Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Socialism vs. Capitalism: Which is the Moral System?

http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/onprin/v1n3/thompson.html
The extraordinary level of material prosperity achieved by the capitalist system over the course of the last two-hundred years is a matter of historical record. But very few people are willing to defend capitalism as morally uplifting.

It is fashionable among college professors, journalists, and politicians these days to sneer at the free-enterprise system. They tell us that capitalism is base, callous, exploitative, dehumanizing, alienating, and ultimately enslaving.

The intellectuals’ mantra runs something like this: In theory socialism is the morally superior social system despite its dismal record of failure in the real world. Capitalism, by contrast, is a morally bankrupt system despite the extraordinary prosperity it has created. In other words, capitalism at best, can only be defended on pragmatic grounds. We tolerate it because it works.

Under socialism a ruling class of intellectuals, bureaucrats and social planners decide what people want or what is good for society and then use the coercive power of the State to regulate, tax, and redistribute the wealth of those who work for a living. In other words, socialism is a form of legalized theft.

The morality of socialism can be summed-up in two words: envy and self-sacrifice. Envy is the desire to not only possess another’s wealth but also the desire to see another’s wealth lowered to the level of one’s own. Socialism’s teaching on self-sacrifice was nicely summarized by two of its greatest defenders, Hermann Goering and Bennito Mussolini. The highest principle of Nazism (National Socialism), said Goering, is: "Common good comes before private good." Fascism, said Mussolini, is "a life in which the individual, through the sacrifice of his own private interests…realizes that completely spiritual existence in which his value as a man lies."

Socialism is the social system which institutionalizes envy and self-sacrifice: It is the social system which uses compulsion and the organized violence of the State to expropriate wealth from the producer class for its redistribution to the parasitical class.

Despite the intellectuals’ psychotic hatred of capitalism, it is the only moral and just social system.
This is one of the clearest, simplest, and most thorough essays on the difference between Capitalism and Socialism I have ever read. It also is an excellent defense of the morality of Capitalism - a defense that few intellectuals have ever proposed (other than Ayn Rand).

Saturday, September 15, 2007

The legacy of Milton Friedman, a giant among economists

http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8313925

Directly or indirectly, Mr Friedman brought about profound changes in the way his profession, politicians and the public thought of economic questions, in at least three enormously important and connected areas. In all of them his thinking was widely regarded at the outset as eccentric or worse.

The first of those areas is summed up by “Capitalism and Freedom”, the title of a book published in 1962 (see our review). To Mr Friedman, the two were inextricably intertwined: without economic freedom—capitalism—there could be no political freedom. Governments, he argued, should do little more than enforce contracts, promote competition, “provide a monetary framework” (of which more below) and protect the “irresponsible, whether madman or child”.

To show where Mr Friedman thought the limit of the state should lie, the book lists 14 activities, then undertaken by government in America, “that cannot...validly be justified” by the principles it lays out. These include price supports for farming; tariffs and import quotas; rent control; minimum wages; “detailed regulation of industries”, including banks; forcing pensioners to buy annuities; military conscription in time of peace; national parks; and the ban on carrying mail for profit.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Celebrating Income Inequality

http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=5005
Democrat and Republican candidates for President are debating one another on nearly every issue--but nearly all are united on one thing: America faces a crisis of "income inequality." The rich are getting richer, the refrain goes, while the poor and middle class are held back by stagnating wages, lousy schools, and growing healthcare costs. The solution, we are told, is more government intervention: spend more on education, provide "universal healthcare," and force employers to raise wages through minimum-wage increases and union protection legislation.

But all of this outcry is based on a false premise--that income inequality is bad. While some of the problems critics point to are legitimate concerns, income inequality is not. Income inequality is a natural and desirable part of a free, prosperous society.

