Congress's
'Virtual Iran War Resolution'
by Ron Paul
Today the Dow Jones Average was down 350-some
points, gold was up $32, and oil was up another $5. There
is a lot of chaos out there and everyone is worried about
$4 gasoline. But I don't think there is a clear understanding
[of] exactly why that has occurred.
We do know that there is a supply and demand issue, but
there are other reasons for the high cost of energy. One
is inflation. In order to pay for the war that has been
going on, and the domestic spending, we've been spending
a lot more money than we have. So what do we do? We send
the bills over to the Federal Reserve and they create
new money, and in the last three years, our government,
through the Federal Reserve and the banking system, has
created $4 trillion of new money. That is one of the main
reasons why we have this high cost of energy and $4 per
gallon gasoline.
But there is another factor that I want to talk about
tonight, and that is not only the fear of inflation and
future inflation, but the fear factor dealing with our
foreign policy. In the last several weeks, if not for
months, we have heard a lot of talk about the potential
of Israel and/or the United States bombing Iran. And it
is in the marketplace. Energy prices are being bid up
because of this fear. It has been predicted that if bombs
start dropping, that we will see energy prices double
or triple. It is just the thought of it right now that
is helping to push these energy prices up. And that is
a very real thing going on right now.
But to me it is almost like déjà vu all
over again. We listened to the rhetoric for years and
years before we went into Iraq. We did not go in the correct
manner, we did not declare war, we are there and it is
an endless struggle. And I cannot believe it, that we
may well be on the verge of initiating the bombing of
Iran!
Leaders on both sides of the aisle, and in the administration,
have all said so often, "No options should be taken
off the table – including a nuclear first strike
on Iran." The fear is, they say, maybe someday [Iran
is] going to get a nuclear weapon, even though our own
CIA's National Intelligence Estimate has said that the
Iranians have not been working on a nuclear weapon since
2003. They say they're enriching uranium, but they have
no evidence whatsoever that they're enriching uranium
for weapons purposes. They may well be enriching uranium
for peaceful purposes, and that is perfectly legal. They
have been a member of the non-proliferation treaties,
and they are under the investigation of the IAEA, and
ElBaradei has verified that in the last year there have
been nine unannounced investigations and examinations
of the Iranian nuclear structure and they have never been
found to be in violation. And yet, this country and Israel
are talking about a preventive war – starting bombing
for this reason, without negotiations, without talks.
Now the one issue that I do want to mention tonight is
a resolution that is about to come to this floor if our
suspicions are correct, after the July 4th holiday. And
this bill will probably be brought up under suspension.
It is expected to pass easily. It probably will be. And
it is just more war propaganda, just more preparation
to go to war against Iran.
This resolution, H.J. Res 362 [listed as H. Con. Res
362 online] is a virtual war resolution. It is the declaration
of tremendous sanctions, and boycotts and embargoes on
the Iranians. It is very, very severe. Let me just read
what is involved if this bill passes and what we're telling
the President what he must do:
This demands that the President impose stringent inspection
requirements on all persons, vehicles, ships, planes,
trains and cargo entering or departing Iran, and prohibiting
the international movement of all Iranian officials.
This is unbelievable! This is closing down Iran. Where
do we have this authority? Where do we get the moral authority?
Where do we get the international legality for this? Where
do we get the Constitutional authority for this? This
is what we did for ten years before we went into Iraq.
We starved children – 500,000 individuals it was
admitted probably died because of the sanctions on the
Iraqis. They were incapable at the time of attacking us.
And all the propaganda that was given for our need to
go into Iraq was not true.
And it is not true today about the severity [of the need
to attack Iran]. But they say, "Yeah, but Ahmadinejad
– he's a bad guy. He's threatened violence."
But you know what? Us threatening violence is very, very
similar. We must – we must look at this carefully.
We just can't go to war again under these careless, frivolous
conditions.
Foreword
to Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State
by Ron Paul
Sheldon Richman’s Tethered Citizens:
Time to Repeal the Welfare State is precisely the type of
scholarly work needed to wake up the American people to
the dangers posed by the welfare state. Richman demolishes
the popular myth that the welfare state was a natural outgrowth
of the Founding Fathers’ conception of individual
liberty. In fact, the ideology behind the welfare state
is a 180-degree turn from the individualism embraced by
the Founders. The men who led the American Revolution and
drafted the Constitution understood that people flourish
best under conditions of freedom – and that a centralized
state has neither the legitimate authority nor the competence
to care for the needy. Instead, the Founders realized that
a state which attempts to provide security will end up destroying
both liberty and the economic prosperity necessary to enhance
individual security.
In contrast, the theoreticians of the welfare state believe
that people are incapable of improving their condition and
would ultimately become little more than pawns of the “greedy
capitalists” without the support of a wise and benevolent
state. Of course, while redistributionism and its nasty
cousins – socialism, communism, and fascism –
have created many shortages, one thing it has produced in
abundance is power-hungry politicians eager to protect the
people from the forces of private greed!
In fact, as Richman points out, one of the prime motivations
of Bismarck, who created the prototype of the modern welfare
state, was to use taxpayer monies to bribe the citizens
into supporting his imperial regime. The use of the welfare
state to cement popular support for the incumbent government
remains intact. As a United States congressman, I regularly
see how prevalent the welfare state mentality is among elected
officials who use the tool of redistribution as a means
to “buying votes” with the taxpayers’
own money.
One of the most powerful arguments used by those who would
expand the welfare state is that absent government-provided
welfare the lives of the poor would be “nasty, brutish
and short.” Richman demolishes this argument by showing
how voluntary charities and organizations, such as friendly
societies that devoted themselves to helping those in need,
flourished in the days before the welfare state turned charity
into a government function. Today, government welfare programs
have supplemented the old-style private programs. Many private
charities have become seduced by the siren song of taxpayer
funding into becoming little more than appendages of the
welfare bureaucracy. One of the most disturbing trends of
recent years is the attempt by many so-called conservatives
to entice the remaining independent charities into government
dependency under the guise of expanding access to “faith-based”
institutions. Of course, entanglement with the dependency-fostering
welfare state will destroy the very attributes that make
these institutions effective – freedom from government
infiltration and regulation.
While freedom charities promote self-reliance, government
welfare programs foster dependency. In fact, it is in the
self-interests of the bureaucrats and politicians who control
the welfare state to encourage dependency. After all, when
a private organization moves a person off welfare, the organization
has fulfilled its mission and proved its worth to donors.
In contrast, when people leave government welfare programs,
they have deprived federal bureaucrats of power and of a
justification for a larger amount of taxpayer funding.
