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Barbarians at the Gate: The Terrorists and Their Anti-Capitalist Comrades
CATO ^ | October 16, 2001 | Steve H. Hanke

Posted on 10/17/2001 4:21:08 AM PDT by Mr. Mulliner


October 16, 2001

Barbarians at the Gate

by Steve H. Hanke
Steve H. Hanke is a professor of applied economics at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, chairman of the Friedberg Mercantile Group, Inc. in New York and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.

Don't make the mistake of interpreting the events of Sept. 11 purely in terms of terrorism and murder. There is a bigger context here. There is more to this story -- much more. The terrorists are a virulent subset of a much larger group of anti-capitalists, one that includes many politicians, bureaucrats, writers, media types, academics, entertainers, trade unionists and, at times, church leaders.

The barbarians at the gates are more numerous than you thought.

The distinctive feature of their ideology is a bitter hostility toward the West, toward the rule of law and toward the market system. That ideology begins with nasty-minded fantasies of Western exploitation that supposedly produces Third World poverty. It ends with demands for huge international income redistribution and calls to expropriate private property.

The worldwide public's sorrow and rage over the attacks found few echoes among the anti-capitalist crowd. Defiantly, Bernard Cassen -- chairman of protest group Attac France and a spark plug of the assault on the July G-8 meetings in Genoa -- was quoted as saying: "Life goes on, and we see no reason to change our analysis or our actions." How noble.

Closer to home, writer Susan Sontag found it within herself to admire the twisted suicidal thinking that animated the hijackers. She wrote in the New Yorker that "whatever may be said about the perpetrators of Tuesday's slaughter, they were not cowards." What an accolade.

Now is the time for President Bush to acknowledge reality and engage not only the terrorists but also the anti-capitalists who are bent on destroying the core of Western civilization. His inspiration should be Ronald Reagan, who reminded the citizenry what they were fighting for and what against. This will prove to be no easy task. Taking on the anti-capitalists will require some straight talk. Namely, that handouts and protectionism, which this bunch champions, are counterproductive.

For a reference, I suggest the recently released book by the World Bank's William Easterly, The Elusive Quest for Growth (MIT Press, $30). That treatise documents how the West has dished out $1 trillion in foreign aid as grants, debt relief and concessionary loans to the Third World since the 1960s. Coupled with an endless convoy of "expert" advisers from Easterly's employer and the International Monetary Fund, the effort has been a monumental flop. Much of Latin America, Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are economic weaklings, despite all the aid, writes Easterly, thus upsetting his bosses at the World Bank.

When the World Trade Organization's meetings convene in Doha, Qatar on Nov. 9, the United States must stand up for free trade, the essence of capitalism. It should insist that the meetings not get upended by unelected anti-capitalists, as did the 1999 WTO conclave in Seattle. The party-crashers' flotilla of protest boats should not be allowed in the harbor.

Next, the United States must confront the elected protectionists -- primarily socialists from Europe -- with a few facts about free trade. A working paper -- "Trade, Growth and Poverty" -- by David Dollar and Aart Kraay, again from the World Bank, provides good ammunition. They divided developing countries into two groups: those that embraced free trade (Argentina, India) and ones that were protectionist (Pakistan, Honduras). Then they analyzed measures of economic performance since 1980.

The developing countries that have adopted free trade since 1980 have seen trade as a percentage of their economies increase, growth rates in per capita GDP accelerate and the level of poverty fall. Not surprisingly, these developing countries grew more rapidly than the rich, developed countries, closing the income gap between them. On all counts, the performance was the reverse for those countries that embraced protectionism.

The Bush Administration's message for the Doha gathering should be clear: Free trade will do the most to foster the economic growth that decent people want for all. That message may disturb the exquisite sensibilities that haters of capitalism love to display. But the U.S. has a winning hand. Let's play it.


This article was first published in Forbes, October 29, 2001.



TOPICS: Editorial; Front Page News; Philosophy
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I love this editorial. With the left trying to point the finger at conservatives for the bioterrorism, this guy turns the tables and, more accurately, points out the blame of the left and its virulent anti-capitalism.
1 posted on 10/17/2001 4:21:08 AM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
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To: Brian Allen; MadIvan; Chairman_December_19th_Society; illstillbe; pollyshy; LibertyBelt
enjoy
2 posted on 10/17/2001 4:24:11 AM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
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To: Singapore_Yank
I think this article is bad. The Islamic fundamentalists are not motivated by anti-capitalism. When was the last time Osama bin Laden condemned "capitalism". The Soviets did it all the time. I have never heard OBL say it.
3 posted on 10/17/2001 4:28:32 AM PDT by Marduk
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To: Singapore_Yank
Bump!
4 posted on 10/17/2001 4:30:48 AM PDT by Mortimer Snavely
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To: Marduk
What do you think the World Trade Center symbolizes?
5 posted on 10/17/2001 4:38:20 AM PDT by arielb
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To: jmp702; kristinn; madrussian; malarski; Askel5; GROUCHOTWO; Zviadist; Free the USA; Black Jade...
Look at this, jmp702. It's 3 of us.

