Posted on 07/24/2002 3:47:01 PM PDT by Jim Robinson
REPUBLICAN LIBERTY CAUCUS
POSITION STATEMENT
As adopted by the General Membership of the Republican Liberty Caucus at its Biannual Meeting held December 8, 2000.
WHEREAS we believe that government has no money nor power not derived from the consent of the people;
WHEREAS we believe that people have the right to keep the fruits of their labor; and
WHEREAS we believe in upholding the U. S. Constitution as the supreme law of the land;
BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Liberty Caucus endorses the following principles:
1.0 FEDERALISM
1.1 The power of the federal government should be limited, as per the tenth amendment to the U. S. Constitution.
2.0 EDUCATION
2.1 The U. S. Department of Education should be abolished, leaving education decision making at the state, local or personal level.
2.2 Parents have the right to spend their money on the school or method of schooling they deem appropriate for their children.3.0 HEALTH CARE
3.1 Free market health care alternatives, such as medical savings accounts, should be available to everyone, including senior citizens.
3.2 The federal entitlement to Medicare should be abolished, leaving health care decision making regarding the elderly at the state, local, or personal level.4.0 TAXATION
4.1 The tax system of the United States should be overhauled.
4.2 There should be a national debate discussing various alternative means of taxation including but not limited to a single flat income tax, repealing the income tax and replacing it with a national sales tax, and reducing spending to the point where the income tax can be repealed without the need to replace it with a national sales tax or any other form of taxation.
4.3 The capital gains tax should be *eliminated*.
4.4 The inheritance tax should be *eliminated*.
4.5 The new tax system should be implemented *promptly*.5.0 WELFARE
5.1 The U. S. Department of Health and Human Services should be abolished, leaving decision making on welfare and related matters at the state, local or personal level. All Americans have the right to keep the fruits of their labor to support themselves, their families and whatever charities they so choose, without interference from the federal government.
5.2 All able-bodied Americans have the responsibility to support themselves and their families.6.0 CRIMINAL JUSTICE
6.1 Every American has the right to keep and bear arms. We affirm our support for the second amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
6.2 All people, regardless of position in the public or private sector, should be held equally accountable under the law.
6.3 The *only* litmus test for Supreme Court or other judges should be their determination to accurately interpret, not amend, the Constitution. Judges have *no* authority to make new law.7.0 CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
7.1 Election campaigns should not be subsidized by tax payers.
7.2 No individual should be compelled to support a political candidate he or she does not support. Government should not empower trade unions to collect funds from their members for use as political contributions without their members' expressed consent.
7.3 All limits on campaign contributions should be eliminated.
7.4 There should be full and timely public disclosure of all the sources and amounts of all campaign contributions upon their receipt.8.0 FEDERAL BUDGET
8.1 There should be an amendment to the U. S. Constitution to require a balanced budget, provided it includes a supermajority requirement to raise taxes and provided it does not empower the judiciary to unilaterally raise taxes.
8.2 Honest accounting dictates that all federal expenditures should be on budget.
8.3 Each budget should be derived based upon the justification for and needs of each program, with no program being either budgeted for or increased automatically.9.0 GOVERNMENT REFORM
9.1 The U. S. Department of Commerce should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
9.2 The National Endowment for the Arts should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
9.3 The National Endowment for the Humanities should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
9.4 The U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the U. S. Constitution.
9.5 Subsidies to agricultural and other businesses should be eliminated.
9.6 Corporate taxes should be eliminated simultaneously and proportionally with the elimination of subsidies to businesses.
9.7 Recommendations by the Grace Commission and the Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) should be reviewed and implemented, where possible, beginning immediately.
9.8 Privatization of government assets, management and services should be implemented for cost-effectiveness wherever applicable.10.0 TRADE
10.1 The U. S. government should inhibit neither the exportation of U. S. goods and services worldwide, nor the importation of goods and services.
10.2 The United States should not be answerable to any governing body outside the United States for its trade policy.11.0 DEFENSE
11.1 U. S. military should be deployed only where there is a clear threat to vital U. S. interests and only with the consent of the U. S. Congress.
11.2 It is the duty of the federal government to provide a system to defend against missile attacks.
11.3 No branch of the military should be put in harm's way without a clear entrance and exit strategy and a goal, which when achieved, constitutes victory.
