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Challenge to America: A Current Assessment of Our Republic
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
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This article
is excerpted from Part I of Pillars
of Prosperity. An MP3 version of this article, read by
Dr. Floy Lilley, is
available for free download.
Congressional
Record US House of Representatives February 7, 2001
The beginning
of the 21st century lends itself to a reassessment of our history
and gives us an opportunity to redirect our country's future course
if deemed prudent.
The main question
before the new Congress and the administration is: Are we to have
gridlock or cooperation? Today we refer to cooperation as bipartisanship.
Some argue that bipartisanship is absolutely necessary for the American
democracy to survive. The media never mention a concern for the
survival of the Republic. But there are those who argue that left-wing
interventionism should give no ground to right-wing interventionism
that too much is at stake.
The media are
demanding the Bush administration and the Republican Congress immediately
yield to those insisting on higher taxes and more federal government
intervention for the sake of national unity, because our government
is neatly split between two concise philosophic views. But if one
looks closely, one is more likely to find only a variation of a
single system of authoritarianism, in contrast to the rarely mentioned
constitutional, nonauthoritarian approach to government.
The big debate
between the two factions in Washington boils down to nothing more
than a contest over power and political cronyism, rather than any
deep philosophic differences.
The
feared gridlock anticipated for the 107th Congress will differ little
from the other legislative battles in recent previous Congresses.
Yes, there will be heated arguments regarding the size of budgets,
local vs. federal control, and private vs. government solutions.
But a serious debate over the precise role for government is unlikely
to occur. I do not expect any serious challenge to the 20th-century
consensus of both major parties that the federal government
has a significant responsibility to deal with education, health
care, retirement programs, or managing the distribution of the welfare
state benefits. Both parties are in general agreement on monetary
management, environmental protection, safety, and risks both natural
and man-made. Both participate in telling others around the world
how they must adopt a democratic process similar to ours, as we
police our worldwide financial interests.
We can expect
most of the media-directed propaganda to be designed to speed up
and broaden the role of the federal government in our lives and
the economy. Unfortunately, the token opposition will not present
a principled challenge to big government, only an argument that
we must move more slowly and make an effort to allow greater local
decision-making. Without presenting a specific philosophic alternative
to authoritarian intervention from the Left, the opposition concedes
that the principle of government involvement per se is proper, practical,
and constitutional.
The cliché
"Third Way" has been used to define the so-called compromise
between the conventional wisdom of the conservative and liberal
firebrands. This nice-sounding compromise refers to the noisy rhetoric
we hear not only in the US Congress but also in Britain, Germany,
and other nations as well. The question, though, remains: Is there
really anything new being offered? The demand for bipartisanship
is nothing more than a continuation of the Third Way movement of
the last several decades.
The effort
always is to soften the image of the authoritarians who see a need
to run the economy and regulate people's lives, while pretending
not to give up any of the advantages of the free market or the supposed
benefits that come from a compassionate-welfare or socialist government.
It's nothing more than political have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too deception.
Many insecure and wanting citizens cling to the notion that they
can be taken care of through government benevolence without sacrificing
the free market and personal liberty. Those who anxiously await
next month's government check prefer not to deal with the question
of how goods and services are produced and under what political
circumstances they are most efficiently provided. Sadly, whether
personal freedom is sacrificed in the process is a serious concern
for only a small number of Americans.
The Third Way,
a bipartisan compromise that sounds less confrontational and circumvents
the issue of individual liberty, free markets, and production is
an alluring, but dangerous, alternative. The harsh reality is that
it is difficult to sell the principles of liberty to those who are
dependent on government programs. And this includes both the poor
beneficiaries as well as the self-serving wealthy elites who know
how to benefit from government policies. The authoritarian demagogues
are always anxious to play on the needs of people made dependent
by a defective political system of government intervention while
perpetuating their own power. Anything that can help the people
to avoid facing the reality of the shortcomings of the welfare/warfare
state is welcomed. Thus our system is destined to perpetuate itself
until the immutable laws of economics bring it to a halt at the
expense of liberty and prosperity.
Third Way compromise,
or bipartisan cooperation, can never reconcile the differences between
those who produce and those who live off others. It will only make
it worse. Theft is theft, and forced redistribution of wealth is
just that. The Third Way, though, can deceive and perpetuate an
unworkable system when both major factions endorse the principle.
In the last
session of the Congress, the majority party, with bipartisan agreement,
increased the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education appropriations
by 26 percent over the previous year, nine times the rate of inflation.
The Education Department alone received $44 billion, nearly double
Clinton's first educational budget of 1993. The Labor, HHS, and
Education appropriation was $34 billion more than the Republican
budget had authorized.
Already the
spirit of bipartisanship has prompted the new president to request
another $10 billion, along with many more mandates on public schools.
This is a far cry from the clear constitutional mandate that neither
the Congress nor the federal courts have any authority to be involved
in public education.
The argument
that this bipartisan approach is a reasonable compromise between
the total free-market or local-government approach and that of a
huge activist centralized-government approach may appeal to some,
but it is fraught with great danger. Big government clearly wins;
limited government and the free market lose. Any talk of a Third
Way is nothing more than propaganda for big government. It's no
compromise at all. The principle of federal government control is
fully endorsed by both sides, and the argument that the Third Way
might slow the growth of big government falls flat. Actually, with
bipartisan cooperation, government growth may well accelerate.
How true bipartisanship
works in Washington is best illustrated by the way a number of former
members of Congress make a living after leaving office. They find
it quite convenient to associate with other former members of the
opposing party and start a lobbying firm. What might have appeared
to be contentious differences when in office are easily put aside
to lobby their respected party members. Essentially no philosophic
difference of importance exists it's only a matter of degree
and favors sought, since both parties must be won over. The differences
they might have had while they were voting members of Congress existed
only for the purpose of appealing to their different constituencies,
not serious differences of opinion as to what the role of government
ought to be. This is the reality of bipartisanship. Sadly our system
handsomely rewards those who lobby well and in a bipartisan fashion.
Congressional service too often is a training ground or a farm system
for the ultimate government service: lobbying Congress for the benefit
of powerful and wealthy special interests.
It should be
clearly evident, however, that all the campaign finance reforms
and lobbying controls conceivable will not help the situation. Limiting
the right to petition Congress or restricting people's right to
spend their own money will always fail and is not morally acceptable
and misses the point. As long as government has so much to offer,
public officials will be tempted to accept the generous offers of
support from special interests. Those who can benefit have too much
at stake not to be in the business of influencing government. Eliminating
the power of government to pass out favors is the only real solution.
