Too
Much Presidential Power
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
President
Bush's proposal to subsidize private religious charity is a disaster
in the making. It would wreck good charities by making them dependent
on federal loot. It would compromise their religious mission by
making them squeamish about evangelizing.
It
threatens to inflame taxpayers against Christian groups who are
lobbying for the cash, which is the last thing these charitable
groups need. Even the left has a point about the separation of church
and state: faith-based organizations should be funded voluntarily,
not through the coercion of the tax system.
In
fact, we ought to take that logic a step further to call for the
full separation of society and state: all organizations (charities,
businesses, schools, hospitals, civic groups, etc.) should be funded
voluntarily. In the meantime, the proper policy priority is to reduce
the number of groups dependent on the federal government, not add
another layer.
Bush
probably meant well in proposing the idea. As governor of Texas,
he saw the failure of the welfare state and the success of private
charity by comparison. A regular person might conclude from this
that the public sector ought to be shrunk so the private sector
can take on ever more responsibility. Instead, in an upside down
way, Bush concluded that private charities should be absorbed into
the government!
Where
does this crazy logic come from?
When
you become president, it appears, you are no longer a regular person.
Everyone tells you that you must have a vision and a plan for using
the vast amount of taxpayer loot at your disposal. You are constantly
encouraged to think and behave like a central planner. The activities
and institutions outside the orbit of the state begin to appear
irrelevant, as if they don't really exist. All that really matters
is the reality you see inside the beltway.
Governors
have this problem too, but the presidency exacerbates it many times
over. If one man stays in the job for too long, like Clinton, he
begins to see himself as the center of the universe, knowing all
that is important to know about everything important. The people
who voted for you become this statistical abstraction called the
"approval rating," and it doesn't take long for a president to become
cynical about the wild volatility of these polls.
The
weirdest, the most immoral, aspect of presidential might is the
war-making power. It was only weeks into George Bush's presidency
that he launched more attacks on Iraq – a gravely impoverished country
that the U.S. has been strangling for longer than a decade. Some
bombs landed in civilian areas, of course, as always, and there
were reports of civilian deaths, of course, as always. Remarkable.
George Bush, husband and father, had only been president a couple
of weeks when he decided that taking innocent human life in a country
halfway around the world was wholly justifiable.
The
presidency has become a job with a whole series of unseemly initiation
rites. One rite involves proposing a range of new uses of taxpayer
dollars: that's where Bush's charity proposal comes in. Another
is to kill a few foreigners just to show the world who is boss:
that's Bush's Iraq policy. George Bush, as decent a fellow as you
will ever meet, is just as likely to follow these prescribed rites
as his predecessors and successors.
It's
time that we realize that the problem of the presidency goes beyond
the man. It's the office that is inherently corrupt. No man should
be permitted to possess the power of the presidency. The whole of
Western history was a continuing struggle to limit and curb the
ability of men to seize this much power. The greatest advances of
politics consisted of eliminating the existence of such offices
from the earth. But in our own country, conceived in liberty, the
worst form of Caesarism has taken root. We see it in both foreign
and domestic policy.
To
understand how this has happened, and why the presidency as currently
constituted needs to be uprooted as an institution, there is no
better source than Reassessing
the Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State and the Decline
of Freedom, edited by John V. Denson (Mises Institute, 2001).
This 826-page tome turns conventional presidency history on its
head to tell the truth about the power-grabs and power-abuses that
have been made possible by this office.
Still,
there are a few bright moments in the history of the presidency.
Grover Cleveland was sent a bill by Congress that would have used
tax dollars for drought relief in Texas. He vetoed it, saying:
"I
do not believe that the power and duty of the general Government
ought to be extended to the relief of individual suffering. ...
A prevalent tendency to disregard the limited mission of this power
should, I think, be steadfastly resisted. ... Federal aid in such
cases encourages the expectation of paternal care on the part of
the Government and weakens the sturdiness of our National character."
If
Bush really wants to be a great president, that is the view that
he should adopt. And he should stick to it through thick and thin.
June
29, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail], is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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