Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Phyrric Victory:The Folly of the Afghan War

If [America] becomes militant, it will be because its people choose to become such; it will be because they think that war and warlikeness are desirable.-William Graham Sumner

Last Friday marked the 10th Anniversary of the Afghan War. On October 7th, The United States invaded the landlocked country of Afghanistan in order to topple the Taliban regime, which did not actually participate in the 9/11 attacks. So far, around  1,791 American troops have died as a result of the war. And after 10-years of a brutal occupation, Osama Bin Laden has been killed after evading capture by U.S. forces. War-related violence has increased by 39% in Afghanistan.

What has the U.S. reaped because of this war? Thousands of American soldiers have been killed or severely wounded; thousands of Afghans have died and perhaps thousands if not millions of Afghans have been displaced from their homes; more enemies have been created who hate the United States and its' foreign policy; and blowback. The war-powers of Congress over the President have been further eviscerated. Overall, this war has made the United States less safe, less prosperous, and less free. But how is the Afghan War a disaster for America, while at the same time being an immoral war?

Constitutional Problems

One problem with the Afghan war involves its' dubious constitutionality. According to Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, Congress has the power "to declare war". George Washington, the first President of these United States, said this of the war powers and the Constitution:

The constitution vests the power of declaring war in Congress; therefore no offensive expedition of importance can be undertaken until after they shall have deliberated upon the subject and authorized such a measure.

But in the case of the Afghanistan, war has not been officially or constitutionally declared. But Congress did pass a resolution of Authorization for the Use of Military Force. How is this unconstitutional? The Authorization for the Use of Military Force is unconstitutional because it basically delegates the Congressional war-making power to the President. The AUMF allows the President to use military force if and how he deems necessary, but Congress has no power to delegate its' war-making power to the President.

Also, since the government of Afghanistan (which at the time was the Taliban regime) did not actually attack the United States, a declaration of war against Afghanistan would be very difficult to rationalize. As the Founders understood, the federal government was limited to protecting these United States from invasion by a foreign government. They understood that the proper and constitutional foreign policy for America would be that of noninterventionism, whereby the country would swear off invading foreign lands to export our goodness, change the regimes of other countries, or free oppressed peoples. Thus, many early Americans understood that war should only be entered to when the country was invaded by a foreign government. That is, war had to be defensive, and all other options had to be exhausted. It was understood that a declaration of war by Congress would come up only under these circumstances.

But the Afghan War, while on the surface may appear to be defensive, was not actually self-defensive. The Afghan government had not attacked the United States. As Jacob Hornberger notes:

Actually, the Taliban did not participate in the 9/11 attacks. If the U.S. Empire had even one iota of evidence supporting that thesis, does anyone honestly believe that President George H.W. Bush would have gone to the United Nations to seek permission to invade Afghanistan? Of course not. When another nation-state attacks the United States, like Japan did in 1941, you can rest assured that the United States is going to defend itself without seeking permission of the United Nations.

Don’t forget, also, that the U.S. government furnished millions of dollars in foreign aid to Afghanistan prior to the 9/11 attacks.

So the U.S. is not waging a war of self-defense because the Taliban did not invade or attack the United States.

The Costs of War

One thing that is sometimes ignored is the enormous toll that war, especially the Afghan war, has on our economy. Spending on war and "defense" (read:empire), has drastically increased, especially under the Obama administration. As Anthony Gregory has written:

spending on Afghanistan has sharply increased. The most expensive year during the Bush presidency was in FY2008, with a price tag of $43.5 billion. In FY2009, that number rose quickly to $59.9 billion. In FY2010 the war was costing the United States $93.8 billion, and the cost is projected to be $118.6 billion for FY2011 and $113.7 billion for FY2012.

Anthony Gregory further explains the costs of war:

We can also simply look at the effect on the defense budget over the last decade. Exorbitant Pentagon spending has always been touted as necessary to protect the country, yet ten years ago it was suddenly decided that this huge price tag was not nearly enough. Apparently all that defense and intelligence spending before 9/11, which failed to prevent the attack, was for something other than defense. In 2001, adjusted for inflation to today's dollars, the defense budget was just over $400 billion. After 9/11 the budget began rising at about eight percent a year. The latest funding request was for $707 billion. This doesn't include the ballooning security-related expenses in the Department of Homeland Security, State Department, or Department of Energy's nuclear weapon operations.

What was the full opportunity cost of all these wars? Few economists ask this question. What if these resources had been available for private savings and investment? What if the Americans and foreigners fighting had instead been working in the commercial sector, producing wealth? Perhaps the financial situation would look considerably better. The government is notorious for diverting money and energy from productive uses toward wasteful ones. Nothing is as destructive as war. Even the most just war imaginable is a disaster for the economy, as the great economist Ludwig von Mises explained.

War is perhaps the greatest disaster for a free-market economy. In war, government redirects economic resources into the hands of the State. These economic resources are then wasted on fancy military equipment and weapons that are sent overseas and eventually destroyed. Overall, war is a net negative for the economy.
Lost Liberty

Every President, every Congressman, every member of the armed forces, has taken an oath to protect and defend the U.S. Constitution. The constitutional question should be the first litmus test in examining all policies and laws enacted by the federal government. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the federal government has waged a war on the Bill of Rights. As with any crisis, the government, especially the federal government, will exploit any crisis or emergency to gain more power and steal the liberties of the people. As James Madison said in opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798: "Perhaps it is a universal truth that the loss of liberty at home is to be charged to provisions against danger real or pretended from abroad."

The PATRIOT Act, which was passed by Congress on October 15, 2001, is perhaps one of the most abominable violations of the U.S. Constitution in our time. One effect that the PATRIOT Act has is that it assaults the Fourth Amendment which states that "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." But under the PATRIOT ACT, federal agents are allowed to engage in "sneak and peak" searches and seizures, which, as Anthony Gregory explains "allows the feds to come into your home, search your residence, and leave without telling you for up to six months." It forces businesses to spy on their customers and hand over information to the Justice Department. Surveillance, wiretapping, and warrantless searches have increased as a result of the Act, thereby circumventing the Fourth Amendment.

Self written National Security Letters violate the First Amendment by forbidding those who are being monitored (read: spied on) by the FBI from telling anyone about it, even their spouse or lawyer. The National Security Administration spies on Americans telecommunications without a warrant, another violation of the Fourth Amendment. The Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment has been violated by the federal government's use of torture against detainees, especially Guantanamo detainees. And the prison at Guantanomo Bay, which is a violation of Cuba's sovereignty, has not been closed down, and is main warehouse for captured "enemy combatants".

Constitutional lawyer Bruce Fein summarizes some of the PATRIOT Act's assaults on the Constitution:

Section 206 of the Patriot Act authorizing roving wiretaps to collect foreign intelligence; section 215 authorizing orders to seize any "tangible thing"like books or computer hard drives to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities; section 505 authorizing National Security Letters to seize customer records of financial institutions, credit bureaus, and telecommunications providers by the government's assertion of relevance to preventing international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities; and, section 6001 of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 authorizing surveillance against hypothetical "lone wolf"international terrorists are all abusive of citizen liberty because they encroach on the right to be left alone without probable cause to believe the target is implicated in crime.

