Economics In Four Dimensions
posted at 9:35 pm on February 10, 2010 by Doctor Zero
The most complex factor in the study of economics is time. Because liberal and statist economic theory does not properly account for the fourth dimension, it rarely predicts economic development accurately. The application of static thinking to a dynamic economy is equivalent to carving an ice sculpture out of warm water.
Take the example of the new pork bill Democrats are attempting to fry up in Congress. Even if this bill was an honest attempt to stimulate job growth, instead of the outright theft of taxpayer money to pay off favored constituencies, it would have minimal and short-term effects on job growth at best. This is because the engine of job growth is demand, particularly anticipated demand.
Training new employees requires a sizable investment of time and resources. Hiring comes with huge compliance costs, as well as incurring taxes and fees that workers don’t usually see on their paychecks – depending on your job and the state you live in, the total cost of employing you is probably double your hourly wage. This is an investment your employer makes in the hope of long-term reward. Marginal reductions in the cost of labor have a minor effect on the employer’s hiring decisions, because they are short-term incentives to make a long-term commitment. A foreman hiring day laborers for a short job might take on more workers, in exchange for a discount or subsidy payment, but expecting most businesses to respond to such incentives is like expecting a subsidy for wedding ring purchases to result in more marriages.
Government stimulus spending ends up doing more harm than good, because it removes money from the private sector through taxation, and when government debt reaches dizzying Obama heights, it makes corporate management nervous about the future. They understand that deficit spending jeopardizes the value of money, and they see massive tax increases lurking in its shadow. Businessmen know they’re a year away from the Democrats losing power in Congress, and they’ve got to survive three more years of Barack Obama, whose tendencies toward populist business-bashing and socialist spending make him dangerously unpredictable.
Investment is a calculated risk, based on the investor’s confidence in his ability to predict and influence future trends. In a command economy, future developments are shaped by the personality quirks of political leaders, and the demands of powerful constituencies. Political influence becomes the most valuable resource a large business can purchase… while small businessmen can only hope they aren’t crushed by regulations, mandates, and policy earthquakes rippling out from Washington. No one grows into an uncertain future, especially when the ruling party makes it clear they will confiscate the “winnings” from exceptionally successful enterprises.
The Wall Street interests that supported Obama’s candidacy were badly rattled when he turned on them. Obviously, they feel less confident in their ability to predict his actions, and their investment portfolios are likely to reflect this anxiety. Watching him perform an about-face under the pressure of crashing poll numbers, and begin courting them like Valentine’s Day sweethearts, will not calm their nerves.
In a socialist economy, their best-case scenario is modest growth and profits, since windfall success will turn them into political targets. The worst-case scenario is economic collapse brought about by Obama’s manifestly incompetent team, and his primitive wealth-destroying ideology. This vision of the future will continue to depress corporate growth, and resulting job growth, no matter what Obama says he will do today.
Political assaults on the banking and credit industries also do great harm to the economy, because they are the source of investment capital and consumer loans. Criticizing the profits of a bank is easy if you ignore the time factor – the previous risks and losses the bank had to endure. Banks and credit-card companies invest hard capital at a substantial risk of default, to earn money in the future through interest and fees. If they believe their ability to profit from this risk and expense is threatened, and they’ve been demonized to the point where they have no effective means to influence politics to their advantage, the only logical move is to reduce risk, and increase the price of the loans they feel confident in making. This hurts new businesses and low-income consumers the most, because they have the least impressive credit ratings.
Static theories of redistribution and “social justice” never account for the changes in behavior they produce. Money given or taken today produces a response tomorrow, which can be very different from the desired goal of social engineers. This is why higher tax rates never bring in anywhere near the revenue projected by greedy politicians. Redistribution schemes destroy future opportunity, for both providers and recipients.
It’s significant that socialists always talk about the catastrophes that will ensue if government takes no action, but they never want to discuss the possibilities denied to private industry when the government passes regulations or seizes wealth. No one mourns the investments that weren’t made, technologies that weren’t developed, or new markets that weren’t opened. The Left not only ignores the future, it proceeds as if we don’t have one… or as though it’s so inescapably awful that the only moral course of action is spreading the misery, so it will be easier to endure. That’s why we should never stop asking who will pay off those deficits someday, or what will happen when the government can’t borrow any more money from foreign interests, or the dwindling Social Security fund, to service its debt. The Left will never have an answer for those questions, because their economic theories are like a school of physics that assumes nothing in the universe will ever move.
