Cancel
the Presidential Election!
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Nothing could
be better for the country than cancelling the 2008 election. Leave
the office of the presidency empty.
I can see only
one possible justification for having a president of the United
States: to preside over the dismantling of the federal government.
If you think this is a radical idea, think again. This is, in part,
what people have long voted for, even if they never actually get
it. I can hardly remember a time when a president has been elected
who didn't promise to get the government off our backs.
In one way,
this agenda makes no sense, of course. You don't hire a CEO to drive
a company into bankruptcy. You don't appoint a pastor to shrink
a congregation. Why should we expect a president to dismantle the
thing that gives him power and fame, and his allies huge wealth?
Well, realistically, you can't. But it's the best hope we have within
the framework of conventional politics.
The irony is
that most presidents get elected on the prospect that they will
curb power. It's true of George Bush, who promised domestic cuts
and a humble foreign policy. Clinton was also elected on the promise
of middle-class tax cuts. We can go back and back and see it was
true for the first Bush, for Reagan, for Carter, for Nixon, and
so on.
For that matter,
FDR himself denounced government spending during this first campaign.
"I accuse the present administration [Hoover's] of being the greatest
spending administration in peace times in all our history," and
added, "On my part, I ask you very simply to assign to me the task
of reducing the annual operating expenses of your national government."
He further denounced the government for "fostering regimentation
without stint or limit."
It was even
true with George Washington, who had made innumerable speeches on
the evil of tyranny only to take power and use it to the benefit
of the powerful. Even Jefferson succumbed with his mistaken Louisiana
Purchase, though he later entertained the possibility of a salutary
breakup of the United States.
And so on it
goes. And it will happen again, despite all promises.
Folks, there
is something wrong with this model of governance, not just current
policy but the whole structure. We might even argue that the error
goes back to the Constitution, a document that created new government
powers unprecedented in Colonial history, and put the government
in charge of restraining itself. It set up competitive divisions
within government under the presumption that they would keep each
other in check. Instead, they cooperated toward mutual expansion,
especially after the federal power seizure called the Civil War.
Part of the
problem dates to a core error within liberal theory: the belief
that it was possible to create a government that was an extension
of society, thanks to the relentless input of the people via democratic
institutions. What this model did instead is enlist the public as
part of their own destruction. And it created confusion about who
precisely is to blame when things don't work out. Under democracy,
aren't we the government? Aren’t we doing this to ourselves?
Let's draw
on another aspect of old-time liberal theory as a means of finding
a way out of this mess. There are two additional contributions that
liberalism made. It taught that society is capable of self-management,
and that government is not the reason for order in society. Summing
up the old liberal position, Thomas Paine said:
A great part
of that order which reigns among mankind is not the effect of
government. It had its origin in the principles of society, and
the natural constitution of man. It existed prior to government,
and would exist if the formality of government was abolished.
The mutual dependence and reciprocal interest which man has in
man and all the parts of a civilized community upon each other
create that great chain of connection which holds it together.
The landholder, the farmer, the manufacturer, the merchant, the
tradesman, and every occupation prospers by the aid which each
receives from the other, and from the whole. Common interest regulates
their concerns, and forms their laws; and the laws which common
usage ordains, have a greater influence than the laws of government.
In fine, society performs for itself almost everything that is
ascribed to government.
If we would
be true to this line of thought, we should propose the unthinkable:
cancel the election. This has never before been so urgent. Neither
party will cut government in a way that is desperately needed. Instead,
they offer a left- or right-tinged Americanized socialism or fascism.
One promises domestic expansion and foreign reduction; the other
promises foreign expansion and domestic reduction. The inevitable
compromise: expand both domestically and internationally.
In addition,
whatever the new president does will make our growing economic problems
worse. The economic interventions they propose will add to our troubles,
whether that means expanding inflation, taxes, controls, or debt.
Another war is unthinkable, but probably inevitable. You can already
detect it in the aggressive trajectory towards Iran. More business
regulation can only dampen the fires of free enterprise, which are
our saving grace today.
The best solution
would be a government that would destroy itself. The second best
solution would be a government that does nothing at all – then,
at least, matters will not get worse. This is what canceling the
election would do. It would introduce enough confusion and chaos
to keep government from acting either domestically or internationally,
which would be a wonderful thing.
There is also
the matter of public will. We pretend as if the person who is elected
enjoys the support of a majority. Nonsense. Most people who can
vote do not vote, and who can blame them? Those who do vote are
most likely voting against the other guy and not for a positive
program. The person elected will enjoy a mandate of perhaps 510%
of the population that actively supports the agenda. I say: make
the new president their president but not our president.
It's true that
what I'm proposing constitutes a purely negative agenda. So let's
look to a positive goal. This country is too large to be governed
from the center. It is long past time that it be broken into ever
smaller pieces, even to the size of the world's smallest nations.
In that way, the US government will cease to be a menace to its
citizens and to the world. Prosperity will be assured in the same
way it always has: through peace and free trade with all.
But what about
the Constitution? Let Jefferson speak: "We have not yet so far perfected
our constitutions as to venture to make them unchangeable…. But
can they be made unchangeable?... I think not. The Creator has made
the earth for the living, not the dead. Rights and powers can only
belong to persons, not to things."
It is highly
significant that Jefferson, when he wrote his own epitaph, wanted
to be remembered for the Declaration of Independence, for the Virginia
statute on religious freedom, and for founding the University of
Virginia. That he was a two-term president is not listed.
March
6, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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