Some Further Thoughts on Government Regulation
by
Tibor R. Machan
by Tibor R. Machan
In
several forums, including one long book, Private
Rights and Public Illusions (The Independent Institute,
1995), I have argued that government regulation is unjust, a policy
unbecoming of a free society. Government regulation is a form of
prior restraint, meaning, the legal authorities take aggressive
action against citizens before they have done anything that deserves
such action.
A
principle of justice is that unless one has acted aggressively toward
others, or there is extremely good evidence that one is about to
do so, no one may restrain one from doing what one wants. No one
is authorized to rule another unless this other has taken actions
that are themselves an attempt to rule others. Or, as Abraham Lincoln
put it, "No man is good enough to govern another man without
that other’s consent." (Indeed, as far back as ancient Greece,
some have recognized this point see, for example, Alcibiades’
debate with Pericles in Xenophan’s Memorabilia where Alcibiades
shows that legal measures that involve coercion are not in fact
laws at all.)
There
are those who would reply that government regulation is, in fact,
consented to by way of the electoral process, but this is sophistry.
The electoral process must conform to due process, not override
it, since none of us is authorized to vote other people into servitude.
We may vote on who should administer the laws but not on what laws
we must live by; that’s a matter of argument and must evolve through
the common law, not via the vote. That is why a lynch mob is immoral
and unjust it aims to trump justice, of which due process is a
crucial element.
Since
many people realize that others really have no moral authority to
govern them without their consent, as well as that government regulations
amount to just such "governance," there are massive efforts
to evade or circumvent such regulations. Arguably the huge legal
departments in major corporations are part of such efforts. The
motivation for this is very much akin to what underlies the existence
of black markets or smuggling operations people do not believe
that bans on the production and sale of various goods and services
is morally justified, so they work diligently and cleverly to dodge
such bans.
This
is so even if what’s banned is itself unsavory, shameful for example,
prostitution or mindless gambling. What they do know, at least tacitly,
is that there is something radically wrong about governmental efforts
to suppress such trade. It is a bit like when we know that police
brutality is wrong even if we disapprove of the person who is its
target, or when we know that beating someone up for having insulted
another is going way beyond any kind of permissible response.
So,
in business it is quite possible that a reason why folks so often
run afoul of "the law" à la Martha Stewart, for
instance is that much of the law bearing on them is understood
by them as harassment, nothing to do with crime or civil order.
All those government regulations in banking, manufacture, marketing,
sales, and so forth impose burdens on professionals, what with all
the rules, fines, and even prison sentences administered not for
having violated someone’s rights but merely for having the capacity
to do so they might hurt someone, they might injure someone,
they might defraud someone, although they haven’t done so at all.
Government regulation is nearly all precautionary, preventive, yet
in the criminal law that’s banned, deemed a violation of due process.
Only if someone has violated or is very likely to violate
another’s rights, may law enforcement go into action against
that individual.
So,
one result of this precautionary nature of government regulation
is that those covered by it work very hard to evade them. That’s
so, arguably, because many people do not really believe the regulations
are just and thus consider them an imposition they should not suffer.
No, they probably haven’t some coherent, fully worked out idea about
this; but in their guts, as it were, they sense confidently enough
that there is something amiss here. And this leads to their treating
not just government regulations but nearly all laws as suspect,
perhaps not really deserving of compliance.
January
30, 2004
Tibor
Machan [send
him mail] holds
the Freedom Communications Professorship of Free Enterprise and
Business Ethics at the Argyros School of Business & Economics, Chapman
University, CA. A Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, he is author of 20+ books, most recently, Putting
Humans First: Why We Are Nature's Favorite.
Copyright © 2004 Tibor Machan
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