Posted on 12/27/2007 6:36:22 AM PST by traviskicks
September 19, 1984
SOME OBSERVATIONS ON FOUR TERMS IN CONGRESS
HON. RON PAUL of TEXAS
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Mr. Speaker, I shall soon be leaving the House and have asked for this special order to make a few comments regarding the problems our nation faces and the actions needed to correct hem. Having been honored by the 22nd district of Texas to represent them for four terms, I have grown to appreciate the greatness of this institution. I only wish the actions performed by Congress in recent years could match the historic importance of this body.
Thousands of men and women have come and gone in our countrys history, and except for the few, most go unnoticed and nameless in the pages of history, as Im sure I will be. The few who are remembered are those who were able to grab the reins of power and, for the most part, use that power to the detriment of our nation. We must remember achieving power is never the goal sought by a truly free society. Dissipation of power is the objective of those who love liberty. Others, tragically, will be remembered in a negative way for personal scandals. Yet those individuals whose shortcomings prompted the taking of bribes or involvement in illicit sexual activities, have caused no more harm to society than those who used legitimate power to infringe upon individual liberty and expand the size of government. Morally the two are closely related. The acceptance of a bribe is a horrible act indeed for a public servant, but reducing liberty is an outrageous act that causes suffering for generations to come.
Since the time of our founding, few who have come to congress have been remembered for championing the cause of freedom. This is a sign of a declining nation and indicates that respect for freedom is on the wane.
Serving here has been a wonderful experience, and the many friendships will be cherished. I am, however, the first to admit the limited impact Ive had on the legislative process. By conventional wisdom I am ineffective, unable to trade votes, and champion anyones special privilege even my own districts. It places me in lonely category here in Washington. If the political career is not the goal sought, possibly the measuring of effectiveness should be done using a different standard.
The most I can hope for is that someday a suggestion Ive made is remembered: that the debate would shift to a different plane. Instead of asking which form of intervention and planning government should impose, perhaps someday Congress will debate intervention versus nonintervention, government versus voluntary planning, U.S. sovereignty versus internationalism the pros and cons of true liberty. Today the debate is basically is only that of deciding who will be the victims and who the beneficiaries. I hope the hours of debate over the mechanisms of the political system orchestrated by the special interests will give way to this more important debate on freedom. The lack of this debate was my greatest disappointment. Only rarely did I see small fragments of this discussion, and then merely as a tactic for short-term gain rather than because of a sincere belief in the principles of liberty and the Constitution.
Some have said my approach is not practical, but more concede, At least hes consistent. Since I first came here in 1976, the number of lobbyists have doubled and the national debt tripled - $500 billion to $1.59 trillion to me a most impractical trend. Business cycles, unemployment, inflation, high interest rates, and trade wars are the real impracticalities brought about by unwise political and economic policies. Ive been impressed over the years by those who concede to me that the consistency of my views, yet evidently reject them in favor of inconsistent views. Who, I might ask, is served by the politicians of inconsistency the special interests or the general welfare?
The petty partisan squabbles that today are more numerous and more heated serve no useful function. The rhetoric now becoming personal is not designed to solve problems, nor does it show a correct perception of our countrys problems. All are motivated by good intentions, but that cannot suffice. The narrow partisan squabbles are a natural consequence of an intellectual bankruptcy, whereby correct solutions are not offered for our economic problems. The good intentions prompts those involved to do something. It seems that narrow partisanship on the house floor contributes nothing to the solutions of todays problems.
Sadly, I have found that individual Members, even though we represent our half million constituents, are much less important than most of us would like to believe. The elite few who control the strings of power are the only ones who really count in the legislative process. Votes, of course, occur routinely after heated debate by all those who want to ventilate. But as C. Northcote Parkinson pointed out, the length of debate on an issue is inversely proportional to the importance of an issue. Many times debate is done either for therapy or as a ritual to force Members to make public commitments to those who wield power, a mere litmus test of loyalty, thus qualifying some quietly to receive largess for their particular district.
