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Note: Howell-at-the-Moon column has moved to The Nolan Chart website. The archived columns/blogs here pre-date the move. Visit our new column @ lp.c howelling-at-the-moon.
Howell-at-the-Moonarchive !Libertarian Rants! John Wingspread Howell
Water Balloons and Bailouts Why you really don't want more regulation. You really don't! Or maybe you do want to move back in with Mom and Dad. From
the perspective of a free market absolutist, as most Libertarians are,
all the clamour for more regulation as a knee jerk response to the
recent financial melt-down is humorous-- at least it would be if it
wasn't so serious. My response to the "Regulate!" cheerleaders is this: It's simple. Have you grown up or do you still live with your parents?
Remember
when you were a teenager and you couldn't wait to get out of the house
so you could make your own decisions, earn your own money, spend your
own money as you saw fit, basically live and manage your own life for a
change? Did that work both ways or did it work the way the U.S. economy
is working? You were glad to have the independence when it came to
earning, keeping, and spending your money, but when you blew the
money, were you equally happy to have your liberty? Did you live with
the consequences, or did you go crawling back to Mom and Dad and ask
for a bailout? And if you did, did they oblige? Perhaps that is why we
have this problem. You
see, as much as we think we want the Federal Government (or state or
local governments for that matter) to be ever vigilant at the bottom of
every cliff to catch us when we jump off, or fall, or are pushed... we
really don't-- unless we really enjoyed living with Mom and Dad and
being subject to their rules, once we were old enough to live on our
own.. If the government acts like Mom and Dad, beware. You could be grounded. The government that does everything for you, can take everything from you.
And isn't that what the demagogues are saying now? The government needs
to clean up this mess but as a result, they need to clamp down more. No
more late dates. There will be a curfew. And give us the car keys.
You'll have to earn it back. Is
that what we want? And how does that work? The Congress of pork and
earmarks, of defecit spending out the wazoo, and the President who
makes Lyndon Johnson's expansion of government and deficits look like
an exercise in restraint by comparison, suddenly acting like the
disgusted parents, shaking their heads and wagging their fingers at the
rest of us for blowing the budget? What makes us think they can help
us? The only regulation that will truly get us out of this jam is
regulation of government. Government needs to cut up their own credit
cards. They need to give the kids the keys. And we think they can help us? Some
of the key financial players in the country may have acted like
children but the solution is not to treat them-- and the rest of us--
like children but to demand that they grow up. Sorry son, we've already
turned your room into a quilting studio, you'll have to find your own
place to stay. Sorry daughter, you blew your month's allowance in one
night. Oh well, you'll have to figure something out on your own. No
more advances. In other words, tough love. We could use a little more
of that right now. But won't that bring down the entire financial system? Make us all poor? Turn the whole nation into a slum (over time)? I
don't know. What I do know is it doesn't go any good to squeeze a water
balloon. If you squeeze a water balloon what happens? You have complete
control of the area you squeeze, but all the water just goes to another
part of the balloon and changes shape. To say that the economy is a
water balloon is a little simplistic, I admit, but not really. Any
attempt to regulate a free market is just squeezing a water balloon. If
you squeeze here, you just change the shape of your problem, you move
the bad money somewhere else in the system, get rid of one bulge and
create another. The best way to handle a water balloon is not to
squeeze it. Let it find its own shape and density and distribution of
density. Let it float, let it fly, let it crash and burst, but let it
go. Unless
we are going to scrap the free market all together and adopt a Soviet
style planned economy there is no possibility that regulation will
work. Regulation creates at least one loophole for every loophole it
fills. It creates one bulge for every bulge it squeezes. Every time we
intervene in the markets, we create a whole new set of unintended
consequences that usually exacerbate the problems we were initially
trying to solve. So
what's the answer? Growing up. We're all adults now. The economy, the
markets, are free living beings. They correct themselves, find their
own efficiencies, if we leave them alone. Every attempt to tweak,
adjust, control, limit, just creates ripple effect after ripple
effect. Regulation stifles creativity among those who would save us by
finding a new way to generate wealth, but doesn't stop those who are
looking for unscrupulous ways to find and exploit the new bulge in the
water balloon. I'm
not saying there isn't a place for scrutinizing the markets and the
players. That should be done, very closely and carefully, by private
initiative. There's the next big business idea for someone who can be
the first to try it. The next Bill Gates could be the person who
creates a company to provide private, independent ratings of financial
companies that actually expose the vulnerabilities. For instance, if
there were a private company that put a stamp (like the Good
Housekeeping Seal of Approval) on every legitimate financial deal, then
the world would have known, for example, that AIG did not have anywhere
near the capital reserves required to "insure" the mortgage debt they
claimed to insure. So grow up. Ask questions. Don't accept what someome
tells you without getting independent verification. Don't trust the
government to protect you from being the next victim. The government is
just as likely to be in on the fix as to be the fixer. Do your own due
dilligence. Hire someone who is capable to do it for you if you don't
feel capable yourself. Buyer beware! You may think this isn't much of a solution, but do you really want to move back in with Mom and Dad? Howoooo! John Howell-at-the-Moon other "Howelling" columns re the Bailout
See Mary Ruwart's comments on this subject at her campaign website.