Furthermore, as Anthony Gregory notes:

Perhaps the freedom being defended is the long-celebrated right to due process and habeas corpus for those detained by the government. That would be hard to reconcile, however, with the Bush administration’s roundup of hundreds of innocent aliens right after 9/11, the “material witness” doctrine that allowed for indefinite detention without charge, or the “enemy combatant” designation that, when pinned on someone by the president, even on a U.S. citizen, means there will be a total disregard for traditional due process. It would certainly make a puzzle out of Guantanamo, where some detainees have been determined innocent of all wrongdoing but are nevertheless kept detained; and it would be hard to make sense of the military commissions that deprive subjects of both the standard protections of criminal suspects or those of prisoners of war. The secret evidence used in many cases in the last ten years certainly seems to be in tension with the right to confront one’s accuser and the evidence laid against one. And Obama’s very concept of “prolonged detention” and his administration’s fighting the courts on numerous habeas corpus cases are a little bit of an enigma if indeed the right to due process is what our leaders have in mind when they’re waging these wars for our freedoms.


Conclusion


The Afghan War is not a war for freedom; it is a war against ourselves, our values, our liberties, our prosperity, and our Constitution. A better alternative to dealing with the 9/11 perpetrators would have been to grant Letters of Marque and Reprisals. This would have limited and minimized both the costs and the damage. It certainly would have been better than having a large land army invade and occupy the "Graveyard of Empires". But since Osama Bin Laden is dead, it is time to bring all the troops home from Afghanistan and close down all military bases there. All assaults on our liberties and Constitution by the federal government since the Afghan War need to be abolished and repealed.

Unfortunately, President Obama has fulfilled his promise of expanding and escalating the Afghan War. If this course is not reversed, we will create (or have we already created?) endless new enemies who will retaliate with violent acts of terrorism; our national defense will be greatly weakened; and the American Republic, and the liberties it stood for, will be forever murdered. We live in a time in which the last nails are being placed in the coffin of the American Republic.

Let us admit it: It was wrong to invade Afghanistan.









Friday, October 7, 2011

On the 10th Anniversary of Afghan War......

I was going to write a article about the folly of invading and occupying Afghanistan, but the following video sums up my sentiments...

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Fallacy of Keynesian Consummerism

We heard this mantra after the 9/11 attacks back in the year 2001: "Go spend money!" "Go shopping" "Go buy a lot of stuff to get this economy moving!" Whenever there is an economic downturn (like the one we are currently in), we are advised by mainstream economists and government officials that consumption is what is necessary for wealth to be created. But this is another Keynesian fallacy.

As Steve Horwitz explains:

 Production, not consumption, is the source of wealth. If we want a healthy economy, we need to create the conditions under which producers can get on with the process of creating wealth for others to consume, and under which households and firms can engage in the saving necessary to finance that production.

But Keynesians will typically say that the economy is all about spending: that people don't need to save their money. Instead, they are admonished to get rid of all the money in their pockets at once. According to the mainstream Keynesian economists, this is all about the flow of money: that the simple act of spending gets the "circular flow" going. This allows them to make the argument that in order to "jump start" the economy in a downturn, all we need is more government spending.

Free-market economist Henry Hazlitt defended savings against the consumerism fallacy as follows:

Let us imagine two brothers, then, one a spendthrift and the other a prudent man, each of whom has inherited a sum to yield him an income of $50,000 a year. We shall disregard the income tax, and the question whether both brothers really ought to work for a living, because such questions are irrelevant to our present purpose.
Alvin, then, the first brother, is a lavish spender. He spends not only by temperament, but on principle. He is a disciple (to go no further back) of Rodbertus, who declared in the middle of the nineteenth century that capitalists "must expend their income to the last penny in comforts and luxuries," for if they "determine to save . . . goods accumulate, and part of the workmen will have no work.”* Alvin is always seen at the night clubs; he tips handsomely; he maintains a pretentious establishment, with plenty of servants; he has a couple of chauffeurs and doesn't stint himself in the number of cars he owns; he keeps a racing stable; he runs a yacht; he travels; he loads his wife down with diamond bracelets and fur coats; he gives expensive and useless presents to his friends.
To do all this he has to dig into his capital. But what of it? If saving is a sin, dissaving must be a virtue; and in any case he is simply making up for the harm being done by the saving of his pinchpenny brother Benjamin.
It need hardly be said that Alvin is a great favorite with the hat check girls, the waiters, the restaurateurs, the furriers, the jewelers, the luxury establishments of all kinds. They regard him as a public benefactor. Certainly it is obvious to everyone that he is giving employment and spreading his money around.
Compared with him brother Benjamin is much less popular. He is seldom seen at the jewelers, the furriers or the night clubs, and he does not call the head waiters by their first names. Whereas Alvin spends not only the full $50,000 income each year but is digging into capital besides, Benjamin lives much more modestly and spends only about $25,000. Obviously, think the people who see only what hits them in the eye, he is providing less than.) half as much employment as Alvin, and the other $25,000 is as useless as if it did not exist.
But let us see what Benjamin actually does with this other $25,000. On the average he gives $5,000 of it to charitable causes, including help to friends in need. The families who are helped by these funds in turn spend them on groceries or clothing or living quarters. So the funds create as much employment as if Benjamin had spent them directly on himself. The difference is that more people are made happy as consumers, and that production is going more into essential goods and less into luxuries and superfluities.
This last point is one that often gives Benjamin concern. His conscience sometimes troubles him even about the $25,000 he spends. The kind of vulgar display and reckless spending that Alvin indulges in, he thinks, not only helps to breed dissatisfaction and envy in those who find it hard to make a decent living, but actually increases their difficulties. At any given moment, as Benjamin sees it, the actual producing power of the nation is limited. The more of it that is diverted to producing frivolities and luxuries, the less there is left for producing the essentials of life for those who are in need of them.* The less he withdraws from the existing stock of wealth for his own use, the more he leaves for others. Prudence in consumptive spending, he feels, mitigates the problems raised by the inequalities of wealth and income. He realizes that this consumptive restraint can he carried too far; but there ought to be some of it, he feels, in everyone whose income is substantially above the average.
Now let us see, apart from Benjamin's ideas, what happens to the $20,000 that he neither spends nor gives away. He does not let it pile up in his pocketbook, his bureau drawers, or in his safe. He either deposits it in a bank or he invests it. If he puts it either into a commercial or a savings bank, the bank either lends it to going businesses on short term for working capital, or uses it to buy securities. In other words, Benjamin invests his money either directly or indirectly. But when money is invested it is used to buy capital goods–houses or office buildings or factories or ships or motor trucks or machines. Any one of these projects puts as much money into circulation and gives as much employment as the same amount of money spent directly on consumption.

Hazzlit continues:

"Saving," in short, in the modern world, is only another form of spending. The usual difference is that the money is turned over to someone else to spend on means to increase production. So far as giving employment is concerned, Benjamin's "saving" and spending combined give as much as Alvin's spending alone, and put as much money in circulation. The chief difference is that the employment provided by Alvin 's spending can be seen by anyone with one eye; but it is necessary to look a little more carefully, and to think a moment, to recognize that every dollar of Benjamin's saving gives as much employment as every dollar that Alvin throws around.
A dozen years roll by. Alvin is broke. He is no longer seen in the night clubs and at the fashionable shops; and those whom he formerly patronized, when they speak of him, refer to him as something of a fool. He writes begging letters to Benjamin. And Benjamin, who continues about the same ratio of spending to saving, provides more jobs than ever, because his income, through investment, has grown. His capital wealth is greater also. Moreover, because of his investments, the national wealth and income are greater; there are more factories and more production.

Economist J.B. Say concludes as follows:

[T]he encouragement of mere consumption is no benefit to commerce; for the difficulty lies in supplying the means, not in stimulating the desire of consumption; and we have seen that production alone furnishes those means. Thus it is the aim of good government to stimulate production, of bad government to encourage consumption.