More often than not, the floor debates are a charade without real issues being dealt with a mere chance for grandstanding. Budgetary votes are meaningless in that continuing resolutions and supplemental appropriations are all that count. If covert aid to a nation is voted down, the CIA and the administration in power will find the means to finance whatever is desired. Emergencies are declared, finances are hidden and discretionary funds are found, foreign governments are used, and policy as desired is carried out, regardless of the will of the people expressed by Congress.
On occasion, a program requested by the administration is stopped or voted down. But this doesnt really change the course of events the price is merely raised. The vote can be reversed on the House floor or in the conference, and the enlightened Member who cast the crucial vote will receive an ample reward for his or her district. These arrangements or deals are routine and accepted practice. The better one is as making them, the higher is ones effectiveness rating and easier for the next election.
Recently, the national Taxpayers Union gave me their annual Taxpayers Best Friend Award for voting for the least amount of taxes and spending of any Member of Congress. I realize this does not qualify as a news event, but I have, over the years, tried to emphasize how dangerous is the problem of overspending and I have voted accordingly. This past year, I am recorded of having voted against 99% of all spending to me that means voting for the taxpayer 99% of the time and against the tyranny of the state at the same percentage. I must confess, though, to the possible disappointment of the anarchists, that I endorse more than 1 percent of our expenditures - possibly even 20%. Due to the seriousness of the problems we face, I believe its crucial to make the point that all programs are bloated, and overspending, deficits and monetary inflation are a mortal threat to a free society. Those not wiling to vote for the cuts either believe they are not a threat or do not care if they are. I suspect the former to be the case.
Deficits are in themselves very harmful, but its what they represent that we must be concerned about. Deficits are a consequence of spending and this tells us something about the amount of power gravitating into the hands of a centralized authority. As the deficits grow, so does the power of the state. Correspondingly, individual liberty is diminished. Its difficult for one who truly loves liberty and utterly detests the power of the state to come to Washington for a period of time and not leave a cynic. Yet I am not; for I believe in the goodness of my fellow man and am realistic enough to understand the shortcomings in human beings. However, I do believe that if the Democrats and the Republicans played more baseball and legislated a lot less, the country would be much better off. I am convinced that the annual baseball game played by the Republicans and the Democrats must be considered one of the mot productive events in which the Members of Congress participate.
Mr Speaker, I would like to take some time to point out some of the contradictions that I have observed in my four terms in the Congress. These I have found frustrating and exasperating and, if others agree, possibly this recognition will someday lead to policies designed to correct them. I find these contradictions in three areas: foreign policy, economic policy, and social issues.
I have trouble believing the foreign policy of the past 70 years has served the best interests of the United States. The policy of international intervention has been followed during this time, regardless of the party in power. The traditional American policy of strategic independence and neutrality based on strength has been replaced by an international policy of sacrifices, policy that has given us nearly a century of war. The last two wards were fought without formal declaration and without the goal of victory in mind. There are many specific examples to show how irrational this interventionist policy is.
We pump $40 billion a year into the Japanese economy by providing for essentially all of Japans defense. At the same time, Japan out competes us in the market, in effect subsidizing their exports, which then undermines our own domestic steel and auto industries. The result: greater deficits for us, higher taxes, more inflation, higher interests rate, and a cry by our producers for protectionism. We insist that Western Europe take our Pershing missiles. We get the bill, and the hostility of the people of Western Europe, and then act surprised that the Soviets pull out of arms negotiations and send more modern nuclear submarines to our coastline. Its a sure guarantee that any conflict in Europe even one between two socialist nations will be our conflict.
Loyally standing by our ally Israel is in conflict with satisfying the Arab interests that are always represented by big business in each administration. We arm Jordan and Egypt, rescue the PLO (on two occasions), and guarantee that the American taxpayer will be funding both sides of any conflict in the Middle East. This policy prompts placing Marines armed with guns without bullets, between two warring factions. Our F-15s shooting down our F-5s in the Persian Gulf War is our idea of neutrality and getting others to test our equipment. Americas interests are forgotten under these circumstances.