Short of that, the only other reasonable solution must come by members'
refusal to be influenced by the pressure that special-interest money
can exert. This requires moral restraint by our leaders. Since this
has not happened, special-interest favoritism has continued to grow.
The bipartisanship
of the last 50 years has allowed our government to gain control
over half of the income of most Americans. Being enslaved half the
time is hardly a good compromise. But supporters of the political
status quo point out that, in spite of the loss of personal freedom,
the country continues to thrive in many ways.
But there are
some serious questions that we as a people must answer:
- Is this
prosperity real?
- Will it
be long lasting?
- What is
the cost in economic terms?
- Have we
sacrificed our liberties for government security?
- Have we
undermined the very system that has allowed productive effort
to provide a high standard of living for so many?
- Has this
system in recent years excluded some from the benefits that Wall
Street and others have enjoyed?
- Has it led
to needless and dangerous US intervention overseas and created
problems that we are not yet fully aware of?
- Is it morally
permissible in a country that professes to respect individual
liberty to routinely give handouts to the poor, and provide benefits
to the privileged and rich by stealing the fruits of labor from
hard-working Americans?
As we move
into the next Congress, some worry that gridlock will make it impossible
to get needed legislation passed. This seems highly unlikely. If
big government supporters found ways to enlarge the government in
the past, the current evenly split Congress will hardly impede this
trend and may even accelerate it. With a recession on the horizon,
both sides will be more eager than ever to cooperate on expanding
federal spending to stimulate the economy, whether the fictitious
budget surplus shrinks or not.
In this frantic
effort to take care of the economy, promote education, save Social
Security, and provide for the medical needs of all Americans, no
serious discussion will take place on the political conditions required
for a free people to thrive. If not, all efforts to patch the current
system together will be at the expense of personal liberty, private
property, and sound money.
If we are truly
taking a more dangerous course, the biggest question is: How long
will it be before a major political-economic crisis engulfs our
land? That, of course, is not known, and certainly not necessary
if we as a people and especially the Congress understand the nature
of the crisis and do something to prevent the crisis from undermining
our liberties. We should, instead, encourage prosperity by avoiding
any international conflict that threatens our safety or wastefully
consumes our needed resources.
Congressional
leaders have a responsibility to work together for the good of the
country. But working together to promote a giant interventionist
state dangerous to us all is far different from working together
to preserve constitutionally protected liberties.
Many argue
that the compromise of bipartisanship is needed to get even a little
of what the limited-government advocates want. But this is a fallacious
argument. More freedom can never be gained by giving up freedom,
no matter the rationale.
If liberals
want $46 billion for the Department of Education and conservatives
argue for $42 billion, a compromise of $44 billion is a total victory
for the advocates of federal government control of public education.
"Saving" $2 billion means nothing in the scheme of things,
especially since the case for the constitutional position of zero
funding was never entertained. When the budget and government controls
are expanding each year, a token cut in the proposed increase means
nothing, and those who claim it to be a legitimate victory do great
harm to the cause of liberty by condoning the process. Instead of
it being a Third Way alternative to the two sides arguing over minor
details on how to use government force, the three options instead
are philosophically the same. A true alternative must be offered
if the growth of the state is to be contained. Third Way bipartisanship
is not the answer.
However, if
in the future, the constitutionalists argue for zero funding for
the Education Department, and the liberals argue to increase it
to $50 billion, and finally $25 billion is accepted as the compromise,
progress will have been made.
But this is
not what is being talked about in DC when an effort is made to find
a Third Way. Both sides are talking about expanding government,
and neither side questions the legitimacy of the particular program
involved. Unless the moral and constitutional debate changes, there
can be no hope that the trend toward bigger government with a sustained
attack on personal liberty will be reversed. It must become a moral
and constitutional issue.
Budgetary tokenism
hides the real issue. Even if someone claims to have just saved
the taxpayers a couple billion dollars, the deception does great
harm in the long run by failure to emphasize the importance of the
Constitution and the moral principles of liberty. It instead helps
to deceive the people into believing something productive is being
done. But it's really worse than that, because neither party makes
an effort to cut the budget. The American people must prepare themselves
for ever-more spending and taxes.
A different
approach is needed if we want to protect the freedoms of all Americans,
to perpetuate prosperity, and to avoid a major military confrontation.
All three options in reality represent only a variation of the one
based on authoritarian and interventionist principles.
Nothing should
be taken for granted, neither our liberties nor our material well-being.
Understanding the nature of a free society and favorably deciding
on its merit are required before true reform can be expected. If,
however, satisfaction and complacency with the current trend toward
bigger and more centralized government remain the dominant view,
those who love liberty more than promised security must be prepared
for an unpleasant future. And those alternative plans will surely
vary from one another. Tragically for some it will contribute to
the violence that will surely come when promises of government security
are not forthcoming. We can expect further violations of civil liberties
by a government determined to maintain order when difficult economic
and political conditions develop.
But none of
this need occur if the principles that underpin our Republic, as
designed by the Founders, can be resurrected and reinstituted. Current
problems that we now confront are government created and can be
much more easily dealt with when government is limited to its proper
role of protecting liberty, instead of promoting a welfare-fascist
state.
There are reasons
to be optimistic that the principles of the Republic, the free market,
and respect for private property can be restored. However, there
remains good reason as well to be concerned that we must confront
the serious political and economic firestorm seen on the horizon
before that happens.
My concerns
are threefold: the health of the economy, the potential for war,
and the coming social discord. If our problems are ignored, they
will further undermine the civil liberties of all Americans. The
next decade will be a great challenge to all Americans.
The Economy
The booming
economy of the last six years has come to an end. The only question
remaining is how bad the slump will be.
Although many
economists expressed surprise at the sudden and serious shift in
sentiment, others have been warning of its inevitability. Boom times
built on central-bank credit creation always end in recession or
depression. But central planners, being extremely optimistic, hope
that this time it will be different; that a new era has arrived.
For several
years, we've heard the endless nostrum of a technology- and productivity-driven
new paradigm that would make the excesses of the 1990s permanent
and real. Arguments that productivity increases made the grand prosperity
of the last six years possible were accepted as conventional wisdom,
although sound free-market analysts warned otherwise. We are now
witnessing an economic downturn that will, in all likelihood, be
quite serious. If our economic planners pursue the wrong course,
they will surely make it much worse and prolong the recovery.
