The Group
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
I met the first
Member in the parking lot. Actually, it was not the Member himself,
but one of his employees. (He has many of them working parking lots
throughout the area). "I want a dollar. Give it to me NOW!"
was the demand. I ignored him and entered the store.
I debated with
myself in the wine aisle. Should I go for my usual $2.99 merlot
(brisk, hearty, with a strong finish), or indulge myself with the
$4.99 chardonnay (delicate, fruity, with a hint of persimmon; reminiscent
of wooded glades in spring)? My reverie was crudely interrupted
by another Member. "I want to pass. Move your cart. It’s in
the way." I pointed out that there was ample room for her to
get by. "Stationary shopping carts are always to be on the
right side of the aisle," she snapped.
When I asked
the butcher to grind some chuck roast for me, with added fat, for
hamburger, still another Member remonstrated with me. "All
that fat is bad for your heart. You shouldn’t eat fatty foods."
In the gardening section, outside, I lit up a cigarette while contemplating
perennials. "How dare you smoke! Don’t you know that with every
breath I draw in some of that smoke?" whined still another
Member. My suggestion that he stop breathing was met with ill humor.
The Members
of the group are a nuisance, but easily ignored. They’re wasting
their time, seemingly unaware that it’s already been done. The first
Group did it over two centuries ago.
They didn’t
call themselves The Group to Regulate, Limit, and Control Everyone,
For Their Own Good, and Convert Their Property To Our Use. That
sounds too harsh and self-serving, and besides, it’s too much to
write on a check. Rather, they referred to themselves as We The
People. I will not argue with those who insist that their intentions
were good, and that the government they established, with its Constitution,
was the best government, and best Constitution, ever devised by
man. That claim is probably true, and I won’t challenge it. My contention
is that the best government, with the best Constitution ever devised
by well-meaning men, is still deplorable, or becomes so.
They declared
that their goals were to "form a more perfect Union, establish
Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense,
promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty."
The Articles of Confederation, which the new Constitution replaced,
could also have made those same claims. For that matter, people,
left to their own devices, could perfectly well claim the same objectives,
and meet them with as much success, or more, than the government.
How were the
Founders to achieve these lofty aims? By the exercise of power,
such as the power to make laws, as in "All legislative Powers
herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States
– ." What was the source of this power? The Founders bestowed
it upon themselves. The sole source of "legislative Powers"
was determined by them, upon their own authority, to be exercised
by them, or, later, by people elected according to their rules.
They also bestowed upon Congress the power to "lay and collect
Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises," which is an elegant and
formal way of stating that Congress could seize other people’s property
to support itself. But this seizure was perfectly proper, just,
and lawful, because the Founders wrote it down in the Constitution,
pursuant to their power to do so, which they arrogated to themselves.
They had no
choice, of course. Alexander Hamilton observed, at the Constitutional
Convention, "Money is one of the essential agencies of government.
Without it no Government can exist, and without the power to raise
it, it cannot be had." The power to "raise it," of
course, is simply the power to seize it. In other words, money is
so important to government that seizing it, by force if necessary,
from those who possess it, is proper and right. Of course, the owners
of the money could rightly claim that their money is essential to
them, and they cannot exist without it; but such arguments would
be dismissed as baseless, or in modern terms, "frivolous":
a shibboleth employed by government to describe an argument they
cannot refute. To eliminate the possibility that the people refuse
to support government, Congress created a banking system that created
money out of nothing, and lent it, without expectation of repayment,
except interest, to government forever. But the output of the printing
press (inflation) reduces the value of existing money, and thus,
indirectly, the people DO support government via the loss of purchasing
power of their incomes and savings. Thus, we have taxation via an
alternative method, as yet largely unperceived by its victims.
This is the
great, and, in my opinion, unsolvable, problem of government. It
exists, ostensibly, to protect the rights of the people. One of
those rights, perhaps the greatest one after the right to life itself,
is the right to own property. Yet as Mr. Hamilton has so clearly
stated, government cannot exist without money, and the means to
"raise" it. Hence the paradox: the institution existing
to protect one’s right to property is the only institution which
can, and will, seize one’s property for its own purposes, like it
or not. The organization founded to establish justice must, inevitably,
be unjust, but not culpable for its injustice, since it is the judge
of its own actions, and judges them right and proper. Still another
power granted Congress is that to "make all Laws which shall
be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing
Powers – ," thus ensuring that what Congress does will be legal
– because it says so.
It’s a certainty
that the delegates to the Constitutional Convention did not, in
1787, consider the possibility that society could exist, absent
some form of government. Nor, I am sure, did the people themselves,
upon whose shoulders the burden of government would fall, entertain
such a notion. Nor do people even today. Government, contrary to
popular belief, is the oldest profession, and thus accepted as inevitable,
as is its competitor for the title of world’s oldest profession,
to which it is closely related. Government was seen as essential,
and thus its inherent inconsistencies were unseen, or overlooked.
But the government
of the Founders was a treasure, compared to the institution into
which it has degenerated. What we call government today is a collection
of fools and crooks totally absorbed with furthering their own ends,
and those of their cronies, at the expense of "We The People,"
who are, in theory, their masters. The Constitution, so painstakingly
forged two hundred and twenty years ago, is irrelevant and preserved
as an historical artifact of no practical significance.
If the question
could have been raised at that first Constitutional Convention:
"of what need is this government you propose, and how can it
exist without violating the rights of those it is designed to protect?"
how much more relevant today is the same question. Of what need
is this organization? Are we to bend our knee, and give allegiance,
to an outfit that exists to enrich its adherents, at our expense,
and the expense of our freedom, prosperity, and safety?
I think not,
but I always seem to be in the minority.
June
18, 2007
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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