We condemn the use of poison gas by Iraq at the same time we aid Iraq, along with the Soviets, in preventing an Iranian victory, forgetting that Iraq started the war. Inconsistently, the administration pressures Congress to manufacture new nerve gas so we have something with which to go to the Soviets and draw up some unworkable treaty regarding war gases. We allocated low-interest loans through the Export-Import Bank to build a pipeline for Iraq, giving huge profits to Shultz Bechtel Corp., while hurting our domestic oil producers.
On the day we stood firm against Communist aggression in this hemisphere by invading Grenada, our president apologized to those liberal House Members who were soft on communism and pleaded for their vote to ensure the passage of the IMF bill, so the Communist dictators can continue to receive taxpayer dollars dollars used to support Castros adventurism in the Caribbean and in Central America.
Our official policy is currently is to be tough on communism, but at the same time promote lower-interests, allowing Red China to buy nuclear technology, F-16s and other military technology all this by the strongest anti-Communist administration that weve had in decades. We participate in the bailout of bankrupt Argentina as she continues to loan money to Castros Cuba, which then prompts us to send men, money and weapons to counteract the spread of communism formed by Castro. Its doubtful if any of these loans will be repaid, and the military equipment and technology will probably end up being used against us at a later date. We talk about a close alliance with Taiwan while subsidizing their hated enemy, Red China.
We subsidize Red Chinas nuclear technology; at the same time, we allow Jane Fonda to ruin ours.
We continuously sacrifice ourselves to the world by assuming the role of world policeman, which precipitates international rises on a regular basis, all the while neglecting our own defenses. New planes go overseas while our Air National Guard is forced to use planes 20 years old. We neglect our defenses by signing treaties like Salt I and the ABM Treaty that prevents us from building a non-nuclear defense system and follow Salt II without even signing it. The result: a massive arms race based on a doctrine of mutually assured destruction.
Praising the greatness of the Vietnam veterans and honoring them can never remove the truth of our failed policy that took us there. Resurrecting heroes will never erase the pain and suffering of an interventionist foreign policy that prompted unnecessary military activities and a no-win strategy.
There are 42 wars now going on in the world and its reported were involved in many of them on both sides. We have troops in a total of 121 countries. National security is used as a justification for all this activity, but rarely is it directly involved.
Our Export-Import Bank financed the building of the Kama River truck plant in Russia trucks then used in the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan over a road built by our Corps of Engineers. Our response? Draft registration and an Olympic boycott!
In pleading for the MX funds, the administration explains we need it as a bargaining chip. I guess to bargain away to the Soviets whom we cant trust anyway. We even modify the MX to conform with the Soviets - a treaty we never signed.
If we look closely at the record, we find the conservative hawk is frequently is frequently the one who appeases and subsidizes the Communists, and never starts the war; the liberal dove is the one more likely to involve us in a war to protect democracy and stop Communist expansion. Images play tricks on us and policy is achieved by deception. Is this a mere coincidence, or is it contrived by those dedicated to internationalism?
The carnage of the 20th Century, as compared to the 19th Century, must someday make us aware of the difference between the two policies pursued. Does the modern age mandate that we reject a policy of self-interest and non-intervention, or is it just possible that we worthwhile policies are of value, regardless of the age in which we live? Its an important question, because it will determine whether or not we will enjoy peace and prosperity for decades to come.
Our economic policy is no less contradictory. Its fair to say that even with all the good intentions of Members, the planned welfare state has been a complete and miserable failure. For the most part, the programs achieve exactly the opposite results form those sought. There is a limit to how long the economy can tolerate these insults before we all suffer from the severe consequences. What we say and do are in full conflict with each other. We talk boldly of balanced budgets, full employment, prosperity, low interest rates, and no inflation. So we either do not believe, as a body, what we say, or we are inept in our ability to pursue and achieve the goals that we seek. Either way, the results are the same.
