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Fear
Pols, Don't Let Them Scare You
by
Steven Greenhut
by Steven Greenhut
DIGG THIS
As the nation
braces for a long and grueling presidential contest, what are the
chances that either candidate Democratic Sen. Barack Obama
or Republican Sen. John McCain will talk about the one crucial
issue at hand? I'm not referring to some bogus threat from Iran,
or a dubious climate cataclysm, or a "crisis" in health
care, the mortgage industry or other aspect of an economy that's
perfectly capable of fixing itself if left to its own devices.
America's big
problem is the rapid, unstoppable expansion of government at every
level. This isn't just a problem of affordability as in making
sure there are sufficient tax dollars to sustain the growth. It's
a problem of liberty. The bigger government gets, the more it extinguishes
the choices made by individuals. We all enjoy fewer freedoms as
regulation grows, the number of government agents expands, taxes
increase, programs grow, wars continue and laws proliferate. It's
as simple as that.
Obama and McCain
both act as if government is a magical force that can shower goodies,
ranging from free health care to permanent security, on the American
people. They both view government as something unquestionably good
and noble, although they prefer different aspects of Leviathan.
But, as George Washington explained, "Government is not reason;
it is not eloquence, it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant
and a fearful master." Dangerous or fearful those are
your choices, whether or not modern Republicans (who claim to believe
in limited government, but have been most effective in expanding
it) or Democrats want to admit it.
Because America's
founders understood that government always is about coercion, they
created a system that was designed primarily to limit the size and
power of that government and to create competing levels of government
to check one another. They knew something Americans since have forgotten:
The biggest threat most of us face is from our own government, not
foreign invaders.
Over the years,
government has grown well beyond the imagination of Washington and
the other founders. It's gotten so big because of majoritarianism,
as voters have learned to vote themselves benefits at others' expense.
And it's grown big because of fear. Government officials are adept
at scaring people, by using real, perceived and exaggerated threats
to convince the public to give away more precious liberties.
The Bush administration
has kept the public so scared of terrorists that there have been
too-few complaints as it has centralized executive power. As I tell
my conservative friends, "The next Democratic president will
enjoy using all those powers the Bush administration has vested
in the president's office!" By contrast, the Democrats are
busy scaring the public about imperfections in the health care system,
as a pretext for a government takeover. Both parties embrace limited
versions of the other party's priorities, so we all lose, whoever
is in power. Sure, Obama gilds his scaremongering with lovely words,
while McCain well, everything about him is downright scary!
It's time for
Americans to grow up. Throughout this nation's history, there always
have been domestic and international threats. There always will
be. There always have been economic crises and other problems. There
always have been those Americans who are willing to suspend our
freedoms just a little to deal with whatever those threats may be.
As Benjamin Franklin reputedly said, "Those who would give
up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve
neither liberty nor safety." Well, at least Americans are deserving
of the increasingly tyrannical government they are getting, if that's
any consolation.
For those of
us still more concerned about being free rather than coddled, the
best advice is to resist all the fear-mongering, regardless of whether
it is Republican fear-mongering or Democratic fear-mongering. Both
parties are toxic these days, and neither one values liberty as
an end in and of itself.
My editor often
says that everyone is 25 percent libertarian. That's true. Everyone
values freedom on those things that touch their own lives. The problem
is the 75 percent of the time they don't value it. Most Americans
want to be left alone, but they want to commandeer government to
plunder, control and regulate the other guy. Americans need to understand,
"A government big enough to give you everything you want is
a government big enough to take from you everything you have."
(That quotation, misattributed to Thomas Jefferson, actually came
from Gerald Ford, who left the nation with little else of value.)
Be scared
but of your own government, not of whatever it is officials are
selling. Be leery of officials at every level, whether it's a local
redevelopment director telling you that it's OK to take someone's
property to wipe out "blight" (based on whatever broad
and debatable definition the director offers), or a secretary of
state telling you that the government needs to suspend habeas corpus
to battle terrorists, real or not.
"At every
point, opportunists latch onto existing fears and strive to invent
new ones to feather their own nests," wrote the Independent
Institute's senior fellow Robert Higgs in a 2005 article. "Thus,
public-school teachers and administrators agree that the nation
faces an 'education crisis.' Police departments and temperance crusaders
insist that the nation faces a generalized 'drug crisis' or at times
a specific drug crisis, such as 'an epidemic of crack cocaine use.'
Public-health interests foster fears of 'epidemics' that in reality
consist not of the spread of contagious pathogens but of the lack
of personal control and self-responsibility, such as the 'epidemic
of obesity' or the 'epidemic of juvenile homicides.'
In this
way and countless others, private parties become complicit in sustaining
a vast government apparatus fueled by fear."
But
perhaps H.L. Mencken said it best: "The whole aim of practical
politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to
be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins,
all of them imaginary."
Government
is not always like an ordinary mugger, who puts a gun to your head
and demands your wallet (although some government officials operate
that way). It often comes in the form of a slick salesman, exploiting
the natural imperfections of society "Hey, there's inequality,
poverty and crime in our midst!" to convince you to
give him more power and money to uplift, improve, equalize, protect,
enhance or empower.
The
promises of the security state and welfare state never come to pass,
just like those old Soviet five-year plans never met their targets.
Indeed, government often creates the opposite result of its grandiose
promises. But by the time anyone notices, it's on to a new round
of promises, a new batch of fears.
Just remember
that government always is about coercion whether the promises
are uttered by a likable and uplifting candidate who offers change
or by a crusty old war hero who promises whatever it is he is promising
this week. Fear them, but don't let them scare you.
June
23, 2008
Steven
Greenhut (send him mail)
is a senior editorial writer and columnist for the Orange
County Register. He is the author of the book, Abuse
of Power. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2008 Orange County Register
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