Sunday, December 9, 2012

The Pope's Logic Fail: A Simple Lesson of Selfishness vs. Self-Destruction

Behold a classic case of a mystic's misuse of logic!

In an attempt to bash greed as a societal evil, Pope Benedict XVI (not surprisingly) misused a simple law of logic, the Law of Identity (i.e. A is A), to do so.

The pope, as reported by the Associated Press, described selfishness as something that "triggers emptiness" in people which then causes them to fill those voids with "false remedies" such as drugs. He further elaborated that harming oneself is the "poisonous root of selfishness."

What the pope fails to realize, however, is that it is not in a man's selfish interest to engage in drug use or other harmful activities. A man who does engage in such activities is not being selfish, but self-destructive.

A truly selfish man acts in a goal-oriented way that is life-serving and whose life is enriched by the values he pursues, be them material (goods and services, etc.) and/or spiritual (friendship, romantic love, etc.) That certainly does not leave one feeling "empty."

Conversely, it is the altruist ethics of self-sacrfice this pontiff pompously pontificates that undoubtedly leaves one with a sense that his life has gone unfulfilled. If the pope truly seeks to rid the world of this "emptiness" he speaks of, he ought to begin by deriding its cause, the moral cancer that is altruism.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Onward to 2016

Four years and one night ago I shouted in jubilation to my best friend through the phone, “WE DID IT!”
 
Last night was different as I allowed myself to shed a few tears before choking back the rest of my sorrow.
 
What a difference four years makes.
 
Mitt Romney’s loss was heartbreaking for me. Not that he was an ideal candidate—far from it—but he was the better option. Romney does not have the disdain for freedom that our current “Leader of the Free World” outspokenly does (see Obama Declares Liberty A ‘Bumper-Sticker Theory That Doesn’t Work’). This is important because, as Ayn Rand put it, “[I]deas matter.” She further explained that “To take ideas seriously, means that you intend to live by, to practice, any idea you accept as true.” If President Obama takes his ideas seriously (and we have every reason to believe he does based on his policy decisions), we’re in for a tough road ahead.
 
Is Obama’s reelection the end of the world? No. I do not believe in such a thing as historical determinism. Our future is not set in stone. We can reverse course. But the immediate future, however, does look dim.
 
With several Supreme Court Justices near retirement, this could give President Obama the opportunity to stack the court with “progressive” judges sympathetic to his vision of transformation. With a Court in agreement with the President’s agenda, the checks and balances from the court go out the window. One branch down, two to go.
 
That brings us to the Congress which remains gridlocked and divided with a Republican controlled House of Representatives and a Democrat controlled Senate. It’s highly likely (if the last four years were any indication) that he’ll use the gridlocked Congress as an excuse to continue his policy of issuing Executive Orders. In fact, he’s on record as saying “Where Republicans refuse to cooperate on things that I know are good for the American people, I will continue to look for ways to do it administratively and work around Congress.” With a Senate sympathetic to the President’s agenda, do not expect a Congressional challenge to that “work around.” Two branches down.
 
One Executive branch is what we are left with, with practically no checks on the President’s power. What we are left with is, essentially, a quasi-dictatorship.
 
Now, as I said before, our future is not set in stone. It’s very likely that doesn’t happen, but it is a possibility, based entirely on the words and sentiments of the President himself. It’s something we ought to be wary of. America suffers from this notion that “it can’t happen here,” but it can. As I said, nothing is set in stone.
 
With that said, I think our best hope now to ensure this is prevented from happening or reigned in if it does happen, is to look towards the mid-term elections in 2014. If Republicans can sweep the House and Senate, Congress won’t hold back in challenging the President’s use of Executive Orders.
 
The silver lining in this (if one could be found) is that America is known for making course corrections. After the “Progressive Era” that brought us statists such as Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, we eventually got Coolidge along with his laissez-faire style approach, which brought with it almost a decade of prosperity. After the stagflation of Jimmy Carter’s administration, we chose Ronald Reagan who put us on a better path. We are free to make a change every few years, and since I think it’s almost assured, assuming current trends continue, that the economy does not get better, with our best hope for stagnation rather than depression, I’m hopeful a real leader will emerge the next time around to challenge the misconceptions that statism works. A free-market thinker can turn this around.
 
