The
Nanny State
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
Whenever some
new perceived crisis comes along, Americans typically look to the
state as a problem solver. Are we running out of oil? The government
should increase CAFE standards so that cars are more fuel-efficient.
Is gas too expensive? The government should limit the profits of
oil companies. Is the planet getting warmer? The government should
mandate reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Are too many Americans
without health insurance? The government should expand Medicaid
and SCHIP to address the problem. Will taking drugs destroy your
life? The government should ban them.
My applause
is muted, however, for conservatives who rightly criticize the states
decreeing solutions to these problems. Most conservatives
never met a federal program they didnt like as long as it
furthered their agenda. As we have seen regarding its support for
the Iraq war and lack of support for presidential candidate Ron
Paul, the conservative movement has of late exalted the state and
its leaders above all else, including liberty. As Lew Rockwell of
the Ludwig von Mises Institute has explained,
The
problem with American conservatism is that it hates the left more
than the state, loves the past more than liberty, feels a greater
attachment to nationalism than to the idea of self-determination,
believes brute force is the answer to all social problems, and
thinks it is better to impose truth rather than risk losing one
soul to heresy. It has never understood the idea of freedom as
a self-ordering principle of society. It has never seen the state
as the enemy of what conservatives purport to favor. It has always
looked to presidential power as the saving grace of what is right
and true about America.
Thus, the same
conservatives who condemn the welfare state (while typically accepting
it anyway) have no trouble condoning the nanny state. Liberals,
of course, generally accept both, although they can be quite selective
when it comes to the extent of the nanny states reach.
A nanny state
is a government that majors in micro-managing the behavior of its
citizens. From federal warning labels to state seat-belt laws to
local school-district bans on dodgeball and tag, instead of father
knows best it is government that knows best.
Making people
criminals
The nanny state
garners the most support when it comes to criminalizing the advertising,
sale, or use of what it deems to be harmful substances.
Although tobacco
isnt illegal (cigarette taxes are a nice source of revenue
for federal and state governments), cigarette advertising has been
banned on television and radio since 1971. Ads for smokeless tobacco
ceased in 1986. On the state level and local level, more than 50
percent of Americans live in an area where smoking anywhere outside
their own home including bars and restaurants has
basically been banned completely. A law that took effect in California
earlier this year outlawed smoking in a car in the presence of a
minor.
I knew that
the drinking age in my state (Florida) was 21. I knew that alcohol
could not be sold after a certain time at night. I knew that alcohol
could not be purchased on Sunday until after a certain time. But
I didnt know that many parents in Florida who probably support
those laws were themselves criminals because they let their children
have a beer or a glass of wine at home. I have seen posted in several
convenience stores around the state of Florida the following sign:
Notice.
It is unlawful for anyone (including parents) to sell, give, or
serve an alcoholic beverage to a person under 21 years of age.
I confirmed
that this is in fact the case by consulting Florida statute 562.11,
which states that it is unlawful for any person to sell, give,
serve, or permit to be served alcoholic beverages to a person under
21 years of age. Those under 21 who were served alcohol would
also be criminals under Florida statute 562.111, which states that
it is unlawful for any person under the age of 21 years, except
a person employed under the provisions of s. 562.13 acting in the
scope of her or his employment, to have in her or his possession
alcoholic beverages. Yet, even though possessing and drinking
alcoholic beverages is permitted for adults in the state of Florida,
making more than 100 gallons of your own beer or wine is forbidden
by state statute and federal law, as is selling any of it.
The war on
drugs is another of the governments bogus wars that we are
all too familiar with. It, more than anything else, is responsible
for the rise of a police state in America. It has also resulted
in a prison state. The United States, with less than 5 percent of
the worlds population, has almost a quarter of the worlds
prisoners. The United States has one of the highest per-capita prison
populations in the world. One in 32 American adults is in prison,
on probation, or on parole. Yet more than half of all U.S. prisoners
are incarcerated for low-level drug offenses.
The nanny state
is at its prime when it comes to monitoring consensual behavior
that some people find objectionable, e.g., gambling, pornography,
and prostitution. Since I live in Pensacola, Florida, I will give
some examples from incidents that happened here within the last
year.
Four businesses
were shut down, and their computers, cash, and records were seized,
following an undercover investigation of illegal gambling. The state
attorneys office alleged that special plastic credit-type
cards were being used at the four establishments to go online and
gamble for cash prizes. The computer games replicated the sounds
of a slot machine, with the clamor of bells greeting a winning spin.
Since the state of Florida has a lottery, it is obvious that gambling
itself is not the problem. The problem is gambling in which the
state doesnt get a cut of the action.
