Keep It Local!
by
Manuel Lora
by Manuel Lora
"In
short, the objective of the libertarian is to confine any existing
State to as small a degree of invasion of person and property
as possible."
~
Murray Rothbard, Ethics
of Liberty
Does it not
seem wrong that the mere few hundred politicians in the Federal
Government have the power to control 300 million people and influence,
either directly or indirectly, the entire planet? Even though the
state is unjustified,
inconsistent,
immoral
and inefficient, we
should still favor maximum decentralization
of power but not because local government is somehow "better"
or less evil. Rather, we ought to favor decentralization because
governmental flaws and inherent corruption can be geographically
limited, and the amount of damage they inflict remains within its
jurisdiction. Those outside the scope of a local government are
not affected, whereas those within its scope can find it easier
to escape.
Under a Jeffersonian
heterogeneous and decentralized hierarchy of power, life in the
U.S. could have been quite different. Left alone by the Feds, each
of the sovereign states might have had vastly different laws. Indeed,
Anthony Gregory correctly points
out that "many if not most political tensions would be
decentralized down to the state level, and after that, competition
and experimentation among states would likely point the way to the
benefits of liberalizing and shrinking government at all levels."
The situation
today, however, is totally different. The once sovereign states
have now been homogenized by the Federal Government, becoming its
administrative arms. No longer is there a major difference between
one place and another. Yes, I am aware that some states have significantly
smaller governments with less taxation and lower regulations. And
granted, one should not have to move to another place to enjoy freedom
just like one should not have to move out of one’s home to avoid
a burglar. Yet the unconstitutional departments and programs coming
from Washington are so overweening, intrusive and inexorably expansive
that it would be preferable to at least have a choice amongst states.
Alas, no longer can we vote with our feet.
Under proper
federalism, families and groups would decide which style of government
best suits them. I do not advocate statism but instead recognize
that, lacking a central authority, the local governments would be
free to experiment with policies. Don’t like California’s socialist
leanings? Move to New Hampshire. Want to carry concealed guns without
a permit? Move to Alaska or Vermont. If you don’t like firearms,
move to Chicago or D.C. For those who want a nanny environment with
heavy business regulations, try Massachusetts. For better or worse,
state laws generally do not cross borders, and their effects are
limited. The Feds no longer allow even a limited freedom of movement.
Everywhere you go you find the war on terror, the war on drugs,
Social Security, income tax, fiat currency and inflation, and an
interminable number of abominable and centralist boils of welfare-warfare
pus. The only day-to-day sign that your state is part of the Union
should be the occasional Post Office, which should not even enjoy
a legal monopoly.
Federalism
was, thus, an attempt to keep the burgeoning central power away
from local life. There is no perfect system, but by exposing failures
locally, there can at least be the freedom to avoid bad governments
and pursue better ones. Who knows what the outcome would have been
had federalism been kept alive, but one thing is certain: it would
have been better than what we have today. Instead of fifty states,
there is only one, and one is never a choice.
Ultimately,
those who love liberty must favor decentralization of power
because it is the path towards greater individual freedom and the
respect of rights.
December
30, 2005
Manuel
Lora [send him mail]
is a freelance TV producer and multimedia specialist in New Orleans.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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