A Moral Government Must Have Individualism As Its Foundation
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
Dr. John Lewis explains at a North Carolina Tea Party:
Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem.
Saturday
April 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
Dr. John Lewis explains at a North Carolina Tea Party:
Friday
April 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned.
Thomas JeffersonThe Department of Homeland Security is sounding the alarm. Against a bioweapon? No. A new plot by radical jihadis to murder thousands of Americans? Nope. Against right wing extremism! The report begins by pointing out that DHS has no real evidence to suggest that “right-wing extremists” are any danger.
The DHS/Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) has no specific information that domestic rightwing* terrorists are currently planning acts of violence, but rightwing extremists may be gaining new recruits by playing on their fears about several emergent issues. The economic downturn and the election of the first African American president present unique drivers for rightwing radicalization and recruitment.
Translation: Even without evidence, we know that those darn racists are up to no good.
What’s really amusing about the report, however, is the ridiculously broad definition of rightwing extremism.
* (U) Rightwing extremism in the United States can be broadly divided into those groups, movements, and adherents that are primarily hate-oriented (based on hatred of particular religious, racial or ethnic groups), and those that are mainly antigovernment, rejecting federal authority in favor of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. It may include groups and individuals that are dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition to abortion or immigration.
State and local authority? Those bastards! Here is a list I have compiled of notable right wing extremists throughout American history:
Should you come across any of these dangerous radicals, please notify Janet Napolitano immediately.
Wednesday
April 2009
COMMENTS
Wednesday
March 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
We need to bring this man to the U.S.
Friday
March 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Gun Rights, Liberty & Limited Government
I recently sent the following letter to the Boston Globe.
To the Editor:
Your recent editorial blaming Mexico’s drug violence on our gun laws (“A lethal export to Mexico,” March 3) missed the mark. It is not insightful to say that 90% of guns picked up in Mexico are from the U.S. Of course they are; we are the closest supplier. But that does nothing to show that restricting sales in the U.S. would make them unavailable to Mexican criminals, as your editorial suggests. In fact, the evidence shows that view is simply false.
Mexican drug cartels are currently fighting police with machine guns, grenades and even RPG’s. None of these items are legal to purchase in the U.S. There is simply no connection between gun laws and the ability of criminals to arm themselves.
Our drug prohibition has created a black market which the must unsavory characters are willing to fight over. But there is nothing inherent to drugs that makes its trade violent. If the U.S. outlawed meat, there would be meat-related violence in Mexico as criminals vied to smuggle meat to U.S. consumers willing to pay black market prices. If we really want to help Mexico, the best thing we can do is expand our freedoms, not restrict them.
Sincerely,
Brian Garst
Wednesday
March 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Legislation, Liberty & Limited Government, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society
West Virginia state lawmaker Jeff Eldridge wants to outlaw Barbie dolls. His reasoning? It makes girls want to be pretty.
“I just hate the image that we give to our kids that if you’re beautiful, you’re beautiful and you don’t have to be smart,” Eldridge told West Virginia Media. “I’d like to send a message to not only our children but parents and educators that let’s push education over the importance of beauty.”
Mr. Eldridge is tragically confused. The image that “if you’re beautiful [then] you don’t have to be smart,” is not created by Barbie dolls, it’s created by human behavoir. They hold that image because it’s an accurate description of society. Men (and even other women) give women more attention if they are beautiful. Girls know this and thus want to be beautiful. This is a fact of life. You may not like it, but there’s not much you can do to change it. You certainly can’t legislate it away, and even if you could, respect for personal freedom should be enough to prevent you from trying.
Wednesday
February 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
If federalism wasn’t dead already, the “stimulus” killed it. That is, the relationship between the federal government and the states has become so distorted compared to the original conception held by our founders that it would make little practical difference if we just went ahead and abolished the concept of states altogether.
The Constitution designed a system in which the states share sovereignty with a federal government. According to Madison, the powers of the federal government were to be “few and defined,” while those remaining with the states would be “numerous and indefinite.” This is no longer so.
The federal government now has the final say in most areas which used to be the sole responsibility of the states. Criminal law, an area left exclusively to the respective states, is becoming ever more federalized. Obeying the laws of California and growing pot for medical use is no protection from federal agents. Whatever one might think of this behavior, it’s the voters of California who should get the final say.
A fifty-five mph speed limit, promptly ignored by most motorists, was dictated to the states by passage of the 1974 Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act. Although the national speed limit was later repealed in 1995, numerous federal standards remain, such as the minimum ages for drinking and smoking. The federal government has largely accomplished this power grab by opening the spigot of federal dollars, then threatening to cut off any state that doesn’t kowtow to Washington’s demands.