Thus, stimulating consumption is not a path to prosperity. Rather, through the process of the free-market, savings and production will eventually lead to prosperity. But in order for this to happen, capital needs to come back into our country. Capital accumulation, which is necessary for a capitalist free-market economy to thrive and create prosperity, is unattractive in the United States due to the tax burdens, economic regulations, dollar devaluation through monetary inflation that robs the wallets of the American people.

As Steve Horwitz rightly puts it, a government stimulus program that puts money into the hands of consumers fails because the money comes from producers and other taxpayers. You also have to take inflation into account as well. As the money supply continually increase because the Federal Reserve keeps printing money, the currency is devalued. In fact, the dollar has lost approximately 98% of its' value since the creation of the Fed in 1913. All these factors, on top of the economic regulations, makes capital accumulation unattractive in America.

In order to bring capital back into America, most taxes need to be eliminated and reduced, the Federal Reserve needs to be abolished, currency competition must be legalized, and all economic regulations (at the Federal level at least) need to be phases out (i.e. abolished). Only then will capital start flowing into America again and thus give entrepreneurs the means to save money and invest in things that will increase production, leading to a greater creation of wealth for all Americans.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Mutually Assured Destruction vs Mutually Assured Respect

Here is the full text from www.house.gov/paul :

The Soviet Union detonated its first nuclear bomb on August 29, 1949, leading to the doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction, shared by both the USA and the Soviets. The unwritten agreement by the two super powers deterred nuclear war with an implied threat to blow up the world, if need be, to defend each of their interests.
I well remember the Cuban missile crises of October 1962, having been drafted into the military at that time. Mutually Assured Destruction had significant meaning to the whole world during this period. This crisis, along with the escalating ill-advised Vietnam War, made me very much aware of the problems the world faced during the five years I served as a USAF flight surgeon.
It was with great pleasure and hope that I observed the collapse of the Soviet Empire between 1989 and 1991. This breakup verified the early predictions by the free market economists, like Ludwig Von Mises, that communism would self-destruct because of the deeply flawed economic theories embedded in socialism. Our nukes were never needed because ideas are more powerful than the Weapons of War.
Many Americans at the time were boldly hopeful that we would benefit from a generous peace dividend. Sadly, it turned out to be a wonderful opportunity wasted. There was to be no "beating their swords into plowshares," even though history shows that without weapons and war there's more food and prosperity for the people. Unfortunately, our leaders decided on another course that served the special interests who benefit from constant wars and the arbitrary rearrangement of national borders for control of national resources.
Instead of a peace dividend from ending the policy of Mutually Assured Destruction, US leaders opted for a foreign policy of American world domination as its sole super power. It was all in the spirit of Woodrow Wilson's idealistic goal of "making the world safe for democracy" by pursuing a war to end all wars.
The mantra became that American exceptionalism morally required us to spread our dominance world-wide by force. US world dominance, by whatever means, became our new bipartisan foreign policy. There was to be no peace dividend, though our enemies were virtually non-existent.
In many ways America had been "exceptional" but in an opposite manner from the neo-con driven foreign policy of the last 20 years. If America indeed has something good to offer the cause of peace, prosperity, and liberty it must be spread through persuasion and by example; not by intimidation, bribes and war.
Maintaining world domination is based on an intellectually and financially bankrupt idea that generates dependency, war, loss of civil liberties, inflation and debt, all of which contribute to our economic crisis.
Saddest of all, this policy of American domination and exceptionalism has allowed us to become an aggressor nation, supporting pre-emptive war, covert destabilization, foreign occupations, nation building, torture and assassinations. This policy has generated hatred toward Americans and provides the incentive for almost all of the suicide attacks against us and our allies.
To continue to believe the fiction that the militants hate us for our freedoms and wealth may even result in more attacks against us -- that is, unless our national bankruptcy brings us to our knees and forces us to bring our troops home.
Expanding our foreign military intervention overseas as a cure for the attacks against us, tragically, only guarantees even more attacks. We must someday wake up, be honest with ourselves, and reject the notion that we're spreading freedom and America's goodness around the world. We cannot justify our policy by claiming our mission is to secure American freedoms and protect our Constitution. That is not believable. This policy is doomed to fail on all fronts.
The policy of Mutually Assured Destruction has been gone now for 20 years, and that is good.
The policy of American domination of the world, as nation builder-in-chief and policeman of the world, has failed and must be abandoned—if not as a moral imperative, then certainly out of economic necessity.
My humble suggestion is to replace it with a policy of Mutually Assured Respect. This requires no money and no weapons industry, or other special interests demanding huge war profits or other advantages.
This requires simply tolerance of others cultures and their social and religious values, and the giving up of all use of force to occupy or control other countries and their national resources. Many who disagree choose to grossly distort the basic principles shared by the world's great religions: the Golden Rule, the Ten Commandments, and the cause of peace. Religions all too often are distorted and used to justify the violence engaged in for arbitrary power.
A policy of Mutually Assured Respect would result in the U.S.:
Treating other nations exactly as we expect others to treat us.
Offering friendship with all who seek it.
Participating in trade with all who are willing.
Refusing to threaten, bribe or occupy any other nation.
Seeking an honest system of commodity money that no single country can manipulate for a trade advantage. Without this, currency manipulation becomes a tool of protectionism and prompts retaliation with tariffs and various regulations. This policy, when it persists, is dangerous and frequently leads to real wars.
Mutually Assured Respect offers a policy of respect, trade and friendship and rejects threats, sanctions and occupations.
This is the only practical way to promote peace, harmony and economic well-being to the maximum number of people in the world.
Mutually Assured Respect may not be perfect but far better than Mutually Assured Destruction or unilateral American dominance.


Writes Dom Armentano:

"This is a crucial time in the Ron Paul candidacy. The MSM and the so-called debates are marginalizing Ron's message. Non-interventionism in the economy and in foreign affairs cannot be explained convincingly in debates with statists or in a 20 second sound-bite response to some idiot from NBC. In my view Ron must go AROUND the MSM/debate format and speak directly to the American people. He needs a "game changer" and this could be it.
"My suggestion: Ron should buy time (say 15 minutes) on a national tv network and deliver a major foreign policy address. This would allow him to logically lay out his (our) non-interventionist position and call for an end to all foreign wars. After all, this is the one issue that distinguishes Ron from the other Republicans and, obviously, from the White House. Moreover, the public is entirely fed up with the wars and will (in my view) support a candidate who makes a solid moral and economic case for "bringing the troops home." I am aware that Ron has repeatedly made the argument I suggest; BUT it has been made in regional campaign speeches (this is a national issue with strong Independent support) or in these idiot debates where the message is fractured or ridiculed. Right message but wrong forum or medium. This can be corrected with a nationally televised talk."

Sunday, September 11, 2011

9/11 should have been no surprise...

Because Ron Paul predicted it!

9/11 and the Fate of the American Republic

"Statists love to say that 9/11 changed the world. Actually, it didn’t change anything insofar as the federal government is concerned. It continued doing the same things it was doing prior to 9/11 and even expanded them. 9/11 did change our country though, especially with respect to the degradation of liberty and conscience".-Jacob Hornberger

"Those who would trade liberty for security deserve neither liberty nor safety"-Benjamin Franklin

"The U.S. government has learned absolutely nothing since 9/11. Instead of the occasion being a time to reassess a century of bad foreign policy, it was used as an excuse to start two wars against countries that had nothing to do with 9/11 and accelerate the destruction of American freedoms. And now, ten years later, the anniversary of 9/11 will be used to lionize the police state, the warfare state, and the national security state while justifying even more wars."-Laurence M. Vance

It has been a decade since that tragic day when 19 Saudi terrorists crashed two airliners into the World Trade Center and one airliner into the Pentagon. It is estimated that around 3000 Americans lost their lives in that attack. The country was rightfully angry and wanted to avenge those who died. But even to this day, not a whole lot of people contemplate the consequences of the actions the U.S. government took after the 9/11 attacks, or even ask themselves if things could have been done differently.