In America, equality should mean only one thing: freedom for all. If business and wages were deregulated, we would see a dramatic rise in economic opportunity. If education and medicine were left free, with America's businessmen, doctors, and educators liberated to offer education and medicine at all different price points, we would see quality and price improvements like those for computers or flat-panel television sets. But these benefits of freedom require that we recognize the moral right of each individual to enjoy whatever he produces--and recognize that none of us has a right to something for nothing.
Great essay from Alex Epstein of the Ayn Rand Institute. I love topics like this that catch people in the contradiction of their thoughts. Most people instinctively condemn "inequality", but in this case, when they apply their minds to why that inequality exists and what is being proposed to "fix it", they find some difficult pills to swallow. This is yet another example of the two paradigms: one that is risk averse, wanting protection from one's own weakness, and the other that embraces risk and the responsibility that comes with it (and its ensuing rewards).

Too many people see only the rewards gained by some, and covet them. Not understanding why they have those rewards (e.g. proof of their profitable actions), they take on the mentality of the victim, saying that they were unfairly gained, either by unfair competitive circumstances or at the expense (exploitation) of the poor victim.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Introduction to Radical Capitalism - Part III

http://zambia.co.zm/articles/radical_capitalism3.html
There are so many people today who just invoke arbitrary rights without such recourse to logic and reality, which is why we have great confusion in society today, with rights being randomly granted to anything, from animals to trees to God and to just about anything else. Without integrating the factors that make the whole concept of rights viable, such irrational arbitrariness is inevitable.

In our upcoming constitution, we can already see this evidence of divorcing rights from an irrefutable foundation (property rights) which can be derived from common sense, as we have shown. We have had people suggesting all kinds of special rights based purely on their feelings of sympathy. Thus we are going to have special rights for the poor people, for example, which government will be obliged to meet by forcefully taking some property from those who are less poor.

There are no special rights that anyone can claim. Every human being has certain inalienable rights and these are built on the foundation of the principle of property ownership and not on whim or sympathy. This is why the dichotomy of “individual rights versus societal rights” is a false one based on a similarly false reification of society. And it is why the acceptance of property rights leads logically to the absolute acceptance of capitalism and the absolute rejection of socialism and all its variant or resultant forms that reject the sovereignty of the individual in his own life and over his own property (communism, fascism, etc).
This is currently the last of the series - I truly hope Mr. Chisala will continue this particular series of essays, as I have found them very approachable and useful in sharing with people who are misinformed about Capitalism. Chanda brings up the issue of rights in this essay - a crucial topic for any debate on government and the philosophical basis for any moral society. He demonstrates the relationship between rights and property, and shows how a philosophy's definition of rights shapes its entire societal system.

Introduction to Radical Capitalism - Part II

http://zambia.co.zm/articles/radical_capitalism2.html
You suggest that a better method is to simply be “pragmatic”. By this, I believe you mean that we should simply look at what works (or has worked) in practice, for our economic ends, and to follow that path. But pragmatism is a very poor way of guidance in life. Why? Let’s say we discover that corruption is actually good for the economy. Should we encourage corruption in the nation so that we could have economic growth? Your answer, I am sure is no. But why not? From pragmatism, it is not possible for you to simply reject corruption as a way to economic growth if statistics show that it is good for the economy.

The same can be said about slavery. One can possibly argue that some nations have had economic success as a result of using forced free labour (slavery). If pragmatism had had its way in this debate on slavery many years ago, the West would still be practicing it. Indeed there were pragmatists who saw nothing wrong with slavery since the slaves were foreigners and the human trade was helping their economy. But it was banned because a rational moral argument triumphed over mere pragmatism, as it always should. My argument against slavery is simply that you do not have the right to own or control someone else’s property – their mind and their body – and this is the same argument I use for capitalism. Pragmatism does not have a similar moral foundation to be a useful guide.

Bwana says that I should show how capitalism achieves the things that socialism wants to achieve, but in a better way, and so on. But why should I do that? Why should anyone, for example, spend time trying to show why freedom is better than dictatorship, or than slavery? That would be the pragmatic paradigm route, which we have already shown to be morally invalid. Since no one really needs to be convinced that freedom is better than slavery, or that theft is wrong, my responsibility is only to show how socialism is essentially equal to these vices (slavery or theft) – which infringe on property rights - and someone will easily make up their mind after they see this. If this is shown, there is no need to investigate whether it even has any advantages. The discussion simply closes there. Granted, some economists have shown that socialism is actually even counter-productive, but that’s just a wonderful coincidence of the nature of our benevolent universe or our good Lord – the important fact is that it’s immoral, just as slavery is immoral. Corruption has also been allegedly shown to be counter-productive from empirical evidence, but the issue still is that it is immoral, even if it was not shown to be counter-productive, and therefore it is not a valid option for a rational person or society to even investigate.
In Part II of his essays on Radical Capitalism, Chanda Chisala answers his reader's critical comments, particularly an argument for a more pragmatic approach to deciding their society's government. I am impressed with his clear, logical responses. These essays are a very good introduction to what Capitalism entails for those who are unclear or misguided on the subject.

