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Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem.

political philosophy Archive

Friday

20

May 2011

2

COMMENTS

Should We Weight Votes Toward the Least Productive in Society?

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Taxes

This is what a terrible idea looks like:

America should implement weighted voting to make voting more objective and fair, and give the young more power, because the consequences of political decisions will affect them the longest. Weighted voting would restore power to twenty and thirty year olds, where it resided before the advent of medical science. With the aid of computers, it would be easy to give everyone a Voting Score, just like we all have a credit score.

Yes, let’s give the most ignorant, inexperienced and disengaged voting bloc extra political power. That sounds like an excellent idea.

Ezra Klein also highlighted the idea, though was careful to note that he did not endorse it, instead pointing out that we weight by other factors such as geography. We do this for a reason, as states are recognized as constituents with independent interests. Unlike voters, they have issues of sovereignty and their own rightful political authority to protect from federal encroachment. And we’ve seen what has happened with the erosion of their political input at the federal level by moving to direct elections for Senators, as the federal government has all but assimilated the states into administrative bodies which exist for no other purpose than to do its bidding.

The young, on the other hand, do not have an independent interest that is different from any other individual voter, they just have a longer time horizon. But does that necessarily mean they are more impacted by political decisions, as implied by the “decisions will affect them the longest” reasoning? I don’t think so.

As the government has become more and more an instrument of redistribution, I’d say it is taxpayers who are most impacted by political decisions, regardless of how much longer they have to live. As such, if we insist on mucking with voting weights, I agree with the suggestion of John Hawkins to weight by total taxes paid.

This would have the benefit of solving what is perhaps the biggest political problem of the day: the ability of non-tax payers to vote themselves benefits at the expense of an ever narrowing tax base. Voters are more likely to vote themselves benefits if they are not contributing to the costs.The burdens then fall on fewer and fewer productive members of society, which both reduces their productivity (and thus the funds available for such redistributions) but it also means a growing population of moochers. It’s a vicious, teat-suckling cycle. This is why James Madison warned of a need for “protecting the minority of the opulent.” His answer was the Senate.

Madison was not talking merely of the super-wealthy routinely attacked by leftists and redistributionists today, but of the productive sector in general, which we can largely equate to today as those who pay income tax. The point of his argument was to protect the minority interests against the majority that would abuse them. And when those who pay for and sustain government are the minority, while those who mooch off their largess are a majority, the end result can be only fiscal calamity. As younger people are less productive and carry less than the average burden of government, weighting in their favor would exacerbate this problem and hasten our headlong rush into national insolvency.

Friday

11

February 2011

0

COMMENTS

Egypt: Now Comes the Hard Part

Written by , Posted in Foreign Affairs & Policy

With news that Egyptian President Mubarak has finally stepped down after 30 years in power, freedom loving people the world over rejoiced. As a vociferous proponent of human liberty wherever humans may reside, I share in that joy. However, it’s important to realize that this is but a first, tiny step down the path to liberty, one which may well be followed by two steps back. The question the Egyptian people now face is this: What government do we wish to make for ourselves?

The last shot in the Revolutionary War, where Americans similarly decided they had been ruled by the same tyrant long enough, was not the end of our struggle but the beginning. What came next, while not as costly in terms of human lives, was arguably far more difficult; I’m talking about the task of establishing a lasting government of the people, and which would be their servant instead of their master.

Representative governments are hard work. Tyranny, oppression and poverty are the natural state of human affairs and not easily overcome. It takes more, much more, than just an election. Despotic countries the world over hold elections all the time. True representative government requires democratic institutions and civic culture. The people have to  live, breath and feel freedom not just for a few days or weeks, but for every moment of every day. As Ronald Reagan observed, even in the U.S., “freedom is never more than a generation away from extinction.”

The American Founding Fathers proved uniquely positioned in both place and time to capture a moment for freedom. They exhaustively debated the form of their new government, drawing upon centuries of wisdom, and carefully crafted a tapestry of freedom from the innumerable threads of knowledge spun over the centuries in the wheel of human history.  They then took their ideas to the people, recognizing that no government, however well designed, can be legitimate without the consent of the governed.

Are the Egyptian protesters prepared to make this long slog? Is their society ready for more than just elections, but the real cornerstones of democracy, like  tolerance and respect for the rights of fellow citizens, and civic participation? Or will they quietly fall back into old routines, accepting the authority of whatever figure emerges to fill the power void? They, like the American Founders, have a moment. What are they prepared to do with it?

Friday

14

January 2011

1

COMMENTS

A Shocking Poll!

Written by , Posted in Culture & Society

[A]ll experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.

Declaration of Independence

A CBS poll has found shocking results. It seems that 16% of the public thinks it is sometimes justified “to take violent action against the government,” including a full 28% of Republicans!

Wait, that’s not the shocking part. What’s shocking is that 76% of the public, and 64% of the dangerous, far-right, radical Republican party, thinks it is never justified to take violent action against the government.

This is absolutely amazing. Seventy-six percent of the citizens in a country that only exists due to the violent overthrow of an oppressive government thinks such action is never justified. Never.

I suppose they must think the Declaration of Independence reads thusly, “But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to complain nonviolently about such government.” Inspiring stuff.

The poll result would be understandable if the question premised that the government remained representative and the democratic process continued untarnished. Certainly violent action against the government is not justified just because one particular party won an election over another. But to say that violent action is never justified, with no qualification whatsoever, is ridiculously naive. Or maybe a cabal of Loyalists have remained active all these years, secretly growing their ranks and plotting their revenge.