No, Americans continue to blindly believe that 9/11 changed everything. Many Americans seem convinced that the policies that the U.S. government pursued in the aftermath of 9/11 were somehow necessary and just. Americans seem willing to give up liberty for security, but in the end, we have neither liberty or safety. What should rightfully be called tyranny, has been sold to the American people as "liberty" in an effort the cloak the bad and unjust deeds of the U.S. government.

Why did they attack us?

While this question seems redundant and unnecessary, we must ask ourselves this question in order to find out the motivation for carrying out the destructive attacks on 9/11. Unfortunately, from the very beginning, Americans have been sold a lie in regards to this question: that the attack somehow came about because the terrorist "hate our freedoms" or "hate our way of life". Americans have also been convinced that 9/11 resulted from too few entangling alliances and too few military interventions.

In an article entitled "All the Wrong 9/11Lessons", Michelle Malkin laments those who believe that 9/11 was caused by the aggressive and intervention foreign policy of the U.S. government:

A decade after the 9/11 attacks, Blame America-ism still permeates classrooms and the culture. A special 9/11 curriculum distributed in New Jersey schools advises teachers to "avoid graphic details or dramatizing the destruction" wrought by the 9/11 hijackers, and instead focus elementary school students' attention on broadly defined "intolerance" and "hurtful words."

But Michelle Malkin, and her fellow conservatives (and some liberals) are the ones who are drawing all the wrong lessons.

She is assuming that those (like myself and Ron Paul) who take the correct position that 9/11 came about because of our foreign policy of having troops in the Middle East, unconditional support for the State of Israel, and the continual bombing of Iraq are somehow "blaming America". First of all, we are not "blaming America"; we are placing the blame on the U.S. government's foreign policy of perpetual war and empire. Second, rarely does the U.S. government represent the American people. In fact, it has been determined to steal the liberties of the American people since 9/11 while euphemistically calling it "freedom".

So what motivated those terrible men to commit such a destructive act?

Said Osama Bin Laden:

It should not be hidden from you that the people of Islam had suffered from aggression, iniquity and injustice imposed on them by the Zionist-Crusaders alliance and their collaborators; to the extent that the Muslims blood became the cheapest and their wealth as loot in the hands of the enemies. Their blood was spilled in Palestine and Iraq. The horrifying pictures of the massacre of Qana, in Lebanon are still fresh in our memory. Massacres in Tajakestan, Burma, Cashmere, Assam, Philippine, Fatani, Ogadin, Somalia, Erithria, Chechnia and in Bosnia-Herzegovina took place, massacres that send shivers in the body and shake the conscience. All of this and the world watch and hear, and not only didn’t respond to these atrocities, but also with a clear conspiracy between the USA and its’ allies and under the cover of the iniquitous United Nations, the dispossessed people were even prevented from obtaining arms to defend themselves.

And in 1997 he said:

We declared jihad against the US government, because the US government is unjust, criminal and tyrannical. It has committed acts that are extremely unjust, hideous and criminal, whether directly or through its support of the Israeli occupation of the Prophet’s Night Travel Land.

Since there are more lengthy statements like this, I will give only one more, from Anwar al-Awlaki:

We are not against Americans for just being Americans. We are against evil and America as a whole has turned into a nation of evil. What we see from America is the invasion of [inaudible] countries, we see Abu Ghraib, Baghram and Guantanamo Bay, we see cruise missiles and cluster bombs and we have just seen in Yemen the death of 23 children and 17 women. We cannot stand idly in the face of such aggression and we will fight back and incite others to do the same. I for one was born in the U.S.; I lived in the U.S. for 21 years. America was my home. I was a preacher of Islam involved in non-violent Islamic activism. However, with the American invasion of Iraq and continued U.S. aggression against Muslims I could not reconcile between living in the U.S. and being a Muslim.

As James L. Payne has researched, when reading Bin Laden's published statements the "topic of imposing fundamentalist Muslim beliefs and practices on the West is essentially absent." Payne continues:

Bin Laden may be rigid and subjective in his perceptions, but his point of view is not without substance. Great Britain was the colonial master of many Muslim lands, including Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, and especially Palestine, which, with the approval of the United States, the British turned over to the Jews for the state of Israel in 1948. U.S. military aid and military advisors have blanketed the Middle East for generations. The U.S. military has bases in Djibouti, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. It sent troops to Lebanon twice, in 1958 and 1983, and to Somalia in 1992. The U.S. Sixth Fleet, with forty ships and twenty-one thousand servicemen and women, patrols the eastern Mediterranean, and the Fifth Fleet, with fifteen thousand personnel, patrols the Persian Gulf. Its Carrier Strike Group and Expeditionary Strike Group are poised to deliver military might anywhere throughout the region. This great show of military power may have achieved little in the way of domination, but to a local Muslim it can certainly look vicious and threatening. Furthermore, American leaders have proclaimed the goal of spreading the American conception of democracy to the world. The neoconservatives have frankly urged the U.S. government to use military force to carry out this goal (see, for example, Kristol and Kagan 1996; Frum and Perle 2003, 278). Some might say this talk about spreading democracy by force is empty rhetoric for the most part, but to the man on the street in the Middle East it can certainly look like an aggressive program to impose American social and cultural values on Muslim lands. Shortly after 9/11, Bush described his war on terrorism as a “crusade,” a point that bin Laden didn’t miss: “The odd thing about this is that he has taken the words right out of our mouth [that America is waging a crusade against Muslim lands]”

 But many Americans do not want to admit this truth: that our foreign policy is a huge motivating factor for terrorism and terrorist attacks on U.S. soil. This is not to say that the events of 9/11 were justified. What happened on that tragic day was terrible and those who commit such acts of violence must be punished, but by the full force of the law, not by war and military domination.

Aggressive War and Empire

Jacob Hornberger gives us a quick summary of the imperial escapades that took place after 9/11:

First, it invaded Afghanistan and effected regime change there by ousting the Afghan government and installing a crooked, corrupt, fraudulent, brutal dictatorial regime that would do the bidding of the U.S. Empire.

Second, it invaded Iraq for the purpose of effecting the regime change there that the 11 years of deadly sanctions had failed to accomplish.

Third, it instituted a program of torture, assassination, indefinite detention, abuse, and humiliation of people from the Middle East.

Fourth, it embarked on a spending and borrowing spree that now threatens the government with bankruptcy. What changed was the nature of freedom in America. The U.S. government used the attacks to assume the same types of emergency powers that U.S.-supported dictators in the Middle East had been exercising for decades against their own people.

After the 9/11 attacks, the U.S. Congress passed the unconstitutional “Authorization for Use of Military Force” resolution for Afghanistan. By doing this, Congress illegally transferred its war powers to the President. According to Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, Congress has the power to “declare war”. But Congress did not declare war on Afghanistan, and would be unable to. The terrorists who committed the 9/11 attacks were not soldiers or agents from another nation-state. They were a stateless enemy. The best option for responding to the 9/11 attacks would have been to grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, which would allow bounty hunters to go hunt down and capture Bin Laden and his lieutenants. This would have saved us billions and billions of dollars, not to mention hundreds if not thousands of American soldiers’ lives. But instead, President Bush unconstitutionally invaded Afghanistan on October 7, 2001. While U.S. and Northern Alliance forces quickly toppled the Taliban government, Osama Bin Laden escaped U.S. troops for the next 10 years.