As effective as this book is in showing the harm done by
our current welfare policies, it would be a mistake to lump
Richman in with those writers who condemn the welfare state’s
cost and corrosive effects on society in order to build
a case for making the welfare state more “efficient.”
Unlike many policy analysts Richman does not ignore the
fundamental immorality behind the welfare state, which is,
after all, built on theft. If it is wrong to rob Peter to
pay Paul, how can it be right to levy taxes on Peter to
pay Paul?
By tracing the history of the welfare and detailing how
redistributionism damages both taxpayer and the recipient
of government “aid,” Sheldon Richman has produced
a book that is essential reading for any American wishing
to understand how the welfare state is incompatible with
constitutional government and a free society. Such understanding
is the first step toward reclaiming liberty. For only when
the American people fully understand how damaging the welfare
state is to both the nation’s economy and its moral
character will the welfare state join other forms of statism
on the ash heap of history.
All lovers of freedom have reason to be grateful to Sheldon
Richman for his excellent work and to the Future of Freedom
Foundation for publishing it.
Challenge
to America: A Current Assessment of Our Republic
by Ron Paul
This article is excerpted from Part I of Pillars of Prosperity.
An MP3 version of this article, read by Dr. Floy Lilley,
is available for free download.
Congressional Record – US House of Representatives
February 7, 2001
The beginning of the 21st century lends itself to a reassessment
of our history and gives us an opportunity to redirect our
country's future course if deemed prudent.
The main question before the new Congress and the administration
is: Are we to have gridlock or cooperation? Today we refer
to cooperation as bipartisanship. Some argue that bipartisanship
is absolutely necessary for the American democracy to survive.
The media never mention a concern for the survival of the
Republic. But there are those who argue that left-wing interventionism
should give no ground to right-wing interventionism –
that too much is at stake.
The media are demanding the Bush administration and the
Republican Congress immediately yield to those insisting
on higher taxes and more federal government intervention
for the sake of national unity, because our government is
neatly split between two concise philosophic views. But
if one looks closely, one is more likely to find only a
variation of a single system of authoritarianism, in contrast
to the rarely mentioned constitutional, nonauthoritarian
approach to government.
The big debate between the two factions in Washington boils
down to nothing more than a contest over power and political
cronyism, rather than any deep philosophic differences.
The feared gridlock anticipated for the 107th Congress
will differ little from the other legislative battles in
recent previous Congresses. Yes, there will be heated arguments
regarding the size of budgets, local vs. federal control,
and private vs. government solutions. But a serious debate
over the precise role for government is unlikely to occur.
I do not expect any serious challenge to the 20th-century
consensus of both major parties – that the federal
government has a significant responsibility to deal with
education, health care, retirement programs, or managing
the distribution of the welfare state benefits. Both parties
are in general agreement on monetary management, environmental
protection, safety, and risks both natural and man-made.
Both participate in telling others around the world how
they must adopt a democratic process similar to ours, as
we police our worldwide financial interests.
We can expect most of the media-directed propaganda to
be designed to speed up and broaden the role of the federal
government in our lives and the economy. Unfortunately,
the token opposition will not present a principled challenge
to big government, only an argument that we must move more
slowly and make an effort to allow greater local decision-making.
Without presenting a specific philosophic alternative to
authoritarian intervention from the Left, the opposition
concedes that the principle of government involvement per
se is proper, practical, and constitutional.
The cliché "Third Way" has been used to
define the so-called compromise between the conventional
wisdom of the conservative and liberal firebrands. This
nice-sounding compromise refers to the noisy rhetoric we
hear not only in the US Congress but also in Britain, Germany,
and other nations as well. The question, though, remains:
Is there really anything new being offered? The demand for
bipartisanship is nothing more than a continuation of the
Third Way movement of the last several decades.
The effort always is to soften the image of the authoritarians
who see a need to run the economy and regulate people's
lives, while pretending not to give up any of the advantages
of the free market or the supposed benefits that come from
a compassionate-welfare or socialist government. It's nothing
more than political have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too deception.
Many insecure and wanting citizens cling to the notion that
they can be taken care of through government benevolence
without sacrificing the free market and personal liberty.
Those who anxiously await next month's government check
prefer not to deal with the question of how goods and services
are produced and under what political circumstances they
are most efficiently provided. Sadly, whether personal freedom
is sacrificed in the process is a serious concern for only
a small number of Americans.
The Third Way, a bipartisan compromise that sounds less
confrontational and circumvents the issue of individual
liberty, free markets, and production is an alluring, but
dangerous, alternative. The harsh reality is that it is
difficult to sell the principles of liberty to those who
are dependent on government programs. And this includes
both the poor beneficiaries as well as the self-serving
wealthy elites who know how to benefit from government policies.
The authoritarian demagogues are always anxious to play
on the needs of people made dependent by a defective political
system of government intervention while perpetuating their
own power. Anything that can help the people to avoid facing
the reality of the shortcomings of the welfare/warfare state
is welcomed. Thus our system is destined to perpetuate itself
until the immutable laws of economics bring it to a halt
at the expense of liberty and prosperity.
Third Way compromise, or bipartisan cooperation, can never
reconcile the differences between those who produce and
those who live off others. It will only make it worse. Theft
is theft, and forced redistribution of wealth is just that.
The Third Way, though, can deceive and perpetuate an unworkable
system when both major factions endorse the principle.
In the last session of the Congress, the majority party,
with bipartisan agreement, increased the Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education appropriations by 26 percent
over the previous year, nine times the rate of inflation.
The Education Department alone received $44 billion, nearly
double Clinton's first educational budget of 1993. The Labor,
HHS, and Education appropriation was $34 billion more than
the Republican budget had authorized.
Already the spirit of bipartisanship has prompted the new
president to request another $10 billion, along with many
more mandates on public schools. This is a far cry from
the clear constitutional mandate that neither the Congress
nor the federal courts have any authority to be involved
in public education.
The argument that this bipartisan approach is a reasonable
compromise between the total free-market or local-government
approach and that of a huge activist centralized-government
approach may appeal to some, but it is fraught with great
danger. Big government clearly wins; limited government
and the free market lose. Any talk of a Third Way is nothing
more than propaganda for big government. It's no compromise
at all. The principle of federal government control is fully
endorsed by both sides, and the argument that the Third
Way might slow the growth of big government falls flat.
Actually, with bipartisan cooperation, government growth
may well accelerate.
