Why I Am a Ron Paul Libertarian
by Stan Warford
by
Stan Warford
DIGG THIS
I was born
and raised a liberal Democrat. My grandmother, who lived through
the Depression, thought that Franklin Roosevelt was the savior of
the United States. My father, who was a farmer, explained to me
why it was a good policy for the government to pay farmers to not
grow crops. For years I thought that gun control laws were necessary
to curb violent behavior. At one time I believed that minimum wage
laws were compassionate. I used to defend our government in its
foreign interventions, especially those based on humanitarian grounds.
But, during
the past twelve years, I have rejected many political beliefs taught
to me by my family and my schools. I now believe that our country
is in serious trouble that only libertarian principles can alleviate.
Furthermore,
these problems have a direct effect on your future.
When you graduate,
you will look for a job. What if you cannot find one because the
economy is in a recession or even a depression?
Your salary
will be paid in dollars. What will those dollars be worth after
the Federal Reserve decreases their value with its policy of inflation
and Wall Street bailouts?
You will begin
to save for your retirement. What if you pay into Social Security
your whole life but receive no benefits at the end because the system
is bankrupt?
And, heaven
forbid, what if you must terminate your employment because our country
reinstates the draft and sends you off to war as it did with my
generation in the 60s?
The Non-aggression
Principle
Libertarianism
is based on this Non-aggression Principle: It should be legal for
anyone to do anything he wants, provided that he does not initiate
violence or threaten violence against the person or legitimately
owned property of another.
The Non-aggression
Principle implies all the common prohibitions against theft, murder,
rape, torture, and violence against other individuals except in
cases of self-defense of one’s person or property.
But government
itself is financed by the compulsory payment of taxes by its citizens.
Taxes are not voluntary. If you disagree with the policies of your
government you may not withhold your taxes because if you do the
government will threaten you with the violence of law enforcement.
It therefore
follows that the government that governs best is the government
that governs least.
The libertarian
philosophy advocates a small government in line with the US Constitution
as envisioned by our founding fathers. It is growing in popularity
but has a huge uphill battle to wage. Our government is in large
part controlled by special interest groups and the leaders of an
entrenched two-party system. The maintenance of this system is based
on a series of myths that are perpetuated to justify an ever-expanding
government that assumes more power year by year, the very antithesis
of a government that governs least.
Here are some
of those myths.
Myth Number
One – That which is immoral should be illegal.
It is true
that many actions that are immoral should be illegal – actions such
as theft and murder. However, no action by any individual in the
privacy of his own home that does not initiate violence against
another should be illegal even if it is immoral. Nor should any
action between two consenting adults that does not initiate violence
against others be illegal even if it is immoral.
We are in the
midst of a huge, expensive, failed war on drugs. The war itself
produces more harm than the abuse of the illegal drugs. A recent
study puts our incarceration rate at 1%, the highest per capita
rate of any country in the world. It is estimated that about a half
million of these are for nonviolent drug offenses. Alcohol prohibition
was responsible for gangland violence in the streets, and drug prohibition
is no different. Libertarians call for an end to the drug war.
Myth Number
Two – Government regulation is necessary to save us from the
failures of laissez faire capitalism.
The prime example
of this myth is the belief that laissez faire capitalism caused
the Great Depression and that government intervention in the economy
ended it. The fact is, however, that the Federal Reserve was founded
in 1913, a full 16 years before the fateful stock market crash of
1929. The Fed presided over an expansion of the credit market, which
produced the roaring 20’s, the largest economic bubble in history
before its collapse.
In recent history,
we have seen the dot com bubble and now the real estate mortgage
bubble. Both of these bubbles are created by government intervention
in the credit market through the Federal Reserve central bank. Libertarians
call for an economic policy governed by the principles of the Austrian
School of Economics, which includes a minimization of government
intervention in the free market.
Myth Number
Three – Government intervention in the affairs of foreign countries
is necessary for the security of its own citizens.