So when a number of governors of both parties balked at taking federal money for unemployment insurance, knowing that they would be stuck with the bill of an expanded government welfare mandate when the federal funds expired, it should come as no surprise that the beltway response was to attempt to denigrate and browbeat the rogue states into compliance. Democratic Senator Charles Schumer responded to their rejection of federal funds by admonishing governors for playing “political games,” then boldly declared, “whether the governors want to or not, they can be forced to take the whole thing.” This astonishing declaration strikes at the heart of our federalist system. Even the race card has been played to shame governors into accepting the dictates of Washington, such as when democratic House member James Clyburn shamelessly alleged that any rejection of stimulus money, and the strings that came with it, amounts to “a slap in the face of African-Americans.” Not all states have the foresight to resist such federal encroachments. State financial shortfalls and a narrow view of state interest leads some, such as California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, to turn to Washington hat in hand.
Aside from the eventual subjugation of state authority, funneling federal dollars into the states also leads to significant waste. No longer dependent on their constituents for financial support, the states become rent-seekers looking to game the federal system. This is why 250,000 Washington State residents recently received a $1 check in the mail. As a reward for this wasteful spending, the federal government will pump into the state millions in new welfare funds. This seemingly irrational and grossly wasteful spending is encouraged by the present system, where states have financial incentives to meet federal bureaucratic rules that allow them to qualify for more funding. The impact on the taxpayer is simply not important to the state in this calculus.
Alexander Hamilton described the balance between national and state governments as one of “utmost importance” that should be “dwelt on with peculiar attention.” Yet hardly a thought was given by Congress to this fundamental principle when it hastily passed almost $1 trillion in new federal spending, $144 billion of which has been designated for state consumption. And so we must now repeat in vain Thomas Jefferson’s wish “never to see all offices transferred to Washington.”
Wednesday
February 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
Or so says Harvard University. The most amusing aspect for me is how the introduction identifies “the free market ideology that has dominated legal discourse and lawmaking the last few decades.”
The last few decades? Spending so much time diagnosing right-leaning thinkers as mentally ill, they must not have much left over for the history of political and economic
thought.
Hat-tip: Cato-at-Libery
Monday
February 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government
In honor of President’s Day, I will ruminate on the nature of the presidency and how we perceive presidential performance. Typically, historical rankings favor appearance over outcomes and power over Constitutional caution. Those presidents that most expand the scope and power of the presidency are considered great, while those that operate within the confines of the Constitution are denigrated as weak and ineffective.
George Washington is one of the few men rightly celebrated as among our greatest presidents. His humble approach to the Presidency stands in stark contrast to others routinely ranked among the top, such as Woodrow Wilson and FDR. Others, such as Calvin Coolidge and Grover Cleveland, who promoted classical liberalism and attempted to bring the presidency back to its original conception are unfairly ranked poorly.
This false understanding of the role of the presidency is not limited to historians. It is the public that is largely responsible for the continuing devolution of the office into something becoming less and less distinguishable from tyranny. No problem is beyond the powers of the presidency to attempt to solve. No aspect of life is outside the purview of government. At the first sign of trouble, we eagerly hand our rights over to the president, then praise him for making us feel better (despite the fact that his actions almost always make things worse).
This President’s Day, let’s help break the cycle. Celebrate the men who stayed within the bounds of limited government, and stop worshiping those who ignored them.
Wednesday
February 2009
COMMENTS
Written by Brian Garst, Posted in Liberty & Limited Government, Taxes
The Guardian has a big series they are doing on tax evaders called Tax Gap. In discussing the series, this article notes various responses they’ve gotten from across the political spectrum. According to the Guardian, a number of responses “welcome the Guardian’s exposés as finally holding transnational corporations to account and asking them to pay their dues to the society from which they benefit.”
This kind of attitude is horribly misguided. I’m not going to get into the debate over the actions of the companies the Guardian has reported on (most of it being legal, however). Rather, I want to address this specific view that corporations owe society something, and that they are, to date, not supplying it.
The reasoning for this argument usually progresses as follows: “Corporation A has made X amount of profit in our country; they owe us!”
The unspoken implication of this reasoning is that Corporation A has provided nothing of value in return for its profit. But this is false. Profits are made by providing desired goods. The people have benefited from Corporation A’s presence just as much, if not more, than Corporation A has – else it would have no profit.
There is a limited exception, which is the general benefit that rule of law provides to everyone. However, there are two important caveats here. First, the benefit is given to all, and corporations owe no more thanks for it than anyone else. Second, and most important, the amount of tax revenue needed to actually fund this function of government is incredibly small compared to what governments today attempt to raise. Even the biggest tax evading companies, if they still pay any taxes at all, are supplying enough funds to pay for their benefit from this.
The rest of the taxes collected go to funding massive welfare states and entitlement programs. I’m not going to discuss the entirety of the moral and ethical arguments surrounding paying these taxes, other than to say that it is not sufficient to prove a moral obligation to pay for this simply by showing that a corporation has produced a profit.