The economic contradictions are numerous. Conservatives, for years, preached balanced budget until in charge- then the deficits soared to $200 billion per year. Liberal big spenders who led the way to runaway spending quickly excoriate conservative deficits and noting happens; the deficit financing continues and accelerates.
Campaigns are won by promising tax cuts, some are given, but are quickly canceled out by numerous tax increases and associated with accelerated federal spending.
Congress and the administration are quick to blame for Federal Reserve System for high interest rates and do nothing about the huge deficits. Congress totally ignores their responsibility in maintaining the integrity of the money and refuses to exert their rightful authority over the Federal Reserve. We routinely preach about helping the poor, then we plunder the working class to subsidize foreign socialist dictators and the welfare rich through abusive taxation and inflation.
Our government pursues a policy of currency debasement, causing steadily rising prices, and blindly treats only the symptoms while punishing through regulations and taxation, those capable and wiling to take care of themselves.
Vocal support for free trade is routinely heard, as protectionist measures march on. The steel, sugar, textile, shoe, copper, and automobile industries all come for help, and we do nothing to remove the burden of taxation inflation, high interest rates and labor laws that put our companies at a competitive disadvantage. Our protectionist measures then hurt our trade partners, precipitating our need to send them more foreign aid to help out their weak economies and relieve their debt burden.
Archconservatives champion tobacco subsidies, which are criticized by archconservatives who champion milk subsidies. Government then spends millions of dollars to regulate the tobacco industry and points out the hazards of smoke.
A liberal champion of the peace movement and disbarment pushes for the B-1 bomber as a reasonable alternative and because its good for the economy the bomber, by coincidence, to be built in the Senators home state.
The well-intentioned do-gooder legislates minimum wage laws to help the poor and minorities, causing higher unemployment in the precise groups who were intended to be the beneficiaries.
We learned nothing from the Depression years and continue to pay farmers to raise crops not needed, then pay them to stop planting. Our policies drive prices of commodities down, so we prop up the prices and buy the surpluses. The consumer suffers, the farmer suffers, the country suffers, but our policies never change, we just legislate more of the same programs that cause the problems in the first place.
Our steel plants are closing down, so we pursue protectionism and stupidly continue to subsidize the building of steel plants throughout the world through our foreign aid projects.
We pay for bridges and harbors around the world and neglect our own. If we feel compulsion to spend and waste money, it would make more sense to waste it at home. We build highways around the world, raise gasoline taxes here, and routinely doge potholes on our own highways.
Why do we cut funding for day care centers and Head Start programs before cutting aid to the Communists, Socialists, and international bankers?
A substantial number of businessmen demand the rigors of the free market for their competitors, and socialism/fascism for themselves.
Economic interventionism, a philosophy in itself and not a compromise with anything, is the cause of all these contradictions in the economy. Rejection of government planning, controlled by the powerful special interests, at the expense of the general welfare is necessary, and even inevitable, for that system will fall under its own weight. The question that remains is whether or not it will be replaced with a precise philosophy of the free market, rejecting all special interests and fiat money, or with a philosophy of socialism. The choice when the time comes should not be difficult, but freedom lovers have no reason for complacency or optimism.
Social issues are handled in a contradictory manner as well. A basic misunderstanding of the nature of rights and little respect for the Constitution has given us a hodgepodge of social problems that worsen each day.
At one time, we bused children long distances from their homes to force segregation; now we bus them, against their will to force integration.
We subsidize flood insurance in the low-lying areas of the country, prompting people to build where market-orientated insurance companies would have prevented it. When flooding problems worsen, land control and condemnation procedures become the only solution.
The Supreme Court now rules that large landowners must, against their wishes, sell to others to break up their holdings. This is being done in the name of eminent domain. This is land reform a la U.S.A.