07/22/08
by Mary J. Ruwart, Ph.D. What if We Could Opt Out? Have We Been Missing the Point? Instead of Changing the Country, We Just Resign from It The Liberty Option Minneapolis September 1, 2008 It hit me like a ton of gold bricks. All this time we've been struggling to change the government, to educate society to help us change the government, to win our liberty back. But maybe we've taken the wrong approach. What brought this to mind was a comment a reader made on my column "Ron Paul and The Libertarian Party" at The Nolan Chart. He said if the Libertarian Party ever achieved parity with the big two, "you" (meaning me) wouldn't belong to it. He said what gives Ron Paul his power is that he "leaves us alone." I thought about that for a while. It really bothered me-- the idea that libertarians function best in a post-party purgatory where we tell the truth about liberty, about the illusion that the United States is still "a free country," but have given up the goal of gaining liberty through electoral victory. It bothered me so much I wrote a response to my responses. I said "It takes a village to raise a child and it takes a party to defeat a party." (Ron Paul and Party Politics at the Nolan Chart.) And then the light went on. What if we could just opt out? more We Say Republicrats for a Reason
Not a Dime's Worth of Difference The Opportunity is There
August 27, 2008 Denver, Colorado
Barak had me in tears. Goosebumps too. It was a historic moment. It made me proud to be an American. No sarcasm. I agreed with a lot of what he said about foreign policy and John McCain. Most of what he said was so last-century Nanny State I would h ave normally needed to puke, but he pulled it off. Hit it out of the park. It's history. I'm glad I'm alive to see it. And I thought that would be it for this kind of excitement for a while. Then McCain played his own card. I found myself falling in love with Sarah Palin. Any Libertarian has to love a woman who said no to pork she was being spoonfed, who took on the Good Old Alaska Boys and won, who is a lifetime NRA member, and who gave back extra state revenue. And I found myself-- not crying this time, but at least getting goosebumps. History again. More cracks in the glass ceiling. You have to love it. complete article my related article at Nolan Chart How's this for a "Rescue?" Congress Slips IRS-Trojan Horse into the "Housing Rescue Bill" It's 1984 in the People's Republic Through the Looking Glass August 17, 2008 I don't know when it started but for years now our Congress has been taking lessons from Lewis Carroll, George Orwell and various current and former Communist regimes in the titles they choose for various legislation. You know the drill. If you're paying farmers not to plant crops, you call it the Defense of Farming Bill. And so on and so on and scooby doobie do! So buried in the current legislation to "bail out" people who face foreclosure on their home loans is a provision to require that credit card companies provide their customers and the IRS with a complete printout of every charge made on plastic. One might not realize the importance of semantics to democracy but it is crucial. Governments are not immune to "truth in advertising" requirments. Most of us, regardless of religous affiliation or the lack of which are famialiar with one scriptural quotation, "You will know the truth and the truth will set you free." The opposite is also true. Falsehood is the stuff of totalitarianism. Why do you think the expression "a chain of lies" was coined? Lies become chains constraining individual freedom. read complete article
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Are we the "party of Drugs and Prostitution?" August 16, 2008 A funny thing happened to me on the way back from the Forum. In fact it happened two months after the fact. Apparently someone affiliated with the company I represent in my primary business read an article in a major media outlet that described the party in terms of some of the vendors, exhibitors, and sponsors at the Convention. The author of the article enjoyed the opportunity to engage in yellow journalism by spending a disproportionate amount of time describing a particular sponsor who happened to be a business engaged in the promotion of the art of seductive dance. After describing that booth, there was a more cursory summary of the Marijuana Policy Project, etc. and then a reference to my own booth. I was accurately but derisively quoted as promoting the ultimate Libertarian asset as a shelter where the "government can't take your money." (Which is absolutely true.) If I had any doubts about the compliance department at the company I represent being able to conduct a first class intelligence operation, they have been completely put to rest. It took them a couple of months but eventually the attorneys at the home office were able to identify me as the person who had a company booth at the convention. Humorously, they had not been able to find the article that originally whistled me, although I was later able to find it in three seconds by Goggling a combination of four key words. But I digress. Read the entire article.
