Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Is Obama Worse than Bush?


Is Obama Worse than Bush?
by Anthony Gregory on March 16, 2011 @ 1:23 pm ·

The two are definitely in the same league, in absolute terms. Maybe Obama is Nixon to Bush's LBJ, in that he is continuing and expanding upon his predecessor's foreign and domestic enormities, deserving special ire for ramping them up, but with the president before still deserving special hatred for having started so many horrible policies.

Of course, it is unfair to compare Obama to Bush just yet, since Bush had eight years of destruction and Obama has only had a little over two. Nevertheless, let's remember what Bush had done by this point in his presidency, mid-March 2003. Just over two years into his presidency, Bush had:
  • Invaded and occupied Afghanistan
  • Invaded Iraq
  • Rounded up and detained hundreds of aliens right after 9/11
  • Established a policy of indefinite detention and torture
  • Created a prison camp at Guantanamo
  • Signed the Patriot Act, including major assaults on free speech (National Security Letters) and a near total annihilation of the Fourth Amendment
  • Created the Transportation Security Administration
  • Created the Department of Homeland Security
  • Instituted "Project Safe Neighborhoods" and overseen a vast increase in firearms prosecutions by the Justice Department
  • Signed No Child Left Behind
  • Rammed through Medicare Part D, adding $20 trillion in unfunded liabilities, the largest expansion of the welfare state in about 35 years
  • Rammed through Sarbanes-Oxley, the largest expansion of the corporate regulatory state perhaps since the New Deal, which has devastated the economy
  • Signed protectionist steel tariffs
  • Expanded farm subsidies
  • Made "free-speech zones" a commonplace
  • Directed the NSA (a branch of the military) to warrantlessly wiretap the American people
  • Accelerated the subsidization (directly and indirectly) of home ownership by minorities and others who couldn't really afford houses, sowing the seeds for a housing bubble to replace the Nasdaq bubble, culminating in the crash of '08

Obama has done a staggering amount of damage in just over two years, but I submit that Bush might still have him beat in terms of destruction unleashed in so short a time. Also, the war in Iraq has long-term consequences in foreign relations that are yet to be seen. Bush could very well be the Woodrow Wilson of the 21st century, having set in motion a series of devastating events humanity will suffer from for a century.

Obama is definitely no sort of relief from the Bush years. But never let it be forgotten how completely terrible his predecessor was, right off the bat.


http://www.libertarianstandard.com/2011/03/16/is-obama-worse-than-bush/

Re: Wringing-the-Neck of Empty Ritual.

Folks: The vast majority of the still apt portions of our original
Constitution remains within my New Constitution. Issues relating to
having government be deferential to the people, and placing reasonable
limits of the type and scope of the laws that may be passed, is the
subject of much that I have expanded on in my New Constitution. I've
placed great importance on seeing to it that the corruption in
government—state, local and federal—which I have observed first hand,
shall never again negatively impact any law-abiding citizen.

There are dozens of well-defined, unconstitutional acts by government
employees or elected officials that will either get the persons fired
or sent to prison. Working for government, even for the President, is
not a license to violate laws, or to have privileges that good
citizens don't have. Other than my eliminating the unconstitutional
(in the SPIRIT) US Senate, and excluding 'career politicians',
lobbyists and elitist media from ever setting foot in the Capital, the
changes in the daily operation of government won't be too obvious to
most Americans.

Not specifically written into the New Constitution, I am personally
recommending that Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and Unemployment
Insurance ALL be privatized—while continuing to "cover" only those
older or sicker people who have no other means of surviving or of
getting first rate care. When most taxes and restrictions on the FAIR
operation of businesses in this country have been removed, the US
economy will experience a BOOM so large, that most people will be
making enough money (Prosperity!) to provide for their own futures
without needing to look to government for any handouts.

The next sentence will assure that socialism—now closely associated
with the Democratic Party—will never again influence any future action
taken by government: "Fair play and democracy shall have supremacy in
the USA!" Those in government employment must swear, on penalty of
death, to agree with that one sentence and to act accordingly.
Democrats, who consistently want better things without requiring any
work on their part, must learn that they will get no more free lunches
or free medical care. It is my sincere hope that the hard-core 40% of
socialist democrats in this country will realize that they will be far
better off working in an efficient capitalist economy than from
continuing to seek government-doled, socialist mediocrity.