But for now, we have to deal with the fact that instead of seeking freedom from men, Americans today are seeking freedom from the laws of nature, i.e. freedom from reality (through an ever-growing and more empowered welfare state). They will find there is no such thing as; hopefully sooner rather than later.
 
Four years is a long time to educate (and that will continue to be my mission), so I say onward to 2016—America's next chance at a renaissance.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Privatize Big Bird!

Put a fork in Big Bird, he's done—at least if Mitt Romney has his way (and it's about time!).

During last night's debate, Romney expressed PBS is on the chopping block. “I’m sorry, Jim, I’m going to stop the subsidy to PBS. I’m going to stop other things. I like PBS. I love Big Bird. Actually, I like you too. But I’m not going to keep on spending money on things to borrow money from China to pay for us,” he said. Good for him. It's time to stop treating public broadcasting as if it were some sort of sacred cow; it's not. The left has already taken to the media to defend and make known that public broadcasting only costs tax payers a fraction of a percent compared to other programs (0.012%, or $444.1 million, to be exact).1 That's true, and I certainly hope Mitt understands that Big Bird does not make up the bulk of our deficit and over $16 trillion debt. He probably would have better used his time to focus his argument on entitlement spending (Social Security, Medicare, etc). 
 
But, he is right. If one is going to take a principled approach to debt reduction, one must be willing to cut or phase out spending for all government departments and services that have nothing to do with protecting the individual rights of the people, and that includes funding to PBS. The fact that PBS is not as costly as other government programs is no justification to violate individual rights through coercive taxation. If the public finds it to be as crucial a national asset as many believe it is, then people will be willing to fund it voluntarily. Essentially, we ought to privatize Big Bird.
 
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Sunday, September 30, 2012

Thank You, Mitt Romney!

If you've been paying even minimal attention to this campaign season, then you are probably familiar with calls from the Democratic Party, especially President Obama, for the rich to pay their "fair share." It all seems innocent enough–why should the rich pay less than someone in the middle class? But the truth is, they're not paying less.
 
If you look at the dollar amount paid, the rich pay much more in taxes than most people will probably pay in their entire lifetimes. But, the Democrats' main argument, however, is that as a percentage of their income, the rich do not pay their "fair share." What they are alluding to is that the rich didn't feel the taxation as much as some people would like them to. In other words, the rich should be made to suffer more. This stems from nothing more than envy, plain and simple, and, as the Democrat-supported OWS succinctly put it, they're out to "Eat the Rich!"
 
Upon further research, I came across the tax returns of one such rich man who just so happens to go by the name of Mitt Romney, the Republican nominee for President. I was rather taken aback that he had paid about $1.94 million in income taxes for 2011 alone (somebody call Senator Harry Reid). To put this in perspective, it would take someone with a salary equal to the median income of the United States ($51,914 for 2006-2010) approximately 37 years—most of an adult's working life—to earn that much.1 That is no small chunk of change (unless of course you are comparing that amount to the $5 trillion added to our debt thus far under President Obama alone, then Romney's tax bill is mere peanuts). Yet President Obama and his campaign continue to whine and assert that Romney did not pay his "fair share" because his income tax rate (13.9% for 2010) is seemingly low compared to that of others2 (which is true, but they ignore to mention the whole host of other taxes the rich pay that the middle class simply do not).
 
Oddly enough, the top 1% of income earners pay a disproportionate amount of the federal tax bill–roughly 37% (so, although their individual tax rates seem to be low, they actually bear much more of the tax burden). The same holds true with the top 10% who pay about 70% of the bill. The bottom 50%? They pick up just 2.3% of the liability.3 So much for the rich not paying their "fair share."
 