How true bipartisanship works in Washington is best illustrated
by the way a number of former members of Congress make a
living after leaving office. They find it quite convenient
to associate with other former members of the opposing party
and start a lobbying firm. What might have appeared to be
contentious differences when in office are easily put aside
to lobby their respected party members. Essentially no philosophic
difference of importance exists – it's only a matter
of degree and favors sought, since both parties must be
won over. The differences they might have had while they
were voting members of Congress existed only for the purpose
of appealing to their different constituencies, not serious
differences of opinion as to what the role of government
ought to be. This is the reality of bipartisanship. Sadly
our system handsomely rewards those who lobby well and in
a bipartisan fashion. Congressional service too often is
a training ground or a farm system for the ultimate government
service: lobbying Congress for the benefit of powerful and
wealthy special interests.
It should be clearly evident, however, that all the campaign
finance reforms and lobbying controls conceivable will not
help the situation. Limiting the right to petition Congress
or restricting people's right to spend their own money will
always fail and is not morally acceptable and misses the
point. As long as government has so much to offer, public
officials will be tempted to accept the generous offers
of support from special interests. Those who can benefit
have too much at stake not to be in the business of influencing
government. Eliminating the power of government to pass
out favors is the only real solution. Short of that, the
only other reasonable solution must come by members' refusal
to be influenced by the pressure that special-interest money
can exert. This requires moral restraint by our leaders.
Since this has not happened, special-interest favoritism
has continued to grow.
The bipartisanship of the last 50 years has allowed our
government to gain control over half of the income of most
Americans. Being enslaved half the time is hardly a good
compromise. But supporters of the political status quo point
out that, in spite of the loss of personal freedom, the
country continues to thrive in many ways.
But there are some serious questions that we as a people
must answer:
* Is this prosperity real?
* Will it be long lasting?
* What is the cost in economic terms?
* Have we sacrificed our liberties for government security?
* Have we undermined the very system that has allowed productive
effort to provide a high standard of living for so many?
* Has this system in recent years excluded some from the
benefits that Wall Street and others have enjoyed?
* Has it led to needless and dangerous US intervention overseas
and created problems that we are not yet fully aware of?
* Is it morally permissible in a country that professes
to respect individual liberty to routinely give handouts
to the poor, and provide benefits to the privileged and
rich by stealing the fruits of labor from hard-working Americans?
As we move into the next Congress, some worry that gridlock
will make it impossible to get needed legislation passed.
This seems highly unlikely. If big government supporters
found ways to enlarge the government in the past, the current
evenly split Congress will hardly impede this trend and
may even accelerate it. With a recession on the horizon,
both sides will be more eager than ever to cooperate on
expanding federal spending to stimulate the economy, whether
the fictitious budget surplus shrinks or not.
In this frantic effort to take care of the economy, promote
education, save Social Security, and provide for the medical
needs of all Americans, no serious discussion will take
place on the political conditions required for a free people
to thrive. If not, all efforts to patch the current system
together will be at the expense of personal liberty, private
property, and sound money.
If we are truly taking a more dangerous course, the biggest
question is: How long will it be before a major political-economic
crisis engulfs our land? That, of course, is not known,
and certainly not necessary if we as a people and especially
the Congress understand the nature of the crisis and do
something to prevent the crisis from undermining our liberties.
We should, instead, encourage prosperity by avoiding any
international conflict that threatens our safety or wastefully
consumes our needed resources.
Congressional leaders have a responsibility to work together
for the good of the country. But working together to promote
a giant interventionist state dangerous to us all is far
different from working together to preserve constitutionally
protected liberties.
Many argue that the compromise of bipartisanship is needed
to get even a little of what the limited-government advocates
want. But this is a fallacious argument. More freedom can
never be gained by giving up freedom, no matter the rationale.
If liberals want $46 billion for the Department of Education
and conservatives argue for $42 billion, a compromise of
$44 billion is a total victory for the advocates of federal
government control of public education. "Saving"
$2 billion means nothing in the scheme of things, especially
since the case for the constitutional position of zero funding
was never entertained. When the budget and government controls
are expanding each year, a token cut in the proposed increase
means nothing, and those who claim it to be a legitimate
victory do great harm to the cause of liberty by condoning
the process. Instead of it being a Third Way alternative
to the two sides arguing over minor details on how to use
government force, the three options instead are philosophically
the same. A true alternative must be offered if the growth
of the state is to be contained. Third Way bipartisanship
is not the answer.
However, if in the future, the constitutionalists argue
for zero funding for the Education Department, and the liberals
argue to increase it to $50 billion, and finally $25 billion
is accepted as the compromise, progress will have been made.
But this is not what is being talked about in DC when an
effort is made to find a Third Way. Both sides are talking
about expanding government, and neither side questions the
legitimacy of the particular program involved. Unless the
moral and constitutional debate changes, there can be no
hope that the trend toward bigger government with a sustained
attack on personal liberty will be reversed. It must become
a moral and constitutional issue.
Budgetary tokenism hides the real issue. Even if someone
claims to have just saved the taxpayers a couple billion
dollars, the deception does great harm in the long run by
failure to emphasize the importance of the Constitution
and the moral principles of liberty. It instead helps to
deceive the people into believing something productive is
being done. But it's really worse than that, because neither
party makes an effort to cut the budget. The American people
must prepare themselves for ever-more spending and taxes.
A different approach is needed if we want to protect the
freedoms of all Americans, to perpetuate prosperity, and
to avoid a major military confrontation. All three options
in reality represent only a variation of the one based on
authoritarian and interventionist principles.
Nothing should be taken for granted, neither our liberties
nor our material well-being. Understanding the nature of
a free society and favorably deciding on its merit are required
before true reform can be expected. If, however, satisfaction
and complacency with the current trend toward bigger and
more centralized government remain the dominant view, those
who love liberty more than promised security must be prepared
for an unpleasant future. And those alternative plans will
surely vary from one another. Tragically for some it will
contribute to the violence that will surely come when promises
of government security are not forthcoming. We can expect
further violations of civil liberties by a government determined
to maintain order when difficult economic and political
conditions develop.
But none of this need occur if the principles that underpin
our Republic, as designed by the Founders, can be resurrected
and reinstituted. Current problems that we now confront
are government created and can be much more easily dealt
with when government is limited to its proper role of protecting
liberty, instead of promoting a welfare-fascist state.
There are reasons to be optimistic that the principles
of the Republic, the free market, and respect for private
property can be restored. However, there remains good reason
as well to be concerned that we must confront the serious
political and economic firestorm seen on the horizon before
that happens.