I invite the readers to comment on the general people-oriented-tone of
my document. *** However, no specifics are open for discussion. ***
— John A. Armistead — Patriot
>
On Mar 15, 9:36 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Folks:  I've now presented over 50% of my New Constitution.  That,
> plus the following, should give you a good idea of the love and
> devotion I've put into this long project.  My efforts, aided by
> computer, exceed the combined total time spent by the actual
> contributers to writing the original Constitution by a factor of ten.
> At each step, I asked myself what the Founding Fathers would say.  I'd
> bet they are happy people!
>
> "Article VI:
>
> Section 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5:  Laws in effect at the time of the adoption of
> this New Constitution shall remain in effect while such are
> systematically reviewed, debated and revoted in the House.  Whether
> for the revoting of existing laws and regulations or for new bills,
> early and conspicuous public notice in the media shall invite Public
> input.  Bills passing without broad and substantiated Public input,
> especially by those law-abiding Citizens most affected by the
> legislation, shall not become laws.  The House shall make new laws and
> define procedures for implementing this New Constitution.  Federal
> functions to be returned to local or state governments shall be phased
> out gradually and considerately for those to be displaced or relo-
> cated.  Under this New Constitution the future state taxes of Citizens
> or businesses, typically, shall not exceed their com-bined former
> total of state and federal taxes.  At any level of services provided,
> streamlining government and minimizing bureaucracy via wise laws shall
> always be primary goals.
>      Local, state and federal law enforcement, the courts, or any
> branch or branches of the military or their respective parts shall at
> no time be used in support of corruption in government by any public
> official(s) at any level.  Legal authority of law enforcement or the
> courts over the Citizens is voided if used in support of corruption.
> Local, state and federal law en-forcement agencies shall not be
> organizationally affiliated, and persons or groups, therein, shall not
> be presumed by law enforcement to be acting lawfully solely because of
> such auspices.
>      All local, state and federal officer holders and employees—upon
> taking office or assuming employment—shall take the following oath:
> "I, (Name), promise to serve and be deferential to the People, and to
> be unbiased toward any group with a pro democracy, pro fairness
> ideology.  I swear to honor and uphold the full civil rights of the
> citizens, as guaranteed by the Constitution, and I shall expect my
> coworkers and superiors to do the same.   I understand that my
> employment in or by government is conditional upon my adherence to
> this oath."   No employee nor office holder shall be sanctioned for
> making complaints against another office holder, employee or
> superior.  No government employee nor office holder shall be coerced
> into wrongdoing, immoral action or non action, or illegality by a real
> or implied threat of the loss of one's job, promotion or benefits, nor
> by any bribe or promise of promotion or benefits.   Making such a
> threat, bribe or promise is a felony carrying a minimum ten year
> prison sentence—and if part of a pattern—making such threats, bribes
> or promises is treason.  Acqui-escing to such is a felony.  Government
> officials, agents or employees who become aware of corruption in
> government or in any of its departments shall notify the Executive
> Branch and the courts; willful failure to do so is a felony.  With
> impunity, a government officer(s) or employee(s) shall enforce no law
> nor perform any order or directive which violates their personal moral
> conscience or their oath.
>      Local governments shall have 10 or more councilmen or a direct
> vote of the People is required to pass ordinances or raise taxes.
> Upon request by the Executive or 1/5 of the larger governing body,
> federal, state or local law making authority shall defer to the People
> on controversial issues where the Will of the People is in doubt.  No
> law nor previous or subsequent vote on any issue shall usurp the right
> of an informed Public to decide controversial issues in direct
> referenda; the vote for passage shall be 60%.  The apt macro-Will of
> the People in elections or referenda, as manifested by their votes,
> shall take precedence over any contrary existing or subsequent law,
> governmental hierarchy or judicial ruling.  Because conditions change,
> older laws aren't necessarily the Will of the People.
>      Laws shall be concise and well defined.  If—due to brevity,
> simplicity or lack of foresight, etc.—such laws have consequences
> outside the intended or implied scope, for justice and expediency, a
> judge may decree rightful, specific exceptions without new
> legislation.  Only laws, rules, regulations and procedures that are in
> the best interest of the People and the world environment shall be
> passed, enacted or enforced, and no business contrary to such shall be
> allowed to prosper.  No business, organization nor alliance shall use
> their auspices to sway the House for selfish gain.  No business shall
> exist that uses computer invasion to coerce sales or to monitor others—
> regardless of any disclaimer or pact.  There shall be no
> discrimination against any law-abiding Citizen, business or
> organization due to arbitrary categorization.  No public nor private
> regulation shall require disclosure of a person's stand or vote on any
> issue which might cause them discrimination.  Laws shall respect the
> People's diverse mores without setting arbitrary social standards.  No
> government shall criminalize behavior that the Public considers to be
> innocuous, or is macro-typical, or where government isn't being
> deferential to the Public; nor shall they: prosecute victimless crimes
> other than gross reckless endangerment; restrict the freedoms of
> Citizens through oppressive laws and procedures; enact laws too broad
> in scope to address narrow issues; pass laws disallowing any
> reasonable criminal defense, or solely at a bureau's request;
> selectively or inequitably enforce any laws; impose unfair,
> drastically different punishments due to one's sex, race, color, creed
> or age; nor sentence someone differ-ently due to their having a prior
> criminal record.  An arresting officer may reverse such with impunity
> at any time, regardless of the forms, procedures or processes begun.
> The arrested person shall be freed and the record expunged.  Agreeable
> restitution to crime victims may, at their option, substitute for the
> apt trial.
>
> Section 6, 7, 8 & 9:  Governments shall regulate no businesses nor
> professions on the presumption that only governments have the best
> interest of the Public at heart.  Businesses or professions meeting
> licensing standards germane to the type and scope of work such
> perform, and being regularly apprised of substantive new developments,
> may control their own work without governmental sanction, nor, once
> licensed, being required to be other than self-trained to maintain
> continuing competency for doing safe work within their chosen type.
> Professionals qualified by training, testing and experience who
> perform safe and acceptable work within an area of their competency
> shall not be sanctioned for being unlicensed in another job class or
> licensing jurisdiction—beyond fair registration cost.  No more than
> 25% of regulatory board members shall have been employed in the
> profession or industry regulated.
>      Businesses and professions shall be fair to their employees and
> to their customers.  The wages, benefits and perks, as well as the
> charges that are made for goods and services, shall not be
> discriminatory nor exploitive of any person, group nor class, nor
> shall such be overly influenced by the profit motive of those who
> perform no actual work on an ongoing basis.  Fair and honest business
> practices require that management be forthright with employees and
> customers without coercion.
>      No person nor small group, within government or without, shall
> have the power to limit a law-abiding Citizen from pressing charges or
> suing—collectively, whenever possible—for any wrong doing to
> themselves or on behalf of a close relative or significant other whose
> mistreatment, injury or death, also, negatively impacts such party.
>      Articles, Sections and Amendments to this New Constitution—both
> herein before and after—are immutable except by the People.  The
> original Constitution and previous or subsequent laws by local, state,
> or federal governments shall not diminish this New Constitution or any
> of its parts; nor shall any judge or justice diminish this document
> through the interpretation of details, as such shall be subordinate to
> the spirit of this document and to the absolute right and power of the
> People to be contented with their leaders, their laws and with their
> governments."
>
> — John A. Armistead —  Patriot
>
>
>
> On Mar 13, 11:51 am, NoEinstein <noeinst...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Folks:  As closely as possible, following the outline of our original
> > Constitution, is the attached Article from my New Constitution.:
>
> > "Article V:
>
> > Section 1, 2 & 3:  Whenever 50% of the House deems necessary, the
> > House may propose amendments to the New Constitution, or call a
> > convention for proposing amendments; such may be ratified in a one
> > day, direct referendum of the People of all the states and
> > territories, provided 60% of the registered voters who vote concur.
> >      The New Constitution and laws and treaties made under the
> > authority of the United States shall be the supreme law of the land,
> > and judges in every state shall be bound thereby.  Nothing in a state
> > constitution can be to the contrary.  Before taking a public office or
> > job, representatives, members of the legislatures, all executive and
> > judicial officers—of the United States and of the several states and
> > local governments—and all employees of those who regularly
>
> ...
>
> read more »

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Interesting that she was bankrolled by public employee unions and lobbyists

She spent so much more than the people trying to get her recalled
and lost by almost 9-1.

Wonder if this same situation might happen in Wisconsin. One can
only hope.


http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/03/15/2117141/overwhelming-vote-ousts-miami.html


This guy also had the support of public employee unions and lost by
the same 9-1.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/03/15/2117129/9-of-10-say-yes-to-ousting-alvarez.html

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U.S. Planning Military Presence and Operations in Afghanistan Beyond 2014

We must continue to control our empire. It's all about money and power.


U.S. Planning Military Presence and Operations in Afghanistan Beyond 2014
http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/dod-and-petraeus-us-planning-military-pr

"(CNSNews.com) - Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy and Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, told the Senate Armed Services Committee Tuesday that the Obama administration is planning to maintain “joint” U.S.-Afghan military bases in Afghanistan after 2014 and it plans to conduct what Flournoy described as “joint counter-terrorism operations” with the Afghan military after that date."




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

Angry Voters Oust Miami-Dade Mayor In Special Vote

It's high time we tell bureaucrats to get off our backs. What act of civil disobedience will you perform today?


Angry Voters Oust Miami-Dade Mayor In Special Vote
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/16/us-usa-florida-election-result-idUSTRE72F0EC20110316

"MIAMI (Reuters) - Voters in Miami-Dade, one of the most populous U.S. counties, removed Mayor Carlos Alvarez from office in a special vote on Tuesday triggered by popular anger over a hike in property taxes."




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

Man With 4th Amendment Written on Chest Sues Over Airport Arrest

If you don't stand up for your rights, who will?


Man With 4th Amendment Written on Chest Sues Over Airport Arrest
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/03/4th-amendment-on-chest/

"A 21-year-old Virginia man who wrote an abbreviated version of the Fourth Amendment on his body and stripped to his shorts at an airport security screening area is demanding $250,000 in damages for being detained on a disorderly conduct charge."




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

An Example Of How Unregulated Free Markets Can Work

And all this time I thought we needed government to protect us from the bad guys. <g>


eBaynomics

We're all now familiar with the way the on-line exchange market eBay works. However, it should also be seen as an example of how unregulated free markets can work. In 2010, 90 million people from across the world, often unable to speak the same language, and totally unknown to each other due to adopted pseudonyms traded $2000-worth of goods every single second.

Without any government input when it came to advertising standards or fair trading, or any of the usual regulations we see with conventional off-line markets, a whopping 98% of trades managed to get a positive rating. This shows that trust can be built between and amongst people who will never meet, and may even conceal their identities.

