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Wednesday, June 27, 2007
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
Big-Government Conservatives
by John Stossel
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"Reviving the Hamilton Agenda." That's the headline the New York Times gave David Brooks's recent column honoring Alexander Hamilton, the Founding Father perhaps least interested in limiting political power. Unlike his rival Thomas Jefferson, Hamilton favored strong central government and weaker states.

And he didn't trust the free market. He was an old-fashioned mercantilist -- he wanted politicians and bureaucrats to control private economic activities for the sake of special business interests.

In the true Hamiltonian spirit, Brooks also doesn't trust the market -- which means he doesn't trust free, peaceful individuals and private property. He writes, "We Hamiltonians disagree with the limited government conservatives [I assume Brooks has libertarians like me in mind] because, on its own, the market is failing to supply enough human capital."

Now David Brooks is a bright guy, so I wonder how he can blame the free market for failing in this way. He continues, "Despite all the incentives, 30 percent of kids drop out of high school and the college graduation rate has been flat for a generation."

Excuse me, but why is that the market's fault? Government dominates education in America. K-12 education is a coercive, often rigidly unionized government virtual monopoly that fights every attempt to experiment with free-market competition.

Brooks writes that Hamiltonians like him "think government should help people get the tools they need to compete." But when has government ever been good at that?

He claims the state can "increase the quality of human capital" by, for example, providing "Quality preschool [to] help young children from ... disorganized homes. ... "

Really? What is the chance that it would be "quality" preschool if government runs it? Even the acclaimed Head Start has not been shown to have any lasting effect on academic performance.

Why does Brooks think the government is competent enough to "help ... people compete"? He writes that liberals' "programs haven't worked out," but then proposes his own. When I challenged him on that, he said his ideas are in a "different category" and argued that some intervention is effective and necessary.

Please. When I asked Brooks why a government that performed as ineptly as FEMA did after Hurricane Katrina will be better at running preschools, he said, "Some lives are so screwed up, it's hard to make them worse."

Government coercion almost always makes things worse. It discourages individual effort, and sucks capital away from more productive uses.

Brooks, like a good Hamiltonian, favors coercive government micromanagement. He says, "Bigger child tax credits and increasing the earned income tax credit [welfare] can reduce the economic strain on young families. ... [G]overnment should increase funding for basic research, especially in math, engineering and physics. Continued...

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About The Author
John Stossel blogs at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel/ is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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Drug Addiction - Legal or Not
Actually, saying that drug addiction is same whether it's legal or not is also false.

As it so happens, in a black market, there is no oversight, public or private, that is commonplace in an open market. As a result, there's little to guarantee quality. Drugs are very often diluted with poisons which render similar highs, but a lower lethal dosage. 100% pure heroin has a very low rate of actually killing anyone -- no more than a handful have died from that -- but the poisons it is typically cut with in the illegal black market *DO* kill people on a regular basis.

If the quality of your stuff is bad, what can you do about it? You can't tell the cops, and you can't organize a boycott. (I have a calendar filled with stories about stupid criminals, and there's two or three in there where a junkie got some inferior drugs and tried getting the government to do something about it.)

Every time I hear about somebody dying from a drug overdose, I want to *scream* -- WAS IT PURE DRUGS OR CUT WITH POISON? They never tell you that. It's a very critical piece of information. If it's cut with poison, well no wonder the person died.

It's similar (once again) to Prohibition when people often made wood alcohol instead of grain alcohol, because it was easier to get. Wood alcohol DOES KILL. Normal alcohol can kill you also, but most people will get so drunk they'll pass out before they have a chance to take a lethal dose. The same isn't true with wood alcohol.

Wood alcohol will also take your sight away, which was the hooch-drinker's signal that he'd drank too much. Hence the term, "blind drunk".

None of these problems exist anymore now that alcohol is legal. Similarly, if drugs were made legal, we'd see far fewer ER visits for drug OD's.

Hamilton
Lalo is right. Stossel and Brooks just don't understand Hamilton. Hamilton was for business, but I don't think he advocated any of the special favors that Stossel sees. Jefferson was an idiot. He was against business, mostly because he didn't understand it. When the price his plantation was getting for tobacco went down, Jefferson blamed the middle-men in England.

Hamilton and Madison did their best to put restraints in the Constitution against mob rule. It worked for a hundred years or so, but now what we have is mob rule. I think we have to admit that our democracy just doesn't work anymore. It is degrading into socialism.
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