Cross-posted at www.doczero.org.
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The government can only deplete wealth.
daesleeper on February 10, 2010 at 9:39 PM
That isn’t pork they’re frying up.
Bishop on February 10, 2010 at 9:41 PM
Oh, yea; The fourth dimension understood only by the sixth sense.
Barrack’s been there; Done that!
Gibbs shall explain to the unwashed masses.
Cybergeezer on February 10, 2010 at 9:46 PM
Doc Zero should start a radio show or something. Always on point…
visions on February 10, 2010 at 9:47 PM
Alas, tax credits are the same type of social engineering that produces unanticipated consequences, as we are learning.
AnninCA on February 10, 2010 at 9:47 PM
Excellent article, Doctor Zero.
Which is why only those brainiacs from Harvard can do it. Anyone who doesn’t know what “profit and earnings ratios” are just wouldn’t understand …
Heh. Good analogy.
neurosculptor on February 10, 2010 at 9:48 PM
I have successfully run a service business employing 20 to 30 people on a seasonal basis for 25 years. I can afford to wait out Obama and his minions. But this president and his policies have caused me to scale back, because I have no faith in the business climate as long as he is in power. This decision has been made at the cost of jobs about 25% of my employees. How more are there like me? Thousands. Tens of thousands. Welcome to Obamanomics.
khacha on February 10, 2010 at 9:51 PM
All these confusing dimensions can be boiled down to one overriding moral. The less freedom there is for you, the more power there is for them.
Cheshire Cat on February 10, 2010 at 9:59 PM
I’ve always believe that consistency and predictability is alot more important than the actual policies.
Obama is unpredictable. I saw it in the primaries. I’m surprised to see it, but it’s very prevalant, in his presidency.
That tactic works great when whipping up communities. It’s absolutely the wrong tack with governing a country.
I suspect a lot of people are like you. It’s the chaos factor.
AnninCA on February 10, 2010 at 10:00 PM
Great article. Our economy is in the hands of a clown.
Hopey the Clown Photshopped pic here.
trapeze on February 10, 2010 at 10:01 PM
Do not imagine, Doctor Zero, that controlling the economy of a country is a pleasure. On the contrary, it is a deep and heavy responsibility. No one believes more firmly than our Dear Leader Barack Obama that all businessmen and businesswomen should make their own economic decisions. He would be only too happy to let them make their own economic decisions for themselves, but sometimes they might make the wrong economic decisions like drilling for oil and natural gas and building cars rather than building windmills and solar panels and battery powered golf carts, Doctor Zero, and then where would we be?
Cheshire Cat on February 10, 2010 at 10:07 PM
Well it might work if a Ferrari came with the wedding ring.
Cheshire Cat on February 10, 2010 at 10:10 PM
The economy is on its own, in my opinion. The government can do very little.
Some actions might really shift the direction. But it would take courage beyond what I see from government today.
Real regulatory oversight, a true financial path outlined, a commitment to a philosophy.
Frankly, I think that’s the solution, but I don’t see either party offering such a path.
It would take too much guts.
AnninCA on February 10, 2010 at 10:13 PM
Nailhead. We’re currently faced with choosing one of two extremes: almost no regulation at all, or near-total regulation. There’s no middle ground because our politicians are morally bankrupt, and their loyalty is up for either the highest bidder or whatever group creates the biggest ruckus.
Dark-Star on February 10, 2010 at 10:20 PM
Doc Zero, I learn so much from you. How do you figure all this out? Thanks for enlightening us.
I hope the democrats who are snowed in, read HA and your posts…
CCRWM on February 10, 2010 at 10:28 PM
The answer is simple.
No regulations.
