists and their beneficiaries to find local or private support for their airy and presumptuous works. Let's relieve the Federal taxpayer of this onerous burden.


Thank you for considering my opinion on this. This has been an issue to me since Alfred University's state-supported Ceramics School hosted Andres Serrano, the "artist" who did the disgusting "Piss Christ" on an NEA grant. (This was perhaps 30 years ago.) The then Dean of the school treated me to a  haughty lecture on academic freedom and refused to answer when I asked if  a hypothetical artist executing a "Piss Nelson Mandela" would be similarly welcomed. The injustice to the taxpayer (and the Christian) displayed in this attitude is analogous to the disdain for the critic, the taxpayer  and especially any who dare to criticize it, fostered by the NEA to this day.  Thanks again; I very much appreciate your already demonstrated faithfulness to the views of the vast majority of your constituents. I am confident they would support my concerns on the NEA.
 
Please note this minor correction: 
 
Dear readers, re: my article above on the NEA, when I talked on the phone back then on my concerns about Serrano's visit to the state taxpayer supported Alfred U. School of Ceramics I asked to speak to the Dean and I remember that I understood then I was talking to that official. But I learned today that in that time period, apparently all the Deans of that school were men and I know I was talking to a woman. So I think it probable that I was not talking to the Dean, but maybe another administrator. 

If you have forwarded my original article to a person other than Congressman Langworthy, thank you! Could you please forward this revision also? 
 
Thanx again. 
 
Jack

 
 
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If you've enjoyed Jack's analysis, or if, perchance, you're currently soaking yourself in urine for artistic purposes and thus disagree, we welcome your contributions to this digital forum!
 
In other news, today Trump's new tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China took effect, and the markets are none too pleased.  Tariffs have complex effects, and by no means are they all negative, but I must admit that I have my concerns about this strategy.  Free enterprise and free trade go hand in hand, in many ways.  Raising prices on imports will strain our relations with a wide range of countries, and it will increase the price of a wide range of goods.  What's more, the stated reasons for the tariffs are highly varied and generally ambiguous.  It is unclear to me how a nation can avoid attracting Trump's commercial ire, and thus I assume it is unclear to them.  Initially, he was upset mainly about illegal immigration.  Well, Canada was never an offender on Mexico's level, so why tariff them equally?  What's more, the flow of illegal migrants has almost entirely ceased -- granted, due to Trump, not to Mexico or Canada, but nonetheless a major irritant has been removed.  My hope is that a negotiated settlement will eventually be agreed upon that will scale back these tariffs, but will result in freer U.S. access to these foreign markets.  Genuine free trade, which we have never truly enjoyed, esepcially with China, would be a nice thing to try.
 
 

1 comment:

  1. Dr. Waddy from Jack: I think DJT may well have written off soon to be unseated Trudeau and presented him with a challenge to which he knows Trudeau will raise a characteristic emotionally imbued hyperbolic response. He may just be using Trudeau as a foil, pending the ascension of a new PM, who may be a relative conservative , with whom DJT can deal on a mutually understood basis.

    I think all of DJT's "51st state" musings have been a ploy by a master gamer to overexcite an overidealistic Trudeau. Since such a change is a near impossibility, canny DJT is simply setting up a position from which he can "retreat" after he has achieved his real objective, tight Canadian control of its border with us. I think that's all; why would any American leader want otherwise to vex good old Canada, with whom we have had a peaceful border since 1815? Besides, the only reason Canada is not a Russian province is the U.S. Even Pere Pierre Trudeau , who once described Canada's proximity to the U.S. as reclining next to a sleeping restless giant, had to know that!

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