Locked in the Trunk of a Car:
A Political Solution to Shopping
by
Stefan Molyneux
by Stefan Molyneux
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Now that my
wife has started taking political science courses, things are getting
really confusing at my house. Just this morning there was a knock
at our front door. Opening it, I saw an enormous man, who asked
for my wife.
"Actually,
I think she’s just heading out to go shopping," I said, my
eyes narrowing just a little.
"Yeah,"
he drawled, a toothpick working back and forth across his lips like
a little oar. "I know. That’s what I’m here for."
I stared at
him, then shrugged. A personal shopper? Professional bag-toter?
Foot-masseuse? Who knew?
I heard my
wife coming downstairs. "Ah!" she exclaimed. "Excellent,
I’m just ready!"
"All right,"
growled the man. He pulled out a large burlap sack from under his
coat. "Lean forward," he said to my wife, lifting the
sack over her head.
I made a motion
to grab his arm, then decided to use words instead. "What are
you doing?" I demanded – not weakly, I hoped.
My wife held
up her hand, smiling at the man. "It’s okay," she said.
"I’m afraid my husband is a libertarian."
The big man
rolled his eyes, then sighed and crossed his arms, leaning up against
the door frame.
"You see,
honey," my wife smiled, "I really want to go shopping…"
"So this…
man gets to put you in a sack?"
"Of course!
That’s how it works. I didn’t really understand it until I started
taking political science, but it’s so radiantly clear now!"
"What
is?"
"Well,
before, when I wanted to go shopping, I wasn’t very efficient. I
just grabbed my purse and my car keys, went to the mall, and just
– shopped. I mean, how crazy was that? Now, I finally understand
how it’s supposed to be done. So when I want to shop, I call
this fine gentleman, who takes my credit card, puts me in a sack,
puts the sack in the trunk of my car, then drives me to the mall
and does my shopping for me – and buys quite a bit for himself as
well! Now isn’t that so much better?" Her eyes shone.
"Seriously,
honey – I have no idea how that even makes sense, let alone
could be ‘better’!"
"Honey,"
she said soothingly, "this is how it is supposed to
be done. If I want to do something, I call a man up who forces me
to do it! What could be better? It’s perfect!"
"Do you
get to keep your car?"
My wife looked
inquiringly at the large man, sunning himself in our doorway. He
shrugged. "Dunno. I guess I could use it for a day or two.
I’ll give you a call when I’m done with it, and you can come and
pick it up. Okay?"
"No, it’s
not okay!" I fume. "If my wife wants to go shopping,
she doesn’t need you to force her to go shopping, and buy
things for yourself besides!"
"Sweetie,"
my wife said soothingly. "It’s exactly how things are supposed
to work." She tapped her fingernails against her front teeth.
"It’s exactly how we help the poor with welfare programs, right?"
"What?"
"Well,
we as voters want to help the poor, right? So we vote politicians
in who force us to help the poor. They take our money, spend
it on the poor as they see fit, and buy a lot of things for themselves
as well! And if that way of doing things is good enough for
something as important as helping the poor, surely it is
good enough for something as inconsequential as my shopping expeditions!
Am I right, or am I right?"
"But –
if we want to help the poor so badly that we vote politicians in
who force us to help the poor, then what do we need the politicians
for in the first place? Why don’t we just help the poor ourselves?"
"Ah,"
she said with a triumphant grin, "that’s because we are too
selfish to help the poor ourselves!"
"But if
we’re too selfish to help the poor ourselves, then surely
we would never vote politicians in who would force us to
help the poor! And if we don’t want to help the poor, then
the government will never do it for us, because we’d never vote
in a politician who promised that! So if the majority of
people want to help the poor, then they don’t need to vote politicians
in to force them to help the poor, right?"
For a moment,
she seemed confused. "Well…"
"I mean,
look what’s happening here! In the past, if you wanted to go shopping,
you just went to the mall and bought whatever you wanted! Now, look
at all this extra overhead and complication – this guy has to come
and put you in a sack, and drive you to the mall in the trunk of
your car, and then shop for what he thinks you might want,
and buy stuff for himself as well. How is that more efficient
– or in any way better – than what happened before?"
She frowned.
"No, that’s…"
"If we
get all these politicians to force us to give them money to help
the poor, what happens if they spend money in ways that don’t
help the poor? What if they decide to spend more money on themselves
than on the poor? Can we get our money back? You see, if we want
to help the poor – or the sick, or the old, or whoever – then we’ll
just do it, and we don’t need the government to force us to do it.
If the government reflects the will of the people, then it doesn’t
need to force those people to do things. If the government does
not reflect the will of the people, then it is mere tyranny. Do
you see what I mean?"
"Yes,
but…" My wife scowled, trying to reason her way out of the
fog of statism.
"I mean,
who told you all this stuff?"
The big man
leaned forward. "I did," he growled.
"Yes,"
said my wife distractedly. "Sorry I didn’t introduce you. This
is my professor of political science."
He stretched
out his enormous hand. I stared at it.
"Hey,"
said the professor, dropping his hand suddenly. "I haven’t
got all day. What say we put this to a vote? I mean," he added,
leaning over my wife, "I assume I can count on you to do the
right thing, and show me that you understand the course material."
She nodded
slowly, staring up at him. I guess she really wants to pass his
course.
The professor
raised his hand – the one with the sack. "Then I vote: let’s
go shopping!" he grinned. "I need some stuff!"
My wife tightened
her lips. "It’s the right thing to do," she said, raising
her hand and averting her eyes.
In
a blink she disappeared into the sack. I was about to cry out in
opposition to this violation of sense, property, morality and rationality,
but of course I am in the minority, so what’s the point?
February
19, 2007
Stefan
Molyneux [send him mail]
has been an actor, comedian, gold-panner, graduate student, and
software entrepreneur. His first novel, Revolutions
was published in 2004, and he maintains a
blog. Listen to his podcast, which you can get by clicking here
or, you like iTunes better, you can click here.
For more on DROs, please see
my archives. He is host of Freedomain
Radio.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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