Introduction to Radical Capitalism - Part I

http://zambia.co.zm/articles/radical_capitalism1.html
One of the most common comments one hears whenever there is a discussion on how Africa can solve its problems is this: “we have tried socialism and we have tried capitalism; neither of them have worked. It is time for us to try out a new system of economics, something invented by ourselves.”

This statement always sounds very attractive to many unsuspecting intellectuals and yet it is quite a meaningless statement. To break it down to essentials, what it actually means is this: “we have tried taking the rights of individuals to own their property from them, and we have tried letting individuals keep their rights of owning their property; neither has worked. It is time for us to try out a new system, something invented by ourselves.”

Unfortunately, there is no “third way”. This is a question of very basic logic. Either you allow a person to be an owner of his property or you forcefully assume ownership and control of his property (through government). The former is the essence of capitalism and the latter is the essence of socialism, whether you like those two terms or not.
This is part of an excellent series of essays on Radical Capitalism, written by an editor in Zambia. I stumbled upon these writings by accident, and quickly realized they were very articulate arguments in favor of capitalism. I was further surprised to find out that they were written in the context of a public debate happening right now in Zambia concerning the organization of their society and government! It seems they are in the process of creating a new Constitution, and this writer is advocating the adoption of capitalism as the moral basis of government for Zambia.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

AMA is Wrong About Medicare

http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4793
Under current restrictions, it is illegal for the doctor to accept a patient's payment for any amount over the government's approved reimbursement for a service covered by Medicare.
The government also prohibits the patient from being reimbursed by Medicare if the patient chooses to privately contract for services with a doctor who does not accept Medicare.
This is a textbook example of why it's wrong for the government to be the middleman for your dollars. If you were freely exchanging your dollars for medical services, you would be within your right to choose which services, which provider (and thereby, what cost) you prefer. But it's not your dollar anymore, it's a dollar that has passed through the hand of government, somehow "sanctifying" it from the taint of profit or greed before being handed to the provider of services you desire.

Unfortunately for you, because you are not the one exchanging the dollar for services anymore, you no longer have the power to negotiate the terms of that exchange (unlike your ability to choose which breakfast cereal you purchase - ironically a real factor in your health). Your options for exchange consist of trying to game the tax system to your benefit, and punching a ballot every now and then to decide who will be your personal benevolent tyrant for a season.

Also working against you is the fact that since your money has been pooled together with everyone else's before reaching this point of medical services, it falls upon the representatives of the People to make sure your best interests (as they define it) are served in this exchange. Unsurprisingly, every incident that brings harm to one becomes a reason to legislate for all - since the only way, in this situation, to keep harm from coming to the one again is to codify the incident into preventative law, transferring the effects of that exchange from one to all. How else could a victim be protected if the terms of their exchanges are dictated by government?

The thousands of pages of directives and regulations dictating the use of what has now become "public money" on your behalf is no different than a hypothetical "government-sanctioned grocery list", posted on the doors of every store, specifying the items you may buy, at what price, and from whom. It would also be illegal in this bizarro world for the grocer to accept any of your personal dollars for his business with you would be funded by the state. Only a selfish, greedy rich person would ever need or want more than the benevolent tyrants had provided.

Would you be surprised to see the shelves eventually sparse and then empty for lack of products to sell? (as all the producers of products chose to do business elsewhere where they could set their own prices with the buyers) Would you be surprised to see lines of disgruntled shoppers, each carrying their apportioned groceries through the "free checkout line"?