My concerns are threefold: the health of the economy, the
potential for war, and the coming social discord. If our
problems are ignored, they will further undermine the civil
liberties of all Americans. The next decade will be a great
challenge to all Americans.
The Economy
The booming economy of the last six years has come to an
end. The only question remaining is how bad the slump will
be.
Although many economists expressed surprise at the sudden
and serious shift in sentiment, others have been warning
of its inevitability. Boom times built on central-bank credit
creation always end in recession or depression. But central
planners, being extremely optimistic, hope that this time
it will be different; that a new era has arrived.
For several years, we've heard the endless nostrum of a
technology- and productivity-driven new paradigm that would
make the excesses of the 1990s permanent and real. Arguments
that productivity increases made the grand prosperity of
the last six years possible were accepted as conventional
wisdom, although sound free-market analysts warned otherwise.
We are now witnessing an economic downturn that will, in
all likelihood, be quite serious. If our economic planners
pursue the wrong course, they will surely make it much worse
and prolong the recovery.
Although computer technology has been quite beneficial
to the economy, in some ways these benefits have been misleading
by hiding the ill effects of central-bank manipulation of
interest rates and by causing many to believe that the usual
business-cycle correction could be averted. Instead, delaying
a correction that is destined to come only contributes to
greater distortions in the economy, thus requiring an even
greater adjustment.
It seems obvious that we are dealing with a financial bubble
now deflating. Certainly, most observers recognize that
the NASDAQ was grossly overpriced. The question remains,
though, as to what is needed for the entire economy to reach
equilibrium and allow sound growth to resume.
Western leaders for most of the 20th century have come
to accept a type of central planning they believe is not
burdened by the shortcomings of true socialist-type central
planning. Instead of outright government ownership of the
means of production, the economy was to be fine-tuned by
fixing interest rates (federal funds rates), subsidizing
credit (government-sponsored enterprises), stimulating sluggish
segments of the economy (farming and the weapons industry),
aiding the sick (Medicaid and Medicare), federally managing
education (Department of Education), and many other welfare
schemes.
The majority of Americans have not yet accepted the harsh
reality that this less-threatening, friendlier type of economic
planning is minimally more efficient than that of the socialist
planners with their five-year economic plans. We must face
the fact that the business cycle, with its recurring recessions,
wage controls, wealth transfers, and social discord are
still with us and will get worse unless there is a fundamental
change in economic and monetary policy. Regardless of the
type, central economic planning is a dangerous notion.
In an economic downturn, a large majority of our political
leaders believe that the ill effects of recession can be
greatly minimized by monetary and fiscal policy. Although
cutting taxes is always beneficial, spending one's way out
of a recession is no panacea. Even if some help is gained
by cutting taxes or temporary relief given by an increase
in government spending, they distract from the real cause
of the downturn: previously pursued faulty monetary policy.
The consequences of interest-rate manipulation in a recession
– along with tax and spending changes – are
unpredictable and do not always produce the same results
each time they're used. This is why interest rates of less
than 1 percent and massive spending programs have not revitalized
Japan's economy or her stock market. We may well be witnessing
the beginning of a major worldwide economic downturn, making
even more unpredictable the consequence of conventional
Western-style central bank tinkering.
There's good reason to believe the Congress and the American
people ought to be concerned and start preparing for a slump
that could play havoc with our federal budget and the value
of the American dollar. Certainly the Congress has a profound
responsibility in this area. If we ignore the problems,
or continue to endorse the economic myths of past generations,
our prosperity will be threatened. But our liberties could
be lost, as well, if expanding the government's role in
the economy is pursued as the only solution to the crisis.
It's important to understand how we got ourselves into
this mess. The blind faith that wealth and capital can be
created by the central bank's creating money and credit
out of thin air, using government debt as its collateral,
along with fixing short-term interest rates, is a myth that
must one day be dispelled. All the hopes of productivity
increases in a dreamed-about new-era economy cannot repeal
eternal economic laws.
The big shift in sentiment of the past several months has
come with a loss of confidence in the status of the new
paradigm. If we're not careful, the likely weakening of
the US dollar could lead to a loss of confidence in America
and all her institutions. US political and economic power
has propped up the world economy for years. Trust in the
dollar has given us license to borrow and spend way beyond
our means. But just because world conditions have allowed
us greater leverage to borrow and inflate the currency than
otherwise might have been permitted, the economic limitations
of such a policy still exist. This trust, however, did allow
for a greater financial bubble to develop and dislocations
to last longer, compared to similar excesses in less powerful
nations.
There is one remnant of the Bretton Woods gold-exchange
standard that has aided US dominance over the past 30 years.
Gold was once the reserve all central banks held to back
up their currencies. After World War II, the world's central
banks were satisfied to hold dollars, still considered to
be as good as gold since internationally the dollar could
still be exchanged for gold at $35 an ounce. When the system
broke down in 1971, and we defaulted on our promises to
pay in gold, chaos broke out. By default the dollar maintained
its status as the reserve currency of the world.
This is true, even to this day. The dollar still represents
approximately 77 percent of all world central-bank reserves.
This means that the United States has license to steal.
We print the money and spend it overseas, while world trust
continues because of our dominant economic and military
power. This results in a current account and trade deficit
so large that almost all economists agree that it cannot
last. The longer and more extensive the distortions in the
international market, the greater will be the crisis when
the market dictates a correction. And that's what we're
starting to see.
When the recession hits full force, even the extraordinary
power and influence of Alan Greenspan and the Federal Reserve,
along with all the other central banks of the world, won't
be able to stop the powerful natural economic forces that
demand equilibrium. Liquidation of unreasonable debt and
the elimination of the over-capacity built into the system
and a return to trustworthy money and trustworthy government
will be necessary. Quite an undertaking!
Instead of looking at the real cost and actual reasons
for the recent good years, politicians and many Americans
have been all too eager to accept the new-found wealth as
permanent and deserved, as part of a grand new era. Even
with a national debt that continued to grow, all the talk
in DC was about how to handle the magnificent budget surpluses.
Since 1998, when it was announced that we had a budgetary
surplus to deal with, the national debt has nevertheless
grown by more than $230 billion, albeit at a rate less than
in the early 1990s, but certainly a sum that should not
be ignored. But the really big borrowing has been what the
United States as a whole has borrowed from foreigners to
pay for the huge deficit we have in our current account.
We are now by far the largest foreign debtor in the world
and in all of history.
This convenient arrangement has allowed us to live beyond
our means and, according to long-understood economic laws,
must end. A declining dollar confirms that our ability to
painlessly borrow huge sums will no longer be cheap or wise.