Now, I was going to compare Romney's tax rate with the income tax rate I paid, but looking over my 2011 tax return, I've just realized I only paid into Social Security, Medicare, and my state's disability fund. I actually paid no income taxes to the federal government last year. This means that, thanks to people like Romney who have created and made possible the trillions of dollars in wealth confiscated by the government annually, I am able to feel secure knowing that the services that I depend on that are currently under government control, legitimately so or otherwise, are, for the most part, funded. 
 
Instead of demanding more from people like Romney, I'd like to personally thank them for the great wealth they have created that benefits me in my daily life and that is all too often taken for granted. 
 
Thank you, Mitt Romney, and all the other producers who have made my life more enjoyable by your pursuit of profit. Although I was never your purpose, your success has nonetheless enriched my life beyond my ability to ever repay you.
 
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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Atlas Libeled: Refuting the Smear Campaign Against Ayn Rand


It's been a little over two weeks now since Paul Ryan (R-WI) was chosen to be Mitt Romney's VP, and in those two weeks, something miraculous has happened: Ayn Rand has been thrown into the spotlight. This is due in part because Ryan once said Rand was "the reason I got involved in public service.” That’s the good news.

The bad news, however, is the utter mudslinging against Rand, her philosophy, and her character on behalf of the media, bloggers, and pundits who have become fixated on her and are on a mission to put a nail in her coffin, lest their entire fantasy world collapse around them.

This, nonetheless, has given me the opportunity to go through some of the smears I constantly come across and to appeal to the reasonable who otherwise wouldn’t know the real Rand.

Let’s explore a few examples of such attacks and I’ll turn to Rand’s own words and philosophy throughout to vindicate her.

1.   How Ayn Rand became the new right’s version of Marx,” by George Monbiot, The Guardian

The Attack
I’ll start with this hit piece since this was one of the more blatantly dishonest ones. In George Monbiot’s article, he explains how Rand believed “empathy and compassion are irrational and destructive. The poor deserve to die,” and “the rich deserve unmediated power.” He goes on to say Rand “described the poor and weak as ‘refuse’ and ‘parasites,’ and excoriated anyone seeking to assist them.” Of course, he provides no concrete examples to back up any of these claims, and if you are familiar with Rand and Objectivism, you know why: there aren’t any. It’s a clear character assassination in order to discredit Rand and her philosophy of Objectivism.

The Truth
When it came to compassion and empathy, Rand saidI regard compassion as proper only toward those who are innocent victims, but not toward those who are morally guilty. If one feels compassion for the victims of a concentration camp, one cannot feel it for the torturers. If one does feel compassion for the torturers, it is an act of moral treason toward the victims.”

In regards to the poor, Rand was their biggest advocate, because she was an advocate of individual rights. She championed a system, Capitalism, which leaves people alone and allows them, especially the ambitious poor, to prosper. On the issue of poverty, she wrote “If concern for human poverty and suffering were one’s primary motive, one would seek to discover their cause. One would not fail to ask: Why did some nations develop, while others did not? Why have some nations achieved material abundance, while others have remained stagnant in subhuman misery? History and, specifically, the unprecedented prosperity-explosion of the nineteenth century, would give an immediate answer: capitalism is the only system that enables men to produce abundance—and the key to capitalism is individual freedom.”1 As is obvious, Ayn Rand had enough respect for the poor to advocate a system that would respect their rights and leave them free and allow them to prosper. Does this sound like a woman who thought the poor were garbage?

Ayn Rand “excoriated anyone seeking to assist [the poor],” Monbiot suggests. On charity, Rand affirmed “There is nothing wrong in helping other people,” and elaborated by saying “The fact that a man has no claim on others (i.e., that it is not their moral duty to help him and that he cannot demand their help as his right) does not preclude or prohibit good will among men and does not make it immoral to offer or to accept voluntary, non-sacrificial assistance.” Bottom line, Ayn Rand was not against charity, she was against forced redistribution of wealth. Monbiot’s argument is nothing less than a classical straw man argument, suggesting that because Ayn Rand was against government forcefully robbing Peter to pay Paul, that she was against voluntary charity to Paul on behalf of compassionate individuals.