You may argue that this is simply because of the rating system, something put in place by the eBay designers, and that this provides a justification for a similar government scheme. But then eBay, like all other markets is entirely voluntary - we buy at our own risk but try to reduce it. Even if eBay had not built in its own ratings system and provided free Buyer Protection, the huge demand for these services would have prompted someone to design them in any case.

Whilst government may wish to get involved, the chances are it would be a waste of taxpayer money, and would displace both consumer wariness and voluntary approaches more open to innovation. Furthermore, regulations always respond to the last disaster. But consumer ratings are likely to be more immediate and effective, whilst also changing seller behavior without the need for intrusive or expensive top-down rules governing everyone else too.

We're all personally interested in reducing risk, and more conventional markets see a much greater effect: companies obsess about brands so that we can trust them over others. Traditional media and now even a quick Google search all play a role in making or breaking these reputations. For example, the reporting of failing brakes in some Toyota models last year was the off-line equivalent of getting millions of bad ratings on eBay! Its sales, prices and value all dropped, and its practices changed. If on-line markets can be both accepted and trusted to self-regulate despite anonymity, why can't their older, more established and identifiable off-line counterparts?

Anton Howes is a co-founder of the Liberty League, a network for UK-based libertarians.

http://www.adamsmith.org/blog/tax-and-economy/ebaynomics/




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

Illinois Man Files Suit Against "Abnormal" State Wiretapping Law

We need more people willing to fight tyranny at the local level.


Illinois Man Files Suit Against "Abnormal" State Wiretapping Law
http://www.pixiq.com/article/illinois-man-files-suit-against-abnormal-state-wiretapping-law

"An Illinois man who was arrested last year on felony wiretapping charges after he videotaped a traffic stop has filed a lawsuit, questioning the Constitutionality of the state's law."




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

The Bureaucracies That Marijuana Feeds

The Bureaucracies That Marijuana Feeds
http://www.newswithviews.com/Timothy/baldwin159.htm

"For almost 100 years in the United States, countless resources have been spent feeding—oops—I mean, 'fighting' the 'war on drugs,' specifically marijuana. Before that time, marijuana was largely acceptable and viewed as inherently valuable throughout the world. Today, medical science seems to support its use for certain purposes—not to mention whatever social uses for which some may advocate its use. However, since 1937, Congress has deemed that marijuana has absolutely no medical benefit and purpose and made anyone who possesses it subject to extreme criminal penalty. The history behind Congress’ enactment is quite suspect, and the 'war on marijuana' deserves objective attention."




Q: What do you call 1,000 Republican politicians chained together with 1,000 Democrat politicians at the bottom of the ocean? A: A good start.

Overt and Covert Socialisms


Overt and Covert Socialisms
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
by Daniel James Sanchez

In 1789 a group of men gathered in Paris to sound the death knell for the ancien regime, and to inaugurate the modern political world. But there were some differences among them. Some wanted to abolish the old order more completely. Others wanted to retain some vestiges of the old privileges. In this "National Constituent Assembly" of France, the ideological birds of a feather sat together: the more radical members on the left, the more conservative members on the right.

On that day, on the eve of the French Revolution, not only was the modern political world born, but so was its terminology.[1] To this day, politics is bisected into a "left wing" and "right wing." Much digital ink is daily spilled in vain on the web over the "best" distinction between "right" and "left." Now, with regard to specific, fleeting political agendas, vague distinctions like this make sense. Movable umbrella terms are necessary, because legislation involves shifting coalitions of people who do not agree on every single point. The trouble starts when the terminology of the political moment is imported wholesale into the language of science, in which precise, fixed distinctions are called for. The left/right divide is downright confusing for social science.

Where this confusion is most pronounced is in intellectual discussion of Western society following World War I. According to common opinion, there are two politicoeconomic extremes: communism (or socialism) on the left, and fascism (or Nazism) on the right. Sound policy, then, is considered a balancing act between two opposite forms of totalitarianism. If one leans too far to the left toward the interests of the poor and weak, one arrives at communism/socialism. Veer too far to the right toward the interests of the rich and strong, and you get fascism. This political taxonomy is entirely unscientific. Neither fascism nor Nazism has ever been scientifically identifiable social orders. They are party platforms, and thus are assemblages of often-contradictory ideas and slogans. Calling fascism a "social order" makes as little sense as calling "Tea Partyism" or "Blue Dog Democrat-ism" a social order.

Moreover, as Ludwig von Mises demonstrated,[2] the allegedly "right-wing" social order of Nazi Germany was just as socialistic as was Lenin's Russia. Through economic interventions the German government completely took over the economy. The only "market" left was a sham. Private individuals owned the means of production in name only. Real ownership of the means of production was in the hands of the state. This is what Mises called "socialism of the German or Hindenburg pattern." This variety of socialism is also known as Zwangswirtschaft, which is basically German for "compulsory economy." Those who were once entrepreneurs devolve in a Zwangswirtschaft into mere shop managers (Betriebsfuhrer in Nazi legalese), following the orders of a central command.

The only way in which "socialism of the Russian or Lenin pattern" (as Mises termed the more familiar variant of socialism) is distinct from the Zwangswirtschaft is in the nonessential fact that it has no such veneer of faux-private ownership. Its socialism is simply more overt.

Another way of stating this is as follows. In the populist propaganda of Bolshevism, under "socialism of the Russian or Lenin pattern" the people ostensibly own the state, and the state in turn owns the means of production. While, under the sham capitalism of Nazism and "socialism of the German or Hindenburg pattern," the people ostensibly own the means of production, but the state in turn owns the people.

Thus these occupants of different political "poles" really occupy the same ground and are only separated by a trivial technicality: the existence or absence of a sham market. Each variant of socialism does indeed have its own distinctive path. But it has nothing to do with "left vs. right," "poor vs. rich," or "weak vs. powerful." Rather, it is a matter of "bureaucratization vs. interventionism." Bureaucratization, by forthrightly gobbling up the market bite by bite, leads to the overt socialism of the Russian or Lenin pattern. Interventionism, by subtly crippling the market and replacing it incrementally with a network of government diktats, leads to the sham market of socialism of the German or Hindenburg pattern.[3]

Revolutionary socialist governments, like the Nazi and the Bolshevist states, will generally adopt one path or the other. But it is by no means necessarily an either/or choice. Gradual approaches toward socialism, like the one the United States is currently taking, often rely on both: overtly socializing an industry via nationalization here and covertly socializing an industry via market interventions there. And one type of socialization often leads to the other. Thus through this gradual, dual approach to socialization, one can imagine what one day might be called "socialism of the American pattern" arising, characterized by a hodgepodge of vast bureaus and sham markets.

Thus it is conceivable that there can be a single socialist system that is a mixture of the two varieties of socialism. However, a mixture of capitalism and socialism is entirely inconceivable, in spite of the fact that most people think that all real-world societies have only ever had "mixed economies."[4]

As Mises wrote, the mere existence of some bureaus and state-owned firms does not alter the capitalist nature of society and make it a "mixed system" of capitalism and socialism. Defining "economy" as a social system of production, there is no such thing as a "mixed economy." Bureaucracies in society are not an integral aspect of the social system of production. They operate as (basically consumptive) elements within a market economy. But they do not contribute any social coordination to it. Rather, it is the market economy that contributes coordination to bureaucracies, in that the latter wholly depend on market prices to be able to attain even the severely impaired budget rationality characteristic of bureaucratic management. The social system of production can only ever be rationalized by market processes.[5] Even the crippled social production that occurred in Lenin's Russia and Hitler's Germany was only possible because recourse could be taken to the prices that formed in the surviving market processes of the outside world. As Mises wrote in Human Action,

Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany … were not isolated socialist systems. They were operating in an environment in which the price system still worked. They could resort to economic calculation on the ground of the prices established abroad.

