Posted on 03/19/2016 5:36:07 PM PDT by Lorianne
On January 26, 1841, two years into the First Opium War between Chinas Qing Dynasty and the British Empire, Commodore Sir Gordon Bremer hoisted the British flag above Possession Point in Hong Kong.
At the time the islands population numbered less than 10,000. Most were illiterate fishermen.
Hong Kong was also devoid of any meaningful natural resources except for well-placed geography.
So when the war ended in 1842 and British diplomats formally annexed Hong Kong into their empire, they turned it into a free port almost immediately.
This means that no taxes were charged on goods traded in Hong Kongan anomaly back then.
Governments routinely squeezed trading posts for tax revenue, taking a cut of all goods shipped through the port.
Governments still do this today, charging custom duties and other taxes on imported goods crossing their borders.
As a free port, Hong Kong immediately attracted entrepreneurs and speculators from all over the world to set up their operations.
People were attracted to the low tax environment, and the fact that the imperial government bureaucrats were over 5,000 miles away.
Trade quickly flourished. And as commercial activity grew, the island prospered and rapidly became more developed.
People migrated to Hong Kong based on the premise that, just like in America, they could work hard and make a life for themselves.
Within 20 years the population had increased over ten-fold. And it kept growing.
Hong Kong became a boomtown, earning a reputation as a swashbuckling paradise for risk-takers.
This freewheeling, Wild East attitude paid off.
Today Hong Kong is one of the wealthiest places in the world, with a GDP per capita and standard of living that outpaces most of the West.
Its modern and advanced; the city skyline is beautiful there are 50% more skyscrapers here than in New York City.
Taxes in Hong Kong are still among the lowest in the world.
Yet the government is awash with cash and regularly sends surpluses back to its citizens.
They maintain almost unparalleled financial reserves.
And instead of having to pay interest on debt, Hong Kong generates substantial income from interest and investment gains on its huge pool of savings.
Hong Kong is far from perfect. But this illiterate fishing village did pretty well for itself. And its not hard to figure out why: freedom.
Freedom is an often-misunderstood word.
As G. Edward Griffin, author of the wonderful book The Creature from Jekyll Island told us over the weekend, people think that theyre free as long as theyre not in jail.
And while that may be true, it doesnt scratch the surface of what it means to be free.
Freedom also means being able to make mistakes to take risks and either suffer the consequences of bad decisions or enjoy the rewards of good ones.
This has been a huge part of Hong Kongs success. And it used to be part of Americas as well.
This isnt rocket science. The Universal Law of Prosperity is very clear in order to build wealth you have to produce more than you consume.
But the more rules, regulations, and taxes there are, the more difficult it is to produce.
This is precisely the economic problem in the Land of the Free today.
Theyve created a political system that churns out 80,000+ pages of regulations each year, making people less free and more encumbered to produce.
And these regulations require more government, which can only be funded by more debt and more tax revenue.
Yet at the same time, their monetary system of ultra-low interest rates encourages people to spend money and go into debt.
This system makes the US, and most Western countries, easy to be a consumer. But its becoming more difficult to be a producer.
They reinforce this early, sending police to shutter childrens lemonade stands who didnt apply for a permit. Or calling Homeland Security on teenagers selling snow-shoveling service door-to-door.
This entire system is rigged against the Universal Law of Prosperity.
And when all the incentives make it easier to consume than produce, its not hard to figure out where this destructive path will ultimately lead.
My position is that up until 1865 or so, some blacks in America were slaves, but that was as far as it went.
Today, all Americans are slaves to the government. Black, white, rich, poor. No one is free. The government owns us all.
We need to change that.
It’s not just freedom to succeed, you need freedom to fail too to have a robust economy. Our biggest problem is that those who strive most for success are stripped of their earnings to subsidize the outcomes of the poor decisions of those who SHOULD fail.
But the gubmint sed “We all equal”
They gave us permiss’n boss !
Somebody has to make money so the government can steal it and take a cut and give it to the stupid and lazy.
Just stop and think how overwhelming the government has become in the last 40 years.
The amount of sheer capital it has tied up and removed from the private sector.
However, pursuing happiness and enjoying the blessings of liberty has always meant spiritual prosperity within the hazards and uncertainties of personal freedoms.
The American Dream has never meant disfiguring and crippling the concept of promoting the general welfare into the spreading of government largess. It does not mean government ensuring the protection of home values, college funds, retirement accounts, savings, executive severance packages, affordable healthcare, homeownership, lifetime employment, corporate wealth, political careers, and union benefits.
In every case politicians now become patricians offer enchanting elements of material security such as described above, while obscuring subservience to rules vastly increasing their power. Their legislation routinely attacks our Bill of Rights confiscating freedoms for apparitions of material prosperity.
History and Danger of Administrative Law
http://theconservativecitizen.com/2014/10/01/the-history-and-danger-of-administrative-law/
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