This is Your Brain on Government
Remember the old Commercial, "This is Your Brain on Drugs?" How 'bout this Public Service Announcement?
The Government wants to do more than fry your brain, they want to box it up.
August 6, 2008
Did you hear the one about the politician who wanted to think outside of the box? ... I didn't think so. And it's not funny. This is how the existing order stays in power, and why, no matter how much, how loud, or how long the major party candidates talk about change-- they don't really mean it.
How do I know they don't mean it? Because it would make them endangered species. It would be the end of the world as they know it. And as we know it. Our gain, but their loss.
To prove it I will challenge you to cite one example of any major politician or candidate from either major party who has proposed solutions to our economic crisis that don't involve taxation, regulation, bail outs and/or loan guarantees. Or how about energy? Which major candidate has proposed a complete and comprehensive end to tax credits, incentives, etc. that favor one type of energy source over another? Has anyone ever wondered how much gasoline would cost if it had to compete on a level playing field with any other type of fuel? And what about health care. Where's the creative solution there? Has anyone proposed a solution that has nothing to do with health insurance, public or private? read entire article
IRS to Monitor Credit Card Transactions No Big Surprise, But Will We Stand for This? Makes You Want to Go Underground Forget Worrying About Identity Theft... July 26,2008 I have to check this out, but I have it from a reliable source that the headline is the new policy at the Illegal Robbery Service. So your government is spying on citizens on two fronts now: communications and purchase transactions. As bad as the former is, I would expect the latter to be much worse for more people. An American in Berlin And Baghdad, And Jerusalem, and... Obama's Trip from a Libertarian Perspective Ending Foreign Entanglements, Rebuilding Foreign Relationships July 26, 2008 What does Barak Obama's World Tour have in common with Libertarian approaches to foreign policy? He understands we need to end unilateral meddling in the world, and the damage that is done not only to our reputation but to our national security, by going around the world poking a stick in every hornet's nest. He has made it a top priority to repair relationships and end foreign some foreign entanglements. As the American public focuses on the crash and burn approach to foregin policy the current administration has carried out, and the scorched earth policy related to it, Libertarians have an opportunity to remind our friends, family, co-workers, neighbors, etc. that there is much damage to be repaired, regardless of who inhabits the White House, before our nation enjoys its prior place of respect in the world. A good place to start is to get the bull out of the china shops and start helping the shop owners clean up the mess.read entire article Transportation Security
Airport Harassment Highway Robbery
But it won't spoil my vacation!
July 17, 2008
I just got back from a three-city air circuit and am getting ready to take my family on a ten day, six thousand mile circle tour of the American West in the SUV we bought this past April. It takes a lot of determination to hold on to the American Dream of free travel (and I mean free in the sense of liberty, not the absence of cost) but dammit, I'm going to!
You could say this is a continuation of my column on attitude. The United States has led the world in prosperity and power for most of our history because we have been a nation of persistence, determination, and optimism. We never met a crisis we couldn't endure. We have been undaunted by obstacles. We have found away around road blocks. We have reinvented the wheel whenever we've needed a better mousetrap. And we have traveled when, where, and how we have wanted to no matter what! read entire article The United Whiners of America? (Yes, Mr. Gramm, but we said it First!)
What Ever Happened to American Ingenuity... Optimism... "Can Do" Spirit? How the Mighty Have Fallen
A Nation of Energy Vampires!
Reposted July 10, 2008 Editor's Note: As much as it creeps us out to side with Phil Gramm, we said the same thing two weeks before he did. In fact, he's probably plaguerising us. But the media, who fan the flames of our national whining, don't get it, so they castigate him.They miss the point. Since it's dominating the current news cycle, we thought we'd repost what we said on the subject.
June 23, 2008
The news today, any news. From Fox to CNN, NPR, it doesn't matter. Oil and food prices, airline woes, subprime mortgages, layoffs. The tone and slant is the same. We're drowning. We're losing. We're broke. We hear story after story of how someone can't afford to shop at Whole Foods, others cancel vacations or staying close to home. It's a mess. Life's tough all over.
And our politicians pander. They play to this. They try to outdo each other with attacks on speculators, oil companies, the government for not doing something about it. They toss windfall profits taxes and suspension of gasoline tax at us like candy to children as the political parade comes past. And therein lies the problem. read entire article |
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