No bailouts.
khacha on February 10, 2010 at 10:30 PM
Que? What country are you living in? I don’t see anyone proposing anything remotely approaching a rollback of regulation (whether financial, OSHA, ERISA, workmen’s comp., IRC, SEC, Sarbanes-Oxley, etc. etc. etc.) to the 1920′s, let alone the 1800′s.
RD on February 10, 2010 at 10:33 PM
My point was that the nation is so polarized that it’s “all or nothing”…again.
But your point still stands – we’re seemingly only able to see ‘all’ as the sole choice available!
Dark-Star on February 10, 2010 at 10:37 PM
You know, I hate to play the nitpicker, but time is not the fourth dimension. Not in any imaginable way.
And the person who came up with that expression needs to be buried in concrete.
Time is a principle that exists in any dimension – even in one dimension (a line), if anything can move from one place to another down that line, it does so through time.
Calling time the fourth dimension just doesn’t make any sense. There’s already a fourth, fifth, and sixth dimension, and time exists in all of them.
On the other hand, since more people are accused of “towing the line” than are “toeing the line,” I’m probably just beating a dead horse.
Merovign on February 10, 2010 at 10:38 PM
Of those two options, the first is better because at least it’s reversible. Once you go down the road of near-total regulation, there’s no turning back or, at the very least, it’s more difficult to turn back.
There need to be more “hard and fast” rules and less discretion given to politicians to change the rules mid-stream for favored constituencies. To a certain extent, that would make government more technocratic, but it would eliminate some of the arbitrariness mentioned in the essay and not all technocracy is bad, if managed professionally. Even then, it’s not foolproof (but what is?) because, e.g. the Fed has a rule about what the level of interest rates should be and the person who developed it said they used it incorrectly, helping cause the housing bubble.
venividivici on February 10, 2010 at 10:38 PM
Time?
Feh!
The Progressives live in the Eternal Now.
Right next door to Cloud Cuckooland.
And down the street from the floating islandf of LaPuta.
profitsbeard on February 10, 2010 at 11:32 PM
It’s the chaos factor all right, AnninCal.
And it affects individuals, too.
Very good piece, Doctor Zero. Very on target.
Alana on February 10, 2010 at 11:56 PM
Doc, it’s a challenge to make headway with folks who are brainwashed in class warfare, or see the economy as a static picture. I’m wondering whether taking it away from the usual triggers of Marxist programming could help, and if one way might be to paint a coherent picture of the dynamic economy that has doesn’t use people in its iconography, but that someone can still relate to. How about… an engine of some sort.
Like a great big car engine, but something closer to an enormous Rube Goldberg-style contraption, with a ba-zillion gears turning 24/7, with a certain total capacity (C ?) that may be hard to measure but whose total output can at least be imagined.
That total capacity is like our GDP. It’s akin to the total net velocity or torque of all of the crankshafts turning inside of this big engine.
And us little people, us consumers, are constantly sucking productivity off of this engine. For the most part, the turning of those gears can either be diverted to our needs, or used to turn other gears in the engine. Money we have saved up is potential energy like kindling or gasoline that we can use, either to turn the gears ourselves (bus. enterprise), or to give to someone else to turn the gears for us (commerce, buying products & services).
The contraption is also being constantly adjusted, extended, torn down and rebuilt in selected areas, while the rest of it hums along at an ever faster speed, as certain blessed people make really good guesses about what will make it run faster, and put those ideas into practice (entrepeneurs). Others may make bad guesses, and if they do, the total output of the engine will drop — and there’s nothing anyone can do about it, short of drifting back to a pattern of positive guesses about what will improve the engine’s performance.
Sometimes these guesses are based on science, other times they are based on trial and error, but there’s no sure-fire guarantee of any outcome in particular — OR ELSE WE’D HAVE ALREADY DONE IT BY NOW, AND WE’D ALL BE BA-ZILLIONAIRES.
And if the total output at any one time drops below a certain level, then the output being kicked off by this machine stops feeding mouths, or heating our homes. The current speed of this engine is the result of a LARGE # of optimizations and custom tweaks which have succeeded in pushing the total output from its original size all of the way to the current size, from
here (gesture) to
HERE (gesture).