We can't forget that medical products and services are not intrinsically different from any other product or service. They must to be bought and sold, and replacing personal choice with government fiat doesn't "wash the (supposed) stain of profit" from the product one buys. That doctor must choose to provide a service, just like the hairdresser - or he is a slave. Those drugs must be manufactured by human beings, who, devoid of the right to choose their incentive, will cease to do so and seek other means of providing for themselves. Treating medical care any different than "food care" results in a world where food is cheap (for the poor), plentiful (for the multitudes), and profitable (for the producers) - while medicine is expensive, scarce, and undesirable to produce.

And don't tell me health care is different because we need it to survive. Starvation is worse than dying from cancer on my list...

Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Five Stages of Counterfeiting

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north550.html
A truly serious counterfeiting operation would in fact plan to do something very similar to what Mr. Heath said a counterfeiter would not do – just not in a single step. The goal of a serious counterfeiting operation would be to persuade the public to use its money rather than the official bills it originally copied when it designed its original fake plates. Its goal would be the replacement of the original official bills with its own bills, making them official in the eyes of the public.

This has been the primary goal of central bankers ever since the creation of the Bank of England in 1694
Gary North's essays are always very detailed and thorough, if a bit lengthy. This article covers a very broad scope of economic history and describes the process of converting generations of people to treasure a currency once thought to be worthless. It covers precious metal debasement, fractional reserve banking, fiat money, central banks, and inflation - all in the context of a larger move to legitimize a counterfeit currency.

Economists on the Loose

http://www.CapMag.com/article.asp?ID=4991
First, let's establish a working definition of free markets; it's really simple. Free markets are simply millions upon millions of individual decision-makers, engaged in peaceable, voluntary exchange pursuing what they see in their best interests. People who denounce the free market and voluntary exchange, and are for control and coercion, believe they have more intelligence and superior wisdom to the masses. What's more, they believe they've been ordained to forcibly impose that wisdom on the rest of us. Of course, they have what they consider good reasons for doing so, but every tyrant that has ever existed has had what he believed were good reasons for restricting the liberty of others.

Tyrants are against the free market because it implies voluntary exchange. Tyrants do not trust that people acting voluntarily will do what the tyrant thinks they ought to do. Therefore, they want to replace the market with economic planning, or as Professor Blinder calls it — industrial policy.
A short and simple essay on the basic philosophy of the free market economy vs. central planning/industrial policy. I love Walter Williams ability to concisely demonstrate the mindset that inspires both the capitalist and socialist movements.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Where Michael Moore is Wrong

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/07/where_michael_moore_is_wrong.html
America's medical system has problems, but profit is the least of it. Government mandates, overregulation and a tax code that pushes employer-paid health insurance prevent the free market from performing its efficient miracles. Six out of seven health-care dollars are spent by third parties. That kills the market. Patients rarely shop around, and doctors rarely compete on price or service.

Private competitors innovate or die. Government workers do what they did last year. That's why I want the private sector to provide my health care. Pursuit of profit will give us our best medicines and medical devices.

I'll pay you $1,000 if you can name one thing government does more efficiently than the private sector.
Third in a series on articles by John Stossel on his interaction with Michael Moore. In it he disputes more claims of how government does a better job of providing services than the private sector. Moore's popular belief that certain services shouldn't be "tainted" by profit is deceptive - and attractive to those who don't understand what profit truly is.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Bill Gates Needs an Econ Course

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/06/bill_gates_needs_an_econ_cours.html
At Harvard, Gates said, "We can make market forces work better for the poor if we can develop a more creative capitalism -- if we can stretch the reach of market forces so that more people can make a profit, or at least make a living, serving people who are suffering from the worst inequities."

He misses the point. Gates faults the free market for problems caused by governments. What constricts the reach of the free market is the state. Gates seems oblivious to all the ways that governments here and abroad cripple enterprise. In poor countries, corrupt bureaucracies smother entrepreneurship while enriching cronies. The lack of formal property rights and stable law keeps average people from accumulating capital. So the poor stay poor. That's what causes "scarcity of clean water" and kills "children who die from diseases we can cure."
John Stossel takes Gates to task for confusing the root causes of poverty. Once again, the only-somewhat-informed public debate looks at free markets, looks at suffering, and then determines that the free market has failed, and therefore the State should intervene (or more accurately, since it has been intervening already, it should improve its intervention).