Although computer
technology has been quite beneficial to the economy, in some ways
these benefits have been misleading by hiding the ill effects of
central-bank manipulation of interest rates and by causing many
to believe that the usual business-cycle correction could be averted.
Instead, delaying a correction that is destined to come only contributes
to greater distortions in the economy, thus requiring an even greater
adjustment.
It seems obvious
that we are dealing with a financial bubble now deflating. Certainly,
most observers recognize that the NASDAQ was grossly overpriced.
The question remains, though, as to what is needed for the entire
economy to reach equilibrium and allow sound growth to resume.
Western leaders
for most of the 20th century have come to accept a type of central
planning they believe is not burdened by the shortcomings of true
socialist-type central planning. Instead of outright government
ownership of the means of production, the economy was to be fine-tuned
by fixing interest rates (federal funds rates), subsidizing credit
(government-sponsored enterprises), stimulating sluggish segments
of the economy (farming and the weapons industry), aiding the sick
(Medicaid and Medicare), federally managing education (Department
of Education), and many other welfare schemes.
The majority
of Americans have not yet accepted the harsh reality that this less-threatening,
friendlier type of economic planning is minimally more efficient
than that of the socialist planners with their five-year economic
plans. We must face the fact that the business cycle, with its recurring
recessions, wage controls, wealth transfers, and social discord
are still with us and will get worse unless there is a fundamental
change in economic and monetary policy. Regardless of the type,
central economic planning is a dangerous notion.
In an economic
downturn, a large majority of our political leaders believe that
the ill effects of recession can be greatly minimized by monetary
and fiscal policy. Although cutting taxes is always beneficial,
spending one's way out of a recession is no panacea. Even if some
help is gained by cutting taxes or temporary relief given by an
increase in government spending, they distract from the real cause
of the downturn: previously pursued faulty monetary policy. The
consequences of interest-rate manipulation in a recession
along with tax and spending changes are unpredictable and
do not always produce the same results each time they're used. This
is why interest rates of less than 1 percent and massive spending
programs have not revitalized Japan's economy or her stock market.
We may well be witnessing the beginning of a major worldwide economic
downturn, making even more unpredictable the consequence of conventional
Western-style central bank tinkering.
There's good
reason to believe the Congress and the American people ought to
be concerned and start preparing for a slump that could play havoc
with our federal budget and the value of the American dollar. Certainly
the Congress has a profound responsibility in this area. If we ignore
the problems, or continue to endorse the economic myths of past
generations, our prosperity will be threatened. But our liberties
could be lost, as well, if expanding the government's role in the
economy is pursued as the only solution to the crisis.
It's important
to understand how we got ourselves into this mess. The blind faith
that wealth and capital can be created by the central bank's creating
money and credit out of thin air, using government debt as its collateral,
along with fixing short-term interest rates, is a myth that must
one day be dispelled. All the hopes of productivity increases in
a dreamed-about new-era economy cannot repeal eternal economic laws.
The big shift
in sentiment of the past several months has come with a loss of
confidence in the status of the new paradigm. If we're not careful,
the likely weakening of the US dollar could lead to a loss of confidence
in America and all her institutions. US political and economic power
has propped up the world economy for years. Trust in the dollar
has given us license to borrow and spend way beyond our means. But
just because world conditions have allowed us greater leverage to
borrow and inflate the currency than otherwise might have been permitted,
the economic limitations of such a policy still exist. This trust,
however, did allow for a greater financial bubble to develop and
dislocations to last longer, compared to similar excesses in less
powerful nations.
There is one
remnant of the Bretton Woods gold-exchange standard that has aided
US dominance over the past 30 years. Gold was once the reserve all
central banks held to back up their currencies. After World War
II, the world's central banks were satisfied to hold dollars, still
considered to be as good as gold since internationally the dollar
could still be exchanged for gold at $35 an ounce. When the system
broke down in 1971, and we defaulted on our promises to pay in gold,
chaos broke out. By default the dollar maintained its status as
the reserve currency of the world.
This is true,
even to this day. The dollar still represents approximately 77 percent
of all world central-bank reserves. This means that the United States
has license to steal. We print the money and spend it overseas,
while world trust continues because of our dominant economic and
military power. This results in a current account and trade deficit
so large that almost all economists agree that it cannot last. The
longer and more extensive the distortions in the international market,
the greater will be the crisis when the market dictates a correction.
And that's what we're starting to see.
When the recession
hits full force, even the extraordinary power and influence of Alan
Greenspan and the Federal Reserve, along with all the other central
banks of the world, won't be able to stop the powerful natural economic
forces that demand equilibrium. Liquidation of unreasonable debt
and the elimination of the over-capacity built into the system and
a return to trustworthy money and trustworthy government will be
necessary. Quite an undertaking!
Instead of
looking at the real cost and actual reasons for the recent good
years, politicians and many Americans have been all too eager to
accept the new-found wealth as permanent and deserved, as part of
a grand new era. Even with a national debt that continued to grow,
all the talk in DC was about how to handle the magnificent budget
surpluses.
Since 1998,
when it was announced that we had a budgetary surplus to deal with,
the national debt has nevertheless grown by more than $230 billion,
albeit at a rate less than in the early 1990s, but certainly a sum
that should not be ignored. But the really big borrowing has been
what the United States as a whole has borrowed from foreigners to
pay for the huge deficit we have in our current account. We are
now by far the largest foreign debtor in the world and in all of
history.
This convenient
arrangement has allowed us to live beyond our means and, according
to long-understood economic laws, must end. A declining dollar confirms
that our ability to painlessly borrow huge sums will no longer be
cheap or wise.
During the
past 30 years in the postBretton Woods era, worldwide sentiment
has permitted us to inflate our money supply and get others to accept
the dollar as if it were as good as gold. This convenient arrangement
has discouraged savings, which are now at a historic low. Savings
in a capitalist economy are crucial for furnishing capital and establishing
market interest rates. With negative savings and with the Fed fixing
rates by creating credit out of thin air and calling it capital,
we have abandoned a necessary part of free-market capitalism, without
which a smooth and growing economy is unsustainable.
No one should
be surprised when recessions hit or bewildered as to their cause
or danger. The greater surprise should be the endurance of an economy
fine-tuned by a manipulative central bank and a compulsively interventionist
Congress. But the full payment for all past economic sins may now
be required. Let's hope we can keep the pain and suffering to a
minimum.