And any tinkering with this engine by well-intentioned government reps or university professors, or even announcing the intent to tinker with this engine, will cause it to react instantly — possibly chaotically, as millions of individual decision-makers adjust their plans based on trade-offs they may have to make, merely in order to be able to keep turning the gears.
And any steady use by government of time, power or materials from the economy must be siphoned off from this big machine, by diverting power from some gears and onto gears installed by the Government — which have their own inertia. And this siphoning off has to be done VERY carefully, or else entire parts of the machine will grind to a halt. There is no correct way to do this; there are no manuals or college courses to tell us how to do it. Any time we try this it’s an experiment, a crapshoot. And the very best, most delicate intervention will still slow the machine down more than whatever the government manages to extract. That difference in work (speed x time) is dissipated, lost forever.
In this machine, there are likely to be some “cheaters” who will try to siphon off productive cycles for their own ends, but that is NOT the typical “rich person” or business. By and large, the typical “rich person” is somebody who puts velocity into the engine, by applying their own know-how to get some of those wheels turning faster, or adding their own components to the engine. They are, for lack of a better term, the master mechanics, the builders of this big engine.
Without those master mechanics, we don’t have an engine. At least not one that can support 300 million people, put a steady flow of resources into their pockets and make it all look easy.
So anybody who comes to the table saying they can do something better for the economy, can’t leave it at that; they have to explain how what they’re doing is going to make this big, complicated engine run faster. Or at least how it isn’t going to slow down important parts of the engine that ordinary folks rely on for their daily bread. And if they are planning to slow down the engine, on purpose, because of “social justice” or some other goal that competes with total net velocity, they’d better have a good reason why — because they’re playing with fire.
Something like that anyway :)
RD on February 11, 2010 at 12:11 AM
Always love a good analogy; and this is a great one.
gekkobear on February 11, 2010 at 12:20 AM
Penn & Teller BS – Taxes
daesleeper on February 11, 2010 at 12:26 AM
The takeaway: I can appreciate the aesthete’s preference for a nice-looking engine over an ugly duckling as much as the next guy, but if the ugly duckling is consistently kicking the aesthete’s elegant a– … it’s time to find out why.
After all is said and done, the pretty-looking, Politburo-designed engine won’t feed 300 million people on the amount of gasoline we’re feeding our engine today. It may suck up 3x as much while producing half the output; or it may not even run.
The lesson is of a piece with lessons learned in the AI realm, where research into evolutionary algorithms is showing they are the only ones capable of delivering optimal total output over a wide variety of complex tasks, while the central designer-driven solutions are failing miserably in comparison. And what’s true of one discipline might also be true of the other.
RD on February 11, 2010 at 12:40 AM
hehe
instant classic
urbancenturion on February 11, 2010 at 2:00 AM
Thanks Dr. Zero,
…your insight is spot on as usual.
Which is why the free market killing policies of Obama will never jump start this economy.
What few bumps we have had in growth are mostly government produced through the theft of tax payer money or cooked numbers that have to be revised later,reported on page 18c of the paper and ignored by the Katie Couric crowd.
70% of our economy is fueled by consumer spending and right now people don’t have much money.
With higher taxes,government expansion and control of the free market, debt going out of control,and entitlements going through the roof, the American people will not be getting much money anytime soon.
This is a vicious circle jerk of failure that the Obama administration is creating in their quest to socialize this country.
..and Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They [socialists] always run out of other people’s money. It’s quite a characteristic of them.”
Margaret Thatcher, in a television interview for Thames TV This Week on February 5, 1976.
Baxter Greene on February 11, 2010 at 3:23 AM
In a private business, proper marketing anticipates what the customer wants or needs, then fills that need with a service or product, which generates income. The business is always looking for a paying customer, one that has cash in his pocket.
The government does some similar “marketing” (anticipating what the big need is), but if its commodity is benefits or entitlements, its “customer” base will more likely be people who do not have the cash. It buys their votes with promises, while someone else is supposed to pay for it. So the governments “customer” base is happy, but the government is not anticipating the change in behavior in those who are actually paying the bill.
Pazman on February 11, 2010 at 4:30 AM
Everyone who appreciated this post should pick up a copy of Rizzo & O’Driscoll’s The Economics of Time and Ignorance. You can even Kindle it now.