This is why the actual economies of Lenin's Russia and Hitler's Germany were referred to above as "socialistic" and not "socialist."

Another important distinction is that, according to Mises, bureaucratization is not a form of interventionism.[6] Bureaucratization makes people poorer to be sure, but it does so by constraining the ambit of the market, not by interfering in its workings.

Some have said "interventionism" is a system in-and-of itself, and they propose it as a sensible, "middle-of-the-road" policy between capitalism and socialism. Mises exploded this fallacy. Utilizing the findings of classical political economy, as well as the findings of modern economics (including his own original insights), he demonstrated that all economic interventions are, in effect, contrary to the purposes of all, including the purposes of those who advocate them.[7] They are thus destructive, not constructive. Interventionism is not a system of social production; it is nothing but a hampering of capitalism. A hampered capitalist order is still a capitalist order. The social system of production in a hampered capitalist order is always rationalized by the sectors of the market that have not yet been crippled by interventions.

When one is confronted by the contrary-to-purpose effects of an intervention, one has two choices in dealing with those effects. One can undo the intervention, in which case one chooses capitalism. Or one can try to eliminate the harm with further intervention. However, further intervention can only lead to still more harm, which would thus call for yet further intervention, leading to a "cycle of interventionism." Thus, if one does not choose capitalism, one must choose ever-increasing interventions, which ultimately will completely destroy the market and culminate in socialism of the German pattern.[8] If one does not choose capitalism, one chooses socialism.

Not everybody associates "fascism" with the economic policy of the Nazis. Those who know their history remember that part of the economic policy platform of Benito Mussolini, the founder of fascism, was "corporativism," in which production was directed by "corporatives," each of which represented the participants of a specific industry. Some even call our present economic order "fascist," because they equate "corporatism" with the "corporativism" that they identify with fascism. But corporations lobbying for privileges (corporatism) is not the same thing as whole industries collectively owning the means of production relevant to their industry (corporativism). The two notions are distinct, and must be treated separately.

Corporatism is not a system of social production. Corporations lobby for privileges that hamper capitalism, it is true. But, regardless of who instigates the hampering, hampered capitalism is capitalism nonetheless.

And as Mises explained, corporativism is no more a permanent social order than is interventionism.[9] The crux of the matter is the question of who is to determine policy decisions within a given corporative: the landowners, the capitalists, or the workers? If the state adjudicates between them, then it is the state that is essentially disposing of the means of production, and thus corporativism devolves into socialism. If the corporatives operate according to a democratic principle, then it is the majority workers who will dictate policy, and thus corporativism devolves into syndicalism.

Under syndicalism, the means of production of each industry are owned by the workers of that industry. The syndicalist program is distilled by the slogans "the railroads to the railroadmen!" and "the mines to the miners!" Syndicalism too has been put forth as another candidate, as a "third way" between capitalism and socialism. But syndicalism is no system of social production either.[10] As soon as the needs of society change in the slightest, how is a syndicalist order to adapt? Under capitalism, shifts in consumer demand adjust prices. In seeking profits, entrepreneurs try to anticipate these price adjustments, and thereby adjust the structure of production to best satisfy consumer wants in the new state of affairs. In the flux of the market, resources shift from one industry to another, in response to consumer demand.

But, under syndicalism, why would any producer's syndicate acquiesce to a diminution of its importance and wealth in society? Production is for the sake of consumption, never the other way around. Therefore, any system of social production worthy of the name must have some means of at least conceivably adjusting production for the sake of consumption. Even socialism ostensibly fits this bill, because the central administration at least has the authority to adjust production by diktat in order to try to better serve society (if not the intellectual means to do so rationally). But no syndicalist has ever put forth any idea of how a syndicalist state would do so that did not involve becoming, in essence, capitalism or socialism.

Thus, every economic policy decision is a two-pronged fork in the road; there is no third prong. And neither are the two prongs toward the "Left" and the "Right." There is capitalism, and there is socialism.

One is tempted to say that the two prongs are "forward" and "backward." This would be to adopt the strategy of the Marxists who characterized everything they liked as "progressive" (as well as everything they disliked as "reactionary"). But again, this would be eschewing scientific distinctions for political word games. The honest man does not rely on catchwords and slogans in hopes that the gullible public will latch onto his program by dint of its association with words that resound favorably in their ears. The honest man tries to speak to the mind of his listeners, not to their ears, because he is confident in the inherent strength of his ideas. He will even accept unflattering names for his position, and grant flattering names to his opponent's position, if that will but put an end to the distracting word games and allow the true debate to begin.

What is more "social" than the coordinated, ecumenical society of mutual benefactors produced by capitalism? It is true that capitalism progresses via the accumulation of capital. But the upshot of increased capital in proportion to labor is an increase in the marginal productivity of labor, and thus a rise in real wages. And if anything is prejudicial to the vested interests of the already-rich capitalist, is it not pure capitalism -- which does not let him rest on his laurels but demands that he never cease putting himself up to the test of the market, lest his fortune gradually dwindle? Thus should not the market order be given a more flattering (and descriptive) name than "capitalism"? Should not socialism, that fundamentally antisocial program, be stigmatized with an ugly appellation?

Such are the distracting games of demagogues, and they would only slow liberalism down. The most direct path to success is to use the terms at hand, as they are found in the best literature in our tradition (which happens to be the oeuvre of Ludwig von Mises), and simply explain what we mean by them. Any sane person who learns what is truly entailed in "that which is called capitalism" and what is truly entailed in "that which is called socialism" will choose the former over the latter. That is because socialism (which, again, is the only direction one can choose besides capitalism) is social suicide. As Mises irrefutably proved as early as 1920,[11] the socialist state has no way of rationally directing production. Socialism means discoordination, capital consumption, famine, and death. Thus between capitalism and socialism (which, once more, are the only two choices), the informed chooser could not have an easier choice to make.

And this is the choice that is before everybody. The fact that everybody in their right mind would choose capitalism, if only they knew what the choice really meant, is why there is a harmony of interests. Cognizance of this harmony of interests is what underpinned the scientific liberalism (one might call it "harmonist" doctrine as Mises does[12]) that first arose in the writings of men like Hume, Smith, and Condillac; that intellectually won the field in the days of Ricardo and Say; and that had its greatest impact on policy in the days of Cobden and Bastiat. And it was the denial of this harmony of interests ­ what amounted to a philosophy of irreconcilable conflict (or, as Mises termed it, an "anti-harmonist" doctrine) ­ that underpinned the revolt against liberalism that reached its culmination in the 20th century.

This philosophy of irreconcilable conflict is yet another common feature between the totalitarians of the so-called Left and Right. With the overthrow of liberalism, the world once again came to embrace the "Montaigne dogma": the incorrect notion that no group can gain except by another group's loss.[13] This was the social philosophy of the mercantalists, which was heroically overthrown by the early liberals. The people of the early-20th-century West came under the sway of the new "anti-harmonism," dominant among the intellectuals of the time. Thus, adherence (or at least acquiescence) to the party programs of the both the "far Right" and "far Left" came naturally to them. They either adopted the Lebensraum doctrine of national conquest promoted by the Nazis, Fascists, and other national imperialists, or the doctrine of class warfare promoted by the internationalist Marxists. As Mises brilliantly characterized it, the only important difference between the two doctrines was that one divided society into irreconcilable camps vertically (along national lines) and the other did the same horizontally (along class lines).[14]
Mises Academy: Art Carden teaches Capitalism and Socialism

The sooner classical liberals abandon the sloppy distinctions of party politics and adopt the scientific distinctions of Ludwig von Mises, the better will it be for our efforts in explaining to our fellow human beings the stark choice that lies before them. Right vs. Left, fascist vs. communist, all the alleged "middle ways" (interventionism, syndicalism, corporativism, etc.) -- these are all false choices. As Mises demonstrated, ultimately there is one true dilemma in political economy. As he wrote in Liberalism,

There is simply no other choice than this: either to abstain from interference in the free play of the market, or to delegate the entire management of production and distribution to the government. Either capitalism or socialism: there exists no middle way.