During the past 30 years in the post–Bretton Woods
era, worldwide sentiment has permitted us to inflate our
money supply and get others to accept the dollar as if it
were as good as gold. This convenient arrangement has discouraged
savings, which are now at a historic low. Savings in a capitalist
economy are crucial for furnishing capital and establishing
market interest rates. With negative savings and with the
Fed fixing rates by creating credit out of thin air and
calling it capital, we have abandoned a necessary part of
free-market capitalism, without which a smooth and growing
economy is unsustainable.
No one should be surprised when recessions hit or bewildered
as to their cause or danger. The greater surprise should
be the endurance of an economy fine-tuned by a manipulative
central bank and a compulsively interventionist Congress.
But the full payment for all past economic sins may now
be required. Let's hope we can keep the pain and suffering
to a minimum.
The most recent new era of the 1990s appeared to be an
answer to all politicians' dreams: a good economy, low unemployment,
minimal price inflation, a skyrocketing stock market, with
capital gains tax revenues flooding the Treasury, thus providing
money to accommodate every special-interest demand. But
it was too good to be true. It was based on an inflated
currency and massive corporate, personal, and government
borrowing. A recession was inevitable to pay for the extravagance
that many knew was an inherent part of the new era, understanding
that abundance without a commensurate amount of work was
not achievable.
The mantra now is for the Fed to quickly lower short-term
interest rates to stimulate the economy and alleviate a
liquidity crisis. This policy may stimulate a boom and may
help in a mild downturn, but it doesn't always work in a
bad recession. It actually could do great harm since it
could weaken the dollar, which in turn would allow market
forces instead to push long-term interest rates higher.
Deliberately lowering interest rates isn't even necessary
for the dollar to drop, since our policy has led to a current-account
deficit of a magnitude that demands the dollar eventually
readjust and weaken.
A slumping stock market will also cause the dollar to decline
and interest rates to rise. Federal Reserve Board central
planning through interest-rate control is not a panacea.
It is instead the culprit that produces the business cycle.
Government and Fed officials have been reassuring the public
that no structural problem exists, citing no inflation and
a gold price that reassures the world that the dollar is
indeed still king.
The Fed can create excess credit, but it can't control
where it goes as it circulates throughout the economy; nor
can it dictate value either. Claiming that a subdued government-rigged
CPI and PPI proves that no inflation exists is pure nonsense.
It is well established that, under certain circumstances,
new credit inflation can find its way into the stock or
real estate market, as it did in the 1920s, while consumer
prices remain relatively stable. This does not negate the
distortion inherent in a system charged with artificially
low interest rates. Instead it allows the distortion to
last longer and become more serious, leading to a bigger
correction.
If gold prices reflected the true extent of the inflated
dollar, confidence in the dollar specifically and in paper
more generally would be undermined. It is a high priority
of the Fed and all central banks of the world for this not
to happen. Revealing to the public the fraud associated
with all paper money would cause loss of credibility of
all central banks. This knowledge would jeopardize the central
banks' ability to perform the role of lender of last resort
and to finance/monetize government debt. It is for this
reason that the price of gold in their eyes must be held
in check.
From 1945 to 1971, the United States literally dumped nearly
500 million ounces of gold at $35 an ounce in an effort
to do the same thing by continuing the policy of printing
money at will, with the hopes that there would be no consequences
to the value of the dollar. That all ended in 1971 when
the markets overwhelmed the world central banks.
A similar effort continues today, with central banks selling
and loaning gold to keep the price in check. It's working
and does convey false confidence, but it can't last. Most
Americans are wise to the government's statistics regarding
prices and the "no-inflation" rhetoric. Everyone
is aware that the prices of oil, gasoline, natural gas,
medical care, repairs, houses, and entertainment have all
been rapidly rising. The artificially low gold price has
aided the government's charade, but it has also allowed
a bigger bubble to develop. This policy cannot continue.
Economic law dictates a correction that most Americans will
find distasteful and painful. Duration and severity of the
liquidation phase of the business cycle can be limited by
proper responses, but it cannot be avoided and could be
made worse if the wrong course is chosen.
Recent deterioration of the junk-bond market indicates
how serious the situation is. Junk bonds are now paying
9 percent to 10 percent more than short-term government
securities. The quality of business loans is suffering,
while more and more corporate bonds are qualifying for junk
status. The Fed tries to reassure us by attempting to stimulate
the economy with low short-term federal fund rates at the
same time interest rates for businesses and consumers are
rising. There comes a time when Fed policy is ineffective,
much to everyone's chagrin.
Micromanaging an economy effectively for a long period
of time, even with the power a central bank wields, is an
impossible task. The good times are ephemeral and eventually
must be paid for by contraction and renewed real savings.
There is much more to inflation than rising prices. Inflation
is defined as the increase in the supply of money and credit.
Obsessively sticking to the rising prices definition conveniently
ignores placing the blame on the responsible party –
the Federal Reserve. The last thing central banks or the
politicians, who need a backup for all their spending mischief,
want is for the government to lose its power to create money
out of thin air, which serves political and privileged financial
interests.
When the people are forced to think only about rising prices,
government-doctored price indices can dampen concerns for
inflation. Blame then can be laid at the doorstep of corporate
profiteers, price gougers, labor unions, oil sheikhs, or
greedy doctors. But it is never placed at the feet of highly
paid athletes or entertainers. It would be economically
incorrect to do so, but it's political correctness that
doesn't allow some groups to be vilified.
Much else related to artificially low interest rates goes
unnoticed. An overpriced stock market, overcapacity in certain
industries, excesses in real-estate markets, artificially
high bond prices, general malinvestments, excessive debt,
and speculation all result from the generous and artificial
credit the Federal Reserve pumps into the financial system.
These distortions are every bit, if not more, harmful than
rising prices. As the economy soars from the stimulus effect
of low interest rates, growth and distortions compound themselves.
In a slump the reverse is true, and the pain and suffering
is magnified as the adjustment back to reality occurs.
The extra credit in the 1990s has found its way especially
into the housing market like never before. GSEs, in particular
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, have gobbled up huge sums to
finance a booming housing market. GSE securities enjoy implicit
government guarantees, which have allowed for a generous
discount on most housing loans. They have also been the
vehicles used by consumers to refinance and borrow against
their home equity to use these funds for other purposes,
such as investing in the stock market. This has further
undermined savings by using the equity that builds with
price inflation that homeowners enjoy when money is debased.
In addition, the Federal Reserve now buys and holds GSE
securities as collateral in their monetary operations. These
securities are then literally used as collateral for printing
Federal Reserve notes; this is a dangerous precedent.