DrSteve on February 11, 2010 at 5:07 AM
I described this over 2 years ago as “The Democrat Effect” – the rational response by firms to prepare for the inevitable insult to the economy from unsurmountable regulation, litigation, and taxation to come. These policies are absolutely purposeful, hence the related term “economic terrorism.”
Joe C. on February 11, 2010 at 6:34 AM
Excellent dissertation DZ!
Here’s the key sentence for me:
The fact is not that business interests corrupt DC, it’s that DC corrupts business. Big biz knows that it is either going to take a seat at the table with their competitors’ lobbyists or they’re going to be on the menu. Instead of competing for customers, they are forced to compete for favorable laws.
All this eyewash from Obambi about removing corporate influence from our pure and civic-minded pols is simply a fig leaf. The way to reduce the influence of businesses on our laws and the way to spur our economy is to restore our Fed government to the limited powers that our Constitution enumerates!
But of course, how many politicians wants to reduce their own power and influence?
MJBrutus on February 11, 2010 at 6:54 AM
The problem with federal regulation of so much is that it is at the wrong level. Worker safety is a States concern, not the National concern. Fair housing? The States are the ones designated to oversee the land in their individual State and the federal government must ask each State about each piece of property it wants to own and get that agreement first… yet here we have the federal government as the bag-holder for home mortgages which are to real property in the States.
Indeed States have duplicated much of the regulatory structure of the federal government, already, and don’t need ‘help’ or ‘oversight’ to do so. If the federal government actually DID roll back regulations to 1920′s levels would anyone doubt that the States would not step in to enforce the laws they have on the books? If you are really worried about each part that the federal government has taken on, then when it is cut out, cut the funds that went to it in half and block grant that out for that subject to the States: that cuts the federal portion by half, ensures money stays with the people, and puts the more local State government as the one to oversee such affairs.
There are very, very few areas that we need federal regulation, and we did just fine with very little all the way up to the 1970′s… after 1972 more than 2/3 of all regulations were put into effect and that was counted in 1996, and I would dare say that it is 3/4 or more today. Are we actually safer and better off with so much regulation from the federal level?
I prefer a lean, cut to the bone, no extra fat and just enough muscle to move around federal government rather than this bloated cancer we have in DC today. Do we really need a Dept. of Agriculture? Education? Energy? Just start there and see the amount of graft in the first, the continued flat line of literacy, and the fact we have had two ‘energy crises’ and no solutions from the federal agency named to research that area. Does anyone really believe that with the advent of computerized farming, contour farming, drip irrigation and so on that our industry would throw out those tools of productivity that decrease cost and increase profit just to denude the land? And violate a host of STATE laws on such?
I’ll take the lean and barely able to do its job government over this officious, condescending, bloated, spineless mass we currently have that can’t protect the Nation, can’t check its spending, can’t stop encroaching on our daily lives and just can’t face up to the fact that when it does not do a job it was not given well, it should hand the job back to the people and say it was a mistake to give it to the federal government.
And I’m saying that as a retired federal bureaucrat.
ajacksonian on February 11, 2010 at 6:54 AM
We are in a longstanding ideological war that is headed towards becoming actively and broadly violent. There is a reason that kidknapping is a capital offense. It takes away the most valuable thing a person has… their freedon.
The anger being expressed is just the beginning of a “push-back” that has been a long time in coming. It didn’t just appear from thin air. The acceleration in the push by government to take away freedom has received an equal and opposite reaction. God help us all when it reaches critical mass.
CC
CapedConservative on February 11, 2010 at 7:28 AM
Great article, Doc. It points out the myriad of “unintended consequences” that are impossible to predict when government starts tinkering with the economy. I have taken the time this year to thoroughly read Friedrich von Hayek’s “Road to Serfdom” in an attempt to better understand some of the principles of economics (which sadly, along with business, is not one of my strong suits). Page after page reminded me of exactly what is happening today.
Hayek’s main point is that those “planners” who think they can take the reins of economies and lead them in any direction they desire are naive at best. Every intervention will create those nagging unintended consequences that will lead them to more regulation and control, and more unintended consequences. The cycle will continue until the planners believe that virtually everything (socially, economically, culturally) will have to be regulated in order to create their desired results – hence, serfdom.