Daniel James Sanchez (formerly known by the pen name J. Grayson Lilburne) is the administrator of the Mises Academy and chief moderator for the Mises Community Forums. He writes for the Mises Economics Blog and maintains his own blog, Summa Anthropica.



Notes

[1] Dean Russel, The First Leftist.

[2] Ludwig von Mises, Human Action, chapter 27, section 2.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Mises, Critique of Interventionism, section 1.

[5] Note that the autarkic household production of primitive societies is not "social." And production for barter (which Mises excludes from his definition of "market") is so necessarily ad hoc that it can never be part of a "system."

[6] "If within a society based on private ownership of the means of production some of these means are publicly owned and operated, this still does not make for a mixed system which would combine socialism and private property. As long as only certain individual enterprises are publicly owned, the remaining being privately owned, the characteristics of the market economy which determine economic activity remain essentially unimpaired." Mises, Interventionism: An Economic Analysis, "Introduction."

[7] A Critique of Interventionism, Human Action, Interventionism: An Economic Analysis.

[8] "If the government is unwilling to acquiesce in this undesired and undesirable outcome and goes further and further … it eliminates the market altogether. Then the planned economy, socialism of the German Zwangswirtschaft pattern, is substituted for the market economy. " Human Action, chapter 30, section 2.

[9] Mises, Intervention: An Economic Analysis, section 5.

[10] Mises, Ibid.

[11] Mises, Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth.

[12] Mises, Theory and History, chapters 2 and 3.

[13] Mises, Theory and History, chapter 2.

[14] Mises, Socialism, part 3, chapter 20.

http://mises.org/daily/5080/Overt-and-Covert-Socialisms

Nice master


Nice master
March 16th, 2011
by Larken Rose

Slave: "Master, will you please stop whipping me?"
Master: "No."
Slave: "Ow. Pretty please?"
Master: "No."
Slave: "Ow. Darn."

There you have the entire political process, in this country and every other. Instead of asking nicely, should the slave be allowed to forcibly stop the master from whipping him? Surely we can't have that! That would be against the "law"! No single sentence better sums up the belief that we are the property of the politicians, than this one: "You have to work within the system."

In other words, we have no right to do what we want, until we first get the politicians, via "legislation," to say we have the right (which means it isn't a "right" at all). "Mom, can I please go out and play?" "Congress, can I please keep more of what I earn?" The asking itself implies that they have the right to decide, which in turn implies that they own all of us.

The Declaration of Independence speaks of unalienable individual rights -- which we didn't get from "government," and which no "government" has the right to deprive us of. Why, then, when the politicians do violate those rights (as they do on a daily basis), do we ask them to please stop it? It's because the general public does not believe in unalienable rights at all.

If someone is trying to steal my car, do I need the THIEF'S permission before I have the right to try to stop him? No. So if tyrants are stomping on my rights, why would I need to ask them for "legal" permission to resist their oppressions? The very idea is idiotic.

When it comes to "lobbying" politicians, I find the example of "gun control" particularly amusing. Lots of Americans believe, as the Founders of the country did, that an armed populace is the best guard against oppressive government. In other words, the common folk should be armed so that, if the government becomes overly abusive and oppressive, the people can violently overthrow it. So how silly is it to "lobby" politicians to please "legalize" private gun ownership? Consider the absurd message it sends: "We have the right to forcibly resist you if we decide you're being oppressive! So, um, can we please keep our guns? Pretty please?"

The Founders said these things a lot more politely, and in a more respectable, civilized manner. I'll say it so anyone can understand: If someone tries to disarm you, when you haven't committed force or fraud against anyone, you have the absolute right -- "law" or no "law" -- to kill the person who tries it. Oddly, even most "gun rights" advocates don't like putting it that way, though their stated reasons for "gun rights" is to protect against tyranny. Well, duh: if you need the tyrant's PERMISSION (via "law") before you'll resist tyranny, what's the point?

A consistent message from people who believe in gun rights -- which admittedly would make most people very uneasy (because of their underlying "government"-worship) -- would be this: "Dear Congressman, I understand you are considering voting for so-called 'legislation' that would disarm me. Be advised, if you do that, I have the right to kill any thugs you send to disarm me, and the right to kill you for sending them to do it. Have a nice day."

I know a LOT of you cringed when you read that. No offense, but the only reason you would cringe is if, deep down inside, you believe that we are all OBLIGATED to obey whatever commands politicians decide to dish out. And in order to believe that, you must believe that each of us BELONGS to them. If some private individual threatened to come into your house to disarm you, most of you would, without hesitation, condone a response such as: "Try it, and I'll blow your damn head off!" And if ten people, or a hundred people, threatened to disarm you, you'd have the right to violently resist ALL of them.

So why would you have any less of a right to do it -- and why does the idea of forcibly resisting make most people uneasy -- when people wearing the label of "authority" try it? Aren't they just people, too? In most peoples' eyes, NO, they aren't just people; they are representatives of our collective master, our OWNERS: "government." And as long as the people hold that view, the ONLY power they will ever have is the power to pitifully beg their masters to please be nice. In other words, they will have no power at all.

A lot of people have said that they want something somewhere between what I speak of and what we currently have. They want a lot less government, but not none at all. But once again, when it comes right down to it, there are only TWO options: either we each own ourselves, or we are all owned by "government." There is no in between, and there can be no compromise between the two. EVERY so- called "moderate" solution concedes that we are slaves, but asks our owners to be nice. If we own ourselves, we don't NEED their permission to be free, their "laws" carry no obligation to obey, and we have every right to forcibly resist their infringements just as we would have if our neighbor decided on his own to start "taxing" and "regulating" us. If you ask me, being a slave who can only beg his master to be nice isn't good enough. If that makes me an "extremist," so be it.

If I had to pick the primary reason why I am NOT encouraging people to go vote for Ron Paul, it is this: Every election, every lobbying effort, every petition to government, REINFORCES the idea that we need their PERMISSION before we're allowed to be free. To engage in the ritual of "democracy" conveys the message that we CONCEDE that whether we are to be free or not depends upon whether our MASTERS will, by legislation, allow us such freedom. See the contradiction? If I own me, by definition I don't NEED anyone else's permission.

If I were a slave, I'd prefer a nice master. If I had to be the property of someone else, I would prefer Ron Paul over anyone else in public office. Furthermore, if 500 clones of Ron Paul miraculously were elected into every seat of Congress, we'd be oppressed so rarely, and to such a small degree, that even I would rarely bother to complain about it. Nonetheless, there is still a fundamental, crucial difference between being the property of a wise, benign, permissive and kind master, and owning yourself. The former should never be accepted as being good enough.

