"We have to be a state where business is welcome and jobs are created. We have to demand value for what is spent and we need to continue to resist a lottery"
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Austerity dressed up as hospitality: Helms frames North Carolina not as a community but as an investment climate. “Business is welcome” is doing double duty here. On the surface it’s boosterism, the kind of line that reassures employers and chambers of commerce. Underneath, it signals a governing philosophy: the state’s job is to accommodate capital, and “jobs are created” is treated as a natural byproduct of being sufficiently friendly to it. The passive voice matters. No one creates these jobs; they simply appear when regulation, taxes, and labor protections stay out of the way.
“Demand value for what is spent” sounds like neutral stewardship, but it’s a classic rhetorical solvent. Who could oppose value? In practice it pre-legitimizes cuts and skepticism toward public programs by assuming government spending is guilty until proven efficient. Helms doesn’t argue against any specific expenditure; he argues against the category of spending that can’t be audited into a neat business metric.
Then comes the moral anchor: “continue to resist a lottery.” That pivot is the tell. The lottery debate in the South has long been about more than gambling; it’s a proxy for cultural authority and class politics. State lotteries are sold as painless revenue for schools, but critics cast them as a regressive tax on desperation and a state-sponsored vice. Helms fuses pro-business economics with social conservatism, implying a coherent worldview: entice corporations, police temptation, keep the state lean.
The intent is coalition maintenance. He’s speaking to fiscal hawks, religious conservatives, and business interests all at once, offering each a familiar password while presenting it as common sense governance.
“Demand value for what is spent” sounds like neutral stewardship, but it’s a classic rhetorical solvent. Who could oppose value? In practice it pre-legitimizes cuts and skepticism toward public programs by assuming government spending is guilty until proven efficient. Helms doesn’t argue against any specific expenditure; he argues against the category of spending that can’t be audited into a neat business metric.
Then comes the moral anchor: “continue to resist a lottery.” That pivot is the tell. The lottery debate in the South has long been about more than gambling; it’s a proxy for cultural authority and class politics. State lotteries are sold as painless revenue for schools, but critics cast them as a regressive tax on desperation and a state-sponsored vice. Helms fuses pro-business economics with social conservatism, implying a coherent worldview: entice corporations, police temptation, keep the state lean.
The intent is coalition maintenance. He’s speaking to fiscal hawks, religious conservatives, and business interests all at once, offering each a familiar password while presenting it as common sense governance.
Quote Details
| Topic | Business |
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