RD’s analysis above is also very enlightening. Thanks!
Logic on February 11, 2010 at 7:29 AM
Indeed, and the MSM keeps dishonestly calling them “tax cuts”. Totally different thing.
forest on February 11, 2010 at 7:31 AM
Assuming no friction…
forest on February 11, 2010 at 7:36 AM
BRAVO, Doctor!
The Socialist/Marxist design is for the renaissance of Medieval Feudalism to transpire in this Age of Information that empowers evil to pierce all Constitutional Rights and negate the unalienable rights of all people, all rights reserved for party leaders, the new aristocracy belonging to the “untouchable” feudal lords. The sadistic irony of ARBEIT MACHT FREI never ended with WWII. Follow Stein’s link.
maverick muse on February 11, 2010 at 8:50 AM
Regulating commerce is an explicit duty of the congress. To suggest no regulation would be to question the judgment of the founders…are you prepared to do that? ;-)
Also, Doc, your blog has found its way to the Libertarian Reddit. They seem to enjoy your stuff. Congrats.
ernesto on February 11, 2010 at 8:58 AM
TANSTAAFL.
Ever.
N. O'Brain on February 11, 2010 at 9:15 AM
Statists love to assume that govt action carries no cost.
They always assume that new laws will do exactly what they are designed to do.
They always assume that new powers given to govt will be used by selfless and uncorruptable beaurocrats to the betterment of society.
Unfortunately, this includes quite a few statists who mistakingly call themselves conservative.
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:21 AM
To ann, no matter what the problem, the answer is always more govt.
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:24 AM
He’s living in a world in which businessmen would kidnap children to work in their families if the govt weren’t stopping them.
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:25 AM
arg, factories, not families.
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:25 AM
Recovery, oh recovery…..where art thou??
PatriotRider on February 11, 2010 at 9:32 AM
The Left doesn’t ignore the future so much as it fears a future it doesn’t control. A future dictated by free markets and free people includes the chaos of creative destruction that will be sorted out by independent individuals. Where that leads is difficult to predict and it threatens those in power who inherently distrust the people themselves.
If the Left controls the future, then it can hold it back or dole it out in an orderly fashion under terms dictated by them:
The Left will decide how much freedom and independence you, and especially they can handle; like a parent deciding when a teenager is ready to have the keys to the family car.
Then you will be required to be happy and grateful for their magnanimity as you drift through life in a hazy twilight, barely aware of you own existence.
RadClown on February 11, 2010 at 9:37 AM
So giving permission is equivalent to requiring to?
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:38 AM
Statists fear what they don’t control. There are quite a few right wing statists.
MarkTheGreat on February 11, 2010 at 9:39 AM
As if the DHS isn’t enough of a horror to eschew enhanced bureaucracy, look back to what enabled the American mindset permeated by socialism. Unless you home school, it is a lost cause. Even private schools are PC petri dishes. Socialism still fights to own the right to educate the citizenry to tolerate and embrace Marxism.
Being reminded that Reagan’s administration mistakenly attempted to solve the nation’s poor performance from socialist directed public education by enacting the Dept. of Education, look who Obama appointed and the Senate confirmed to be today’s Sec. of Education.
Noting the good intentions of George W. Bush’s “No Child Left Behind” by supposedly requiring teachers to be responsible for student performance, the illiteracy rate and drop-out rate is as bad as ever. REALITY CHECK: students must study in order to learn. Knowledge must be earned through the individual’s dedicated effort to “learn”. Considering the excellent performance of a home schooled student, Bush’s legislation makes it that much more difficult for the teaching parent at home, and impossible for that effective instructor to teach at a public school. It’s all about the teacher union right to dictate what ideology and what techniques are acceptable–only socialist measures are permitted into the classrooms today.