(P.S. As an aside, I do sympathize with those who know that they own themselves, but who nonetheless choose to engage in the cult ritual of "democracy" just out of self-defense, hoping to get a less psychotic and megalomaniacal person into the illegitimate position of national slavemaster. But even in the extremely rare instance in which that actually happens, it is no solution at all to the real problem; it is merely a temporary patch to treat the symptom of the most dangerous superstition in the world: the belief in "authority.")


http://bit.ly/gEmtFJ

Nullifying Tyranny


Nullifying Tyranny
by George C. Leef, Posted March 16, 2011
This article originally appeared in the November 2010 edition of Freedom Daily.

Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century
by Thomas E. Woods Jr. (Regnery, 2010); 309 pages.

One of the big mistakes made by the drafters of the Constitution was their omission of any provision that says what is to be done if the Congress or president acts unconstitutionally. Although the Constitution places limits on their authority, nowhere does it specify the course or courses of action open to citizens or states who want to block the offending action. That omission has plagued the nation almost since its beginning.

Americans are used to one course of action available to challenge the legitimacy of government action, namely review by the judiciary. There is no language in the Constitution stating that courts have the power to declare laws unconstitutional and therefore unenforceable, much less that judicial review is the remedy.

Why shouldn't state governments have at least as much authority to overturn unconstitutional acts as the courts? The states, after all, came together to form the compact called The United States of America. Moreover, state governments are more accountable to the people than are judges serving lifetime appointments on appellate courts. (Government accountability is a weak reed, but at least it is possible to vote out governors and state legislators.)

Does it make any sense to have one branch of the federal government be the sole judge of the legality of acts of the other branches of the federal government?

When Congress passes a statute that violates the Constitution or the president issues an executive order that does, shouldn't there be some way to nullify it other than the undependable method of review by the federal courts?

In his latest book, historian Thomas E. Woods Jr. argues persuasively that it makes no sense for the federal courts to have the final say on the constitutionality of federal action and that there is an alternative, namely nullification by state governments. In fact, he demonstrates that individuals as closely tied to the American Revolution as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison believed that the states had the right and indeed the duty to interpose when the federal government exceeds it authority.

To a shocking degree, the federal system that the Founders envisioned to protect individual rights and restrict government's well-known proclivity for expansion has already been abandoned. Politicians and constitutional "experts" generally proclaim that under the Constitution, the government has the power to do almost anything. For example, when asked where the Constitution says that Congress may compel people to purchase health insurance, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi spluttered, "That is not a serious question!"

The tremendous momentum of government expansion, if unchecked, will leave Americans in a condition of involuntary servitude to the state, their liberties greatly constricted, and most of their income confiscated to pay the debts that their "representatives" have rung up. That is why the topic of nullification is so timely and essential. If Americans can't find a way of stopping the runaway train of government, they are going to be in a stupendous wreck.


Calls for nullification

But could nullification help apply the brakes? Woods begins by showing readers that there are good historical precedents for it. The United States was barely a decade old when the first (and still shocking) case of clear federal overreach occurred, with the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798. Both trampled on the Constitution, but the idea that the government could criminalize criticism of its policies was particularly appalling to many Americans. They could criticize the king of England during the colonial era without getting tossed into prison, after all! The ink was barely dry on the First Amendment's prohibition of laws to abridge freedom of speech, yet people were being put on trial for speaking out against the government.

Jefferson and Madison each thought the Sedition Act unconstitutional and argued that state governments should act to prevent their citizens from being punished under the law. Jefferson drafted a resolution for Kentucky and Madison drafted one for Virginia, proclaiming (in the words of the Kentucky Resolution), "That the several states who formed that instrument [the Constitution], being sovereign and independent, have the unquestionable right to judge of its infraction; and that a nullification, by those sovereignties, of all unauthorized acts done under colour of that instrument, is the rightful remedy."

For an extended treatment of the state opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts, see Reclaiming the American Revolution: The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions and Their Legacy by William Watkins Jr., which I reviewed in the September 2005 Freedom Daily ( www.fff.org/freedom/fd0509g.asp).

The nullification resolutions did not, it must be admitted, meet with universal approval. A number of states enacted their own resolutions in effect saying, "The Alien and Sedition Acts are fine with us and we won't have any part of this nullification stuff." Those counter-resolutions, however, did not endeavor to prove Kentucky and Virginia wrong, that is, to demonstrate that nullification was illegitimate under the Constitution.

With the defeat of the Federalists in 1800, the Alien and Seditions Acts became dead issues, since the Jeffersonians had no interest in prosecuting anyone under them. Therefore, the nullification issue faded away. Just a few years into the new century, however, it arose again, this time as a result of Jefferson's own abuse of power -- his embargo of 1807 that prevented American merchant ships from sailing to any foreign port. That bit of folly was ruinous to American shippers, especially in New England. Connecticut's governor, Jonathan Trumbull, responded to Jefferson's embargo this way:

Whenever our national legislature is led to overleap the prescribed bounds of their constitutional power, on the State Legislature, in great emergencies, devolves the arduous task ­ it is their right ­ it becomes their duty, to interpose their protecting shield between the right and liberty of the people, and the assumed power of the General Government.

Similarly, Woods relates, the Massachusetts legislature passed a resolution condemning the embargo, stating that it was unjust, oppressive, unconstitutional, and "not legally binding on the citizens of this state." Moreover, the resolution continued, "It would be derogatory of the honour of the commonwealth to presume that it is unable to protect its subjects against all violations of their rights, by peaceable and legal remedies."

During the War of 1812, federal politicians proposed legislation to begin a military draft. That idea was hotly opposed by many Americans on constitutional grounds. Although no conscription bill was passed, the Connecticut legislature resolved that if such a bill were enacted, "it will become the imperious duty of the Legislature of this State to exert themselves to ward off a blow so fatal to the liberties of a free people."

In short, many Americans of that era thought that it was entirely proper for state governments to prevent enforcement of unconstitutional federal acts against individuals. Nullification thus has an excellent pedigree.


Actual nullification

Perhaps the most wonderful example of nullification -- action, not just words -- occurred in Wisconsin over enforcement of the federal Fugitive Slave Act, a law that criminalized conduct to assist escaped slaves. Many Americans regarded the law as an unconstitutional, immoral abomination. An escaped slave, Joshua Glover, was arrested in Milwaukee in 1854 by a federal marshal. Glover's arrest catalyzed Sherman Booth, an anti-slavery newspaper editor, into action.

Booth rode through the streets, shouting "A man's liberty is at stake!" A mob of pro-freedom Milwaukeeans soon assembled, broke into the jail, and freed Glover. For his efforts, Booth was arrested by the same federal marshal and charged with violation of the Fugitive Slave Act. I'll let Woods tell the rest of the story:

Booth was arrested and brought before a federal district court. When he applied for a writ of habeas corpus, a judge of the Wisconsin State Supreme Court ordered him released. The state supreme court declared the Fugitive Slave Act to be unconstitutional and therefore void. Before long, Booth was arrested again, by the same federal marshal. This time he was found guilty of violating the Fugitive Slave Act, and imprisoned and fined. But once again he was released on order of the state supreme court.... Finally, in December 1858, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered Booth turned over to federal custody. The state supreme court refused to comply.

The following year, the Wisconsin legislature adopted a resolution perfectly in keeping with the spirit of the Kentucky Resolution of 1798. The crucial part of that resolution reads, "The several states which formed that instrument, being sovereign and independent, have the unquestionable right to judge of its infractions; and that a positive defiance of those sovereignties, of all unauthorized acts done or attempted to be done under color of that instrument, is the rightful remedy."

Backbone! No talk about trying to vote out the politicians who had supported the Fugitive Slave Act and repealing it. No talk of going to court to challenge its constitutionality. They just did it ­ civil disobedience by a whole state. What a great lesson.