If monetary inflation merely raised prices, and all prices
and labor costs moved up at the same rate, and it did not
cause disequilibrium in the market, it would be of little
consequence. But inflation is far more than rising prices.
Creating money out of thin air is morally equivalent to
counterfeiting. It's fraud and theft, because it steals
purchasing power from the savers and those on fixed incomes.
That in itself should compel all nations to prohibit it,
as did the authors of our Constitution.
Inflation is socially disruptive in that the management
of fiat money – as all today's currencies are –
causes great hardships. Unemployment is a direct consequence
of the constantly recurring recessions. Persistent rising
costs impoverish many as the standard of living of unfortunate
groups erodes. Because the pain and suffering that comes
from monetary debasement is never evenly distributed, certain
segments of society can actually benefit.
In the 1990s, Wall Streeters thrived, while some low-income,
nonwelfare, nonhomeowners suffered with rising costs for
fuel, rent, repairs, and medical care. Generally one should
expect the middle class to suffer and to literally be wiped
out in a severe inflation. When this happens, as it did
in many countries throughout the 20th century, social and
political conflicts become paramount when finger pointing
becomes commonplace by those who suffer looking for scapegoats.
Almost always the hostility is inaccurately directed.
There is a greater threat from the monetary mischief than
just the economic harm it does. The threat to liberty resulting
when economic strife hits and finger-pointing increases
should concern us most. We should never be complacent about
monetary policy.
We must reassess the responsibility Congress has in maintaining
a sound monetary system. In the 19th century, the constitutionality
of a central bank was questioned and challenged. Not until
1913 were the advocates of a strong federalist system able
to foist a powerful central bank on us, while destroying
the gold standard. This banking system, which now serves
as the financial arm of Congress, has chosen to pursue massive
welfare spending and a foreign policy that has caused us
to be at war for much of the 20th century.
Without the central bank creating money out of thin air,
our welfare state and worldwide imperialism would have been
impossible to finance. Attempts at economic fine-tuning
by monetary authorities would have been impossible without
a powerful central bank. Propping up the stock market as
it falters would be impossible as well.
But the day will come when we will have no choice but to
question the current system. Yes, the Fed does help to finance
the welfare state. Yes, the Fed does come to the rescue
when funds are needed to fight wars and for us to pay the
cost of maintaining our empire. Yes, the Fed is able to
stimulate the economy and help create what appear to be
good times. But it's all built on an illusion. Wealth cannot
come from a printing press. Empires crumble and a price
is eventually paid for arrogance toward others. And booms
inevitably turn into busts.
Talk of a new era the past five years has had many, including
Greenspan, believing that this time it really would be different.
And it may indeed be different this time. The correction
could be an especially big one, since the Fed-driven distortion
of the past 10 years, plus the lingering distortions of
previous decades have been massive. The correction could
be big enough to challenge all our institutions, the entire
welfare state, Social Security, foreign intervention, and
our national defense. This will only happen if the dollar
is knocked off its pedestal. No one knows if that is going
to happen sooner or later. But when it does, our constitutional
system of government will be challenged to the core.
Ultimately the solution will require a recommitment to
the principles of liberty, including a belief in sound money
– when money once again will be something of value
rather than pieces of paper or mere blips from a Federal
Reserve computer. In spite of the grand technological revolution,
we are still having trouble with a few simple basic tasks
– counting votes or keeping the lights on or understanding
the sinister nature of paper money.
Potential for War
Foreign military interventionism, a policy the United States
has followed for over 100 years, encourages war and undermines
peace. Even with the good intentions of many who support
this policy, it serves the interests of powerful commercial
entities. Perpetual conflicts stimulate military spending.
Minimal and small wars too often get out of control and
cause more tragedy than originally anticipated. Small wars
like the Persian Gulf War are more easily tolerated, but
the foolishness of an out-of-control war like Vietnam is
met with resistance from a justifiably aroused nation. But
both types of conflicts result from the same flawed foreign
policy of foreign interventionism. Both types of conflicts
can be prevented.
National security is usually cited to justify our foreign
involvement, but this excuse distracts from the real reason
we venture so far from home. Influential commercial interests
dictate policy of when and where we go. Persian Gulf oil
obviously got more attention than genocide in Rwanda. If
one were truly concerned about our security and enhancing
peace, one would always opt for a less militarist policy.
It's not a coincidence that US territory and US citizens
are the most vulnerable in the world to terrorist attacks.
Escalation of the war on terrorism and not understanding
its cause is a dangerous temptation.
Not only does foreign interventionism undermine chances
for peace and prosperity, it undermines personal liberty.
War and preparing for war must always be undertaken at someone's
expense. Someone must pay the bills with higher taxes, and
someone has to be available to pay with their lives. It's
never the political and industrial leaders who promote the
policy who pay. They are the ones who reap the benefits,
while at the same time arguing for the policy they claim
is designed to protect freedom and prosperity for the very
ones being victimized.
Many reasons given for our willingness to police the world
sound reasonable: We need to protect our oil. We need to
stop cocaine production in Colombia. We need to bring peace
to the Middle East. We need to punish our adversaries. We
must respond because we are the sole superpower and it's
our responsibility to maintain world order. It's our moral
obligation to settle disputes. We must follow up on our
dollar diplomacy after sending foreign aid throughout the
world. In the old days it was: we need to stop the spread
of Communism. The excuses are endless!
But it's rarely mentioned that the lobbyists and proponents
of foreign intervention are the weapons manufacturers, the
oil companies, and the recipients of huge contracts for
building infrastructure in whatever far corner of the earth
we send our troops to. Financial interests have a lot at
stake, and it's important for them that the United States
maintains its empire. Not infrequently, ethnic groups will
influence foreign policy for reasons other than preserving
our security. This type of political pressure can at times
be substantial and emotional.
We often try to please too many, and by doing so support
both sides of conflicts that have raged for centuries. In
the end, our efforts can end up unifying our adversaries
while alienating our friends.
Over the past 50 years, Congress has allowed our presidents
to usurp the prerogatives the Constitution explicitly gave
only to the Congress. The term foreign policy is never mentioned
in the Constitution and it was never intended to be monopolized
by the president. Going to war was to be strictly a legislative
function, not an executive one.
Operating foreign policy by executive orders and invoking
unratified treaties is a slap in the face to the rule of
law and our republican form of government. But that's currently
being done.
