Freedom, Fairness, and Funding

This is a brief dialog I had recently with someone who I do not know on Facebook.  I have changed his name to “Anonymous” to protect his identity, and I have left his comments “as is” with all the typos/misspellings with the exception of the profanity.  The reason I am adding this post to my blog is that I want to expose the ignorance that is so ubiquitous in our society.  We must educate everyone we meet on basic economic principles in an effort to avert a meltdown of our nation’s financial systems.

Me:  The government’s idea of fairness is to confiscate money from those who produce and give it to those who do not. Freedom means we have the right to pursue our own individual happiness and make as much money as we can using our physical and mental abilities, if that is what we want to do, without interference from the government and without having to worry about others trying to justify taking money from us based on their perceived need.

Anonymous:  You are an idiots. For Reich wing dumba**es like you it’s corporations uber ales. You need to read some Dickens and UNDERSTAND something, THAT is the world you’re advocating. Stupid. Just stupid.

Me:  Sir, I believe we are already living like a Dickens novel.  We have over 40 million people on food stamps.  The Welfare programs are not working.  When you subsidize anything, you get more of it.  We are subsidizing poverty in this nation.  Now we are subsidizing unemployment by extending unemployment benefits.

Me:  The government is not a charity. I contribute to private charities that use their funds wisely and have accountability, unlike the government.  Why do you think it’s right to steal money from those who work and transfer that wealth to those who don’t?  This is unreasonable.  It encourages poverty and discourages work. If you use the rational mind that God gave you and think things through to their logical ends, you will understand that the ideal government is one that maintains an environment in which businesses can thrive.  That means fewer regulations, lower taxes, and much smaller government.  Our current system is a hindrance to anyone trying to build a successful business.  We need to stop using terms like “less fortunate”, “underprivaleged”, and “under-represented”.  Everyone who has a sane mind can find a job that can provide for their own needs.  Our continued support of Social Security, Medicare, too much Defense, and now Healthcare will result in a collapse of the economy as we know it.  The dollar will eventually be worth nothing.  The Vatican bank warned today that both Europe and the U.S. are headed toward catastrophic ends unless they stop trying to control the economy and taking on more debt.  This has happened before to other countries.  Just read history.  We must stop all the social programs and encourage people to use their minds to take care of themselves and stop stealing from the producers in this country.

The Persecution of a Successful Businessman

“Hank Reardon’s answer to the court” in the book Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

“No, I do not want my attitude to be misunderstood. I shall be glad to state it for the record. I am in full agreement with the facts of everything said about me in the newspapers – with the facts, but not with the evaluation. I work for nothing but my own profit – which I make by selling a product they need to men who are willing and able to buy it. I do not produce it for their benefit at the expense of mine, and they do not buy it for my benefit at the expense of theirs; I do not sacrifice my interests to them nor do they sacrifice theirs to me; we deal as equals by mutual consent to mutual advantage – and I am proud of every penny that I have earned in this manner. I am rich and I am proud of every penny I own. I made my money by my own effort, in free exchange and through the voluntary consent of every man I dealt with – voluntary consent of those who employed me when I started, the voluntary consent of those who work for me now, the voluntary consent of those who buy my product. Read more »

The Death of Common Sense

An Obituary  Interesting and sadly rather true

Today we mourn the passing of a beloved old friend, Common Sense, who has been with us for many years. No one knows for sure how old he was, since his birth records were long ago lost in bureaucratic red tape. He will be remembered as having cultivated such valuable lessons as:

- Knowing when to come in out of the rain;
- Why the early bird gets the worm;
- Life isn’t always fair;
- and Maybe it was my fault.

Read more »

Evil is Always Among Us.

I found this article on ‘Preparing for Evil’ by Ted Nugent in the Washington Times. Enjoy.  Click here to view article.