The really savory thing about that story is how it annihilates the feeble, intellectually dishonest argument that is often raised against those who advocate nullification today ­ that they're somehow on a par with racist slavery defenders. Woods himself and others who dare to suggest that it's time for the states to oppose unconstitutional federal statutes are frequently hit with the line, "the Civil War settled that!" No, it's irrelevant, both as to the legality and the practicality of nullification.

But wouldn't the country disintegrate into chaos if states could nullify federal laws? Actually, that is just what's been going on with regard to the federal REAL ID act of 2005. Two dozen states, Woods reports, have simply refused to go along with that new unconstitutional mandate. "Resistance was so widespread," he writes, "that although the law is still on the books, the federal government has, in effect, given up trying to enforce it." The country hasn't disintegrated into chaos because some meddlesome, authoritarian federal law isn't being enforced.

The American political establishment says that the correct way for people to react if they think Congress or the president has acted unconstitutionally is: (a) wait for the next election and vote for an opponent of the politicians responsible in the hope that if enough opponents win, they will repeal the law, or (b) wait until someone is subjected to legal sanctions for violating the law, then argue in court that the law is unconstitutional.

The big point of Woods's book is that those nice, politically correct responses do not work. The Supreme Court very rarely throws out any law, no matter how odious, because it violates the Constitution. And Congress never goes back to repeal one of its pieces of unconstitutional handiwork just because some incumbents who voted for it were defeated. The "respectable" rules ordained by the political establishment stack the deck in favor of continuous expansion of federal power to take liberty, property, and even our lives. Therefore, it's time to play by different rules, Woods argues. It's time to refuse to cooperate with politicians who exceed their authority.

Nullification should have the same impact on Americans of 2010 as did Sherman Booth's dramatic efforts in 1854. It should rouse them to action to save liberty.


George C. Leef is the director of the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy in Raleigh, North Carolina, and book review editor of The Freeman. Send him email

http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd1011f.asp

Time to Stop Deferring to Federal Authority


Wednesday, March 16, 2010
Time to Stop Deferring to Federal Authority
by Jacob G. Hornberger

With Saudi Arabia's military intervention into Bahrain, the dark side of U.S. foreign policy becomes even more exposed. The purpose of the Saudi intervention is to prop up the brutal dictatorship in Bahrain, one of the many dictatorships that the U.S. government has long supported as part of its imperial foreign policy.

Of course, it goes without saying that the Saudi regime also ranks among the longtime brutal and corrupt U.S.-supported dictatorships in the Middle East.

Imagine that: One Middle East U.S.-supported dictatorship intervening militarily to support another Middle East U.S.-supported dictatorship to put down with brutal force people who are resisting tyranny and oppression at the hands of the U.S.-supported Bahrain dictatorship.

Since the U.S. Empire has long provided foreign aid in the form of weaponry to both dictatorships, any bullets fired into demonstrators will likely have "Made in the USA" on them. It should also be pointed out that the military forces of both dictatorships will likely prove effective in suppressing opposition to Bahrain tyranny given that the militaries of both dictatorships have been trained by the U.S. military. In fact, according to the New York Times, just last week the Saudi and U.S. militaries worked together in a joint training exercise in Saudi Arabia.

The purpose of the Saudi intervention is to help the Bahrain dictatorship effect a brutal crackdown on protestors, no doubt following the model of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, whose brutal crackdown appears to be succeeding in Libya. According to the Times, Saudi officials were extremely upset with President Obama for so quickly abandoning Egypt's dictator, another longtime ally and partner of the U.S. Empire, and favoring the Egyptian protestors who were sick and tired of the brutal and cruel U.S.-supported tyranny under which they had been suffering for 30 years.

One of the amusing aspects of all this mainstream publicity disclosing the dark realities of U.S. foreign policy has been the reaction of American interventionists. How can anyone fail to laugh when he reads such palpable nonsense as the claim that the U.S. government is firmly committed to democracy but has no choice but to support dictatorships to protect our interests in the Middle East? It only goes to show how successful public schools have been in inculcating a mindset within people that so easily accepts such nonsensical thinking.

If one of the victims of these brutal U.S.-supported dictatorships responds with a terrorist attack against the United States, the response of U.S. interventionists is predictable: "It's because of Islam! It's because of the radical Muslims! It's because they hate us for our freedom and values."

If you ask an interventionist, "Do you think it might be possible that the terrorists were motivated by anger arising from the killing of their son or the rape of their daughter or the torture of their father by the cruel, brutal, and corrupt U.S.-supported dictatorship?" their response is predictable: "Oh, no. Those things don't bother Muslims at all. They are totally indifferent to the killing, torture, or rape of their families and friends at the hands of U.S.-supported dictatorships. It's really just because the Koran requires Muslims to be terrorists who hate America for its freedom and values."

The Saudi dictatorship's intervention in Bahrain to prop up its fellow U.S.-supported dictatorship should serve as another wake-up call to the American people. It's time for Americans to abandon the passive role they have played for decades with respect to U.S. foreign policy. The time has arrived to stop deferring to federal authority and take moral responsibility for moving our nation in a different direction, one that involves the dismantling of the U.S. military empire and the restoration of the American limited-government republic, non-interventionism in the affairs of other nations, and a liberation of the American private sector to interact peacefully with the people of the world.


http://www.fff.org/blog/jghblog2011-03-16.asp

The Bogus Case Against Birthright Citizenship

The Bogus Case Against Birthright Citizenship
Anti-immigration hysteria has blinded conservatives to their own principles
Shikha Dalmia | March 15, 2011

Like gout, anti-immigration restrictionism is a perennial affliction that comes and goes with the seasons. And with Republicans gaining ground this political season, get ready for a particularly painful bout of it.

Texas Rep. Lamar Smith, a committed restrictionist who now chairs the House Judiciary Committee, is already planning a big push to clamp down on undocumented aliens, especially by denying automatic or birthright citizenship to their children -- a right enshrined in the 14th Amendment. Meanwhile, Republicans in five states -- led by Arizona -- are launching their own offensive to force Congress to repeal this right.

Such calls are not new. What is new is that they are gaining traction beyond a shrill nativist minority. Some conservative libertarians are arguing that birthright citizenship is bad for the country -- and some progressive libertarians are arguing that it is bad for immigrants. Not only are both wrong, they can't reconcile this position with their broader commitment to the constitution and limited government respectively. (In this column I will address only the conservatives, saving the progressives for the next.)

The most famous representative of the conservative view is George Will, whose recent column is an odd hagiographic exercise lauding Smith -- obviously calculated to pave the ground for Smith's birthright crusade that Will has openly embraced.

Smith is pushing a law in Congress to scrap this right, even though literally no one believes that it would pass constitutional muster. That's because the 14th Amendment is unusually clear about extending citizenship rights to everyone born on American soil except for children of foreign diplomats and American Indians (who belong to sovereign tribes). Eliminating these rights for anyone else will require three-quarters of the states to ratify another amendment.

Remarkably for someone who counsels deference to the original Constitution, Will has few qualms about this. Why? Because the authors of the 14th Amendment could not possibly have meant to extend birthright citizenship to illegal aliens given that no laws restricting immigration existed in 1868 when it was passed, he maintains. "Is it reasonable to presume they would have wanted to provide the reward of citizenship to the children of the violators of those laws? Surely not," he declares.

It's even more plausible, however, that if the authors' failed to foresee something, it was not the law-breakers but the laws themselves. Hostility toward immigrants, especially the Irish who arrived in the wake of the potato famine, was certainly around in their time. But they still didn't pass such laws -- perhaps because they thought that a country that had borne the sin of slavery to get cheap foreign labor should not erect barricades to keep out voluntary cheap foreign labor!