The most recent
new era of the 1990s appeared to be an answer to all politicians'
dreams: a good economy, low unemployment, minimal price inflation,
a skyrocketing stock market, with capital gains tax revenues flooding
the Treasury, thus providing money to accommodate every special-interest
demand. But it was too good to be true. It was based on an inflated
currency and massive corporate, personal, and government borrowing.
A recession was inevitable to pay for the extravagance that many
knew was an inherent part of the new era, understanding that abundance
without a commensurate amount of work was not achievable.
The mantra
now is for the Fed to quickly lower short-term interest rates to
stimulate the economy and alleviate a liquidity crisis. This policy
may stimulate a boom and may help in a mild downturn, but it doesn't
always work in a bad recession. It actually could do great harm
since it could weaken the dollar, which in turn would allow market
forces instead to push long-term interest rates higher. Deliberately
lowering interest rates isn't even necessary for the dollar to drop,
since our policy has led to a current-account deficit of a magnitude
that demands the dollar eventually readjust and weaken.
A slumping
stock market will also cause the dollar to decline and interest
rates to rise. Federal Reserve Board central planning through interest-rate
control is not a panacea. It is instead the culprit that produces
the business cycle. Government and Fed officials have been reassuring
the public that no structural problem exists, citing no inflation
and a gold price that reassures the world that the dollar is indeed
still king.
The Fed can
create excess credit, but it can't control where it goes as it circulates
throughout the economy; nor can it dictate value either. Claiming
that a subdued government-rigged CPI and PPI proves that no inflation
exists is pure nonsense. It is well established that, under certain
circumstances, new credit inflation can find its way into the stock
or real estate market, as it did in the 1920s, while consumer prices
remain relatively stable. This does not negate the distortion inherent
in a system charged with artificially low interest rates. Instead
it allows the distortion to last longer and become more serious,
leading to a bigger correction.
If gold prices
reflected the true extent of the inflated dollar, confidence in
the dollar specifically and in paper more generally would be undermined.
It is a high priority of the Fed and all central banks of the world
for this not to happen. Revealing to the public the fraud associated
with all paper money would cause loss of credibility of all central
banks. This knowledge would jeopardize the central banks' ability
to perform the role of lender of last resort and to finance/monetize
government debt. It is for this reason that the price of gold in
their eyes must be held in check.
From 1945 to
1971, the United States literally dumped nearly 500 million ounces
of gold at $35 an ounce in an effort to do the same thing by continuing
the policy of printing money at will, with the hopes that there
would be no consequences to the value of the dollar. That all ended
in 1971 when the markets overwhelmed the world central banks.
A similar effort
continues today, with central banks selling and loaning gold to
keep the price in check. It's working and does convey false confidence,
but it can't last. Most Americans are wise to the government's statistics
regarding prices and the "no-inflation" rhetoric. Everyone
is aware that the prices of oil, gasoline, natural gas, medical
care, repairs, houses, and entertainment have all been rapidly rising.
The artificially low gold price has aided the government's charade,
but it has also allowed a bigger bubble to develop. This policy
cannot continue. Economic law dictates a correction that most Americans
will find distasteful and painful. Duration and severity of the
liquidation phase of the business cycle can be limited by proper
responses, but it cannot be avoided and could be made worse if the
wrong course is chosen.
Recent deterioration
of the junk-bond market indicates how serious the situation is.
Junk bonds are now paying 9 percent to 10 percent more than short-term
government securities. The quality of business loans is suffering,
while more and more corporate bonds are qualifying for junk status.
The Fed tries to reassure us by attempting to stimulate the economy
with low short-term federal fund rates at the same time interest
rates for businesses and consumers are rising. There comes a time
when Fed policy is ineffective, much to everyone's chagrin.
Micromanaging
an economy effectively for a long period of time, even with the
power a central bank wields, is an impossible task. The good times
are ephemeral and eventually must be paid for by contraction and
renewed real savings.
There is much
more to inflation than rising prices. Inflation is defined as the
increase in the supply of money and credit. Obsessively sticking
to the rising prices definition conveniently ignores placing the
blame on the responsible party the Federal Reserve. The last
thing central banks or the politicians, who need a backup for all
their spending mischief, want is for the government to lose its
power to create money out of thin air, which serves political and
privileged financial interests.
When the people
are forced to think only about rising prices, government-doctored
price indices can dampen concerns for inflation. Blame then can
be laid at the doorstep of corporate profiteers, price gougers,
labor unions, oil sheikhs, or greedy doctors. But it is never placed
at the feet of highly paid athletes or entertainers. It would be
economically incorrect to do so, but it's political correctness
that doesn't allow some groups to be vilified.
Much else related
to artificially low interest rates goes unnoticed. An overpriced
stock market, overcapacity in certain industries, excesses in real-estate
markets, artificially high bond prices, general malinvestments,
excessive debt, and speculation all result from the generous and
artificial credit the Federal Reserve pumps into the financial system.
These distortions are every bit, if not more, harmful than rising
prices. As the economy soars from the stimulus effect of low interest
rates, growth and distortions compound themselves. In a slump the
reverse is true, and the pain and suffering is magnified as the
adjustment back to reality occurs.
The extra credit
in the 1990s has found its way especially into the housing market
like never before. GSEs, in particular Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae,
have gobbled up huge sums to finance a booming housing market. GSE
securities enjoy implicit government guarantees, which have allowed
for a generous discount on most housing loans. They have also been
the vehicles used by consumers to refinance and borrow against their
home equity to use these funds for other purposes, such as investing
in the stock market. This has further undermined savings by using
the equity that builds with price inflation that homeowners enjoy
when money is debased. In addition, the Federal Reserve now buys
and holds GSE securities as collateral in their monetary operations.
These securities are then literally used as collateral for printing
Federal Reserve notes; this is a dangerous precedent.
If monetary
inflation merely raised prices, and all prices and labor costs moved
up at the same rate, and it did not cause disequilibrium in the
market, it would be of little consequence. But inflation is far
more than rising prices. Creating money out of thin air is morally
equivalent to counterfeiting. It's fraud and theft, because it steals
purchasing power from the savers and those on fixed incomes. That
in itself should compel all nations to prohibit it, as did the authors
of our Constitution.
Inflation is
socially disruptive in that the management of fiat money
as all today's currencies are causes great hardships. Unemployment
is a direct consequence of the constantly recurring recessions.