Mad World

“Mad World”

All around me are familiar faces
Worn out places, worn out faces
Bright and early for their daily races
Going nowhere, going nowhere

And their tears are filling up their glasses
No expression, no expression
Hide my head I want to drown my sorrow
No tomorrow, no tomorrow

And I find it kind of funny
I find it kind of sad
The dreams in which I’m dying
Are the best I’ve ever had

I find it hard to tell you
‘Cause I find it hard to take
When people run in circles
It’s a very, very mad world

Children waiting for the day they feel good
Happy Birthday, Happy Birthday
Made to feel the way that every child should
Sit and listen, sit and listen

Went to school and I was very nervous
No one knew me, no one knew me
Hello teacher tell me what’s my lesson
Look right through me, look right through me

And I find it kind of funny
I find it kind of sad
The dreams in which I’m dying
Are the best I’ve ever had

I find it hard to tell you
‘Cause I find it hard to take
When people run in circles
It’s a very, very mad world
Mad world, mad world, mad world

Think.

We all are products of our birthplaces, families, churches we grew up in, influences from people we meet and befriend, TV shows we’ve watched, games we’ve played, music we’ve listened to, schools we attended, and books we’ve read. We all need to add to this list “thoughts we’ve thought”. We all have biases resulting from these influences. We still need to THINK. We may be wrong. Study, research, and think.

History of Cassville, Georgia

A friend of mine, Charles Wilson, wrote this paper over 30 years ago when he was 18 for a school project.  It is a fascinating read about a small town in Bartow County, Georgia 60 miles northeast of Atlanta.  If you enjoy Civil War history, you will love reading this paper.  To view it, click this link: http://www.cassvillehistoricalsociety.com/history/

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Federal Reserve History

This is a 42 minute history of the Federal Reserve and an analysis of the serious problems it is causes.  Watching it will help you prepare for the hyperinflation in our future.  The Federal Reserve is NOT “Federal”.  It is a private, non-government organization.  Please watch.

 

Laus Deo

One detail that is never mentioned is that in Washington , D.C. there can never be a building of greater height than the Washington Monument . With all the uproar about removing the ten commandments, etc., this is worth a moment or two of your time. I was not aware of this amazing historical information.

On the aluminum cap, atop the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C. , are displayed two words: Laus Deo. Read more »

The Unthinking Right

I am grateful to Lew Rockwell for publishing this article.  I agree with him that the typical conservative, right-wing voter can’t seem to separate their desire for smaller government from the “perceived” need to be the world’s policeman eager to fight wars for other countries.  Ron Paul gets it.  The Right do not get Ron Paul, but I hope one day soon they will.  -Ray Smith

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The Unthinking Right

by Lew Rockwell 

With each published interview, Ron Paul only seems to become more articulate, more persuasive and compelling, more to the pedagogical point in explaining the meaning and priority of liberty as the central political principle. Those of us who understand can only cheer. Those who hold contradictory opinions – favoring liberty in some areas and government expansion in others – find his views, in the words of National Review, “quixotic – unquestionably a little weird.”

Let’s talk about weird. What’s weird is the world of National Review where it troubles no one to call for huge spending cuts and slashing government at the domestic level while defending the worst form of global imperialism abroad, complete with reflexive defenses of every violation of human rights and liberty.

In what sense can these people claim to favor freedom? Julian Assange released a bunch of boring emails between government bureaucrats and National Review wants him prosecuted under the Espionage Act, passed by Woodrow Wilson in 1917 to persecute his political opponents in America. Editor Rich Lowry writes the following paragraph and fully expects his readers to pick up rocks to stone Assange:

 

He wants to expose to retribution those who cooperate with us on the ground in war zones. He wants to undercut domestic support for our wars. He wants to embarrass our foreign allies and exact a price for their trust in us. He wants to complicate sensitive operations like securing nuclear material in Pakistan and attacking terrorists with missiles in Yemen…. Confronting a dangerous world is difficult enough without the brazen exposure of the nation’s secrets…. Surely, the same Justice Department that sued Arizona for daring to enforce the nation’s immigration laws can find a creative way to harry and shut down Assange.