Gates' statement at the end of this article, "We also can press governments around the world to spend taxpayer money in ways that better reflect the values of the people who pay the taxes" is especially telling. The idea that somehow problems would be solved if we just did the wrong thing in a better way is futile. Ignoring the underlying truth that individuals know best how to spend their money does the poor a disservice. The arrogant assumption that the poor - or anyone - would be better off if a benevolent dictator would take their resources and then wisely dispose of them for the greatest benefit of their former owner is a gross deception. I'm baffled that such an idea is so widely accepted...

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Cartels: Economists and Central Bankers

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north546.html
Economics as a science is seen by its practitioners as having progressed by identifying more and more institutions as governed by personal self-interest. Yet when economists come to banking and education, they refuse to extend this traditional analysis. They either remain silent or invoke the mantra of public interest.

You will search in vain for a chapter on education as an oligopoly within the context of tax-funding, laws mandating education up to age 16, and government licensing of college-accreditation agencies. Somehow, economics textbook authors skip over any analytical discussion of this, the largest sector of the American economy.
Gary North asks some pointed questions in this essay, where he reveals the lack of critical examination on the part of economists when it comes to things like the Federal Reserve. He outlines the obvious contradictions and deceptions being practiced that for some reason, no one ever bothers to question (don't ask, don't tell).

The Romantic Illusion of Universal Health Care

I found all these short essays on CapMag on the same day - so it seemed appropriate to bundle them together and share them here to counter the ignorance I hear every day about Universal Health Care. It's gotten to where the phrase is used as a litmus test - you're either for it or against it (like the abortion issue). Even more perversely, the public consensus has judged that UHC is inherently good (who could possibly be against caring for people?), it is inevitable (everyone else is doing it!), and it is only being held up by selfish, heartless, greedy people (if you're not in favor of the Patriot Act, you must be a traitor!).

Universal Health Care Freedom on the Fourth of July
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4983
The talk about a "right" to health care really means that no one should have the right to any health care at all except through the government. As we celebrate the Fourth of July this year we must remember that our right to manage our own health care as we see fit is as vital to our liberty as freedom of speech or freedom of the press.
Why Health Insurance Should Not Be Universal
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4984
Power-hungry politicians feed off the irrationality of the citizenry. If the citizenry were more rational, there would be no place in the political system for politicians who value power over freedom and justice. Today's problems with medical care are the fault of the people who want the results of capitalism while instructing their leaders to install more socialism.
All Power to the Post Office
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4981
During a recent interview, a talk radio host told me that all private health insurance should be eliminated in order to give us all a reason to work together to make sure the government runs a good health care system.
A better analogy would be that conditions in our prisons might be expected to improve if we were all required to live in them. Socialists and some Liberals would find this level of government-enforced uniformity to be a noble sacrifice to which all citizens must submit. Many Conservatives would reluctantly agree—but suggest a voucher system that would allow us each to select the prison cell of our choice.
Health Care's A Mess--So What's the Solution?
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4980
It's better to consider the possibility that the market didn't fail us in medical care...but it was never allowed to function. If you don't want more of the same, which universal government coverage and control will provide, then consider something radically different: freedom in health care.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Freedom and Benevolence Go Together

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/07/freedom_and_benevolence_go_tog.html
I interviewed Michael Moore recently for an upcoming "20/20" special on health care. It's refreshing to interview a leftist who proudly admits he's a leftist. He told me that government should provide "food care" as well as health care and that big government would work if only the right people were in charge...

Moore followed up with a religious lesson. "What the nuns told me is true: We will be judged by how we treat the least among us. And that in order to be accepted into heaven, we're gonna be asked a series of questions. When I was hungry, did you feed me? When I was homeless, did you give me shelter? And when I was sick, did you take care of me?"