Ever since
the tragic events of September 11, our executive branch has justified
its intervention in Iraq and the subsequent erosion of our civil
liberties in order to secure our safety. It has even established
a policy of preemptive war, whereby it claims the authority to invade
another country because that country might aggress against us in
the future. Imagine the chaos in the world if every country claimed
that authority.
Our intervention
in Iraq has made us less safe, not more, because of the unintended
consequence called "blowback" by the CIA in its recently
declassified report on our policy in Iran. The 9/11 Commission report
also describes the blowback phenomenon. Our military intervention,
apart from its devastating effects on Iraqi civilians, acts as recruiting
tool for extremists. As Benjamin Franklin said, "Any society
that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will
deserve neither and lose both."
Libertarians
call for a foreign policy of nonintervention in general and an immediate
withdrawal of our troops from Iraq in particular.
Myth Number
Four – Non-interventionism is the same as isolationism.
Isolationists
want to isolate the country from interaction with the rest of the
world. To that end, they are for national economic self-sufficiency
and protectionist tariffs. Isolationists use trade wars and economic
sanctions as foreign policy tools to isolate other countries from
the world economy.
Libertarian
non-interventionists, on the other hand, support international trade,
low tariffs, cultural exchange, and diplomatic contact. They view
trade as so beneficial that they refuse to withhold it even from
despotic states. A positive example is our continuing trade with
Communist China, which serves to open that country to the liberal
ideals of the west and is beneficial both to us and to them in spite
of their tarnished record on human rights. A negative example is
our continuing economic boycott of Cuba, a policy that has failed
to remove its leader of a half century.
Myth Number
Five – If the government does not solve a social problem, the
social problem will not be solved.
This myth is
used to justify government provision of social services such as
health care, education, and retirement. The myth is based on the
conflation of negative rights with positive rights.
Negative rights
are rights of prohibition against other people from initiating violence
against you. Negative rights are enshrined in the phrase from the
Declaration of Independence that all people have the right to "life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
Positive rights
force other individuals to provide you with a service. Positive
rights are claims that you have a right to a job with a living wage,
a right to affordable health care, a right to an education, and
a right to a comfortable retirement. Government uses the fiction
of positive rights to expand its power in the provision of these
services.
Libertarians
object to the use of government to provide social services on two
grounds, one ethical and one practical.
Because tax
collection is not voluntary, people who receive social services
from the government do so through a forced exchange of tax dollars.
The receipt of such services thus violates the Non-aggression Principle
and is unethical.
The practical
objection is the observation that no government agency exercising
monopoly power can provide a service with better quality or lower
price than the free market can under the discipline of the profit
motive. We would have better schools and better health care without
government interference in these markets.
Libertarians
call for a government whose sole function is limited to the Constitutional
guarantee of the negative rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness.
Myth Number
Six – Libertarianism is idealistic and does not work in practice.
Libertarians
are often accused of having a naïve faith in the free market, and
having ideas about the way society ought to be governed that are
not practical. As with most myths, the truth is precisely the opposite,
as can be demonstrated by public choice theory. Public choice scholars
analyze the structure of government from an economic and political
perspective to explain why certain policies come into being.
Government
programs are not effective because the incentive system does not
reward bureaucrats for good service or punish them for bad service.
The Los Angeles Unified School District is impossible to reform
because they do not go out of business when they provide poor service
as a private company would. Nor does FEMA.
Politicians
cannot be expected to be good stewards of other people’s money obtained
through the force of taxation. They are motivated by the same self-interest
that motivates all people. Because of the professionalization of
the political class, their interest is in winning elections, a process
that is only possible by courting special interests.
It is the height
of naïveté to place your faith in a governmental system that
can only work if its politicians and bureaucrats are saints and
angels.
Conclusion
The libertarian
philosophy is the ultimate philosophy of tolerance. It is a philosophy
of live and let live, of not initiating violence against any other
individual, of liberty for all, of peace, and of prosperity.
That is why
I am a Ron Paul libertarian.
This is
based on a talk delivered at the Forum for Political Understanding,
Pepperdine
University, on April 7, 2008.
April
10, 2008
Stan Warford
[send him mail]
is a professor of computer science at Pepperdine University.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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