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The Limits of Power (Thomas Sowell)
GOPUSA ^ | April 20, 2010 | Thomas Sowell

Posted on 04/19/2010 7:11:49 PM PDT by jazusamo

When I first began to study the history of slavery around the world, many years ago, one of the oddities that puzzled me was the practice of paying certain slaves, which existed in ancient Rome and in America's antebellum South, among other places.

In both places, slave owners or their overseers whipped slaves to force them to work, and in neither place was whipping a slave literally to death likely to bring any serious consequences.

There could hardly be a greater power of one human being over another than the arbitrary power of life and death. Why then was it necessary to pay certain slaves? At the very least, it suggested that there were limits to what could be accomplished by power.

Most slaves performing most tasks were of course not paid, but were simply forced to work by the threat of punishment. That was sufficient for galley slaves or plantation slaves. But there were various kinds of work where that was not sufficient.

Tasks involving judgment or talents were different because no one can know how much judgment or talent someone else has. In short, knowledge is an inherent constraint on power. Payment can bring forth the knowledge or talent by giving those who have it an incentive to reveal it and to develop it.

Payment can vary in amount and in kind. Some slaves, especially eunuchs in the days of the Ottoman Empire, could amass both wealth and power. One reason they could be trusted in positions of power was that they had no incentive to betray the existing rulers and try to establish their own dynasties, which would obviously have been physically impossible for them.

At more mundane levels, such tasks as diving operations in the Carolina swamps required a level of discretion and skill far in excess of that required to pick cotton in the South or cut sugar cane in the tropics. Slaves doing this kind of work had financial incentives and were treated far better. So were slaves working in Virginia's tobacco factories.

The point of all this is that when even slaves had to be paid to get certain kinds of work done, this shows the limits of what can be accomplished by power alone. Yet so much of what is said and done by those who rely on the power of government to direct ever more sweeping areas of our life seem to have no sense of the limits of what can be accomplished that way.

Even the totalitarian governments of the 20th century eventually learned the hard way the limits of what could be accomplished by power alone. China still has a totalitarian government today but, after the death of Mao, the Chinese government began to loosen its controls on some parts of the economy, in order to reap the economic benefits of freer markets.

As those benefits became clear in higher rates of economic growth and rising standards of living, more government controls were loosened. But, just as market principles were applied to only certain kinds of slavery, so freedom in China has been allowed in economic activities to a far greater extent than in other realms of the country's life, where tight control from the top down remains the norm.

Ironically, the United States is moving in the direction of the kind of economy that China has been forced to move away from. China once had complete government control of medical care, but eventually gave it up as the disaster that it was.

The current leadership in Washington operates as if they can just set arbitrary goals, whether "affordable housing" or "universal health care" or anything else -- and not concern themselves with the repercussions -- since they have the power to simply force individuals, businesses, doctors or anyone else to knuckle under and follow their dictates.

Friedrich Hayek called this mindset "the road to serfdom." But, even under serfdom and slavery, experience forced those with power to recognize the limits of their power. What this administration -- and especially the President -- does not have is experience.

Barack Obama had no experience running even the most modest business, and personally paying the consequences of his mistakes, before becoming President of the United States. He can believe that his heady new power is the answer to all things.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: obama; power; sowell; thomassowell
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1 posted on 04/19/2010 7:11:49 PM PDT by jazusamo
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To: jazusamo

This guy is always a good read! Great analytical mind, I say!


2 posted on 04/19/2010 7:14:58 PM PDT by rawhide
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To: abigail2; Amalie; American Quilter; arthurus; awelliott; Bahbah; bamahead; Battle Axe; ...
*PING*
Thomas Sowell

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Recent columns
Republican‘s Lamentable Legacy: Easy-To-Confirm Court Nominees
Race and Politics: Part IV
Race and Politics: Part III
Race and Politics: Part II
Race and Politics

Please FReepmail me if you would like to be added to or removed from the Thomas Sowell ping list…

3 posted on 04/19/2010 7:15:02 PM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: jazusamo
Friedrich Hayek called this mindset "the road to serfdom."

It is extremely sad but also ironic that it took a "black" president to move the nation back towards a form of slavery.

4 posted on 04/19/2010 7:21:23 PM PDT by highlander_UW (First we take down the Democrats, then we clean the Augean stable that is the GOP.)
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To: jazusamo

Great column. Thanks for posting!


5 posted on 04/19/2010 7:29:18 PM PDT by buridan
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To: jazusamo

Thanks for the ping.

I wonder if Obama ever reads Sowell?


6 posted on 04/19/2010 7:31:42 PM PDT by NotSoModerate
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To: NotSoModerate; jazusamo
I wonder if Obama ever reads Sowell?


7 posted on 04/19/2010 7:35:16 PM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: NotSoModerate
I wonder if Obama ever reads Sowell?

Hah! It'd sure be nice to think so. After Obama comes down from the ceiling if he really thought about it he might learn something. :-)

8 posted on 04/19/2010 7:37:15 PM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: smoothsailing

LOL! That’s Great!


9 posted on 04/19/2010 7:37:58 PM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: jazusamo
This may be my favorite Sowell piece ever.

Example:
"Tasks involving judgment or talents were different because no one can know how much judgment or talent someone else has. In short, knowledge is an inherent constraint on power. Payment can bring forth the knowledge or talent by giving those who have it an incentive to reveal it and to develop it."

10 posted on 04/19/2010 7:39:31 PM PDT by norton
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To: norton

Agreed, and the paragraph you selected is dead on the money.


11 posted on 04/19/2010 7:44:39 PM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: jazusamo

Thanks for the ping jaz. Great post by Dr. Sowell again.


12 posted on 04/19/2010 7:45:29 PM PDT by rockinqsranch (Dems, Libs, Socialists...Call 'em What you Will, They ALL have Fairies Living In Their Trees.)
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To: jazusamo

When warnings transform to preparation for dealing with the unimaginable.


13 posted on 04/19/2010 7:45:45 PM PDT by Gene Eric (Your Hope has been redistributed. Here's your Change.)
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To: jazusamo

Thomas Sowell just gets better all the time.


14 posted on 04/19/2010 7:46:37 PM PDT by SkipW
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To: jazusamo

Joseph of the O.T. comes to mind, a slave who became the second most powerful man in Egypt.


15 posted on 04/19/2010 7:48:53 PM PDT by Graybeard58 (No Romney, not now, not ever!)
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To: jazusamo

Thomas Sowell possesses the maturity and wisdom that the Messiah can only admire.


16 posted on 04/19/2010 7:50:32 PM PDT by Rembrandt (.. AND the donkey you rode in on.)
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To: smoothsailing

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!! That’s pretty funny!!!


17 posted on 04/19/2010 7:51:39 PM PDT by NotSoModerate
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To: highlander_UW
It is extremely sad but also ironic that it took a "black" president to move the nation back towards a form of slavery.

Alan Keyes has been warning the nation since 2004 about Obama's slavemaster mindset. Few seemed to want to listen.

18 posted on 04/19/2010 7:53:57 PM PDT by EternalVigilance (No sane man loves war. But all decent men realize there can be no peace with tyrants or terrorists.)
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To: jazusamo

Obamas reform of every major institution reminds me of the early soviet 5 year plans....


19 posted on 04/19/2010 7:54:10 PM PDT by himno hero
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To: jazusamo

Dr. Sowell nails it yet again.


20 posted on 04/19/2010 7:58:47 PM PDT by Ramius (Personally, I give us... one chance in three. More tea?)
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