The terrorists are a virulent subset of a much larger group of anti-capitalists, one that includes many politicians, bureaucrats, writers, media types, academics, entertainers, trade unionists and, at times, church leaders.

The barbarians at the gates are more numerous than you thought.

6 posted on 10/17/2001 4:38:47 AM PDT by CommiesOut
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To: Singapore_Yank
exquisite sensibilities ... HAR!

Thanks, Singapore .

7 posted on 10/17/2001 4:45:57 AM PDT by illstillbe
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To: Marduk
I agree this is a bad article.

The CATO institute has been promoting "open borders" and massive, unregulated immigration for years.

Now, they want to place blame elsewhere.

The barbarians are not at the gate, they are within the walls of the city and the CATO institute helped ensure their entry, all for the sake of "cheap labor".

This article is an utterly shameless distraction.

8 posted on 10/17/2001 4:46:17 AM PDT by SocialMeltdown
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To: kristinn
Some even noticed they are inside the walls. What a progress comparing to 2 weeks ago.
9 posted on 10/17/2001 4:48:54 AM PDT by CommiesOut
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To: SocialMeltdown
If you take a closer look at what the Cato Institute has advocated with regard to immigration, you will not find that they deserve the blame for the predicament we're in. Wrong analysis.
10 posted on 10/17/2001 4:50:07 AM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
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To: kristinn
Too bad the progress is 4 years too late...
11 posted on 10/17/2001 4:55:45 AM PDT by CommiesOut
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To: Singapore_Yank
Great post!
12 posted on 10/17/2001 5:01:08 AM PDT by Bogie
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To: madrussian; Carry_Okie; Zviadist; malarski
How do you, comrades, like this euphemism: anti-capitalists?
13 posted on 10/17/2001 5:07:34 AM PDT by CommiesOut
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To: CommiesOut
#9

Hillary the placator, and Sharpton the race baiter are still behind the curtain and working the crowds, in a sort of quiet way. The media will draw the curtain back, and start the manipulation of the American people as soon as it is considered to be a safe enviroment, at Leftist Media Command HQs. An enviroment where those "useful idiot" patriots are no longer needed.

14 posted on 10/17/2001 5:13:11 AM PDT by Bogie
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To: CommiesOut
Here is another example of anti-capitalists...

From an article by Dan Sullivan....


"Since Vietnam, Ivory Tower disdain for the military and national-security agencies has been a fact of life on many campuses. In some cases, it is official policy.
When I attended Harvard in the late 1980s, the Spartacus Youth League, an organization for young communists, was welcome on campus. But the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC was not.

My roommate, who was attending college on an Air Force scholarship, had to ride the subway to MIT twice a week for his training. Fair Harvard, our nation’s oldest, most prestigious university, did not allow America’s future military leaders to train on its soil.
Incredibly, this ban, which was first implemented in 1969, continues today. The rationale has morphed from the military’s involvement in Vietnam to the current “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.

Military recruiters are banned, too, from entering Harvard Yard. The alma mater of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes even prohibits fliers—one of the most basic forms of free speech—promoting military service from being posted on campus. "

15 posted on 10/17/2001 5:15:13 AM PDT by prognostigaator
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To: Singapore_Yank
I’m not wrong. I’m dead on.

The CATO Institute has been promoting open borders and unregulated immigration for the sake of “cheap labor” under the pretext of “free market capitalism”.

Mexico is one of the world centers of Marxist ideology and theory. (Where did Trotsky go when he fled Russia?).

All you have to do is read the Hispanic press to see the seething undercurrent of the Marxist theory of exploitation. Mexican immigrants know full well they are being “exploited” for cheap labor and their Marxist masters fuel that ideology every day.

You may choose to go through life with blinders. I saw the anti-American, anti-capitalist sentiment brewing for years. I experience the Hispanic Marxist hatred for America every day.

Are you in Singapore? Maybe you should spend some time living in one of our border states to undestand what's really going on here.

16 posted on 10/17/2001 5:18:40 AM PDT by SocialMeltdown
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To: Marduk
I have never heard OBL say it.

How much have you ever heard OBL say??

The truth is, of course, that radical Islam condemns the west, including capitalism. Some anti-capitalists embrace OBL from the view that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend". Many fellow travellers around these days.

17 posted on 10/17/2001 5:21:04 AM PDT by Cachelot
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To: Singapore_Yank
One very big problem with this analysis - bin Laden is a very rich Capitolist.
18 posted on 10/17/2001 5:25:46 AM PDT by Monitor
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To: Monitor
He may be rich, but where's the evidence that he's a capitalist? Very weak claim, I'd say.
19 posted on 10/17/2001 5:28:41 AM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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