Monbiot also suggests Rand viewed the poor as “parasites” and the rich as people who deserve “unmediated power.” Although Rand often spoke of parasitism and of hero worship, as they are major themes in Atlas Shrugged, she never made such a generalization of the poor being parasites and the rich deserving unchecked power. In fact, one of the villains in Atlas, Orren Boyle, is a rich industrialist who is the owner of a steel company that produces inferior metals. She considered him a parasite because Orren Boyle relies not on his mind to produce products that offered value to his customers in order to become rich, but his political connections to line his pockets and pass laws in favor of his business at the expense of others. She elaborated upon the concept of parasitism by saying “Economically, the forced demands of one group create hardships for all others, thus producing an inextricable mixture of actual victims and plain parasites.” Notice how nowhere in that quotes does she single out the poor as the parasites or suggest that it is the rich who are the victims. She merely said that those who demand the unearned and advocate for the forced redistribution of wealth in order to gain the unearned are parasites, rich and poor alike. Atlas is a tale of the “moochers and the looters” vs. the producers. If he actually read the book, which I assume he hasn’t, he would have noticed there were rich moochers and looters and productive citizens who were materially poor.

Lastly, I’ll touch upon this notion that Rand believed the poor and their helpers “deserve to die.” Referring to an event in Atlas Shrugged, he claims “In a notorious passage, she argues that all the passengers in a train filled with poisoned fumes deserved their fate [for helping the poor].” I can’t tell you how many times Statists reference this particular event in the book as “proof” Rand hated the poor and those who tried to help them. But truth be told, they miss the point of the passage entirely. As Rand describes the passengers in the train cars, it’s easy to understand the message she was trying to convey: that their deaths were no accident. She is simply illustrating the Law of Causality and that A + B = C. The people on the train died as a result of embracing a philosophy inconsistent with the furtherance of human life. This could not have been clearer when, before she describes some of the passengers, she writes (as Monbiot conveniently leaves out) “It is said that catastrophes are a matter of pure chance, and there were those who would have said that the passengers of the Comet were not guilty or responsible for the thing that happened to them.”2

She then expounds on this point by detailing the views held by the passengers, writing:

The man in Roomette 2, Car No. 9, was a professor of economics who advocated the abolition of private property, explaining that intelligence plays no part in industrial production, that man's mind is conditioned by material tools, that anybody can run a factory or a railroad and it's only a matter of seizing the machinery.

... The woman in Roomette 9, Car No. 12, was a housewife who believed that she had the right to elect politicians, of whom she knew nothing, to control giant industries, of which she had no knowledge.

…The man in Bedroom A, Car No. 14, was a professor of philosophy who taught that there is no mind — how do you know that the tunnel is dangerous? — no reality — how can you prove that the tunnel exists? — no logic — why do you claim that trains cannot move without motive power? — no principles — why should you be bound by the law of cause and-effect? — no rights — why shouldn't you attach men to their jobs by force? — no morality — what's moral about running a railroad? — no absolutes — what difference does it make to you whether you live or die, anyway? He taught that we know nothing — why oppose the orders of your superiors? — that we can never be certain of anything — how do you know you're right? — that we must act on the expediency of the moment — you don't want to risk your job, do you?

…The man in Bedroom A, Car no. 16, was a humanitarian who had said, “The men of ability? I do not care what or if they are made to suffer. They must be penalized in order to support the incompetent. Frankly, I do not care whether this is just or not. I take pride in not caring to grant any justice to the able, where mercy to the needy is concerned.”2

There are several more passengers she describes, but I think you get the idea. There’s a huge difference between saying a group of people “deserve” to die and explicitly outlining the reasons and causes that led to their deaths. It was nothing less than a warning to those who wish to live, to reject such destructive anti-life philosophies. 

