Non-Negotiable Political Demands
by
Gary North
by Gary North
DIGG THIS
We don't run
this country, or any country. Our political ideas are not taken
seriously by politicians, editorial writers, or the talking heads
on television. They are not taken seriously in the school systems.
There is no textbook in any social science that takes them seriously.
What are these
ideas? I have compiled a list of non-negotiable political demands.
Each demand calls for the abolition of a government practice or
a government agency.
- Wars that
have not been declared by Congress
- The maintenance
of military bases outside the United States
- Military
defense treaties (NATO, CENTO, etc.)
- America's
membership in the United Nations Organization
- Graduated
("progressive") income taxation
- Tax-funded
education at any level
- Government
licensing of the right to keep and bear arms
- The Federal
Reserve System's monopoly over money
- The Social
Security system
- Medicare
and Medicaid
- The Central
Intelligence Agency
- NASA (National
Aeronautics and Space Administration)
- The National
Parks system
- The Post
Office
- The Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation
- The Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation
- The Food
and Drug Administration
This is my
short list. I could have made it longer. But this is long enough.
This list of
things to abolish is so far outside of mainstream politics that
anyone proposing more than one of them is dismissed as a kook. The
vast majority of voters would agree with this assessment. Neither
of the major political parties would adopt even one of these demands
in its platform, even when most voters who read their party's platform
(under 1%) know that political parties rarely push for any plank
in their platforms once the election is over.
These practices
and institutions are therefore equally non-negotiable by the people
who control this country.
Non-negotiable
political demands are inescapable concepts. It is never a question
of non-negotiable political demands vs. no non-negotiable political
demands. It is always a question of whose non-negotiable
political demands are in force and which agencies will enforce them
at what cost.
For those of
us who have adopted this list as our own, national politics is a
fruitless waste of time, money, energy, and emotional commitment.
With the exception of Ron Paul, no politician committed to this
list or anything close to it has run for the Presidency since Grover
Cleveland. No one receiving the nomination of his party for any
office above Congressman in my lifetime has publicly committed to
as many as half of these demands.
Yet I contend
that most of these demands will be met within the lifetime of my
children. Why am I so optimistic about this list? Because I am optimistic
about the costs of continuing to operate everything on the list.
They will bankrupt the central government.
WHEN
MONEY DIES
People ask
me: "When will we get our liberties back?" I always answer: "When
checks from Washington D.C. no longer buy anything."
An overnight
collapse of the monetary system would be catastrophic. In contrast,
the erosion of the dollar to zero over a decade or more would be
liberating.
The government
is going broke. All over the West, all national governments are
going broke. This is the fundamental political fact of our age.
This is the elephant in the living room.
Two historians
of international repute announced this scenario within a few months
of each other: Martin van Creveld, in The
Rise and Decline of the State (1999), and Jacques Barzun,
in From
Dawn to Decadence (2000). In their concluding chapters,
both authors predicted the disintegration of the modern nation-state,
and for the same two reasons: (1) the inability of the nation-state
to defend its citizens from crime and violence: (2) the impossibility
of the nation-state to fulfill its promises of income security to
retired people.
The nation-state
is steadily losing legitimacy. This is the political fact that the
pundits refuse to discuss. Without widespread legitimacy
respect that generates voluntary cooperation by citizens
a civil government is doomed. It must resort to power, and the enforcement
of power is costly.
The nation-state
is growing broke. Local civil governments will then step into the
gap. The break-up of the nation-state is assured. This will not
be secession in the sense of an armed rebellion at the local level.
It will be something far more fundamental: the disintegration of
the nation-state. It will not be able to enforce its laws and collect
taxes. That is always the end of a unit of civil government.
PLANNING
FOR THE TRANSITION
People who
have adopted the list of non-negotiable demands should not get excited
about any election above the county. If they do, they are wasting
scarce resources. They are deluding themselves. Congress is not
about to adopt even one of the demands. The framework of modern
national government rests on the extension of government power into
more and more areas of economic life.
This was described
half a century ago by political scientist C. Northcote Parkinson.
He was a humorist. He took very serious themes and made them funny.
His most famous book was Parkinson's Law. His most famous
law was this: "Work expands so as to fill the time allotted for
its completion." But his most relevant law really had the characteristics
of a law: the hierarchy of promotion. In every government agency,
people get promoted in terms of how many employees are under their
jurisdiction. Until they get the required number, they will not
get promoted.
Government
only grows. Budgets only grow. This guarantees the eventual breakdown
of government. When tax resources cannot be expanded because government
policies have reduced economic growth and therefore the tax base,
the government can no longer fulfill its economic promises. This
usually occurs very rapidly "without warning" for those who
believe in salvation by legislation, which includes almost everyone.
Those who have become dependent on welfare payments find that the
government increasingly allocates scarce resources by (1) forcing
people to line up or (2) making payoffs to officials. This was the
two-fold solution in every Communist paradise.
When this happens,
paralysis appears at the top. This creates opportunities further
down the chain of command. This is the logic of secession by standing
still. The local governments do not formally secede. They just cease
cooperating with the national government. This was how the Roman
Empire fell. Legitimacy shifted to local agencies of government.
The central government maintained the illusion of sovereignty, but
this was a sham, especially in the Western half of the empire after
Constantine moved the capital to Constantinople.
When Byzantium
replaced Rome, its rulers maintained their authority by stable money.
For a thousand years, the government did not debase the gold coinage.
The government survived.
The Federal
Reserve System will not do equally well. Neither will Washington.
CONCLUSION
Those who have
mentally adopted the list of non-negotiable demands must face political
facts: that list operates, negatively, in every state capital and
in Washington. It is non-negotiable for the other side. It will
remain non-negotiable for as long as the central government does.
This will not be forever.
February
25, 2008
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2008 LewRockwell.com
Gary
North Archives
|