Victory
in Vietnam – Read All About It!
by
Kevin Southwick
Last
April as I walked through the lobby of my Hanoi hotel, I was amused
at the bored staff watching a Vietnamese war movie depicting American
G.I.s fighting North Vietnamese Communists. All that tragic fighting,
I thought, and what did it accomplish? For here I was in beautiful
Hanoi having fun listening to people quietly say they love Americans,
but not (shhhh) Communism.
We
know the outcome of the shooting war in Vietnam. America lost. Communism
won. Afterwards, there was the usual Commie blood bath to settle
old scores and clear out the the "culturally impure."
Hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese escaped by boats. But
alas, in 1989 Soviet Communism came to a whimpering end as
Communism always ultimately does. With no more Soviet subsidies,
Communist dictators in Vietnam had to lighten up on the market place
and allow people to own property and set their own prices
an abandonment of Communism’s fundamental ideology. Ho Chi Minh
("Uncle Ho" to them) would be furious. You might imagine
Jane Fonda on Radio Hanoi warning Vietnam about a takeover by corporations
like McDonald’s and Wall Mart, and summoning the Vietnamese to shoot
down invading American Airline jets filled with greedy capitalist
and to incarcerate any survivors for the first three quarters of
the fiscal year. (And later, to further punish them, have them serve
several terms as a U.S. Senator.)
But
why is it important now to point out that Vietnam has abandoned
Communism?
Because
a restaurant went of business in Houston.
The
restaurant was once owned and operated by a woman from Vietnam.
When she died, her industrious daughter (let’s call her Lu) continued
the restaurant and began to purchase an interest in the shopping
center where the restaurant was located. But to do this, Lu had
to take a second job. She was an ambitious mover and shaker bound
for success the kind of person who built America; the kind of person
we assume will never leave America; the kind of person who risked
death to escape Communism.
But
alas, Lu was paying taxes on the income from the restaurant, Social
Security taxes for her employees, taxes on the property she owned,
taxes on the property she was acquiring, taxes on the income from
her second job, sales taxes, vehicle taxes, and on and on. So what
did Lu do?
She
moved to Vietnam! Her parting words were, "Everything in America
is tax, tax, tax."
Which
brings up the 58,000 U.S. soldiers who died to "save"
Vietnam from the Commies. What would they think about the failure
of Communism in the former Soviet Union and in Vietnam? How would
they feel about Lu’s "tax, tax, tax" frustrations?
Ideologies
aside, we’re only as free as we’re able to keep the fruits of our
labor. Middle class Americans have a tax burden equaling about one-half
of all our income. We are only half free. Maybe we do have freedom
of speech. Maybe we do have a strong economy. Maybe there are some
benefits trickling back from the Almighty Federal Government (the
one which enslaved young men as soldiers to fight against Vietnamese
Commies) from all the taxes we pay. But still, we’re only half free and
half free ain’t free. Just ask Lu if you can find her. She’s probably
in Siagon. (Let’s go. I’m ready when you are.)
It
may come as a surprise to Americans, but Vietnamese workers do not
have to bare their financial soul on an income tax form. They have
a flat ten percent deduction from their paycheck. They do have other
taxes, but not nearly as high as in the "land of the free."
No, Vietnam is not utopia, but if you think America is, dream on.
Can
it be, that after the horrible loss of young Americans in the Vietnam
War, America is only pretending to be capitalist while Vietnam is
only pretending to be Communist? That Communism would have failed
without firing a single shot, without sending a single military
advisor, without dropping a single bomb, without losing a single
life? This is, indeed, what Ludwig von Mises told us.
But in the 1960’s and ‘70’s no one was listening to the wisdom of
von Mises. They were too busy fighting Communism.
As
I made another pass through my hotel lobby in Hanoi, past the bored
night staff, I chuckled at their half attention to the war movie
where the Americans, played by Vietnamese actors, were constantly
being shot or blown up by North Vietnamese Communists.
"Who’s
winning?" I asked. "The Vietnamese," they said. We
all laughed.
June
29, 2001
Kevin
Southwick [send him mail]
owns an Export-Import firm in occupied Houston, Texas (that’s an
energy capital, for you Californians reading this in the dark).
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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