Certain individuals, against the intent of the Constitution and the sentiments of a free society, agitate to make illegal privately owned guns used for self defense. At the same time, they increase the power of the state whose enforcement occurs with massive increase in government guns unconstitutionally obtained at the expense of freedom. Taking away the individuals rights to own weapons of self defense and giving unwarranted power to a police state can hardly be considered progress.
We have strict drug laws written by those who generously use the drug alcohol. Our laws drive up the price of drugs a thousandfold, to the delight of the dealers, pushers, and terrorist nations around the world who all reap huge illegal profits. Crimes committed to finance the outrageous prices, and drug usage never goes down. Enforcement costs soar, and its success remains mysteriously elusive. The whole system creates an underground crime world worth billions of dollars; and addicts must then entice others to join, getting new customers to finance their habits forever compounding a social problem epidemic in proportion. Any new suggestions for changing our drug laws that is, liberalizing them is seen as political suicide by the hypocritical politicians and a society legally hooked on alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, aspirin, and valium.
Talk is cheap about freedom and civil liberties, while privacy and individual liberty are continuously undermined and government force is used to protect the privileges and illegal demands placed on government by the special interest groups. Computers are routinely used to enforce draft registration, involving Selective Service, IRS, Social Security, HHS, and ice cream parlor lists.
The shortcomings of South Africas apartheid system are denounced continuously by the same politicians who ignore the fact that, in Communist countries, dissidents arent segregated; they are shot or sent to concentration camps. In comparison, segregation is seen as more vicious than the exiling and killing of the political dissidents in Russia. South Africa, for their defective system of civil liberties, is banned from the Olympics, while we beg the murdering Communists to come.
Government responsibility to protect life and liberty becomes muddled when the government and courts chosen to protect them, under the guise of privacy and civil liberties, totally ignores the real issue. The abortionist who makes a fortune dropping fetuses and infants into buckets, instead of being restrained by government is encouraged by the courts and the law. Some show a greater concern for the lives of seals than for the life of a human baby.
The government writes thousands of pages of regulations designed to protect workers in private industry without proof of any beneficial results and at the same time 50,000-plus are killed on government engineered and operated highways.
Good conservatives explain while guns and teachers shouldnt be registered, and beg and plead and coerce the government into registering their own kids for the draft.
We have seen cases where harmless elderly women, having committed no act of violence, are arrested for: one, defending against an intruder with the use of a Saturday night special; two, raising marijuana in the yard to use for the relief of severe arthritic pain; and three, selling chances in a numbers game the fact that governments run the biggest craps games seem to have no moral significance.
Federal officials IRS agents and drug enforcement agents have been known to destroy the property and lives of totally innocent people as homes are entered mistakenly without search warrants. Confiscation of property without due process of law is becoming more commonplace everyday with the tactics of the IRS.
The products produced by businessmen are regulated to the extreme by so-called liberals who would never accept similar regulations on the products of the mind and media. Yet the ill effect of bad economic ideas and bad education is much more damaging to ones economic health than are the products manufactured in a totally free and unregulated market. The conservatives answer to regulating ideas in a similar way to regulating goods and services is the risk of pointing out this inconsistency.
THE PROBLEMS WE FACE
Contradictions are all about us, but we must realize they are merely the manifestations of more basic problems. Some of these problems are general, others specific, but all are a consequence of the basic precise ideology to which the nations intellectuals ascribe. Understanding this is imperative if we ever expect to reverse the trend towards statism in which we find ourselves.
Our government officials continue to endorse, in general, economic intervention, control of interventionist individuals, a careless disregard for our property rights, and an international foreign policy. The ideas of liberty for the individual, freedom for the markets, both domestic and international, sound money, and a foreign policy of strategic independence based on strength are no longer popularly endorsed by our national leaders. Yet support by many Americans for these policies exist. The current conflict is over which view will prevail.