I'm not a theologian, but I do know that when people are ordered by the government to be charitable, it's not virtuous; it's compelled. Why would anyone get into heaven because he pays taxes under threat of imprisonment? Moral action is freely chosen action.
This is textbook socialist thinking - first, that government control is the best solution to the society's ills, when lead by the "right people"; second, that because it is right to do something, people should therefore be forced to do so. While people will argue about the results (charity doesn't cover everyone / civilized society should be like this / etc.), they ignore the moral contradiction of being compelled to do what's right. The first attack on those who stand on principle and advocate individual freedom and responsibility is that such people are cold-hearted and unsympathetic of other's suffering. They champion the "charity" of their forced programs and claim the lover of liberty has no love for his fellow man. Unfortunately, many people believe this rhetoric and end up believing that to advocate freedom is to be against charity. Nothing could be farther from the truth...

Monday, July 09, 2007

Time for Another Revolution

http://www.mises.org/story/2633
In 1913 the relationship between the State and Society was reversed. Areas which had heretofore been considered within the private domain, sacred ground so to speak, were now invaded by the arrogant and enriched State, and within thirty years the individual was squeezed into a corner so small that even his soul lacked elbow room. His case was far worse than it was in 1776; in exchange for an income tax King George III would have conceded every point made against him by the colonists, and might even have done penance for past sins. But, such was the character of these Americans that they challenged him to battle because he presumed to impose a miserable tax on tea. What they won at Yorktown was lost by their offspring one hundred and thirty-two years later.

Were the disposition of the current crop of Americans comparable to that of their forbears, a new revolution, to regain the profit of the first one, would be in order. There is far more justification for it now than there was in 1776. But, people do not do what reason dictates; they do what their disposition impels them to do. And the American disposition of the 1950s is flaccidly placid, obsequious and completely without a sense of freedom; it has been molded into that condition by the proceeds of the Sixteenth Amendment. We are Americans geographically, not in the tradition. In the circumstances, a return to the Constitutional immunities must wait for a miracle.
An excellent essay on the need for a revolution - as great a need as existed at the birth of our nation. Too many people are ignorant of the Constitution - its purpose, its principles, and even its weaknesses and why they exist. It all sounds too anachronistic to be taken seriously today. Defenders of the Constitution are seen as blind nostalgic cultists, out of touch with modernity. That's easy to believe when you don't understand the philosophical and moral challenges of our day, let alone the historical context (and the amazing similarities).

Frank outlines the foundations of the Constitution, the social struggle, the loss of liberty, and the slow erosion of protections against the powers of the State. The entire book can be downloaded for free here.

The Myth of the Rational Voter

http://www.economist.com/world/na/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9340166
Instead, he identifies four biases that prompt voters systematically to demand policies that make them worse off. First, people do not understand how the pursuit of private profits often yields public benefits: they have an anti-market bias. Second, they underestimate the benefits of interactions with foreigners: they have an anti-foreign bias. Third, they equate prosperity with employment rather than production: Mr Caplan calls this the “make-work bias”. Finally, they tend to think economic conditions are worse than they are, a bias towards pessimism.

The make-work bias is best illustrated by a story, perhaps apocryphal, of an economist who visits China under Mao Zedong. He sees hundreds of workers building a dam with shovels. He asks: “Why don't they use a mechanical digger?” “That would put people out of work,” replies the foreman. “Oh,” says the economist, “I thought you were making a dam. If it's jobs you want, take away their shovels and give them spoons.” For an individual, the make-work bias makes some sense. He prospers if he has a job, and may lose his health insurance if he is laid off. For the nation as a whole, however, what matters is not whether people have jobs, but how they do them. The more people produce, the greater the general prosperity.
A good essay exposing the myth that democracy always results in the best choice for all involved (wisdom of crowds, etc.) He outlines four factors that cause voters to act irrationally. In a democracy, he claims, rational politicians give the voters what they (irrationally) want.

Live and Let Live

http://jewishworldreview.com/0707/stossel070507.php3
That same week I happened to interview filmmaker Michael Moore for "20/20." Moore wants government to monopolize health care. His new film, "Sicko," argues that Canada and France approach paradise because their governments provide health care and more. This brought him standing ovations in Cannes.