Rather, RESCIND “updated” socialist PC curriculum and teacher paperwork and refocus student studies on the tried and true curriculum that produced America’s so-called “Greatest Generation”. Namely, focus curriculum for literacy, math, science, music, art and an hour of calisthenic PE that warms up for team sports, and history focusing on America through the conservative perspective from our nation’s founding through WWII. That “history” includes Constitutional Governance, proving the record that limited government is Constitutionally and functionally best, exposing the ugly truth about presidents who denied citizens Constitutional Rights when not in a war. Teach the historical setting before presenting the world from the Marxist point of view. Our Founding Fathers model the quintessence of Classical Liberals. They amalgamated all the best thought with the greatest care for posterity to cherish. Civil Rights already lived within the Constitution’s Bill of Rights, stipulating that all American citizens enjoy the same Constitutional rights regardless of race, gender or creed.
However, moving from equal rights under the law into stipulating who is more special and deserves more consideration because of their race, gender or creed is unconstitutional. PC is unconstitutional.
The historical record also exposes the fraud and corruption that LBJ’s “Great Society” welfare inflicted upon our low income families as so-called “entitlements” are NOT Constitutional, but merely tools created by socialists to promote broken families and slothful recipients of tax funds though recipients are capable of working to “earn”. Socialism entirely destroys the traditional concept realized since man became aware of his existence, that by the sweat of our brows we earn our living.
Charity and free thought can not be mandated or restricted by legislation with the threat of prosecution and prison. Yet America, like Europe, has spent the last century using legislation to “solve” humanity’s faults, only to compound evil through the façade of good intent. And the result today deals with things so much worse, that any attempt to retain the ideology of our Founding Fathers will be prosecuted by the very government mutated from the Constitution into a global Marxist state beholden to the UN Marxists.
maverick muse on February 11, 2010 at 9:52 AM
No, it’s interstate commerce. The government has arrogated unto itself the power to define that as just about anything, but that doesn’t mean its constitutional.
RadClown on February 11, 2010 at 9:53 AM
Statism empowers the government to deny our Constitutional Rights and to own all things.
If a statist is masquerading as a right wing politician, then that politician is only a pirate raiding the right wing.
Romney’s last 2008 campaign stand promised whatever it takes to get votes, including merging industry with government in order to provide Americans with good jobs.
Making promises with good intentions doesn’t erase the ugly truth as politics play out in TIME.
maverick muse on February 11, 2010 at 10:01 AM
Oh I like the pic for this peice. Salvador Dahli was one screwed up man.
Hmm I wonder if that makes me a liberal for actually knowing and owning a couple prints of his.
upinak on February 11, 2010 at 10:17 AM
I suppose it being a requirement depends on the individual case. My point is only that the philosophically argue against all regulation is a) in disagreement with the founder’s ideas of what constitutes legitimate government and b) borderline anarchistic. Whether or not the government is compelled to regulate would depend on the costs and benefits of the given regulation you’re referencing.
I’m aware of that, but theoretically the concept of legitimate regulation is well provided for by the constitution. I’m willing to admit that many regulations are superfluous, but to argue against all regulation as a matter of principled philosophy is to go way beyond the framer’s concept of liberty and legitimate government.
ernesto on February 11, 2010 at 10:33 AM
If Obama had taken time to read Doc Zero, especially this piece, he wouldn’t be spewing the misguided economics he vomits every time he opens his mouth.
College Prof on February 11, 2010 at 10:33 AM
Where exactly did I or anyone else argue against all regulation? The argument is against regulation of things the people have an inherent right to decide for themselves.
The government has no right to tell me what kind of light bulb to buy, what type of health insurance coverage I must have, whether or not I wear a seat belt and on and on.
The government has specific enumerated rights and powers that we grant them, not the other way around.
RadClown on February 11, 2010 at 10:46 AM
The comment I first replied to was literally “no regulations”. And I generally agree that the government has no right to tell you what lightbulb to buy, or whether or not you have to wear a seatbelt. It CAN, however, determine that paint with lead in it damages kid’s brains, and require that if you wish to engage in lawful commerce between states, you mustn’t use it in residential settings.
ernesto on February 11, 2010 at 10:53 AM
Ya know, you can advocate a well run government without necessarily advocating the state takeover of all things economic. Just saying.
TheUnrepentantGeek on February 11, 2010 at 11:45 AM