The concept of rights is rarely defined, since there is minimal concern for them as an issue in itself. Rights have become nothing more than the demands of special-interest groups to use government coercion to extract goods and services from one group for the benefit of another. The moral concept of ones natural right to life and liberty without being molested by state intervention in ones pursuit of happiness is all but absent in Washington. Carelessly the Congress has accepted the concept of public interest as being superior to individual liberty in directing their actions. But the public is indefinite and its definition varies depending on who and which special interest is defining it. Its used merely as an excuse to victimize one individual for the benefit of another. The dictatorship of the majority, now a reality, is our greatest threat to the concept of equal rights.
Careless disregard for liberty allows the government to violate the basic premise of a free society; there shall be no initiation of force by anyone, particularly government. Use of force for personal and national self-defense against initiators of violence is its only proper use in a moral and free society. Unfortunately this premise is rejected and not even understood in its entirety in Washington. The result is that we have neither a moral nor a free society.
Rejecting the notion that government should not coerce and force people to act against their own wishes prompts Congress to assume the role of central economic and social planner. Government is used for everything from subsidized farming to protecting cab monopolies; from the distribution of food stamps to healthcare; from fixing the price of labor to the fixing the price of gasoline. Always the results are the same, opposite to what was intended: chaos, confusion, inefficiency, additional costs and lines.
The more that is spend on housing or unemployment problems, the worse the housing and unemployment problems become. Proof that centralized economic planning always fails, regardless of the good intentions behind it, is available to us. It is tragic that we continue to ignore it.
Our intervention and meddling to satisfy the powerful well-heeled special interests have created a hostile atmosphere, a vicious struggle for a shrinking economic pie distributed by our ever-growing inefficient government bureaucracy. Regional class, race, age, and sex disputes polarize the nation. This probably will worsen until we reject the notion that central planning works.
As nations lose respect for liberty, so too do they loose respect for individual responsibility. Laws are passed proposing no-fault insurance for injuries for which someone in particular was responsible. Remote generations are required to pay a heavy price for violations of civil liberties that occurred to the blacks, to the Indians, and to Japanese-Americans. This is done only at the expense of someone elses civil liberties and in no way can be justified.
Collective rights groups rights, in contrast to individual rights prompt laws based on collective guilt for parties not responsible for causing any damage. The Superfund is a typical example of punishing innocent people for damages caused by government/business. Under a system of individual rights where initiation of force is prohibited, this would not occur.
Short run solutions enhance political careers and motivate more legislation in Washington, to the countys detriment. Apparent economic benefits deceive many Members into supporting legislation that in the long run is devastating to the economy. Politics unfortunately is a short-run game the next election. Economics is a long-run game and determines the prosperity and freedoms of the next generation. Sacrificing future wealth for present indulgence is done at the expense of liberty for the individual.
Motivations of those who lead the march toward the totalitarian state can rarely be challenged. Politicians good intentions, combined with the illusion of wisdom, falsely reassure the planners that good results will be forthcoming. Freedom endorses a humble approach towards the idea that one group of individuals by some quirk of nature knows what is best for another. Personal preferences are subjectively decided upon. Degrees of risk that free individuals choose to take vary from one individual to another. Liability and responsibility for ones own acts should never be diminished by government edicts. Voluntary contracts should never be interfered with in a free society except for their enforcement. Trust in a free society even with imperfections if were to strive for one, must be superior to our blind faith in governments ability to solve our problems for us.
Government in a free society is recognized to be nothing more than an embodiment of the people. The sovereignty is held by the people. A planned coercive society talks vaguely of how government provides this and that, as if government were equivalent to the Creator. Distribution is one thing production is another. Centralized control of the distribution of wealth by an impersonal government that ignores the prescribed roll of guaranteeing the equal protection of liberty assures that one day freedom will disappear and take with it the wealth only free men can create.
