Opinion
The question comes up whenever things feeling like their no longer anchored in place. Where are the grownups? Where are the men and women who put country above party, who could disagree without detesting each other, who understood that institutions are worth more than the next election cycle?
People who grew up watching Sam Ervin chair the Watergate hearings know what they're missing. He was a Democrat from North Carolina, a constitutionalist, a man who quoted scripture and Blackstone with equal fluency. When he questioned witnesses, he wasn't performing for cameras. He was following the evidence wherever it led, even when it led directly into the White House of his own party's president. He believed in process, in the separation of powers, in the idea that Congress was a coequal branch of government and ought to act like one.
That kind of figure is nearly extinct now. The question is why.
The Lie as Standard Operating Procedure
Let's start with the most uncomfortable truth. The system doesn't just tolerate official lying. It depends on it.
I'm not talking about the small stuff, the embellished resume lines or the I misspoke moments. I'm talking about the structural lies, the ones that send countries to war, transfer trillions of dollars, and reshape society without anything resembling democratic consent.
The Gulf of Tonkin incident, which was used to justify escalating the Vietnam War, didn't happen the way the administration claimed. The Pentagon Papers proved that multiple presidents had lied systematically about that war for years. Iraq's weapons of mass destruction were a fabrication, and the Downing Street Memo confirmed the intelligence was being fixed around the policy. The 2008 financial crisis was enabled by regulators who knew what was happening and looked the other way. The lab leak hypothesis was suppressed as a conspiracy theory for years before it became acknowledged as plausible. The claim that vaccines do not cause autism was maintained for decades without adequate evidence, which the CDC itself has now effectively admitted.
These aren't isolated episodes. They're the same playbook run over and over. Manufacture a crisis or exploit an existing one. Deploy compliant media to establish the official narrative. Marginalize dissenters as cranks or threats. Rush through policy changes before the public can examine them. When the truth eventually surfaces, hold some hearings, blame a few low level actors, promise reforms, and move on.
The public gets the act of purging. The institutions get the continuation of the same old guard in place. The underlying power structure remains untouched.
The Smell of Legitimacy
What makes this sustainable is the way the permanent governing class launders its decisions through the language of expertise and emergency.
National security doesn't mean protecting the country anymore. It means protecting the exclusive privilege of the intelligence agencies. Public health doesn't mean keeping people healthy. It means compliance with whatever the pharmaceutical regulatory apparatus decides is in its interest. Protecting democracy doesn't mean protecting self governance. It means protecting the incumbent power structure from any challenge it finds inconvenient.
The words still sound noble. That's the point. If they called it what it actually is, people would revolt. So they borrow the language of principle to describe the practice of power.
This is why complexity is so useful to them. Legislation runs thousands of pages and nobody reads it before voting. Monetary policy is conducted through mechanisms that even most members of Congress don't understand. Intelligence operations are classified, so oversight happens in secret, if it happens at all. The opacity isn't accidental. It's the whole design.
Why Sam Ervin Couldn't Exist Now
The institutional conditions that produced Ervin have been systematically dismantled.
First, the media. Ervin operated in an era of three networks and a handful of newspapers. That system had enormous flaws, but it allowed for moments of genuine national deliberation. The Watergate hearings were broadcast during the day, and millions of Americans watched them, not in fragmented clips on social media, but in full. Today the business model of media is activation, not information. You get famous not for careful committee work but for generating outrage. The incentives select for performers, not statesmen.
Second, the money. Ervin's era still had meaningful constraints on campaign finance and lobbying. The revolving door between government and industry existed but hadn't yet become the entire point of government service. Today a congressional staffer writes legislation with one eye on the lobbying job they'll take in two years. A regulator knows that being accommodating to industry is the path to a lucrative post government career. The incentives are perfectly aligned against the public interest, and nobody even bothers to hide it anymore.
Third, the permanence of the security state. Ervin's generation still believed Congress could oversee the intelligence agencies. The Church Committee in 1975 exposed CIA assassination plots, domestic spying, and mind control experiments. For a moment, it looked like real reform was possible. Then nothing fundamentally changed. The agencies survived, learned to be more careful, and continued expanding. By the time Edward Snowden revealed the scale of domestic surveillance in 2013, the reaction wasn't reform. It was prosecution of the whistle blower. The state's message was clear. We will destroy anyone who exposes what we do.
Fourth, and most fundamentally, the abandonment of constitutional governance. Ervin believed in the separation of powers as something sacred, not ceremonial. Today Congress has largely abdicated its war powers, its oversight responsibilities, and its control over spending. The executive branch governs through administrative agencies that combine legislative, executive, and judicial functions. The permanent bureaucracy makes policy that elected officials never voted on. The courts defer to agency interpretations of their own authority. This isn't what the Constitution describes. It's what the ruling class prefers.
The Class That Rules
None of this requires a conspiracy in the sense of people meeting in smoke filled rooms. What it requires is a class of people who share the same assumptions, attend the same universities, staff the same institutions, marry each other, send their children to the same schools, and move seamlessly between government, media, finance, and academia.
They don't need to coordinate explicitly because their interests align naturally. They all benefit from the system as it exists. They all fear the same things. Populist movements, genuine transparency, any transfer of power away from their institutions. They all speak the same language, the managerial dialect of expertise and inevitability, which functions primarily to make political decisions sound like technical necessities.
This class has no party loyalty in the traditional sense. It populated the Bush administration, the Obama administration, the first Trump administration's permanent staff, and the Biden administration. It will populate whatever comes next. Its members consider themselves public servants, and in a sense they are. They serve the public the way a shepherd serves sheep.
What Recovery Would Require
If you want statesmen again, you need institutions worth being loyal to. You need a Congress that actually legislates, a press that actually investigates, courts that actually constrain executive power, and a civil service that serves the elected government rather than its own permanence.
That means breaking up the concentration of power that has accumulated over the past half century. It means ending the revolving door. It means making intelligence agencies accountable to elected officials who are themselves accountable to voters. It means dismantling the censorship infrastructure that the state has built in partnership with technology platforms. It means restoring the separation of powers as something more than a civics textbook abstraction.
It means, in other words, a counterrevolution against the managerial class that has governed without consent for decades. That's a tall order. But the alternative is to accept that Sam Ervin was an anomaly, that the system will continue to degrade, and that the question where are the statesmen? Will be asked by every generation with increasing desperation until the word itself loses all meaning.
The thing Ervin understood, and that his successors have forgotten, is that institutions derive their legitimacy from the consent of the governed. When that consent is manufactured rather than earned, when the public is managed rather than consulted, when the lies become systematic rather than occasional, the legitimacy drains away. What replaces it isn't statesmanship. It's cynicism, then contempt, then something uglier.
We're somewhere between contempt and something uglier. The only way back is through the truth, told plainly, without the perfume.
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