"But government is force," I said to him. He was incredulous.
Michael Moore: Why do you see it as force?
Me: Because government takes money with force from people and gives it to others.
Moore: No, it doesn't, actually. The government is of, by, and for the people. The people elect the government, and the people determine whether or not they'll allow the government to collect taxes from them.

Is it really necessary to explain that government is force? When the Salvation Army asks you for a donation, you are free to say no, and you suffer no consequences. When the U.S. government demands a tax return and a check on April 15, you can't say no and go about your business. You comply or face fines or imprisonment. Yes, you get to vote for candidates periodically. But having an infinitesimal say in who will coerce you doesn't change that fact that they are using force.
John Stossel is very good at identifying the principles that most people miss when discussing the latest hot-button issues. The universal health care debate is full of misdirection and illusion, and a lot of passionate people championing popular causes while ignoring the foundation of their philosophy. Michael Moore's total absence of awareness about the true nature of any collectivist policy leaves me dumbfounded (yet not totally suprised). When people like him are making sweeping statements in the media that ignore principles, I get worried - it means the public debate is fueled by ignorance.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Health Care Is a Business - or Should Be

http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4948

Ultimately all health care is paid for by business activity. Business provides the wages, the return on investment, the insurance, the taxes that pay directly for health care, and the insurance and taxes that fund government programs. When the government manages to provide services at all, it can give you nothing that it does not take from you or others, or from your employer and other employers. The total added value the government creates for your benefit is nothing.

The government now uses your money to pay for 50 percent of health care. That is up from less than 10 percent, forty years ago. The increase in health care costs that has accompanied this process is largely caused by government—the actual origin of the "health care crisis," discovered and proclaimed by Richard Nixon and Edward Kennedy in 1971. Their proposed solution was more government. They got it.

The "crisis" was created by government, not just through its own reckless spending, but through the consequent destruction of much of the free market.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Socialism, Free Enterprise, and the Common Good

http://www.hillsdale.edu/imprimis/2007/05/

In chapter 21 of St. Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus proposes a moral dilemma in the form of a parable: A man asks his two sons to go to work for him in his vineyard. The first son declines, but later ends up going. The second son tells his father he will go, but never does. “Who,” Jesus asks, “did the will of his father?” Although I am loath to argue that Jesus’s point in this parable was an economic one, we may nonetheless derive from it a moral lesson with which to evaluate economic systems in terms of achieving the common good.

Modern history presents us with two divergent models of economic arrangement: socialism and capitalism. One of these appears preoccupied with the common good and social betterment, the other with profits and production. But let us keep the parable in mind as we take a brief tour of economic history.

This essay is adapted from a speech delivered at Hillsdale College on October 27, 2006, at the first annual Free Market Forum, sponsored by the College’s Center for the Study of Monetary Systems and Free Enterprise.

It makes a thorough argument about what I have often observed in the struggle between capitalism and socialism - that of the difference between the public perception of a philosophy and the actual consequences of the same.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

When Talk Isn't Cheap

http://www.opinionjournal.com/diary/?id=110010006
Washington's highest court struck down a decision by Superior Court Judge Chris Wickham, who in 2005 ordered KVI radio hosts John Carlson and Kirby Wilbur had to place a monetary value on "campaign contributions" they made when they argued in favor of Initiative 912, a ballot measure to repeal a 9.5-cent-a-gallon increase in the state's gasoline tax. The antitax measure ultimately lost by 6% of the vote, in part because its opponents outspent its supporters by 20 to 1.

But the "unofficial" support of the measure by talk-show hosts such as Messrs. Carlson and Wilbur, who went so far as to actively tell listeners how they could sign petitions to get I-912 on the ballot, infuriated the self-styled Keep Washington Rolling coalition, which backed the gas tax hike. The coalition convinced a local prosecutor in San Juan County, along with the cities of Kent, Auburn and Seattle, to sue KVI radio demanding that it be brought under the state's campaign finance laws.

In siding with the localities, Judge Wickham insisted he was not restricting speech, merely requiring the reporting of "in kind" contributions to the antitax campaign. But in fact he was equating speech to money, for these "contributions" consisted entirely of speech.
Read to see where our political system is headed...