Today the loss of the peoples sovereignty is clear evident. Lobbyists are important, if not the key figures, in all legislation their numbers are growing exponentially. Its not an accident that the lobbyists and chief bureaucrats salaries are higher than the Congressmans they are literally more important. The salary allocation under todays conditions are correct. Special interests have replaced the concern that the Founders had for the general welfare. Conference committees intrigues are key to critical legislation. The bigger the government, the higher the stakes, the more lucrative the favors granted. Voted trading is seen as good politics, not as an immoral act. The errand-boy mentality is ordinary the defender of liberty is seen as bizarre. The elite few who control our money, our foreign policy, and the international banking institutions in a system designed to keep the welfare rich in diamonds and Mercedes - make the debates on the House and Senate floors nearly meaningless.
The monetary system is an especially important area where the people and Congress have refused to assume their responsibilities. Maintaining honest money a proper role for government has been replaced by putting the counterfeiters in charge of the government printing press. This system of funny money provides a convenient method whereby Congress excessive spending is paid for by the creation of new money. Unless this is addressed, which I suppose it will be in due time, monetary and banking crises will continue and get much worse during this decade.
Congress assumes that it can make certain groups economically better off by robbing others of their wealth. The business and banker welfare recipient justifies the existence of the system by claiming that it is good for jobs, profits and sound banking. The welfare poor play on the sympathies of others, and transfer programs based on government force and violence are justified as necessary to provide basic needs to all at the expense of liberty needed to provide for the prosperity everyone desires.
Government cannot make people morally better by laws that interfere with nonviolent personal acts that produce no victims. Disapproving of anothers behavior is not enough to justify a law prohibiting it. Any attempt to do so under the precepts of liberty is an unwarranted use of government force.
Congress reflects prevailing attitudes developed by an educational system and the conventional media, and in this sense Congress rarely leads, but is merely pushed and manipulated by public opinion. This is even done with scientific use of public-opinion polls. Show me the direction the crowd is going and I will lead them, is sadly the traditional cry of the politician.
Statesmanship is not the road to reelection. Statesmanship is reserved for a rare few at particular times in history unknown to most of us. Leadership in great movements is infrequently found in official capacities. Lech Walesa, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, et al are not legal officials, but are nevertheless great leaders.
Today the deficits, the skyrocketing real interest rates, total government spending, and the expansionist foreign policy have delivered to us a crisis of confidence. The politicians worries and concerns on the sort term reflect the lack of plans made for the future. The interest rate on 30-year bonds tell a lot about the trust in the economic system and especially the integrity of the money.
Its become traditional, especially during the last 70 years, for foreign policy to be pawned off as bipartisan, meaning no dissent is permissible and all true debate truly squelched. Congress, it is said, has no role in formulating foreign policy, for the Constitution gives this power to the president. Nowhere is this written. Many more powers and responsibilities are to be assumed by Congress than by the president in the foreign policy area, according to my reading of the Constitution. Monopoly power for a president to wage war without declaration, as was done in Korea and Vietnam, is a blatant attack on constitutionally guaranteed liberty. I hope the caution shown by the Congress in recent years will prevail yet the Grenada invasion was not reassuring.
Unfortunately, economic egalitarianism has taken over as the goal of most congressional legislation. Any equality achieved will come about by leveling a lowering of everyones standard of living not by raising it. It is achieved by ignoring the sanctity of voluntary contract and the prohibitions that should exist against government initiating force against the citizen. This concept must be rejected if were to reverse the trend toward the Orwellian sate.
Many Members of Congress defend liberty, but only in minute bits and pieces as it appears convenient. I find in Washington the total absence of a consistent defense of liberty, as this principle applies to the marketplace, our personal lives, and international relations. Bits and pieces of liberty will never suffice for the defense of an entire concept. Consistency in the defense of freedom is necessary to counteract the consistent aggressive militancy of interventionism, whether its of liberal or conservative flavor.