11.4 U. S military personnel should always be under U. S. command.
11.5 U. S. armed forces should be all-volunteer.
11.6 Military draft registration should be eliminated.
11.7 Foreign aid is often more harmful than helpful and should be curtailed.12.0 PROPERTY RIGHTS
12.1 The government should not take private property without just compensation.
12.2 All unconstitutional regulation of private property should be repealed.13.0 DRUGS
13.1 While recognizing the harm that drug abuse causes society, we also recognize that government drug policy has been ineffective and has led to frightening abuses of the Bill of Rights which could affect the personal freedom of any American. We, therefore, support alternatives to the War on Drugs.
13.2 Per the tenth amendment to the U. S. Constitution, matters such as drugs should be handled at the state or personal level.
13.3 All laws which give license to violate the Bill of Rights should be repealed.
Entered into the record December 8, 2000
Amazing! People think the government should not get involved in every little problem. But these same people think the RLC must take a position on each and every little problem.
Is it OK if we take no position on some issues? Leave it to the candidate. A winning candidate matters, not the platform. My loyalty is first to God, then the Bible, the Constitution, my family. My loyalty to any political party or party caucus, or their platform, is way down the list, somewhere after my loyalty to my used car salesman.
Here in Illinois, the LP candidate for governor is a good man, but not a liberatarian. The SOCONs worked hard and delivered for both a pro-life and a pro-choice LP candidate (Quaintance and Dubiel).
We're individualists. Of course we can't agree on anything. So let's accept it and move on with the coalition. The longer and more detailed a statement becomes, the less people will read it and take it seriously. (Including my verbose emails.)
Well, the RLC uses a pretty easy-going "standard of judgment".
If you score at least an 80% on the Liberty Index, you are In Like Flynn with the RLC.
For a political action committee, I think that this is a pretty reasonable cut-off. It's rare to find a candidate who agrees with you on everything, but shouldn't we at least expect our representatives to behave Constitutionally four times out of five?
At the least?? As a foundation from which to work??
I liked everything on that page but this silly statment that should put me well above 80 :-)
I bet on Cuba once Castro is done so is his regime. While the Chinese regime enriches and arms itself.
I guess silly is a strong word, I just don't agree.
We used containment with the Soviets and it seems to have worked pretty darn well.
Only if refusing to think is what you call living.
It's an attempt at Foreign Social Engineering by indirect means. Desirable? Quite possibly, but not the Government's job.
Rather, the Government's job is the defense of the Person, property, and rights of the Citizens against aggression by Foreign Powers. As such, Trade Sanctions should (IMHO) not be imposed for any "regime-change" or "protectionistic" or "social engineering" basis -- but simply according to the question, "Does this country intend to attack and kill our citizens?" Ergo, when China threatens Los Angeles with ICBMs, we slap trade sanctions on them as a Hostile Power. If and When they retract the threat (preferably with an apology), we then restore them to Neutral Power trading arrangements -- whether that is a low, single-rate tariff or whatever. 100% Free Trade, of course, we should reserve for our genuine Friends... not because 100% Free Trade is a bad economic idea; No, 100% Free Trade is a great economic idea.
Which is precisely why 100% Free Trade should be reserved for those nations which have a proven record of zero hostile intent towards the US for at least several decades... since Free Trade is enormously profitable to both partners, it doesn;t hurt to be prudently circumspect about the possibility that we might be helping a potential enemy make enormous profits (even if it is to our mutual benefit, which Free Trade is).
Well, my first rule of thumb would be that any nation which has nukes targeted on us at all is automatically disqualified from the "friendly" list. The UK has a couple of hundred nukes, but they don't seem to feel it necessary to keep several targeted on Boston at all times "just to be sure". Nations which target the USA with nuclear weapons at all should be considered "Neutral Powers" at best.
They get down-graded to "Hostile Powers" if they openly threaten a nuclear First Strike, as the Chinese did a few years ago when they threatened to vaporize Los Angeles if we tried to defend Taiwan. Now, it's true that Taiwan, not being a US State, is not constitutionally-entitled to US Federal defense in the first place; and, in threatening to liquidate Los Angeles, it's entirely possible that the Red Chinese were trying to offer us a "win/win" deal -- they get to take Taiwan, we get to lose LA.
But, it was still a threat of nuclear First Strike against US soil. Bump 'em down to "Hostile" until they Recant the threat. No need to sell them stuff when they are openly threatening to Nuke us.
Just food for thoughts....
I hope you are right about trade with China because that is the position of the last three and all forseeable administrations. I'm still wary about enriching such regimes...I hope to be wrong.
A party to honor him is being held August 15th - a couple of days before Friva Las Vegas. If anyone wants an invite Freep mail me. Grover Norquist will be there also.
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