Persistent rising costs impoverish many as the standard of living
of unfortunate groups erodes. Because the pain and suffering that
comes from monetary debasement is never evenly distributed, certain
segments of society can actually benefit.
In the 1990s,
Wall Streeters thrived, while some low-income, nonwelfare, nonhomeowners
suffered with rising costs for fuel, rent, repairs, and medical
care. Generally one should expect the middle class to suffer and
to literally be wiped out in a severe inflation. When this happens,
as it did in many countries throughout the 20th century, social
and political conflicts become paramount when finger pointing becomes
commonplace by those who suffer looking for scapegoats. Almost always
the hostility is inaccurately directed.
There is a
greater threat from the monetary mischief than just the economic
harm it does. The threat to liberty resulting when economic strife
hits and finger-pointing increases should concern us most. We should
never be complacent about monetary policy.
We must reassess
the responsibility Congress has in maintaining a sound monetary
system. In the 19th century, the constitutionality of a central
bank was questioned and challenged. Not until 1913 were the advocates
of a strong federalist system able to foist a powerful central bank
on us, while destroying the gold standard. This banking system,
which now serves as the financial arm of Congress, has chosen to
pursue massive welfare spending and a foreign policy that has caused
us to be at war for much of the 20th century.
Without the
central bank creating money out of thin air, our welfare state and
worldwide imperialism would have been impossible to finance. Attempts
at economic fine-tuning by monetary authorities would have been
impossible without a powerful central bank. Propping up the stock
market as it falters would be impossible as well.
But the day
will come when we will have no choice but to question the current
system. Yes, the Fed does help to finance the welfare state. Yes,
the Fed does come to the rescue when funds are needed to fight wars
and for us to pay the cost of maintaining our empire. Yes, the Fed
is able to stimulate the economy and help create what appear to
be good times. But it's all built on an illusion. Wealth cannot
come from a printing press. Empires crumble and a price is eventually
paid for arrogance toward others. And booms inevitably turn into
busts.
Talk of a new
era the past five years has had many, including Greenspan, believing
that this time it really would be different. And it may indeed be
different this time. The correction could be an especially big one,
since the Fed-driven distortion of the past 10 years, plus the lingering
distortions of previous decades have been massive. The correction
could be big enough to challenge all our institutions, the entire
welfare state, Social Security, foreign intervention, and our national
defense. This will only happen if the dollar is knocked off its
pedestal. No one knows if that is going to happen sooner or later.
But when it does, our constitutional system of government will be
challenged to the core.
Ultimately
the solution will require a recommitment to the principles of liberty,
including a belief in sound money when money once again will
be something of value rather than pieces of paper or mere blips
from a Federal Reserve computer. In spite of the grand technological
revolution, we are still having trouble with a few simple basic
tasks counting votes or keeping the lights on or understanding
the sinister nature of paper money.
Potential
for War
Foreign military
interventionism, a policy the United States has followed for over
100 years, encourages war and undermines peace. Even with the good
intentions of many who support this policy, it serves the interests
of powerful commercial entities. Perpetual conflicts stimulate military
spending. Minimal and small wars too often get out of control and
cause more tragedy than originally anticipated. Small wars like
the Persian Gulf War are more easily tolerated, but the foolishness
of an out-of-control war like Vietnam is met with resistance from
a justifiably aroused nation. But both types of conflicts result
from the same flawed foreign policy of foreign interventionism.
Both types of conflicts can be prevented.
National security
is usually cited to justify our foreign involvement, but this excuse
distracts from the real reason we venture so far from home. Influential
commercial interests dictate policy of when and where we go. Persian
Gulf oil obviously got more attention than genocide in Rwanda. If
one were truly concerned about our security and enhancing peace,
one would always opt for a less militarist policy. It's not a coincidence
that US territory and US citizens are the most vulnerable in the
world to terrorist attacks. Escalation of the war on terrorism and
not understanding its cause is a dangerous temptation.
Not only does
foreign interventionism undermine chances for peace and prosperity,
it undermines personal liberty. War and preparing for war must always
be undertaken at someone's expense. Someone must pay the bills with
higher taxes, and someone has to be available to pay with their
lives. It's never the political and industrial leaders who promote
the policy who pay. They are the ones who reap the benefits, while
at the same time arguing for the policy they claim is designed to
protect freedom and prosperity for the very ones being victimized.
Many reasons
given for our willingness to police the world sound reasonable:
We need to protect our oil. We need to stop cocaine production in
Colombia. We need to bring peace to the Middle East. We need to
punish our adversaries. We must respond because we are the sole
superpower and it's our responsibility to maintain world order.
It's our moral obligation to settle disputes. We must follow up
on our dollar diplomacy after sending foreign aid throughout the
world. In the old days it was: we need to stop the spread of Communism.
The excuses are endless!
But it's rarely
mentioned that the lobbyists and proponents of foreign intervention
are the weapons manufacturers, the oil companies, and the recipients
of huge contracts for building infrastructure in whatever far corner
of the earth we send our troops to. Financial interests have a lot
at stake, and it's important for them that the United States maintains
its empire. Not infrequently, ethnic groups will influence foreign
policy for reasons other than preserving our security. This type
of political pressure can at times be substantial and emotional.
We often try
to please too many, and by doing so support both sides of conflicts
that have raged for centuries. In the end, our efforts can end up
unifying our adversaries while alienating our friends.
Over the past
50 years, Congress has allowed our presidents to usurp the prerogatives
the Constitution explicitly gave only to the Congress. The term
foreign policy is never mentioned in the Constitution and it was
never intended to be monopolized by the president. Going to war
was to be strictly a legislative function, not an executive one.
Operating foreign
policy by executive orders and invoking unratified treaties is a
slap in the face to the rule of law and our republican form of government.
But that's currently being done.
US policy over
the past 50 years has led to endless illegal military interventions,
from Korea to our ongoing war with Iraq and military occupations
in the Balkans. Many Americans have died and many others have been
wounded or injured or have been forgotten. Numerous innocent victims
living in foreign lands have died, as well, from the bombing and
blockades we have imposed. They have been people with whom we have
had no fight but who were trapped between the bad policy of their
own leaders and our eagerness to demonstrate our prowess to the
world. Over 500,000 Iraqi children have reportedly died as a consequence
of our bombing and denying food and medicine by our embargo.
