It has among the lowest tax burdens of any major country: 
fewer than 2 percent of the people pay any taxes. Government is limited, so that burdensome regulations never kill jobs.        
This society embraces traditional religious values and a conservative sensibility. Nobody minds school prayer, 
same-sex marriage isn’t imaginable, and criminals are never coddled.        
The  budget priority is a strong military, the nation’s most respected   institution. When generals decide on a policy for, say, Afghanistan,   politicians defer to them. Citizens are deeply patriotic, and nobody   burns flags.        
So what is this Republican Eden, this Utopia? Why, it’s 
Pakistan.        
Now  obviously Sarah Palin and John Boehner don’t intend to turn  Washington  into Islamabad-on-the-Potomac. And they are right that  long-term  budget issues do need to be addressed. But when many  Republicans insist  on “starving the beast” of government, cutting taxes,  regulations and  social services — slashing everything but the military —  well, those  are steps toward Pakistan.        
The United States is, of  course, in no danger of actually becoming  Pakistan, any more than we’re  going to become Sweden at the other  extreme. But as America has become  more unequal, as we cut off  government lifelines to the neediest  Americans, as 
half of states plan to cut spending on higher education   this year, let’s be clear about our direction — and about the   turnaround that a Republican budget victory would represent.        
The  long trajectory of history has been for governments to take on more   responsibilities, and for citizens to pay more taxes. Now we’re at a   turning point, with Republicans arguing that we need to reverse course.          
I spend a fair amount of time reporting in developing  countries, from  Congo to Colombia. They’re typically characterized by  minimal taxes,  high levels of inequality, free-wheeling businesses and  high military  expenditures. Any of that ring a bell?        
In  Latin American, African or Asian countries, I sometimes see shiny  tanks  and fighter aircraft — but schools that have trouble paying  teachers.  Sound familiar? And the upshot is societies that are  quasi-feudal,  stratified by social class, held back by a limited sense  of common  purpose.        
Maybe that’s why the growing inequality in  America pains me so. The  wealthiest 1 percent of Americans already have  a greater net worth than  the bottom 90 percent, based on Federal  Reserve data. Yet two-thirds of  the proposed Republican budget cuts 
would harm low- and moderate-income families, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.        
For  a country that prides itself on social mobility, where higher   education has been a traditional escalator to a better life, cutbacks in   access to college are a scandal. G. Jeremiah Ryan, the president of   Bergen Community College in New Jersey, tells me that when the college   was set up in 1965, two-thirds of the cost of running it was supposed to   be covered by state and local governments, and one-third by students.   The reality today, Dr. Ryan says, is that students bear 78 percent of   the cost.        
In fairness to Pakistan and Congo, wealthy  people in such countries  manage to live surprisingly comfortably.  Instead of financing education  with taxes, these feudal elites send  their children to elite private  schools. Instead of financing a  reliable police force, they hire  bodyguards. Instead of supporting a  modern health care system for their  nation, they fly to hospitals in  London.        
You can tell the extreme cases by the hum of  diesel generators at night.  Instead of paying taxes for a reliable  electrical grid, each wealthy  family installs its own powerful  generator to run the lights and  air-conditioning. It’s noisy and  stinks, but at least you don’t have to  pay for the poor.        
I’ve  always made fun of these countries, but now I see echoes of that   pattern of privatization of public services in America. Police budgets   are being cut, but the wealthy take refuge in gated communities with   private security guards. Their children are spared the impact of budget   cuts at public schools and state universities because they attend   private institutions.        
Mass transit is underfinanced; after  all, Mercedes-Benzes and private  jets are much more practical, no? And  maybe the most striking push for  reversal of historical trends is the  Republican plan to dismantle 
Medicare as a universal health care program for the elderly.        
There’s  even an echo of the electrical generator problem. More and more   affluent homes in the suburbs are buying electrical generators to use   when the power fails.        
So in this season’s political  debates, let’s remember that we’re arguing  not only over debt ceilings  and budgets, but about larger questions of  our vision for our country.  Do we really aspire to take a step in the  direction of a low-tax  laissez-faire Eden ...like Pakistan?