2.   Understanding Ayn Rand, an inspiration to VP candidate Paul Ryan,” by Michael W. Dominowski, The Staten Island Advance

The Attack
Since most of Dominowski’s out-of-context quoting of Rand deals with topics already addressed above, I’ll cut to a few that were not. In his piece, he writes “But Rand was rife with contradictions, not just in her philosophy but in her personal life. She famously abhorred government-administered social programs such as Social Security and Medicare, yet unhesitatingly availed herself of both when she became eligible to receive their benefits.” Dominowski also labels Rand “a sociopath” who idolized “a serial killer named William Edward Hickman, who, in 1927, butchered a 12-year-old girl simply because he wanted to. ‘A real man,’ she exulted. While the nation was shocked, Rand was so delighted to have found someone who adhered so completely to her do-your-own-thing philosophy that she modeled one of her literary characters after him.”

The Truth
Anyone who knows Rand and her philosophy knows she absolutely unequivocally was against any type of welfare state program, including Social Security and Medicare. It is true, however, that she did receive such payments, but this hardly makes her a hypocrite. The reasoning is quite simple: she was forced to pay into these systems and morally deserved every cent of that back. It was, after all, her money. What Dominowski is suggesting is that if you are against theft and a criminal steals your stuff, it would be a contradiction of your values to take it back. Rand further clarified her position, saying “[T]he victims, who opposed such [welfare state] laws, have a clear right to any refund of their own money—and they would not advance the cause of freedom if they left their money, unclaimed, for the benefit of the welfare-state administration.”

Now, in regards to Hickman, the murderer Rand allegedly idolized, it just doesn’t seem consistent, and oddly out of character, for Rand to worship such a guy who gained notoriety by violating the rights of others. I’ll admit I had to do some research about this. Although, it wasn’t the first time I had heard this accusation, I thought it so ludicrous that it would just be a waste of time to investigate. It’s one of those things you just know is not true and can stand on its own as such, especially for someone like myself who has vast knowledge of Rand and Objectivism, which I came to accept in part because of its flawless consistency. But since such allegation has surfaced yet again, I figured it would be worth sometime, at least for me, to find out what this is all about. And of course, I came across some interesting words from Rand herself. In Rand’s private journals (first published in 1997) regarding the similarities between a character, Danny Renahan, in her play, The Little Street, and Hickman (which is the source of this accusation), she states that Renahan is “very far from [Hickman], of course. The outside of Hickman, but not the inside. Much deeper and much more. A Hickman with a purpose. And without the degeneracy. It is more exact to say that the model is not Hickman, but what Hickman suggested to me.”3 She goes on to describe Hickman as “a purposeless monster.”3 So much for that.

(As per the “sociopath” charge, check out my blog post titled: Countering Statists’ Accusations.)

3.   The Republicans’ empathy is gone,” by Stanley Crouch, Daily News

The Attack
Stanley Crouch, a columnist at the New York Daily News goes on the attack by saying “[The Republicans’] hustle is all about the self. Forget everyone else. Nobody embodies this line of thinking better than Romney’s vice presidential nominee, Ryan, who was mentored intellectually by Ayn Rand, one of the most fraudulent ‘thinkers’ of our time. Rand, however, is perfect for a GOP taken over by loudmouths and cartoon toughs who are better at callousness than anything consisting of deep meaning.” Tell me how you really feel, Mr. Crouch!

The Truth
Although the fact that he feels Rand is a “fraudulent ‘thinker’” is his opinion, he does not opine what leads him to this conclusion. I’ll just stick that in the “ad hominem” box and leave it at that (also, see Rand’s quote on compassion above in regards to his “callous” remark; noticing a pattern yet?). His last sentence in the quote, however, is very telling. It reminds me of when Paul Krugman wrote that Republicans embrace free-market theories because they are “intellectually easy” while Keynesian economics is “intellectually hard,” all in an attempt to paint rightists and their sympathizers as unintelligent. Now, I’m not gloating here, but I’ve been described by many people as smart and intelligent and I’ve been studying Objectivism for 3 years now, and there are still aspects of it that require further study on my part. It is not an exaggeration to say that Objectivism takes brain power and a huge commitment in order to understand it fully and integrate its principles concretely. To say Rand’s philosophy lacks “deep meaning” suggests to me he never picked up her works or even tried to understand who she was. Regardless, it is also important to point out here that the simplicity or complexity of a given statement or idea has no bearing on its truth-value. Most adults would find 1+1=2 to be “intellectually easy,” to use Krugman’s words, but it also happens to be logically true! Crouch and Krugman’s argument as such is entirely pointless and fallacious, plain and simple.