For over 50
years, there has been a precise move toward one-world government
at the expense of our own sovereignty. Our presidents claim that
authority to wage war can come from the United Nations or NATO resolutions,
in contradiction of our Constitution and everything our Founding
Fathers believed. US troops are now required to serve under foreign
commanders and wear UN insignias. Refusal to do so prompts a court
martial.
The past president,
before leaving office, signed the 1998 UN Rome Treaty, indicating
our willingness to establish an International Criminal Court. This
gives the UN authority to enforce global laws against Americans
if ratified by the Senate. Even without ratification, we have gotten
to the point where treaties of this sort can be imposed on nonparticipating
nations. Presidents have, by Executive Order, been willing to follow
unratified treaties in the past. This is a very dangerous precedent.
We already
accept the WTO and its international trade court. Trade wars are
fought with this court's supervision, and we are only too ready
to rewrite our tax laws as the WTO dictates. The only portion of
the major tax bill at the end of the last Congress to be rushed
through for the president's signature was the Foreign Sales Corporation
changes dictated to us by the WTO.
For years the
United States has accepted the international financial and currency
management of the IMF another arm of one-world government.
The World Bank
serves as the distributor of international welfare, of which the
US taxpayer is the biggest donor. This organization helps carry
out a policy of taking money from poor Americans and giving it to
rich foreign leaders, with kickbacks to some of our international
corporations. Support for the World Bank, the IMF, the WTO, and
the International Criminal Court always comes from the elites and
almost never from the common man.
These programs
run by the international institutions are supposed to help the poor,
but they never do. It's all a charade, and if left unchecked, they
will bankrupt us and encourage more world-government mischief.
It's the responsibility
of Congress to curtail this trend by reestablishing the principles
of the US Constitution and our national sovereignty. It's time for
the United States to give up its membership in all these international
organizations.
Our foreign
policy has led to an incestuous relationship between our military
and Hollywood. In December, Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen
used $295,000 of taxpayer money to host a party in Los Angeles for
Hollywood bigwigs. Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said it was
well worth it. The purpose was to thank the movie industry for putting
the military in a good light. A similar relationship has been reported
with TV stations licensed by the US government. They have been willing
to accept suggestions from the government to place political messages
in their programming. This is a dangerous trend, mixing government
and the media. Now here's where real separation is needed!
Our policy
should change for several reasons. It's wrong for our foreign policy
to serve any special interest, whether it's for financial benefits,
ethnic pressures, or some contrived moral imperative. Too often
the policy leads to an unintended consequence, and more people are
killed and more property damaged than was intended. Controlling
world events is never easy. It's better to avoid the chance of one
bad decision leading to another. The best way to do that is to follow
the advice of the Founders and avoid all entangling alliances and
pursue a policy designed solely to protect US national-security
interests.
The two areas
in the world that currently present the greatest danger to the United
States are Colombia and the Middle East. For decades, we have been
engulfed in the ancient wars of the Middle East by subsidizing and
supporting both sides. This policy is destined to fail. We are in
great danger of becoming involved in a vicious war for oil, as well
as being drawn into a religious war that will not end in our lifetime.
The potential for war in this region is great, and the next one
could make the Persian Gulf War look small. Only a reassessment
of our entire policy will keep us from being involved in a needless
and dangerous war in this region.
It will be
difficult to separate any involvement in the Balkans from a major
conflict that breaks out in the Middle East. It's impossible for
us to maintain a policy that both supports Israel and provides security
for Western-leaning secular Arab leaders, while at the same time
taunting the Islamic fundamentalists. Push will come to shove, and
when that happens in the midst of an economic crisis, our resources
will be stretched beyond the limit. This must be prevented.
Our involvement
in Colombia could easily escalate into a regional war. For over
100 years, we have been involved in the affairs of Central America,
but the recent escalation of our presence in Colombia is inviting
trouble for us.
Although the
justification for our enhanced presence is the War on Drugs, protecting
US oil interests and selling helicopters are the real reasons for
last years' $1.3 billion emergency funding. Already neighboring
countries have expressed concern about our presence in Colombia.
The US policymakers gave their usual response by promising more
money and support to the neighboring countries that feel threatened.
Venezuela,
rich in oil, is quite nervous about our enhanced presence in the
region. Their foreign minister stated that if any of our ships enter
the Gulf of Venezuela they will be expelled. This statement was
prompted by an overly aggressive US Coast Guard vessel's intrusion
into Venezuelan territorial waters on a drug expedition. I know
of no one who believes this expanded and insane drug war will do
anything to dampen drug usage in the United States. Yet it will
cost us plenty. Too bad our political leaders cannot take a hint.
The war effort in Colombia is small now, but under current conditions
it will surely escalate. This is a 30-year-old civil war being fought
in the jungles of South America. We are unwelcome by many, and we
ought to have enough sense to stay out of it. Recently new policy
has led to the spraying of herbicides to destroy the coca fields.
It's already been reported that the legal crops in nearby fields
have been destroyed as well. This is no way to win friends around
the world.
There are many
other areas of the world where we ought to take a second look, and
then come home. Instead of bullying the European Union for wanting
to have their own rapid deployment force, we should praise them
and bring our troops home. World War II has been over for 55 years.
It's time we
look at Korea and ask why we have to broker, with the use of American
dollars and American soldiers, the final settlement between North
and South Korea.
Taiwan and
China are now trading and investing in each other's country. Travel
restrictions have been recently liberalized. It's time for us to
let the two of them settle their border dispute.
We continue
to support Turkey with dollars and weapons. We once supported Iraq
with the same. Now we permit Turkey, armed with American weapons,
to kill Kurds in Iraq, while we bomb the Iraqis if they do the same.
It makes no sense.
Selling weapons
to both factions of almost all the major conflicts of the past 50
years reveals that our involvement is more about selling weapons
than spreading the message of freedom. That message can never be
delivered through force to others over their objection. Only a policy
of peace, friendship, trade, and our setting a good example can
inspire others to look to what once was the American tradition of
liberty and justice for all. Entangling alliances won't do it. It's
time for Congress and the American people to wake up.
Social Discord
The political
system of interventionism always leads to social discord. Interventionism
is based on relative rights, majoritarianism, and disrespect for
the Constitution. Degenerating moral standards of the people encourages
and feeds on this system of special-interest favoritism, all of
which contribute to the friction.
Thomas Jefferson
was worried that future generations might squander the liberties
the American Revolution secured. Writing about future generations,
Jefferson wondered if "in the enjoyment of plenty, they would
lose the memory of freedom." He believed, "Material abundance
without character is the path to destruction."