The Taliban government did not attack the United States on 9/11. In fact, the U.S. government was sending millions of dollars to the Afghan government before 9/11. Now of course, we have showered countless amounts of money on our newfound subjects in Afghanistan.

Then there was Iraq. It wasn’t bad enough that our government was continually bombing that country for over 10 years while enforcing crippling economic sanctions that killed at least a half a million Iraqi children. Soon after 9/11, officials in the Bush administration like Vice President Dick Cheney soon began to beat the war drums and demand that the U.S. invade Iraq. In fact, there had been a desire to see the invasion of that country even before 9/11. The attacks only gave an excuse to see this desire implemented, and on March 19, 2003, the U.S. invaded Iraq. Once again an “Authorization for Use of Military Force” resolution was passed. So once again, the President circumvented the Constitution and unconstitutionally invaded another country.

Now the United States is engaged in 5 wars (Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Pakistan, and Yemen) with 2 more wars on the way (Syria, Iran).

The Costs of War

Anthony Gregory gives a quick summary of the costs of the wars the United States has been engaged in since 9/11:

Winslow Wheeler, Research Fellow at the Independent Institute and Director of the Straus Military Reform Project, stresses the need to look at everything: the post-9/11 military operations, the aid to governments like Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen, the increased financial burden of domestic security, and the interest on deficit defense spending that financed these wars. He finds that "the federal costs already incurred would be from $3.2 to $3.9 trillion" -- even if the wars ended abruptly tomorrow. The scholars at the Eisenhower Study Group arrive at similar estimates.

We can also simply look at the effect on the defense budget over the last decade. Exorbitant Pentagon spending has always been touted as necessary to protect the country, yet ten years ago it was suddenly decided that this huge price tag was not nearly enough. Apparently all that defense and intelligence spending before 9/11, which failed to prevent the attack, was for something other than defense.  In 2001, adjusted for inflation to today's dollars, the defense budget was just over $400 billion. After 9/11 the budget began rising at about eight percent a year. The latest funding request was for $707 billion. This doesn't include the ballooning security-related expenses in the Department of Homeland Security, State Department, or Department of Energy's nuclear weapon operations.

What was the full opportunity cost of all these wars? Few economists ask this question. What if these resources had been available for private savings and investment? What if the Americans and foreigners fighting had instead been working in the commercial sector, producing wealth? Perhaps the financial situation would look considerably better. The government is notorious for diverting money and energy from productive uses toward wasteful ones. Nothing is as destructive as war. Even the most just war imaginable is a disaster for the economy, as the great economist Ludwig von Mises explained.

Assaulting the Constitution and Liberty

Another consequence of the policies implemented by the U.S. government since 9/11 has been the loss of liberty here at home and the further burying of the American Republic.

Jacob Hornberger gives us a quick summary of the consequences of trading liberty for security since 9/11:

The military power to seize Americans and incarcerate, torture, and detain them indefinitely as “enemy combatants” in the war on terrorism. The power to spy on and monitor people’s email and telephone calls. The power to search people’s homes and financial institutions in secret. The power to grope people’s private parts at airports, including those of children. The Patriot Act. Guantanamo Bay. Kangaroo tribunals. Denial of due process.

Anthony Gregory asks whether or not our freedoms are actually being defended:

It doesn’t appear to be the First Amendment’s freedoms of speech and association. Otherwise it would be hard to explain the National Security Letters that forbid their recipients from telling anyone, even a lawyer or spouse, that the FBI is monitoring them. It would be difficult to understand the Bush administration’s “free speech zones” that kept war protesters far from presidential appearances, or U.S. spying on peace activists under both administrations. It would be perplexing that Obama would detain Bradley Manning for the crime of releasing incriminating information about the U.S. warfare state, or that his administration’s officials would hint that WikiLeaks’s project of exposing government wrongdoing should be shut down.

Maybe the government has mostly been protecting Americans’ right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. Then again, it would be confusing that both Bush and Obama would stand by the USA PATRIOT Act, which has eroded the Fourth Amendment, forced businesses to spy on their customers and hand information over to the Justice Department, loosened restrictions for wiretapping, and empowered agents to conduct special searches without alerting Americans right away that their property had been searched. It would also be a mystery why both Bush and Obama have stood by the National Security Administation’s power to spy on American telecommunications without a warrant. Then there is the whole question of the Transportation Security Administration, which summarily searches American airline passengers, their luggage, and their persons, forcing them to go through invasive pat-downs and potentially dangerous irradiating “porno-scanners.”

Perhaps the freedom being defended is the long-celebrated right to due process and habeas corpus for those detained by the government. That would be hard to reconcile, however, with the Bush administration’s roundup of hundreds of innocent aliens right after 9/11, the “material witness” doctrine that allowed for indefinite detention without charge, or the “enemy combatant” designation that, when pinned on someone by the president, even on a U.S. citizen, means there will be a total disregard for traditional due process. It would certainly make a puzzle out of Guantanamo, where some detainees have been determined innocent of all wrongdoing but are nevertheless kept detained; and it would be hard to make sense of the military commissions that deprive subjects of both the standard protections of criminal suspects or those of prisoners of war. The secret evidence used in many cases in the last ten years certainly seems to be in tension with the right to confront one’s accuser and the evidence laid against one. And Obama’s very concept of “prolonged detention” and his administration’s fighting the courts on numerous habeas corpus cases are a little bit of an enigma if indeed the right to due process is what our leaders have in mind when they’re waging these wars for our freedoms.

Maybe it’s the right not to be subject to cruel and unusual punishment that Bush and Obama have been defending! Although that would seem to be in conflict with the mistreatment of whisteblower Bradley Manning, the abuse that continues at Guantanamo, the waterboarding of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and the psychological and sexual abuse that became a regular interrogation practice throughout Iraq and other U.S.-controlled areas at the height of the war on terror.

Other freedoms that haven’t seemed to be enhanced, much less defended by the war on terrorism, include the right to travel, financial freedom, the right to bear arms, and the right to a fair civil proceeding against government agents who have violated one’s liberties. Economic freedom hasn’t exactly blossomed since 9/11. Come to think of it, most of the freedoms that have been held as sacred for so long in this country aren’t exactly easy targets for terrorists to undermine in the first place; free speech, due process, privacy, and other such civil liberties are much easier for governments to compromise than for terrorists to take away.

Conclusion

We as Americans need to ask ourselves these questions as we reflect on 9/11: should we ever trade liberty for security? Should the Federal government disobey the Constitution, even in times of war? Should the U.S. be engaged in perpetual war for perpetual peace? What if our foreign policy of the past century has been deeply flawed and has not served to defend this country? What if we finally realize that terrorism is a predictable and unfortunate consequence of a foreign policy of empire and interventionism and has nothing to do with us being free and prosperous?

We need to ask ourselves these questions and contemplate changing the policies that the Federal government has enacted since 9/11. Failure to do so will mean the end of peace, liberty, the Constitution and the American Republic.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Ron Paul: What if?

This 9/11, instead of participating and promoting un-American ideas such as nationalism, jingoism, blind obedience to government, increased government surveillance of American citizens, violations of civil liberties, the destruction of the U.S. Constitution, and unjust, unnecessary and costly wars of aggression, we should take the ideas of Congressman Ron Paul, the Founding Fathers and other defenders of liberty seriously. We should stop blindly waving the American flag and chanting “USA! USA! USA! USA!” (though it is proper to display a flag in honor of those who died) and instead pray for renewed blessings and comfort for those who suffered loss on that tragic day. Please watch this amazing speech and ponder the questions asked in the video.


