Congress Must Reject the Welfare/Warfare State
by
Ron Paul
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During the
past few weeks, Congress has been locked in a battle to pass a continuing
resolution to fund government operations through September. Both
supporters and opponents of the bill, HR 1, claim it is a serious
attempt to reduce federal spending. However, an examination of the
details of the bill call that claim into question. For one thing,
the oft-cited assertion that HR 1 reduces spending by $99 billion
is misleading. The $99 billion figure merely represents the amount
that HR 1 reduces spending from the Presidents proposed Fiscal
Year 2011 budget – not reductions in actual spending. Trying to
claim credit for a reduction in spending based on cuts in proposed
spending is like claiming someone is following a diet because he
had only five slices of pizza when he intended to have 10 slices!
In fact, HR
1 only reduces real federal spending by $66 billion compared to
last years budget. This may seem like a lot to the average
American but in the context of an overwhelming trillion-dollar budget
and a national debt that could exceed 100 percent of GNP in September,
it is barely a drop in the bucket.
One reason
that HR 1 does not cut spending enough is that too many fiscal conservatives
continue to embrace the fallacy that we can balance the budget without
reducing spending on militarism. Until Congress realizes the folly
of spending trillions pretending to impose democracy on the world
we will never be able to seriously reduce spending.
Congress must
not only reject the warfare state, it must also reject the welfare
state. HR 1 is more aggressive in ending domestic spending than
foreign spending, and does zero out some objectionable federal programs
such as AmeriCorps. However, HR 1 leaves most of the current functions
of the federal government undisturbed. This bill thus continues
the delusion that we can have a fiscally responsible and efficient
welfare state.
The failure
to even attempt to address the serious threat the welfare-warfare
state poses to American liberty and prosperity is the main reason
why supporters of limited government and individual liberty ultimately
should find HR 1 unsatisfactory. Only a rejection of the view that
Congress can run the economy, run our lives, and run the world will
allow us to make the spending reductions necessary to avert a serious
financial crisis. This does not mean we should not prioritize and
discuss how to gradually transition away from the welfare state
in a manner that does not harm those currently relying on these
programs. However, we must go beyond balancing the budget to transitioning
back to a free society, and that means eventually placing responsibility
for social welfare back in the hands of individuals and private
institutions.
Despite the
overheated rhetoric heard during the debate, HR 1 is a diversion
from the difficult task of restoring constitutional government and
a free economy and society. It is time for Congress to get serious
about cutting spending, not merely tinkering around the edges of
the proposed budget and kicking the can down the road for future
generations. If we fail to act decisively now, there will soon come
a time when both our money and our capacity to borrow will run out.
When that happens, our ability to negotiate and play political games
with spending priorities will be over. To avoid real chaos, the
time to start dealing with our bloated government budget is right
now.
See
the Ron Paul File
March
2, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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