The challenge
to America today is clearly evident. We lack character, and we also
suffer from a loss of respect, understanding, and faith in the liberty
that offers so much. The American Republic has been transformed
and only a remnant remains. It appears that in the midst of plenty,
we have forgotten about freedom.
We have just
gone through a roaring decade with many Americans enjoying prosperity
beyond their wildest dreams. Because this wealth was not always
earned and instead resulted from borrowing, speculation, and inflation,
the correction that's to come will contribute to the social discord
already inherent in a system of government interventionism. If,
indeed, the economy enters a severe recession, which is highly possible,
it will compound the problems characteristic of a system that encourages
government supervision over all that we do.
Conflicts between
classes, races, ethnic groups, and even generations are already
apparent. This is a consequence of pitting workers and producers
against moochers and the special-interest rich. Divvying up half
of the GDP through a process of confiscatory taxation invites trouble.
It is more easily tolerated when wealth abounds; but when the economy
slips, quiescent resentment quickly turns to noisy confrontation.
Those who feel slighted become more demanding at the same time resources
are diminished.
But the system
of government we have become accustomed to has, for decades, taken
over responsibilities that were never intended to be the prerogative
of the federal government under the Constitution. Although mostly
well intended, the efforts at social engineering have caused significant
damage to our constitutional Republic and have resulted in cynicism
toward all politicians. Our presidents are now elected by less than
20 percent of those old enough to vote. Government is perceived
to be in the business of passing out favors rather than protecting
individual liberty. The majority of the people are made up of independents
and nonvoters.
The ill-conceived
drug war of the past 30 years has caused great harm to our society.
It has undermined privacy and challenged the constitutional rights
of all our citizens. The accelerated attack on drug usage since
the early 1970s has not resulted in any material benefit. Over $300
billion has been spent on this war, and we are all less free and
poorer because of it. Civil liberties are sacrificed in all wars,
both domestic and foreign. It's clear that, even if it were a legitimate
function for government to curtail drug usage, eliminating bad habits
through government regulation is not achievable. Like so much else
that government tries to do, the harm done is not always evenly
distributed. Some groups suffer more than others, further compounding
the problem by causing dissension and distrust.
Anthony Lewis
of the New York Times reported last year: "The 480,000
men and women now in US prisons on drug charges are 100,000 more
than all prisoners in the European Union, where the population is
100 million more than ours."
There are ten
times the number of prisoners for drug offenses than there were
in 1980, and 80 percent of the drug arrests are for nonviolent possession.
In spite of all the money spent and energy wasted, drug usage continues
at a record pace. Someday we must wake up and realize the federal
drug war is a farce. It has failed and we must change our approach.
As bad as drug
addiction is and the harm it causes, it is miniscule compared to
the dollar cost, the loss of liberty, and social conflict that results
from our ill-advised drug war.
Mandatory drug
sentencing laws have done a great deal of harm by limiting the discretion
that judges could use in sentencing victims in the drug war. Congress
should repeal or change these laws, just as we found it beneficial
to modify seizure and forfeiture laws two years ago.
The drug laws,
I'm sure, were never meant to be discriminatory, yet they are. In
Massachusetts, 82.9 percent of the drug offenders are minorities,
but they make up only 9 percent of the state population. The fact
that crack-cocaine users are more likely to land in prison than
powder-cocaine users, and with harsher sentences, discriminates
against black Americans. A wealthy suburbanite caught using drugs
is much less likely to end up in prison than someone from the inner
city. This inequity adds to the conflict between races and between
the poor and the police. And it's unnecessary.
There are no
documented benefits from the drug war. Even if a reduction in drug
usage could have been achieved, the cost in dollars and loss of
liberty would never have justified it. But we don't have that to
deal with, since drug usage continues to get worse; in addition
we have all the problems associated with the drug war.
The effort
to diminish the use of drugs and to improve the personal habits
of some of our citizens has been the excuse to undermine our freedoms.
Ironically we spend hundreds of billions of dollars waging this
dangerous war on drugs while government educational policies promote
a huge and dangerous over-usage of Ritalin.
Seizure and
forfeiture laws, clearly in violation of the Constitution, have
served as a terrible incentive for many police departments to raise
money for law-enforcement projects outside the normal budgeting
process. Nationalizing the police force for various reasons is a
trend that should frighten all Americans. The drug war has been
the most important factor in this trend.
Medicinal use
of illegal drugs, in particular marijuana, has been prohibited and
greater human suffering has resulted. Imprisoning a person who is
dying from cancer and AIDS for using his own self-cultivated marijuana
is absolutely bizarre and cruel.
All addiction
alcohol and illegal drugs should be seen as a medical
problem, not a legal one. Improving behavior, just for the sake
of changing unpopular habits, never works. It should never be the
responsibility of government to do so. When government attempts
to do this, the government and its police force become the criminals.
When someone under the influence of drugs, alcohol (also a drug),
or even from a lack of sleep causes injury to another, local law-enforcement
officials have a responsibility. This is a far cry from the Justice
Department using army tanks to bomb the Davidians because federal
agents claimed an amphetamine lab was possibly on the premises.
An
interventionist government, by its nature, uses any excuse to know
what the people are doing. Drug laws are used to enhance the IRS
agent's ability to collect every dime owed the government. These
laws are used to pressure Congress to spend more dollars for foreign
military operations in places such as Colombia. Artificially high
drug prices allow government to clandestinely participate in the
drug trade to raise funds to fight the secret controversial wars
with off-budget funding. Both our friends and foes depend on the
drug war at times for revenue to pursue their causes, which frequently
are the same as ours.
The sooner
we wake up to this seriously flawed approach to fighting drug usage
the better.
The notion
that the federal government has an obligation to protect us from
ourselves drives the drug war. But this idea also drives the do-gooders
in Washington to involve themselves in every aspect of our lives.
American citizens cannot move without being constantly reminded
by consumer advocates, environmentalists, safety experts, and bureaucratic
busybodies what they can or cannot do.
Once government
becomes our protector, there are no limits. Federal regulations
dictate the amount of water in our commodes and the size and shape
of our washing machines. Complicated USDA regulations dictate the
size of the holes in Swiss cheese. We cannot even turn off our automobile
airbags when they present a danger to a child without federal permission.
Riding in a car without a seat belt may be unwise, but should it
be a federal crime? Why not make us all wear rib pads and football
helmets? That would reduce serious injury and save many dollars
for the government health system.