Government today perpetuates violence in epidemic proportions. Most of the time, the mere threat of violence by the agencies, the bureaucrats, and officials in charge of writing the final drafts of legislation, is enough to intimidate the staunchest resister. Courts, legal costs, government arrests, government guns, and long-term imprisonments have created a society of individuals who meekly submit to the perpetual abuse of our liberties. All this in the name of the social good, stability, compromise, the status quo, and the pubic interest. The IRS, the EPA and other agencies now carry guns. The colonists would have cringed at the sight of such an abuse of our rights to live free. They complained about a standing army that carried guns; we now have a standing bureaucracy that carries guns.
Government today has accumulated massive power that can be used to suppress the people. How is it that we grant our government power to do things that we as individuals would never dream of doing ourselves, declaring such acts as stealing wealth from one another as immoral, and unconscionable? If a free nations sovereignty is held in the hands of the people, how is it that the state can do more than the people can do themselves? Planning our peoples lives, the economy, and meddling throughout the world change the role of government from the guarantor of liberty to the destroyer of liberty.
Our problems have become international in scope due to the nature of the political system and our policies. This need not be, but it is. The financial problems of the nation, although clearly linked to our deficits and domestic monetary system, cannot be separated from the international schemes of banking as promoted by the IMF, the World Bank and the Developmental Banks. It is much clearer to me now, having been in Washington for seven years, how our banking and monetary policies are closely linked to our foreign policy and controlled by men and women not motivated to protect the sovereignty of America, nor the liberties of our citizens. Its not that they are necessarily inclined to deliberately destroy our freedom, but they place a higher priority on internationalism and worldwide inflation a system of government and finance that serves the powerful elite.
All the military might in the world will not protect us from deteriorating economies and protectionism, and will not assure peace. Policies are much more important than apparent military strength. The firepower used in Vietnam and the lives sacrificed did nothing to overcome the interventionist policies of both the Republicans and the Democratic administrations. When foreign policies are right, money sound, trade free, and respect for liberty prevalent, strong economies and peace are much more likely to evolve. The armaments race, and the funding of enemies and wealth allies, only contribute to the fervor with which our tax dollars are churned through the military-industrial complex.
The crisis we face is clearly related to a loss of trust trust in ourselves, in freedom, in our own government, and in our money. We are a litigious welfare society gone mad. Everyone feels compelled to grab whatever he can get from government or by suit. The something for nothing obsession rules our every movement, and is in conflict with the other side of mans nature that side that values self-esteem and pride of ones personal achievement. Today that pride of self-reliance and personal achievement is buried by the ego-destroying policies of the planned interventions of big government and the replaced by the satisfaction of manipulating the political system to ones own special advantage. Score is kept by counting the federal dollars allocated to the special group or the congressional district to which one belongs. This process cannot continue indefinitely. Something has to give we must choose either freedom and prosperity or tyranny and poverty.
No, Ron Paul’s supporters are damnanle traitors.
Though, you’re right - if this country still had guts, it would deal with traitors the way that Augustus did.
He introduced term limit legislation back in the ‘70s but I’ve seen no statements by him making any campaign promise to serve a limited amount of time.
Regardless, he served 3 consecutive terms (’78-’84) and then didn’t run for his House seat in ‘84, so your point is moot anyway.
But you already knew that, didn’t you?
I know better than to take libertarians seriously.
bump
bump :)
Travis,
Thanks for your efforts in transcribing that wide ranging rant! I agree with most of it.
Sir, if you took the time to read that and you can only come up with, “Mr. Speaker...” Then maybe you should give ol’ Ron a chance, ‘cause if you support something else...? I just wonder what happened to all of the Americans who were proud, who would defend this Nation honorably, instead of just letting it go to hell. The things that Dr. Paul stands for are deeply rooted into the history of this country. Our Founding Fathers were no fools, but we are all fools for allowing America, the USA, to become the great Comunist Experiment, the USSA. Men used to have balls. Did 100 short years of evolution cause us to become (unique) Unic? (Oops, made no friends here!) Have a Great Day.
Sounds like his speech last week!!! Nothing changes and too many so-called conservatives don’t WANT it to change.
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