Before the
illegal-gambling crackdown, five men were arrested for illegally
producing and distributing pornographic videos. The films were made
by adults in their homes or at local hotels and then posted on the
Internet where subscribers paid $30 a month to watch them. The state
attorneys office charged the men with racketeering, which
means that they face up to 60 years in prison, despite the fact
that hardcore pornographic magazines can be purchased at newsstands
and convenience stores throughout Pensacola and the state of Florida.
More than a
dozen men from Pensacola were recently arrested across the border
in Alabama following a two-week, undercover sex sting. They are
all being charged with soliciting prostitution, a misdemeanor. Yet,
picking up the tab for dinner and a movie for the same purpose does
not violate the law. What makes this case even more egregious is
that it was undercover female officers posing as prostitutes who
ensnared the men.
The worlds
oldest profession is, of course, not limited to Pensacola, Florida.
Down in Orlando three employees of the Orlando Weekly newspaper
were charged with aiding in the commission of prostitution because
they helped prostitutes design ads masked as escort services. Once
again, female undercover officers were the ones who placed the ads
in the newspaper.
Examples like
these in Florida could be multiplied many times over if we looked
at what goes on in the other 49 states and the District of Columbia.
Yet, the nature of crime, the nature of government, and the nature
of liberty are contrary to what we call law enforcement.
Vices and
crimes
The problem
with the moral crusades of the nanny state is that vices are not
true crimes. As the 19th-century classical-liberal political philosopher
Lysander Spooner explained it,
Vices
are those acts by which a man harms himself or his property. Crimes
are those acts by which one man harms the person or property of
another.
Every crime
needs a victim. Victimless crimes such as drug use, purchasing beer
on Sunday morning, giving your teenager a glass of wine, making
a pornographic video, gambling without the states permission,
or using the services of a prostitute have no victim. They are consensual
acts between two or more parties that harm only the sensibilities
of puritanism, which, as H.L. Mencken once said, is the haunting
fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy. There should be
no vice agents, no undercover sting operations, and no jail time
for growing a plant.
Coercing
morality
There are two
reasons that no one should look to the government as a nanny to
enforce morality. First, the purpose of government is supposed to
be the protection of life, liberty, and property from the violence
or fraud of others. It is simply not the business of government
to prohibit the advertising, sale, and use of what it deems to be
harmful substances. Likewise, the government should not be concerned
with regulating any activity that takes place between consenting
adults. A government with the power to outlaw harmful substances
and immoral practices is a government with the power to ban any
substance or practice. A nanny state is a perversion of government.
Second, all governments, including the U.S. government, eventually
degenerate into the greatest violators of the life, liberty, and
property they are supposed to protect. As former Foundation for
Economic Education president Richard Ebeling has said,
There
has been no greater threat to life, liberty, and property throughout
the ages than government. Even the most violent and brutal private
individuals have been able to inflict only a mere fraction of
the harm and destruction that have been caused by the use of power
by political authorities.
The state is
some nanny. It is the only nanny that forces you to hire her. It
is the only nanny that employs coercion, compulsion, threats, fines,
and imprisonment. The state is the last entity that should be entrusted
with enforcing morality.
Not
only are questionable substances and practices none of the states
business, they are none of anyone elses business either. The
problem is that since the beginning of time there has been no shortage
of busybodies who thought it was their business to mind everyone
elses business. A busybody who becomes a government bureaucrat
merely exacerbates the problem. Liberty means liberty for everyone,
even those who use substances and engage in practices that others
in society dont use or find offensive. Our liberty is compromised
and society is made worse off when we deprive a select few of liberty
who are not themselves violating anyones liberty.
The libertarian
position is the only consistent position. But, it should be emphasized,
libertarianism is not libertinism. Libertarianism is a political
philosophy, not a lifestyle. The essence of libertarianism is that
it is wrong to threaten or initiate violence against a person or
his property. As explained by Murray Rothbard, one of the 20th centurys
greatest proponents of liberty, libertarianism holds
that the only proper role of violence is to defend person and property
against violence, that any use of violence that goes beyond such
just defense is itself aggressive, unjust, and criminal. Libertarianism,
therefore, is a theory which states that everyone should be free
of violent invasion, should be free to do as he sees fit except
invade the person or property of another.
A nanny state
is hostile to liberty. Any attempt to institute or continue it should
be opposed, root and branch. Government intervention is never the
solution; it is always part of the problem.
February
16, 2009
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from Pensacola, FL. His latest book is a new and greatly
expanded edition of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2009 Future of Freedom Foundation
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M. Vance Archives
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