Thursday, September 8, 2011

In Honor of 9/11...

I have some recommendations for reading that all American need to look into. Like other episodes in American history, 9/11 and its' aftermath is a prime case of crisis and leviathan in which the government exploits a crisis like an economic downturn or war to gain more power over the people at the expense of the liberties of the people.

Books:

Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government by Robert Higgs

The Empire Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed by Ivan Eland

Resurgence of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 by Robert Higgs

Opposing the Crusader State: Alternatives to Global Interventionism by Robert Higgs and Carl P. Close


The Costs of War: America's Phyrric Victories by John V. Denson

Liberty, Security, and the War on Terrorism by Jacob G. Hornberger and Richard M. Ebeling

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Happy Capital Day!

By Lawrence W. Reed


Any good economist will tell you that as complementary factors of production, labor and capital are not only indispensable but hugely dependent upon each other as well.
Capital without labor means machines with no operators, or financial resources without the manpower to invest in. Labor without capital looks like Haiti or North Korea: plenty of people working but doing it with sticks instead of bulldozers, or starting a small enterprise with pocket change instead of a bank loan.
There may be no place in the world where there’s a shortage of labor but every inch of the planet is short of capital. There is no worker who couldn’t become more productive and better himself and society in the process if he had a more powerful labor-saving machine or a little more venture capital behind him. Capital can refer to either the tools of production or the funds that finance them. It ought to be abundantly clear that the vast improvement in standards of living over the past century is not explained by physical labor (we actually do less of that), but rather to the application of capital.
This is not class warfare. I’m not “taking sides” between labor and capital. I don’t see them as natural antagonists in spite of some people’s attempts to make them so. Don’t think of capital as something possessed and deployed only by bankers, the college-educated, the rich, or the elite. We workers of all income levels are “capital-ists” too—every time we save and invest, buy a share of stock, fix a machine, or start a business.
And yet, we have a “Labor Day” in America but not a “Capital Day.”
Like most Americans, I’ve traditionally celebrated labor on Labor Day weekend—not organized labor or compulsory labor unions, mind you, but the noble act of physical labor to produce the things we want and need. Nothing at all wrong about that!
But this year on Labor Day weekend, I’ll also be thinking about the remarkable achievements of inventors of labor-saving devices, the risk-taking venture capitalists who put their own money (not your tax money) on the line and the fact that nobody in America has to dig a ditch with a spoon or cut his lawn with a knife. Labor Day and Capital Day—I don’t know why we should have just one and not the other.
Happy Capital Day, America!
Lawrence W. Reed


(A special thanks to Lawrence W. Reed and the Foundation for Economic Education for such a good little article!)

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Read this book!!!

I have been getting into debates here in college lately, and I figured that sometimes it is good to get back to first principles. For those who do not fully understand my views, or wonder what a libertarian constitutionalist believes, then I highly recommend reading Congressman Ron Paul's book Freedom Under Seige: The U.S. Constitution after 200 Plus Years. You can read it for free here. It was written in 1987 on the 200th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, but it was written in a fashion the describes pretty much what is happening today.

The Failure of Disaster Relief Socialism

"The federal government has trumpeted its ability to intervene during disasters and in times of emergency but, more often than not, the result is an explosion of federal power, wasted resources, frustrating red tape, and not much else." -Judge Andrew Napolitano
As Hurricane Irene hits the east coast of the United States, Americans are continually reminded by the media of the great importance of institutionalized governmental disaster relief programs to society and how Americans just could not survive without these programs. Then, when people, especially libertarians like Ron Paul advocate abolishing government agencies like FEMA, people lose their minds because they have become so dependent of the government for their lively hoods.

But is government disaster relief a good thing? Many people would answer in the affirmative. Or is it an inefficient system of bureaucratic socialism that fails to help the people, robs other people of their wealth, and expands the power of the state?

As William F. Shughart II explains:

the public sector predictably fails to supply disaster relief in socially optimal quantities. Moreover, because it facilitates corruption, creates incentives
for populating disaster-prone areas, and crowds out self-help and other local means of coping with disaster, government provision of assistance to disaster’s victims actually threatens to make matters worse.

Looking back on the debacle of Hurrican Katrina, Shughart's concerns seem to be correct. As Lew Rockwell documented:


Consider first how the much-glorified Department of Homeland Security responded to the Katrina crisis. There is a mysterious missing day between the time the hurricane hit and the levees broke and flooded New Orleans. During this strange Monday, August 29 — a day in which there was a window of opportunity to prevent the meltdown of civilization — why didn't federal officials respond or even pretend to respond?
The head of the Department of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff, said that he read in the Tuesday morning newspaper that, according to the headline, "New Orleans Dodged the Bullet." So, to his mind, there was nothing to do. This was his testimony. This is not exactly an awe-inspiring admission, but it speaks to a truth that few are willing to admit: government officials live normal lives. They do not partake of the mind of God. They get their news just like you and me. And they have far less information than the body of knowledge generated by the signaling process of the market economy and the private sector.
We might even say that they are in effect sub-normal in intelligence, because government officials stand outside of society, cut off from normal channels of information that the rest of us take for granted. They are isolated from markets and the regular pressures of life. They are not owners of what they control, and have no real stake in the value of their product. They are surrounded by some of the most peculiar people in the world, namely lifetime bureaucrats, power-mad politicians, and lobbyists on the make. This is their world and this is what they know.
Now, they enjoy the illusion of being better informed than the rest of us, so it would never occur to a high official to surf Google News to find out what is really going on. Thus was it apparently beyond the capacity of FEMA to find out that the National Weather Service had issued a flood warning soon after the hurricane hit. The National Weather Service in turn was only reporting what many private local media outlets were saying.


As with Katrina, there is hysteria about "price-gouging" since Irene hit the East Coast. As Lew Rockwell further points out:

As the Hurricane approached, for example, Mr. Bush, along with nearly every office holder in the entire region, immediately announced that there would be no tolerance of so-called price gouging. What is and what is not gouging remain #ff0000 by law, but there are still criminal penalties attached to doing it. If you raise your prices to the point where you attract a complaint, there is a good chance that you will be thrashed as a gouger.
And yet, we have to ask ourselves what the purpose of a price is. It is a signaling device that allows market players, including both producers and consumers, to adjust their economic behavior in light of supply and demand. If supply remains the same and demand rises, the price too will have to rise so the market can clear properly. Otherwise there will be shortages and surpluses that will prove to be a benefit to no one. William Anderson has called gouging rules a form of back-door price control, and he is right. They create victims, encourage economic dislocations, and foster black markets.
One might think that a Republican administration would understand this, but reflect on the fact that Iraq still has very strict price controls on gasoline, controls that were instituted by the US after Saddam was overthrown. Don't think for a minute that it is beyond the capacity of the Bush administration to do what the Nixon administration did, which was to believe that the laws of markets can be overridden by regulatory force.
Anti-gouging laws, to the extent they are obeyed, will create shortages. But in telling the sad tale of Katrina, I would like to begin not with a case of shortage, but with a strange case of surplus.

Jacob Hornberger reports that,

North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper announced that he would prosecute anybody engaging in price-gouging during Hurricane Irene. Cooper declared, “We’re warning price gougers that you can’t use a crisis as an excuse to make an unfair profit off of consumers. If you think that someone is trying to use Hurricane Irene to justify ripping you off, let my office know about it.”
It’s enough to make you wish that American law schools offered courses in Austrian economics.