US policy over the past 50 years has led to endless illegal
military interventions, from Korea to our ongoing war with
Iraq and military occupations in the Balkans. Many Americans
have died and many others have been wounded or injured or
have been forgotten. Numerous innocent victims living in
foreign lands have died, as well, from the bombing and blockades
we have imposed. They have been people with whom we have
had no fight but who were trapped between the bad policy
of their own leaders and our eagerness to demonstrate our
prowess to the world. Over 500,000 Iraqi children have reportedly
died as a consequence of our bombing and denying food and
medicine by our embargo.
For over 50 years, there has been a precise move toward
one-world government at the expense of our own sovereignty.
Our presidents claim that authority to wage war can come
from the United Nations or NATO resolutions, in contradiction
of our Constitution and everything our Founding Fathers
believed. US troops are now required to serve under foreign
commanders and wear UN insignias. Refusal to do so prompts
a court martial.
The past president, before leaving office, signed the 1998
UN Rome Treaty, indicating our willingness to establish
an International Criminal Court. This gives the UN authority
to enforce global laws against Americans if ratified by
the Senate. Even without ratification, we have gotten to
the point where treaties of this sort can be imposed on
nonparticipating nations. Presidents have, by Executive
Order, been willing to follow unratified treaties in the
past. This is a very dangerous precedent.
We already accept the WTO and its international trade court.
Trade wars are fought with this court's supervision, and
we are only too ready to rewrite our tax laws as the WTO
dictates. The only portion of the major tax bill at the
end of the last Congress to be rushed through for the president's
signature was the Foreign Sales Corporation changes dictated
to us by the WTO.
For years the United States has accepted the international
financial and currency management of the IMF – another
arm of one-world government.
The World Bank serves as the distributor of international
welfare, of which the US taxpayer is the biggest donor.
This organization helps carry out a policy of taking money
from poor Americans and giving it to rich foreign leaders,
with kickbacks to some of our international corporations.
Support for the World Bank, the IMF, the WTO, and the International
Criminal Court always comes from the elites and almost never
from the common man.
These programs run by the international institutions are
supposed to help the poor, but they never do. It's all a
charade, and if left unchecked, they will bankrupt us and
encourage more world-government mischief.
It's the responsibility of Congress to curtail this trend
by reestablishing the principles of the US Constitution
and our national sovereignty. It's time for the United States
to give up its membership in all these international organizations.
Our foreign policy has led to an incestuous relationship
between our military and Hollywood. In December, Secretary
of Defense William S. Cohen used $295,000 of taxpayer money
to host a party in Los Angeles for Hollywood bigwigs. Pentagon
spokesman Kenneth Bacon said it was well worth it. The purpose
was to thank the movie industry for putting the military
in a good light. A similar relationship has been reported
with TV stations licensed by the US government. They have
been willing to accept suggestions from the government to
place political messages in their programming. This is a
dangerous trend, mixing government and the media. Now here's
where real separation is needed!
Our policy should change for several reasons. It's wrong
for our foreign policy to serve any special interest, whether
it's for financial benefits, ethnic pressures, or some contrived
moral imperative. Too often the policy leads to an unintended
consequence, and more people are killed and more property
damaged than was intended. Controlling world events is never
easy. It's better to avoid the chance of one bad decision
leading to another. The best way to do that is to follow
the advice of the Founders and avoid all entangling alliances
and pursue a policy designed solely to protect US national-security
interests.
The two areas in the world that currently present the greatest
danger to the United States are Colombia and the Middle
East. For decades, we have been engulfed in the ancient
wars of the Middle East by subsidizing and supporting both
sides. This policy is destined to fail. We are in great
danger of becoming involved in a vicious war for oil, as
well as being drawn into a religious war that will not end
in our lifetime. The potential for war in this region is
great, and the next one could make the Persian Gulf War
look small. Only a reassessment of our entire policy will
keep us from being involved in a needless and dangerous
war in this region.
It will be difficult to separate any involvement in the
Balkans from a major conflict that breaks out in the Middle
East. It's impossible for us to maintain a policy that both
supports Israel and provides security for Western-leaning
secular Arab leaders, while at the same time taunting the
Islamic fundamentalists. Push will come to shove, and when
that happens in the midst of an economic crisis, our resources
will be stretched beyond the limit. This must be prevented.
Our involvement in Colombia could easily escalate into
a regional war. For over 100 years, we have been involved
in the affairs of Central America, but the recent escalation
of our presence in Colombia is inviting trouble for us.
Although the justification for our enhanced presence is
the War on Drugs, protecting US oil interests and selling
helicopters are the real reasons for last years' $1.3 billion
emergency funding. Already neighboring countries have expressed
concern about our presence in Colombia. The US policymakers
gave their usual response by promising more money and support
to the neighboring countries that feel threatened.
Venezuela, rich in oil, is quite nervous about our enhanced
presence in the region. Their foreign minister stated that
if any of our ships enter the Gulf of Venezuela they will
be expelled. This statement was prompted by an overly aggressive
US Coast Guard vessel's intrusion into Venezuelan territorial
waters on a drug expedition. I know of no one who believes
this expanded and insane drug war will do anything to dampen
drug usage in the United States. Yet it will cost us plenty.
Too bad our political leaders cannot take a hint. The war
effort in Colombia is small now, but under current conditions
it will surely escalate. This is a 30-year-old civil war
being fought in the jungles of South America. We are unwelcome
by many, and we ought to have enough sense to stay out of
it. Recently new policy has led to the spraying of herbicides
to destroy the coca fields. It's already been reported that
the legal crops in nearby fields have been destroyed as
well. This is no way to win friends around the world.
There are many other areas of the world where we ought
to take a second look, and then come home. Instead of bullying
the European Union for wanting to have their own rapid deployment
force, we should praise them and bring our troops home.
World War II has been over for 55 years.
It's time we look at Korea and ask why we have to broker,
with the use of American dollars and American soldiers,
the final settlement between North and South Korea.
Taiwan and China are now trading and investing in each
other's country. Travel restrictions have been recently
liberalized. It's time for us to let the two of them settle
their border dispute.
We continue to support Turkey with dollars and weapons.
We once supported Iraq with the same. Now we permit Turkey,
armed with American weapons, to kill Kurds in Iraq, while
we bomb the Iraqis if they do the same. It makes no sense.
Selling weapons to both factions of almost all the major
conflicts of the past 50 years reveals that our involvement
is more about selling weapons than spreading the message
of freedom. That message can never be delivered through
force to others over their objection. Only a policy of peace,
friendship, trade, and our setting a good example can inspire
others to look to what once was the American tradition of
liberty and justice for all. Entangling alliances won't
do it. It's time for Congress and the American people to
wake up.