So much for opposing big government. This paragraph reveals that Lowry believes in an identity between the citizens and the imperial national state (“us,” to his mind, means you, me, and the Pentagon). These people seem to think that anyone who releases what the government calls a state secret – no matter how boring and irrelevant it is – should be subjected to the “severest possible punishment,” which would presumably include the torture that is also consistently defended on their pages.

What a distance these people have traveled from their ideological ancestors. After World War II, it took about ten years before the American right could be cajoled into embracing militarism as an essential plank in their platform. In doing so, they gave up their traditional love of non-interventionism as an essential aspect of liberty. And what made them give it up? In a word, it was communism.

The rap from the late 1950s through the late 1980s was that there was a global struggle that was the essential challenge of the time. It was a struggle between individualism and collectivism. The struggle took place on the domestic level between those who favored capitalism and those who wanted a highly regulated, Keynesianized, socialized economy. This struggle was mirrored on an international level because there were these communists running around trying to impose their godless collectivism on all kinds of innocent people around the world, and they had to be stopped. Therefore a consistent individualist could and would oppose big government at home and embrace the use of American military might to roll back communism abroad.

That was the ideological tableau that was painted by the likes of William F. Buckley and Whittaker Chambers, and many good people were drawn to it, even sincere libertarians like Frank Mayer went along with it. On the surface it seemed to make some sense. You had to have a pretty keen eye to figure out that it was all a pack of lies, that this was an old-fashioned, illiberal imperialism sneaking in under a different guise.

So far as I know, there were only a handful of people on the right who saw the Cold War as the statist racket that it was. They were led by Murray Rothbard, who documented the whole business in his essential book The Betrayal of the American Right, and included people like Leonard Read, who was for peace in private but pretty much decided not to talk about it for the duration.

In any case, it took something like the great global menace of Soviet communism to persuade the advocates of limited government to go along with cheering on big-government imperialism in the tradition of FDR, Truman, and Wilson. It ran against their instincts that rightly saw military expansionism and war as particular kinds of socialistic policy.

But let bygones be bygones at this point. In 1989, something very striking happened. The Soviet Union imploded, as did its satellite states. The enemy vanished from the planet. One might have supposed that at this point, conservatives would have reverted to their pre-Cold War posture of favoring peace and being suspicious of the state. For a bit, during the Clinton years, this started to happen.

However, it didn’t last long. Once a Republican took control of the White House, the conservatives were at it again, whooping it up for war, calling the advocates of peace traitors, arguing for the worst possible Machiavellian policies of lies and the rack for the opponents of the great god nation state.

Today it is hard to make sense of why people on the right are so solidly pro-imperialist. I offer two possible explanations.

The first is rooted in an ancient nationalist/Manichean instinct variously alive from the Roman empire in the ancient world through the 19th-century British experience. The idea here posits that one’s own state is the light, and the rest of the world is the dark. We must constantly be on the march to light the darkness through military might in order to assure the progress of humanity. This explanation posits a core chauvinism that has taken hold of this sector of American opinion, and it is hardly surprising. It’s a very low intellectual orientation, however, as unthinking as it is unseemly. It also stands in direct contradiction to all the talk about the desire to limit the state.

Another explanation is that it is a purely oppositional stance. The American right is against the left. The left tends toward peacenikism. Therefore the right must oppose peace. This is a view held by people who lack the courage to think independently, people who buy their political ideology pre-packaged right out of the vending machine. It is a tendency of people who join the College Republicans, but it is beneath any serious adult.

Regardless, it is a sad and pathetic thing that people at National Review would look at a consistent proponent of liberty like Ron Paul and find his views completely quixotic, bizarre, unpredictable, incoherent, whereas every single one of the monikers applies in spades to a crowd that imagines itself opposing government while lustily calling for the death of anyone who would dare reveal to the public the inner workings of that government.

December 30, 2010

Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and editor of LewRockwell.com. See his books.

Copyright © 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.