Hornberger continues:

What people like Cooper fail to understand is that the price system is simply the free-market’s method of communication. Prices impart valuable information to both producers and consumers that enable them to make rational economic decisions. When the government tampers with the price system by setting maximum prices or prosecuting “price gougers,” it mucks up the communication system on which people are relying.

Let’s take a hypothetical example. Let’s say that a hurricane hits the Outer Banks in North Carolina and that people are desperately in need of ice on the islands. One store has 50 bags of ice on hand. Immediately, it raises its price from $5 a bag to $25 a bag.

Now, we all know what Attorney General Cooper would do. He’d start screaming like a banshee and sending out state troopers to make an arrest.

Actually, however, that’s the worst thing that Cooper could do.

When the price of ice soars, it communicates valuable information to consumers on the island. The new, higher price says to them: You need to conserve your use of ice.

At the same time, the new, higher price imparts valuable information to producers on the mainland: You need to produce more.


There is so much detail about the disaster of governmental efforts to help in disaster relief that I implore you to read the articles that I linked to above.

Free-market economist Walter Block has some simple solutions for the problems here

 

Sunday, August 28, 2011

The Libertarian 30 day Plan for a Free America

As I was scouring lewrockwell.com, I came across this acticle entitled "Rockwell's 30 Day Plan", which presents an excellent blue print for a free and prosperous America. Here it is as follows:

DAY ONE: The federal income tax is abolished and April 15th is declared a national holiday. The 40% reduction in federal revenues is matched by a 40% cut in spending. The budget is still almost twice as big as Jimmy Carter's.

DAY TWO: All other federal taxes are abolished, including the corporate income tax, the capital gains tax, the gasoline tax, "sin" taxes, excise taxes, etc. Businesses boom, and the few legitimate federal functions are funded with an inexpensive head tax. People who choose not to vote need not pay it. (Note: this was a mainstream view in the 19th century.)

DAY THREE: The federal government sells all its land, freeing up tens of millions of acres for development, mining, farming, forestry, oil drilling, private parks, etc. The government uses the revenue to pay off the national debt and other liabilities.

DAY FOUR: The minimum wage is reduced to zero, creating jobs for ex-federal bureaucrats at their market wage. All pro-union laws and regulations are scrapped. The jobless rate falls dramatically.

DAY FIVE: The Bureau of Labor Statistics, like the rest of the Labor Department, is sent to that big hiring hall in the sky. Without detailed economic statistics, future economic planners will be blind and deaf.

DAY SIX: The Department of Commerce is abolished. Big business has to make its own way in the world, without subsidies and privileges at the expense of its competitors and customers.

DAY SEVEN: The plug is pulled on the Department of Energy. Oil and gas prices plummet.

DAY EIGHT: All regulatory agencies, from the Interstate Commerce Commission to the Federal Trade Commission, are deep-sixed. Competition is legalized.

DAY NINE: HUD is squashed like a bug. There's a building boom in cheap, private, apartments.

DAY TEN: The interstate highways reopen as private businesses. Road entrepreneurs price travel according to consumer demand. Using modern technology, drivers get bills once a month. Credit risks — and drunks and dangerous drivers — aren't allowed on the road. Non-drivers no longer subsidize car owners.

DAY ELEVEN: Government welfare is wiped out. Bums work or starve. The deserving poor find a cornucopia of private services designed to make them independent. Private charity explodes, as the American people, already the most generous in the world, find their incomes almost doubled, thanks to the tax cuts.

DAY TWELVE: The Federal Reserve closes its open-market operations and stops protecting the banking industry from competition. But banks can now engage in all the non-bank financial activities previously forbidden to them. The business cycle, which is caused by monetary expansion through the credit markets, is liquidated.

DAY THIRTEEN: Federal deposit insurance is scrapped. All insured deposits are redeemed from federal assets, which include the personal assets of high-level government employees. The threat of bank runs forces banks to keep 100% reserves for their demand deposits, and prudent reserves on all other accounts. There are no more inherently bankrupt banks propped up by the government, at taxpayer expense, and no more bail-outs.

DAY FOURTEEN: The shaky fiat dollar is defined in terms of gold, with the ratio determined by dividing the government's gold stock by all existing dollars on that day.

DAY FIFTEEN: The federal government sells National and Dulles airports to the highest bidder, and stops all subsidies to other socialist airports around the country. All constraints on airline prices and service cease. It costs more to fly during peak hours than off-peak, but overall, air travel drops in price.

DAY SIXTEEN: All government regulations that create and sustain cartels are abolished, including those for the post office, telephones, television, radio, and cable TV. Prices plummet, and a host of new and unforeseen services becomes available.

DAY SEVENTEEN: Centrally planned agriculture, as imposed by Hoover and Roosevelt, is repealed: there are no more subsidies, payments-in-kind, marketing orders, low-interest loans, etc. Farm prices drop. Entrepreneurial farmers get rich. Welfare farmers go into another line of work. The poor eat like kings.

DAY EIGHTEEN: The Justice Department shutters its anti-trust division. Companies, big and small, are free to merge — up, down, or sideways. Stockholders can buy any other company, or sell their stock to anyone else. Marginal producers can no longer battle their competitors with bureaucratic weapons.

DAY NINETEEN: The Department of Education flunks the constitutionality test, and is kicked out. Private charities set up remedial reading and writing programs for the former bureaucrats. Federally subsidized sex education and other anti-family programs go out of business. Local school districts become responsive to parents or close, pressured by a fast-growing private school sector (which many more parents can now afford).

DAY TWENTY: All federal monuments are sold, in some cases to non-profit groups based on the Mt. Vernon Ladies Association, which owns and runs George Washington's home. The VFW buys the Vietnam memorial. There is much bidding for the Jefferson and Washington monuments. Nobody wants FDR's, so it's torn down and the land sold to a farmer. (With the federal government cut back to its constitutional size, much of Washington reverts to productive uses like agriculture, as in late 18th century.)

DAY TWENTY-ONE: The computerized financial and political dossier maintained by the government on every American is erased. The public wanders through the federal offices to make sure, in a reprise of the East Berliners' visits to Stasi headquarters.

DAY TWENTY-TWO: Equal rights are granted to all Americans, even members of non-victim groups. There is no affirmative action, no quotas, no set-asides, no public accommodations laws. Private property and freedom of association are fully restored.

DAY TWENTY-THREE: The EPA is cleaned out, with all "clean air" and similar big-government laws repealed. Ten thousand lawyers leap from their balconies. Private property is established in air and water. Americans harmed by pollution are free to sue the polluters, who are no longer protected by the federal government.

DAY TWENTY-FOUR: Americans are given complete freedom of contract, restoring rationality to malpractice and product liability law.

DAY TWENTY-FIVE: Government scrambles for more assets to sell (i.e., the National Zoo, also known as Washington, D.C.) to pay off the liabilities of the privatized Social Security system.

DAY TWENTY-SIX: Porno artists have to earn their own livings, as the National Endowment for the Arts tries to raise its budget through sidewalk painting sales.
DAY TWENTY-SEVEN: Foreign aid is outlawed as unconstitutional, unjust, and un-economic. Foreign politicians have to steal their own money. The World Bank, IMF, and United Nations close their super-luxurious doors.

DAY TWENTY-EIGHT: The American people are given the unrestricted right to keep and bear arms.