Social Discord
The political system of interventionism always leads to
social discord. Interventionism is based on relative rights,
majoritarianism, and disrespect for the Constitution. Degenerating
moral standards of the people encourages and feeds on this
system of special-interest favoritism, all of which contribute
to the friction.
Thomas Jefferson was worried that future generations might
squander the liberties the American Revolution secured.
Writing about future generations, Jefferson wondered if
"in the enjoyment of plenty, they would lose the memory
of freedom." He believed, "Material abundance
without character is the path to destruction."
The challenge to America today is clearly evident. We lack
character, and we also suffer from a loss of respect, understanding,
and faith in the liberty that offers so much. The American
Republic has been transformed and only a remnant remains.
It appears that in the midst of plenty, we have forgotten
about freedom.
We have just gone through a roaring decade with many Americans
enjoying prosperity beyond their wildest dreams. Because
this wealth was not always earned and instead resulted from
borrowing, speculation, and inflation, the correction that's
to come will contribute to the social discord already inherent
in a system of government interventionism. If, indeed, the
economy enters a severe recession, which is highly possible,
it will compound the problems characteristic of a system
that encourages government supervision over all that we
do.
Conflicts between classes, races, ethnic groups, and even
generations are already apparent. This is a consequence
of pitting workers and producers against moochers and the
special-interest rich. Divvying up half of the GDP through
a process of confiscatory taxation invites trouble. It is
more easily tolerated when wealth abounds; but when the
economy slips, quiescent resentment quickly turns to noisy
confrontation. Those who feel slighted become more demanding
at the same time resources are diminished.
But the system of government we have become accustomed
to has, for decades, taken over responsibilities that were
never intended to be the prerogative of the federal government
under the Constitution. Although mostly well intended, the
efforts at social engineering have caused significant damage
to our constitutional Republic and have resulted in cynicism
toward all politicians. Our presidents are now elected by
less than 20 percent of those old enough to vote. Government
is perceived to be in the business of passing out favors
rather than protecting individual liberty. The majority
of the people are made up of independents and nonvoters.
The ill-conceived drug war of the past 30 years has caused
great harm to our society. It has undermined privacy and
challenged the constitutional rights of all our citizens.
The accelerated attack on drug usage since the early 1970s
has not resulted in any material benefit. Over $300 billion
has been spent on this war, and we are all less free and
poorer because of it. Civil liberties are sacrificed in
all wars, both domestic and foreign. It's clear that, even
if it were a legitimate function for government to curtail
drug usage, eliminating bad habits through government regulation
is not achievable. Like so much else that government tries
to do, the harm done is not always evenly distributed. Some
groups suffer more than others, further compounding the
problem by causing dissension and distrust.
Anthony Lewis of the New York Times reported last year:
"The 480,000 men and women now in US prisons on drug
charges are 100,000 more than all prisoners in the European
Union, where the population is 100 million more than ours."
There are ten times the number of prisoners for drug offenses
than there were in 1980, and 80 percent of the drug arrests
are for nonviolent possession. In spite of all the money
spent and energy wasted, drug usage continues at a record
pace. Someday we must wake up and realize the federal drug
war is a farce. It has failed and we must change our approach.
As bad as drug addiction is and the harm it causes, it
is miniscule compared to the dollar cost, the loss of liberty,
and social conflict that results from our ill-advised drug
war.
Mandatory drug sentencing laws have done a great deal of
harm by limiting the discretion that judges could use in
sentencing victims in the drug war. Congress should repeal
or change these laws, just as we found it beneficial to
modify seizure and forfeiture laws two years ago.
The drug laws, I'm sure, were never meant to be discriminatory,
yet they are. In Massachusetts, 82.9 percent of the drug
offenders are minorities, but they make up only 9 percent
of the state population. The fact that crack-cocaine users
are more likely to land in prison than powder-cocaine users,
and with harsher sentences, discriminates against black
Americans. A wealthy suburbanite caught using drugs is much
less likely to end up in prison than someone from the inner
city. This inequity adds to the conflict between races and
between the poor and the police. And it's unnecessary.
There are no documented benefits from the drug war. Even
if a reduction in drug usage could have been achieved, the
cost in dollars and loss of liberty would never have justified
it. But we don't have that to deal with, since drug usage
continues to get worse; in addition we have all the problems
associated with the drug war.
The effort to diminish the use of drugs and to improve
the personal habits of some of our citizens has been the
excuse to undermine our freedoms. Ironically we spend hundreds
of billions of dollars waging this dangerous war on drugs
while government educational policies promote a huge and
dangerous over-usage of Ritalin.
Seizure and forfeiture laws, clearly in violation of the
Constitution, have served as a terrible incentive for many
police departments to raise money for law-enforcement projects
outside the normal budgeting process. Nationalizing the
police force for various reasons is a trend that should
frighten all Americans. The drug war has been the most important
factor in this trend.
Medicinal use of illegal drugs, in particular marijuana,
has been prohibited and greater human suffering has resulted.
Imprisoning a person who is dying from cancer and AIDS for
using his own self-cultivated marijuana is absolutely bizarre
and cruel.
All addiction – alcohol and illegal drugs –
should be seen as a medical problem, not a legal one. Improving
behavior, just for the sake of changing unpopular habits,
never works. It should never be the responsibility of government
to do so. When government attempts to do this, the government
and its police force become the criminals. When someone
under the influence of drugs, alcohol (also a drug), or
even from a lack of sleep causes injury to another, local
law-enforcement officials have a responsibility. This is
a far cry from the Justice Department using army tanks to
bomb the Davidians because federal agents claimed an amphetamine
lab was possibly on the premises.
An interventionist government, by its nature, uses any
excuse to know what the people are doing. Drug laws are
used to enhance the IRS agent's ability to collect every
dime owed the government. These laws are used to pressure
Congress to spend more dollars for foreign military operations
in places such as Colombia. Artificially high drug prices
allow government to clandestinely participate in the drug
trade to raise funds to fight the secret controversial wars
with off-budget funding. Both our friends and foes depend
on the drug war at times for revenue to pursue their causes,
which frequently are the same as ours.
The sooner we wake up to this seriously flawed approach
to fighting drug usage the better.
The notion that the federal government has an obligation
to protect us from ourselves drives the drug war. But this
idea also drives the do-gooders in Washington to involve
themselves in every aspect of our lives. American citizens
cannot move without being constantly reminded by consumer
advocates, environmentalists, safety experts, and bureaucratic
busybodies what they can or cannot do.
Once government becomes our protector, there are no |