Regulations
on holistic medicine, natural remedies, herbs, and vitamins are
now commonplace and continue to grow. Who gave the government the
right to make these personal decisions for us? Are the people really
so ignorant that only politicians and bureaucrats can make these
delicate decisions for them?
Today if a
drug shows promise for treating a serious illness, and both patient
and doctor would like to try it on an experimental basis, permission
can be given only by the FDA and only after much begging
and pleading. Permission frequently is not granted, even if the
dying patient is pleading to take the risk. The government is not
anxious to give up any of its power to make these decisions. People
in government think that's what they are supposed to do for the
good of the people.
Free choice
is what freedom is all about. And it means freedom to take risks
as well. As a physician deeply concerned about the health of all
Americans, I am convinced that the government encroachment into
health-care choices has been very detrimental.
There are many
areas where the federal government has gotten involved when it shouldn't
have, and created more problems than it solved. There is no evidence
that the federal government has improved education or medicine,
in spite of the massive funding and mandates of the last 40 years.
Yet all we hear is a call for increased spending and more mandates.
How bad it will get before we reject the big-government approach
is anybody's guess.
Welfarism and
government interventionism are failed systems and always lead to
ever-more intrusive government. The issue of privacy is paramount.
Most Americans and members of Congress recognize the need to protect
everyone's privacy. But the loss of privacy is merely the symptom
of an authoritarian government. Effort can and should be made, even
under today's circumstances, to impede the government's invasion
of privacy.
We
must realize that our privacy and our liberty will always be threatened
as long as we instruct our government to manage a welfare state
and to operate foreign policy as if we are the world's policemen.
If the trends
we have witnessed over the past 70 years are not reversed, our economic
and political system will soon be transposed into a fascist system.
The further along we go in that direction, the more difficult it
becomes to reverse the tide without undue suffering. This cannot
be done unless respect for the rule of law is restored. That means
all public officials must live up to their promise to follow the
written contract between the people and the government: the US Constitution.
For far too
long, we have accepted the idea that government can and should take
care of us. But that is not what a free society is all about. When
government gives us something, it does two bad things. First it
takes it from someone else; second, it causes dependency on government.
A wealthy country can do this for long periods of time, but eventually
the process collapses. Freedom is always sacrificed and eventually
the victims rebel. As needs grow, the producers are unable or unwilling
to provide the goods the government demands. Wealth then hides or
escapes, going underground or overseas, prompting even more government
intrusion to stop the exodus from the system. This only compounds
the problem.
Endless demands
and economic corrections that come with the territory will always
produce deficits. An accommodating central bank then is forced to
steal wealth through the inflation tax by merely printing money
and creating credit out of thin air. Even though these policies
may work for a while, eventually they will fail. As wealth is diminished,
recovery becomes more difficult in an economy operating with a fluctuating
fiat currency and a marketplace overly burdened with regulation,
taxes, and inflation.
The time to
correct these mistakes is prior to the bad times, before tempers
flare. Congress needs to consider a new economic and foreign policy.
Conclusion
Why should
any of us be concerned about the future, especially if prosperity
is all around us? America has been truly blessed. We are involved
in no major military conflict. We remain one of the freest nations
on earth. Current economic conditions have allowed for low unemployment
and a strong dollar, with cheap purchases from overseas further
helping to keep price inflation in check. Violent crimes have been
reduced and civil disorder, such as we saw in the 1960s, is absent.
But we have
good reason to be concerned for our future. Prosperity can persist,
even after the principles of a sound market economy have been undermined,
but only for a limited period of time.
Our economic,
military, and political power, second to none, has perpetuated a
system of government no longer dependent on the principles that
brought our Republic to greatness. Private-property rights, sound
money, and self-reliance have been eroded, and they have been replaced
with welfarism, paper money, and collective management of property.
The new system condones special-interest cronyism and rejects individualism,
profits, and voluntary contracts.
Concern for
the future is real, because it's unreasonable to believe that the
prosperity and relative tranquility can be maintained with the current
system. Not being concerned means that one must be content with
the status quo and that current conditions can be maintained with
no negative consequences. That, I maintain, is a dream.
There is growing
concern about our future by more and more Americans. They are especially
concerned about the moral conditions expressed in our movies, music,
and television programs. Less concern is expressed regarding the
political and economic system. A nation's moral foundation inevitably
reflects the type of government and, in turn, affects the entire
economic and political system.
In some ways
I am pleasantly surprised by the concern expressed about America's
future, considering the prosperity we enjoy. Many Americans sense
a serious problem in general, without specifically understanding
the economic and political ramifications.
Inflation,
the erosion of the dollar, is always worse than the government admits.
It may be that more Americans are suffering than is generally admitted.
Government intrusion in our lives is commonplace. Some unemployed
aren't even counted. Lower-middle-class citizens have not enjoyed
an increase in the standard of living many others have. The fluctuation
in the stock market may have undermined confidence.
Most Americans
still believe everyone has a right to a free education, but they
don't connect this concept to the evidence: that getting a good
education is difficult; that drugs are rampant in public schools;
that safety in public schools is a serious problem; and that the
cost is amazing for a system of education if one wants a real education.
The quality
of medical care is slipping, and the benefits provided by government
are seen by more and more people to not really be benefits at all.
This trend does not make America feel more confident about the future
of health care.
Let there be
no doubt, many Americans are concerned about their future, even
though many still argue that the problem is only that government
has not done enough.
I have expressed
concern that our policies are prone to lead to war, economic weakness,
and social discord. Understanding the cause of these problems is
crucial to finding a solution. If we opt for more government benevolence
and meddling in our lives, along with more military adventurism,
we have to expect an even greater attack on the civil liberties
of all Americans, both rich and poor.
America continues
to be a great country, and we remain prosperous. We have a system
of freedom and opportunities that motivate many in the world to
risk their lives trying to get here.
The question
remains: can we afford to be lax in the defense of liberty at this
juncture in our history? I don't think so.
The problems
are not complex, and even the big ones can be easily handled if
we pursue the right course. Prosperity and peace can be continued,
but not with the current system that permeates Washington. To blindly
hope our freedom will remain intact, without any renewed effort
in its defense, or to expect that the good times will automatically
continue, places our political system in great danger.
Basic morality,
free markets, sound money, living within the rule of law, and adhering
to the fundamental precepts that made the American Republic great
are what we need. And it's worth the effort.
See
the Ron Paul File
May
24, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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