DAY TWENTY-NINE: The Defense Department is reoriented towards defense. American troops come home from all around the world. We adopt a policy of armed neutrality, remembering the Founding Fathers' teaching that we could not have an empire abroad and a constitutional republic at home.

DAY THIRTY: All tariffs, quotas, and trade agreements are put through the shredder. Americans can trade with anyone in the world, without barriers or subsidies. Japanese car prices drop an immediate 25%.

Is this radical? Perhaps. But these proposals are necessary in order to reclaim our liberty and the American Republic that the Founders envisioned.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Resisting Uncle Sam

From the Mises Economic Blog:

I do not like this Uncle Sam, I do not like his welfare-warfare scam.
I do not like these dirty crooks, or how they lie and cook the books.
I do not like when Congress steals, I do not like their secret deals.
I do not like these dirty bombs, or how they kill with no qualms.
I do not like their fiat money, it is worthless paper and oh so funny.
I do not like taxation as theft, I will be happy when none are left.
I do not like this kind of hope. I do not like it. nope, nope, nope

(Thanks to Justin Ptak)

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Scott Horton: "The American Empire must be stopped"

An amazing little speech by Scott Horton of Antiwar radio. This is a must watch for all patriotic Americans.



Saturday, July 30, 2011

U.S. Intelligence Apparatus: Wasteful, Unecessary, and Dangerous

After the terrible events of 9/11, in which over 3000 Americans perished in the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil, the federal government began to exploit the fear (sometimes irrational fear) many Americans had of terrorism and expand the power, size and influence of the National Security State. A result of this irrational fear of terrorism, the U.S. intelligence apparatus grew exponentially. In a Washington Post report entitled "Top Secret America" Dana Priest and William M. Arkin document the massive intelligence state that has emerged since 9/11.

Here are some of the findings from the report:

The top-secret world the government created in response to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has become so large, so unwieldy and so secretive that no one knows how much money it costs, how many people it employs, how many programs exist within it or exactly how many agencies do the same work.
[We] discovered what amounts to an alternative geography of the United States, a Top Secret America hidden from public view and lacking in thorough oversight. After nine years of unprecedented spending and growth, the result is that the system put in place to keep the United States safe is so massive that its effectiveness is impossible to determine.
Some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United States.
An estimated 854,000 people, nearly 1.5 times as many people as live in Washington, D.C., hold top-secret security clearances.
In Washington and the surrounding area, 33 building complexes for top-secret intelligence work are under construction or have been built since September 2001. Together they occupy the equivalent of almost three Pentagons or 22 U.S. Capitol buildings—about 17 million square feet of space.
Many security and intelligence agencies do the same work, creating redundancy and waste. For example, 51 federal organizations and military commands, operating in 15 U.S. cities, track the flow of money to and from terrorist networks.
Analysts who make sense of documents and conversations obtained by foreign and domestic spying share their judgment by publishing 50,000 intelligence reports each year—a volume so large that many are routinely ignored.

This excerpt alone should alarm many Americans to the civil liberty crushing leviathan that has grown exponentially. As this excerpt shows, counter-terrorism, intelligence and "homeland security" may be just more wasteful rackets.

Historian and economist Robert Higgs further reports on this new racket:

According to retired admiral Dennis C. Blair, formerly the director of national intelligence, after 9/11 “the attitude was, if it’s worth doing, it’s probably worth overdoing.” I submit that this explanation does not cut to the heart of the matter. As it stands, it suggests a sort of mindless desire to pile mountains of money, technology, and personnel on top of an already enormous mountain of money, technology, and personnel for no reason other than the vague notion that more must be better. In my view, national politics does not work in that way.

As Priest and Arkin report, “The U.S. intelligence budget is vast, publicly announced last year as $75 billion, 2 ½ times the size it was on Sept. 10, 2001. But the figure doesn’t include many military activities or domestic counterterrorism programs.” Virtually everyone the reporters consulted told them in effect that “the Bush administration and Congress gave agencies more money than they were capable of responsibly spending.” To be sure, they received more than they could spend responsibly, but not more than they were eager to spend irresponsibly. After all, it’s not as if they were spending their own money.

Robert Higgs continues:

The announced goal is to identify terrorists and eliminate them or prevent them from carrying out their nefarious acts. This is simultaneously a small task and an impossible one. It is small because the number of persons seeking to carry out a terrorist act of substantial consequence against the United States and in a position to do so cannot be more than a handful. If the number were greater, we would have seen many more attacks or attempted attacks during the past decade—after all, the number of possible targets is virtually unlimited, and the attackers might cause some form of damage in countless ways. The most plausible reason why so few attacks or attempted attacks have occurred is that very few persons have been trying to carry them out. (I refer to genuine attempts, not to the phony-baloney schemes planted in the minds of simpletons by government undercover agents and then trumpeted to the heavens when the FBI “captures” the unfortunate victims of the government’s entrapment.)

So, the true dimension of the terrorism problem that forms the excuse for these hundreds of programs of official predation against the taxpayers is small—not even in the same class with, say, reducing automobile-accident or household-accident deaths by 20 percent. Yet, at the same time, the antiterrorism task is impossible because terrorism is a simple act available in some form to practically any determined adult with access to Americans and their property at home or abroad. It is simply not possible to stop all acts of terrorism if potential terrorists have been given a sufficient grievance to motivate their wreaking some form of havoc against Americans. However, it is silly to make the prevention of all terrorist acts the goal. What can’t be done won’t be done, regardless of how many people and how much money one devotes to doing it. We can, though, endure some losses from terrorism in the same way that we routinely endure some losses from accidents, diseases, and ordinary crime.

In another article, Robert Higgs explains why the federal government's efforts to "fight terrorism" are really efforts to monitor and spy on American citizens:

Moreover, the so-called intelligence gathering that the government bankrolls so lavishly is aimed in great part, not at Muslim madmen, but at you and me. The government's banks of super-computers and legions of apparatchiki are busily gleaning data on your telephone calls, Internet messages and Web searches, financial and other business transactions, and virtually everything else that touches your life in a way that can be snatched into data banks by soulless bureaucrats and techno-flunkies. Yet, while every nook and cranny of your privacy is being invaded, at your expense, you are being assured that these official crimes are all legitimate means of protecting you from grave, impending harm. Should we also believe in fairy tales and ghost stories?

The truth of the matter is that you have a greater chance of dying on a government highway than dying as a result of terrorism. If the U.S. intelligence apparatus spending of over $40 billion before 9/11 failed, then it would be sheer folly to increase the funding of intelligence activities that have been proven a failure. Throwing more money at an already broken bureaucratic system will not solve our problems.

Perhaps the responsibility of intelligence gathering should be returned to the military, instead of residing in a intelligence bureaucracy that often has served as the President's personal army. This would immediately save the American taxpayers over $80 and more.

Another solution to this problem would be to recognize that terrorism is best combated by the civilian justice system, instead of the militaristic intelligence apparatus.

As Jacob Hornberger explains, "terrorism is a federal criminal offense. No one can deny that. It has long been listed in the U.S. Code as a crime. That's why terrorists are indicted in U.S. District Court and accorded all the rights and guarantees in the Bill of Rights, just like drug defendants. It's why such famous terrorists as Ramzi Yousef, Zacharias Moussaoui, Jose Padilla, and Timothy McVeigh, to name only a few, were indicted, tried, and convicted in federal court."

Since terrorism is a crime, rather than a "act of war", terrorism should be treated as a crime. The criminal justice system would be better at combating terrorism than executing a foreign policy that antagonizes people into committing acts of terrorism against Americans and having a wasteful intelligence bureaucracy that spies and keeps tabs on the American people.