Is the Freedom Movement Really Ready for Freedom?
Ron Paul’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination has ignited a revolution. For the first time in a century, a real movement against the entrenched system in Washington has arisen, and it is a movement of capable people who don’t just complain - they get things done. After a complete debacle for the neo-cons in Nevada, the Republican Party has actually had to mobilize itself in several states to prevent Ron Paul supporters from taking over state conventions and voting in their own delegates. They have resorted to breaking their own rules to prevent a party takeover. This is a sign that their political days are numbered.
Almost universally, Ron Paul supporters oppose the Iraq war. Whether conservative, liberal, moderate, or independent, Ron Paul has brought together a coalition that recognizes that the United States government had no right to invade Iraq. Regardless of their positions on other issues, people of all parties in this movement deserve high marks for taking a stand against the Iraq war.
Similarly, we are almost universally in agreement in our opposition to the expansion of executive powers, especially insofar as they have allowed the government to compromise our privacy and to threaten habeas corpus. These are direct attacks on our lives, and we have been right to defend ourselves against them. It is truly the good fight, and we will win.
So, we are certainly united in what we are against, but are we united in what we are for? Are we all really for free markets, for truly limited government, and for individual liberty? Do we all really understand what that means, and what responsibility that places upon us? Are we really ready to live in a truly free country?
Certainly the first inclination is to answer “yes” to all of the above. However, I wonder if the majority of the freedom movement is really ready for life without big government.
Are we ready to live without Medicare and Medicaid, and depend on the free market to determine the distribution of medical care? Supporting the programs means taking the money for them at gunpoint from our fellow citizens, so the moral question is easily answered. Sound economic theory as well as historical evidence indicates that the poor and elderly would have more access and higher quality care without these programs. Are we ready to trust the free market and private charities with medical care for the poor and elderly?
Are we ready to live life without a “safety net?” Like medical care, the benefits of traditional welfare are also funded by the coercive extortion of money. Similar appeals to economic theory and history prove that the poor would be less numerous and would again experience an improving quality of life without these programs. However, are we ready to admit that no one has the right to even the basic necessities of life?
Are we ready to take full responsibility to support ourselves for our entire lives? Despite the government’s official fairy tale, there is no “trust fund” for social security. The money collected from taxpayers today goes directly to pay today’s beneficiaries. While the program actually runs a surplus (although it will soon become insolvent), the government spends 100% of that surplus on other budget items, as it always has. At the end of the day, social security is just another government redistribution program funded by extorted money. Any financial analysis would show that the money collected from working Americans for social security would be better invested almost anywhere else. Are we ready to admit that no one has the right to retirement benefits, and enter our golden years without social security?
Here is one that even I have trouble overriding my own programming on. Are we ready to get government completely out of education? Are we ready to admit that, like medical care or any other good or service that is produced by somebody else, that no one has a right to education? Are we ready to trust the free market for this as well?
To the average American, the questions I have asked would sound like complete lunacy. However, to someone who understands and accepts the principles of liberty and wishes to live by them, I argue that the answer to every one of those questions must be “yes.” Reason, history, and economics all tell us that these programs are immoral and destructive, not only to society as a whole, but even to the recipients of the benefits. Only our conditioned fear tells us that we cannot live without them. Are we ready to overcome that fear?
There are certainly many more intrusions by the federal government into our private lives, but I have chosen these programs because this is where the money is. Despite what we are led to believe, the Iraq and Afghanistan wars amount to only 5% of the $3 trillion budget. Ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would eliminate less than half of this year’s deficit. The entire military budget makes up only 20%, and some of that would still be necessary even if we brought our troops home from all 130 countries that they are stationed in.
By contrast, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Welfare, and the Department of Education combine for over 55% of our $3 trillion budget (The Department of Education is only 2%, but after that no other expenditure has a significant percentage at all). Without them, there would be no deficit. Without these programs we could eliminate the income tax and begin paying down the national debt at the same time. The financial benefits to our country would be staggering.
I am interested in the answers that CDR members would give to the questions I’ve posed. Can you answer every one of them yes? If not, I would like to hear your arguments supporting why you cannot, and specifically how you would reconcile the programs with the principles of individual liberty, property rights, and the proper limits of government. In a free society, how does government derive the right to seize the funding for these programs from its citizens? Can we ever really be free while they exist?
output- Login to post comments






















I can't think of 1 good thing
the government has done for me
but I can think of 100 things they have done to me!!!!
Think your Free?
Try not paying your income taxes.
Think you own your home?
Try not paying your property taxes.
Want to buy something?
Try not paying the sales tax.
Taxes are evil. Donations are good.
LOL Treber
There is a good line in one of Ron Paul's essays. He is making the point that all government action is done by force. He says "taxes are collected by force. If they were voluntary, they'd call them donations." One of my favorite RP moments.
Perhaps we could call our taxes donations and write them off our taxes? :)
Well...