Hat-tip: NRO

Sunday

13

June 2010

0

COMMENTS

Thursday

13

May 2010

0

COMMENTS

The Benefits Of Party Homogeneity

Written by , Posted in General/Misc.

A recent Washington Post editorial discusses the apparent “Party purges” that some have observed in recent years.  Whether or not “purge” is the most appropriate word, I think there is a general truth to the idea that the parties have been slowly but surely sorting themselves out ideologically.  Southern conservative Democrats like John Breaux and Zell Miller are no longer welcome in the Democratic party.  On the Republican side the same can be said of northern liberals like Lincoln Chafee.

The editorial is reasonably even-handed in discussing the good and the bad of these changes, but I think it falls short in one important area.  A significant unidentified benefit of having parties with more clearly delineated ideologies is the increased ability for voters to replace bad policies with potentially better ones.

Assuming neither party has a monopoly on correct policy responses to various problems, when wrong policies are pursued and one ideology fails to deliver on a particular problem, having a clear alternative is preferable to two parties that are just a mix of both left and right.  In other words, if a governing party is already using a mishmash of liberal, conservative or any other policy solutions because they have a “big tent,” then it’s not altogether clear where the failure stems from when a policy flops.  But if a distinctly liberal or conservative party implements a policy and it fails, the source of that failure is easily identifiable.

The obstacle is our electoral system, which really guarantees the viability of two and only two parties, whereas the array of ideological choices on most issues. is typically greater. But just because we’re stuck with a two party system – one that encourages parties to be ideologically expansive despite all the hand-wringing over “purges” – doesn’t mean we have to have two parties with significant, and confusing, ideological overlap.  If you’re conservative, there’s really no good reason to be in the Democratic party, and no real benefit to the voters for having you there. The same goes for liberals and Republicans. If you’re a libertarian…well, pick your poison.

Wednesday

4

November 2009

0

COMMENTS

A Classical Dream

Written by , Posted in Liberty & Limited Government

I love classical music, but I wish this story had read a little bit differently.  Here’s how it goes in my dream world:

Classical liberalism took over the White House on Wednesday as Barack and Michelle Obama used two seminars and a series of workshops for young thinkers to send a clear message that the beliefs of the Founders aren’t just for stuffy libertarians with bad haircuts.

The president told the audience at an evening seminar in the East Room that classical liberalism is “propelling liberty and spurring innovation” all across the nation, and is something to be enjoyed by political philosophers and laymen alike.

Monday

3

August 2009

0

COMMENTS

The New Yorker Attacks Federalism

Written by , Posted in Big Government

Given the manner in which statists have seen to the systematic erosion of state sovereignty, it should come as no surprise to see a rag like The New Yorker attacking the principle of federalism.  The cause for complaint this time is the allegation that those pesky states are standing in the way of recovery:

If you came up with a list of obstacles to economic recovery in this country, it would include all the usual suspects—our still weak banking system, falling house prices, overindebted consumers, cautious companies. But here are fifty culprits you might not have thought of: the states. Federalism, often described as one of the great strengths of the American system, has become a serious impediment to reversing the downturn.

The article is filled with the usual Keynesian claptrap, blaming balanced budget requirements because it means statists can’t spend like drunken sailors on the pretense that it will help economic recovery.  Never mind that state budgets, in particular those run by lovers of government, are not insolvent because of the recession, which has instead simply sped up the process.

But even more importantly, federalism is apparently getting in the way of statists who want to plan our energy production from Washington:

This would involve turning the current hodgepodge of regional and state grids into a genuinely national grid, which would detect and respond to problems as they happen, giving users more information about and control over their electricity use, and so on. It could also dramatically reduce our dependence on oil. Wind power could eventually produce as much as twenty per cent of the energy that America consumes. The problem is that the places where most of that wind power can be generated tend to be a long way from the places where most of that power would be consumed. A new grid would enable us to get the power to where it’s needed. But since nobody likes power lines running through his property, building the grid would require overriding or placating the states—and the prospects of that aren’t great.

The federal government can do no wrong and should be in charge of planning everything.  States should get out of the way.  Got it.

Hat tip: Moonbattery

Monday

9

March 2009

0

COMMENTS

All Government Decisions Are Political

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

President Obama has, to much liberal fanfare, undone the Bush era decision not to prohibit federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.  He then, with a straight face, attacked Bush for putting politics ahead of science.

It’s laughable that someone could seriously claim that politics has no place in science when he just finished using a political act to influence science.  Yes, Bush made a political decision regarding science when he decided not to fund embryonic stem cell research (and he also made a moral decision – an issue which Obama and the left wants to pretend doesn’t exist).  But Obama is just as political when he decides to fund it as Bush was when he decided not to.

Government is inherently political.  If politicians are deciding what scientific endeavours deserve funds, those decisions will inevitably be political.  Federal funding is what brings politics into science. The only way to truly remove politics from science would be to remove government from science.  Every indication is that Obama wants to do the opposite.  He has all kinds of pet projects that he – based on his ideology – thinks are worthy, from embryonic stem cells to “green energy” and global warming research.  He wants to take more money from the private sector, thus diminishing the capital it has to allocate to research, and decide himself where it should go.   That won’t remove the influence of politics from science, it will enhance it.

Wednesday

25

February 2009

10

COMMENTS

The Stimulus Marks The Death Of Federalism

Written by , 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.”

Monday

16

February 2009

0

COMMENTS

What Makes A President Great?

Written by , 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.