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The
Lies are Sacred, Blessed by Government
by
Doug French
by Doug French
New
president Barack Obama's $3.55 trillion budget serves notice that
if you thought government couldn't get any bigger or more intrusive,
think again. The budget "represents real and dramatic change,"
according to the President. But really the Obama plan is just more
of the same, with the federal government expanding its role in education,
foreign policy, energy policy, health care, and environmental policy.
"The eyes
of all people in all nations are once again upon us watching
to see what we do with this moment; waiting for us to lead,"
Obama told the assembled and adoring senators and congressmen. "Those
of us gathered here tonight have been called to govern in extraordinary
times." The new president believes government can fix the economy
and anything else it sets its collective mind to; after all, "we
aren't quitters," repeated the president.
But as Paul
Cleveland explains, what Obama believes is a lie a sacred
lie. "The first, and biggest lie, is the notion that the institution
of government is capable of successfully and adequately addressing
all human problems," Cleveland writes in his book Unmasking
the Sacred Lies. "The truth is that such collectivism
hampers human progress because it opens the door for many flagrant
abuses of people and their property rights."
So while in
Obama's view a big government is needed for a healthy society, Cleveland
thinks all that's needed is a tiny state government. In his view,
the family and other voluntary associations like churches and schools
provide all the governance we need.
Using insights
from the Austrian School and public-choice theory, the Birmingham-Southern
College economics professor takes a historical look at America's
economic policies, providing a clearly written analysis of how America
has digressed from the "land of the free and home of the brave"
to the "land of the slaves and home of lawlessness." Because
the nanny state seemingly takes care of everyone, nobody cares that
the "average person is made a slave of the political elites,"
Cleveland explains.
In his opening
chapter, Cleveland uses the work of Robert Higgs to make the point
"that government authorities have used opportune occasions
to consolidate power and control." Proving the point, Obama's
chief of staff Rahm Emanuel famously said in late 2008, "You
never want to let a serious crisis go to waste," signaling
that the new administration will use the current economic (or any
other) crisis to expand the size and scope of government.
Cleveland then
focuses on fiscal policy and rightly casts the blame for government's
expansion on the widely accepted policies of the current economist
hero, John Maynard Keynes. Going hand-in-hand with Keynesian policy
is central banking, and in his next chapter the author considers
monetary policy, providing the history of banking in America, drawing
from the likes of Murray Rothbard, Clarence Carson, George Selgin,
and Tom DiLorenzo. Of course, a new history of government involvement
in banking is being written daily with the government bailout of
that entire industry.
The middle
of Unmasking the Sacred Lies provides the history of policies
that the current administration has its sights set on changing
and not for the better. Although Obama says he wants to cut subsidies
to big farmers, after reading Cleveland's chapter on agricultural
policy, you'll be skeptical that any cuts can be made to the Department
of Agriculture bureaucracy, or that price subsidies can be quashed
or trimmed. As the author points out, the politicians and lobbyists
have too much to gain, and the American public is clueless.
More money
and federal government control is slated for education, while government
has no business being involved. In fact, government isn't really
interested in education. "Like [Horace] Mann, [John] Dewey
embraced the common school movement as a means of socializing people
into a common pool," Cleveland explains.
Union leaders
are licking their chops thinking about the further help the government
will provide them during an Obama administration. But American labor
laws have been tilted against freedom of association and contract
since the 1930s, resulting in "distorted labor markets, increased
unemployment especially among the least skilled members of society,
and prejudicial hiring practices."
The
environment is big on the Obama agenda and Cleveland's chapter on
environmental policy shows why green is the perfect issue to expand
governmental power. A generally prosperous people cares about the
environment, so it votes for green candidates. Since the issue attracts
votes, it attracts money, and ultimately "if carbon dioxide
is classified as a pollutant, then every breath we take can be regulated
by government." That sums it up perfectly.
All of these
laws put on the books to further policies for political ends, Cleveland
explains, really amount to lawlessness. And lawlessness ultimately
leads to a decline in civilization. The author would like to turn
this trend around and have America return to a "nation founded
upon the belief in natural law," with people having rights
to life, to the freedom to act, and to property.
The real trouble,
as professor Cleveland points out, is that the vast majority of
people have accepted big government as the solver of all problems,
thus Obama's overwhelming election victory. Education is what is
needed to fix this problem. It won't happen overnight, but if more
young people read sound, well-written books like professor Cleveland's,
the nation will ultimately return to its roots.
This article
first appeared on Mises.org.
March
28, 2009
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.

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