I think Americans aren't ready for it yet, because we're so entrenched in this statist, socialist system. But, it would take some time and a transition period to move us to that point, so I think the process would be gradual anyway.
But yes, I think things would be much better off with a free market, less taxes and no handouts.
And one other thing... are we ready to end the drug war? The one that wastes billions of dollars and fills up our prisons with non-violent offenders? We have 25% of the world's prison population, and only 5% of the total population. We have 1 1/2 times as many prisoners as China, and they have 5 times the population.
NO.
Until a vast majority of the population is ready to live under Gods Law, the Bible, there will be no liberty. Why? Liberty starts with self government, self government requires a virtious moral foundation, and only religion can provide a strong loving moral foundation. George Washington's Farwell Address expresses these ideas clearly. Besides former America, you essentially have the alternative, a big stick, coming to a neighborhood near you.
Gov't is the worst way to do anything
The Revolution is important because coercion is uncivilized, and government is nothing but a scheme to do things coercively. Thus, "that government is best, which governs least." Here's an excerpt from a column at STR that expands on this truth in some detail; the title is "The Worst Way to Do Anything: Why a Healthy World Requires Freedom from Coercion"
http://www.strike-the-roo...
[excerpt begins]
Coercive government always proves to be the worst way to do anything peaceful and civilized; the combination of coercion and top-down central planning ensures this. Furthermore, everyone knows that government is the worst way to do things, even though most people don't seem to realize that they know it.
You can prove to someone that he or she understands the superiority of non-government approaches with a single question:
"How often do you voluntarily send money (that is, non-tax money) to assist government programs?"
The answer, for nearly everyone, is "never." But ask whether the person voluntarily supports private, non-government efforts for provision of goods and services, or for charity and disaster relief, and the answer is very different.
[more; see link above for full column]
Getting rid of the Fed
isn't enough. We have to get rid of the $1.5 trillion in government spending on welfare programs that give the Fed a reason to inflate the currency.
Also, remember that we had bank failures before the Federal Reserve. Throughout history, calls for a central government bank have always arisen because of the bank failures that are inevitably caused by fractional reserve banking.
So, only a 100% reserve ratio for banks AND the elimination of welfare can really save us.
When we have a 100% reserve ratio, we won't need a central bank.
I'm ready
Just last night I wrote about "the revolution" not being ready for real freedom. They were worried about racism, as if the government could fix that. It will take about 2 generations to clean up the mess we are in and a ton of education from the true freedom lovers. The internet is our best chance for spreading the word. If they ever stop our freedom of speech on the internet we are doomed. So the next time someone wants to regulate the internet (no matter what the cause) be adamant about stopping it. Yes that even means porn and gambling, you do gooders. Freedom is scary to most libertarians but not to an anarchist.
conditioning
yes, rollo, we're all overcoming some strong conditioning, and it isn't easy! It took me a while to get past no public education, when there shouldn't be any difference between that and government providing any other service - it's all stealing! Be patient with us libertarians! :)
Skeptic
You are well on the path to freedom. It took me about 2 or 3 years to break the shackles of force....... aka as goverment. I would go back and forth between liberty and force. It was tough to imagine a life without coercion. When you find it you will never go back. This also happened to me in the "religious" sense back in 2002. I was living under the law with God and then found true freedom. It is a very eye opening experience and has changed the way I look at everyone and everythng. This also took a couple of years. Now I live in total freedom with God and hopefully someday with my fellow man. Keep up the good work!
Just Get Rid Of The Federal Reserve
and we'd all be rich. Yes, it is that simple.
How does a 20-hour work week sound? Does that give you anxiety?
Surely there isn't anything
Surely there isn't anything at all that Federal government is good at besides spreading death and misery. When I was a young man, more than 40 years ago, there was a half dozen free clinics in San Diego where a person without money could get free medical care for anything from a cold to a broken leg. We HAD "universal health care." Now, thanks to government intervention into the field of medicine, there is not a single one. And education? How well has Federal intervention done with that? We've gone from one of the most well educated populaces in the world to one of the most ignorant in just a few short decades. Even if you don't believe that the free market could do better (and history proves you wrong), then you surely must realize that the only the thing could be worse would be more government intervention.
www.paulforronpaul.com
Yes, I'm ready. Used to be,
Yes, I'm ready. Used to be, the Government mandating what children learn in school was a tactic used by Communists. It may still be. The less the corrupt officials have their sticky and unconstitutional hands in my pie the better I like it.
For my personal case, I can
For my personal case, I can answer each question "Yes, I'm ready" but I'm a young guy who hasn't been or become dependent on any of these programs.
I think most of the people in the movement could answer yes to these questions but most of the people in the country couldn't. This is why Dr. Paul advocates reducing the military budget, cutting a few departments (like education, energy) and allowing the younger generations to opt out of the social programs. Its going to take 2+ generations to get rid of all the social programs that have been implemented since the turn of the last century. If we save the money else ware and transition out of them we can avoid a lot of pain.