But if the failure to foresee events offered sufficient grounds for amending the Constitution, then we might as well throw out the whole document and begin anew. Would the Founders have written the First Amendment enshrining the freedom of press if they had known that the Internet would one day allow Wikileaks to release classified documents and jeopardize soldiers in the battlefield? Or the Second Amendment guaranteeing the right to bear arms in a world of cop-killing bullets? Or the Fourth Amendment's injunction against improper searches and seizures in an age of terrorism? Or the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against government takings of private property when rare species are allegedly facing extinction?

The 14th Amendment was written, among other things, to prevent Confederate states from denying citizenship to newly freed blacks. What comparable injustice would amending this amendment prevent? Restrictionists claim that birthright citizenship encourages pregnant women to illegally sneak into the U.S. for a just-in-time delivery so that their newborns can gain citizenship and later sponsor them for citizenship. They call these kids "anchor babies."

But Time magazine reported last year that of all the babies born in 2008 to at least one unauthorized parent, over 80 percent were to moms who had been in the United States for over one year. Actual instances of "birth tourism," where moms expressly came here to deliver babies on American soil, accounted for about two-tenths of 1 percent of all births in 2006. And most of these moms were not poor, illegal Hispanics -- Smith's target group. They were rich Chinese moms on tourist visas.

Nor is it plausible that their intention was to use their kids to gain citizenship for themselves. Kids have to wait until 21 to seek legal status for illegal parents and only if the parents have been here for 10 years. What's more, only 4,000 unauthorized parents can receive such status every year. This, then, is the grand illicit citizenship racket that Will & co. want a constitutional amendment to crack!

Conservatives argue that this amendment is necessary to enforce the rule of law. But the first principle of conservatism, constantly deployed against liberal reformers, is that it is not wise to make radical changes to long-standing laws and institutions for small gains. As Aristotle warned in the Politics  two-and-half millennia ago: "[W]hen the improvement is small, and since it is a bad thing to habituate people to the reckless dissolution of laws, it is evident that some errors of both legislations and of the rulers should be let go; for the city will not be benefited as much from changing them as it will be harmed through being habituated to disobey the rulers…The easy alteration of existing laws in favor of new and different ones weakens the power of law itself."

Yet, here are conservatives now, disregarding their own wisdom and subverting the rule of law in the name of the rule of law to fight bogus causes.


Shikha Dalmia is a senior analyst at Reason Foundation and a weekly columnist at The Daily, where a version of this article originally appeared.

http://reason.com/archives/2011/03/15/the-bogus-case-against-birthri

The Ides of March




 

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Liberal Violence: Five Names You Should Know


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Want to join me for dinner?




 




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Muslim Talking Doll Hits US Store Shelves


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The Union Myth


The Free Market
Volume 24, Number 10
The Union Myth
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
October 2004

In Human Action, Ludwig von Mises wrote that labor unions have always been the primary source of anticapitalistic propaganda. I was reminded of this recently when I saw a bumper sticker proclaiming one of the bedrock tenets of unionism:  "The Union Movement:  The People Who Brought You the Weekend."

Well, not exactly. In the US, the average work week was 61 hours in 1870, compared to 34 hours today, and this near doubling of leisure time for American workers was caused by capitalism, not unionism.

As Mises explained, "In the capitalist society there prevails a tendency toward a steady increase in the per capita quota of capital invested. . . . Consequently, the marginal productivity of labor, wage rates, and the wager earners' standard of living tend to rise continually."

Of course, this is only true of a capitalist economy where private property, free markets, and entrepreneurship prevail. The steady rise in living standards in (predominantly) capitalist countries is due to the benefits of private capital investment, entrepreneurship,technological advance, and a better educated workforce (no thanks to the government school monopoly, which has only served to dumb down the population). Labor unions routinely take credit for all of this while pursuing policies which impede the very institutions of capitalism that are the cause of their own prosperity.

The shorter work week is entirely a capitalist invention. As capital investment caused the marginal productivity of labor to increase over time, less labor was required to produce the same levels of output. As competition became more intense, many employers competed for the best employees by offering both better pay and shorter hours. Those who did not offer shorter work weeks were compelled by the forces of competition to offer higher compensating wages or become uncompetitive in the labor market.

Capitalistic competition is also why "child labor" has all but disappeared, despite unionist claims to the contrary. Young people originally left the farms to work in harsh factory conditions because it was a matter of survival for them and their families. But as workers became better paid­thanks to capital investment and subsequent productivity improvements­more and more people could afford to keep their children at home and in school.

Union-backed legislation prohibiting child labor came after the decline in child labor had already begun. Moreover, child labor laws have always been protectionist and aimed at depriving young people of the opportunity to work. Since child labor sometimes competes with unionized labor, unions have long sought to use the power of the state to deprive young people of the right to work.

In the Third World today, the alternative to "child labor" is all too often begging, prostitution, crime, or starvation. Unions absurdly proclaim to be taking the moral high road by advocating protectionist policies that inevitably lead to these consequences.

Unions also boast of having championed safety regulation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) over the past three decades. The American workplace has indeed become safer over the past century, but this was also due to the forces of competitive capitalism, not union-backed regulation.

An unsafe or dangerous workplace is costly to employers because they must pay a compensating difference (higher wage) to attract workers. Employers therefore have a powerful financial interest in improving workplace safety, especially in manufacturing industries where wages often comprise the majority of total costs. In addition, employers must bear the costs of lost work, retraining new employees, and government-imposed workman's compensation whenever there is an accident on the job. Not to mention the threat of lawsuits.

Investments in technology, from air-conditioned farm tractors to the robots used in automobile factories, have also made the American workplace safer. But unions have often opposed such technology with the Luddite argument that it "destroys jobs."

Mises was right that unions have always been a primary source of anti-capitalistic propaganda. But since he wrote Human Action, American unions have also been at the forefront of lobbying efforts on behalf of the regulation and taxation of business­of capital­that has severely hampered the market economy, making everyone, including unionists, worse off economically. The regulation of business by the EPA, OSHA, FTC, DOE, and hundreds of other federal, state, and local government bureaucracies constitutes an effective tax on capital investment that makes such investment less profitable. Less capital investment causes a decline in the growth of labor productivity, which in turn slows down the growth of wages and living standards.

In addition, slower productivity leads to a slower growth of output in the economy, which causes prices to be higher than they otherwise would be; and fewer new products are invented and marketed. All of these things are harmful to the economic well-being of the very people labor unions claim to "represent."  (Incredibly, there are some economists who argue that unions are good for productivity. But if that were true, corporations would be recruiting them instead of spending millions trying to avoid unionization.)

Mises also pointed out that as business becomes more heavily regulated, business decisions are based more and more on compliance with governmental edicts than on profit-making. American labor unions continue to call for more regulation of business because, in order for them to survive, they must convince workers­and society­that "the company is the enemy." That's why, as Mises noted, union propaganda has always been anticapitalistic. Workers supposedly need to be protected from "the enemy" by labor unions.

However, the substitution of bureaucratic compliance for profit-making decisions reduces profitability, usually with little or no benefit to anyone from the regulations being complied with. The end result is once again a reduction in the profitability of investment, and subsequently less investment takes place. Wages are stunted, thanks to self-defeating unionist propaganda. The well-paid union officials may keep their jobs and their perks by perpetuating such propaganda, but they are harming the very people who pay the dues which are used to pay their own salaries.