Have To?
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
I rarely read
the Letters to the Editor in the reams of advertising (with interspersed
snippets of news) that passes for the local newspaper, but this
morning, as I was flipping the pages, a phrase caught my eye. A
reader, commenting on the bailout program, waxed indignant. The
writer claimed that we "will have to pay for this mess."
He referred to the bailout scheme as a debt that our children, grandchildren,
and great-grandchildren will be paying far into the future.
It’s a familiar
refrain, which we’ve heard before and will hear again. Maybe that’s
the problem: familiarity has bred contempt, or at least indifference.
So ignore the familiarity of the concept, and look at it as though
for the first time: "we (the citizens) will have to pay for
this." Have to? Says who?
Going into
debt is easy enough. Everyone understands that using a credit card,
or borrowing in any form, indebts the borrower. It’s equally well
understood that if someone steals your credit card and uses it,
pretending to be you, he does wrong, and injures you unjustly. If
I found your credit card on the street, and using it, bought a set
of tires for my car, would you simply shrug and say, "I have
to pay it?" If I made some really, really, expensive purchases,
would you resign yourself to the fact that your children and their
children would be saddled with the debt?
How is it,
then, that Americans seem resigned, if unhappy, about the fact that
those pompous popinjays in Congress have taken all our credit cards
and charged about 700 billion to them? Has that resulted in a debt
that we "have" to pay? Even more remarkable is the idea
that these officious strangers can place into debt individuals as
yet unborn. How in the world does that work?
Is there a
law that allows one person, or group, to place other persons, or
groups, in debt? Wouldn’t that be tantamount to slavery? We’re not
talking about taxes here, even granting – for the sake of argument
– the authority of Congress to tax us individually. The money to
be taken from us is not going to support government (assuming we’d
want to do that!) but rather, to rescue the bankers from the collapse
of the housing bubble which they created, and from which they profited
greatly. The government is acting as bag man, transferring the billions
from us to them, but that function of government is clearly unlawful
– as if anyone in government cared.
There’s nothing
new about the government doing as it pleases with no regard for
the Constitution, to which all Congressmen have sworn adherence.
It has, in fact, become so commonplace that, again, familiarity
has bred indifference. We shrug and say, "So what? Just more
of the same." The question, then, is this: how much will we
endure before we stand up and say, to our public servants, "Enough!
We DO NOT have to pull your cronies’ chestnuts out of the fire!
We DO NOT have to pay the bad debts of others. We are sovereign!"
Both of the
individuals offered to us as presidential candidates support the
bailout. A vote for either one of them can only be construed as
support for, and agreement with, that policy. A form of protest
that even the most timid among us can employ, without risk or danger,
is to stay home on Election Day. As those cunning Chinese are said
to have observed millennia ago, a trip of a thousand miles begins
with the first step. In a journey to freedom, the first step for
Americans might be a step away from the polling place.
October
8, 2008
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is author of All
Work & No Pay, which is out of print, but may occasionally
be obtained on eBay.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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