The Attack
Grant Ferowich, writing about how Paul Ryan’s own mother received welfare, says “[A]ccording to strict anarchist Randian ideals, this mother and family [would] simply be weaker, and thus undeserving of any help they do not generate themselves. Rand championed ‘rational self-interest,’ integrity, productivity, and pride as the primary philosophical virtues. The single-mother family does not fall within this domain.”

The Truth
I was getting worried. It’s been a while since I actually heard someone refer to Rand’s politics as “anarchy.” I thought the left had finally embraced reason pertaining to this issue. No such luck, apparently. I would suggest to Ferowich, no offense intended, to pick up a dictionary. Not because Rand did not embrace anarchy (although it’s true she didn’t, as I’ll explain in a bit), but because a few lines prior, he writes “In essence, Rand instilled a sense of minimalist government….” Since when does limited government = no government?!?! His lack of understanding of such simple concepts is scary. But back to the crux of my argument, Rand was very much a proponent of government. She believed “If physical force is to be barred from social relationships, men need an institution charged with the task of protecting their rights under an objective code of rules. This is the task of a government—of a proper government—its basic task, its only moral justification and the reason why men do need a government. A government is the means of placing the retaliatory use of physical force under objective control—i.e., under objectively defined laws.”4

With that said, I’m quite perplexed by the last sentence in his quote above. Weren't the Republicans engaged in a “war on women”? Suddenly, single-mothers (including their family members) lack integrity, productivity, and pride?!?! What an ignorant thing to say, not to mention it's flat-out insulting to all single-mothers. There are plenty of them out there who work hard to provide for their children. He clearly lacks any and all understanding of the concept of “rational self-interest.” A mother who provides for her child is not being selfless if she values her children, as rational mothers do. She is acting selfishly, with the utmost integrity to her values (her children) to sustain their lives via her work.

5.   Paul Ryan: Grow Up,” by James Zogby, The Huffington Post

The Attack
James Zogby writes that “Rand's philosophy holds a particular appeal and is especially attractive to the developing adolescent mind. It is self-centered and certain -- traits appreciated by adolescents. And Rand's heroic individualists could be angry and dismissive of others, seeing them as burdensome and obstacles to be overcome on the way to self-fulfillment -- again attitudes quite compatible with adolescent behavior.”

The Truth
This seems to be what Ayn Rand would call an “Argument from Intimidation,” a logical fallacy, a sign of intellectual weakness substituting reason for psychological pressure. What he’s saying is “only the immature buy into this Objectivism nonsense.”

For more insight into the ridiculousness of this argument, I’ll appeal to Dr. Onkar Ghate, senior fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute. He writes:

It remains, however, all too common for a young person to be told that his interest in Ayn Rand is a stage he will soon grow out of. “It's fine to believe in that now,” the refrain goes, “but wait until you're older. You'll discover that life is not like that.”

But when you actually consider the essence of what Rand teaches, the accusation that her philosophy is [a] childish over-simplification stands as condemnation not of her ideas but of the adult world from which the accusation stems.

The key to Rand's popularity is that she appeals to the idealism of youth. She wrote in 1969: “There is a fundamental conviction which some people never acquire, some hold only in their youth, and a few hold to the end of their days--the conviction that ideas matter.” The nature of this conviction? “That ideas matter means that knowledge matters, that truth matters, that one's mind matters. And the radiance of that certainty, in the process of growing up, is the best aspect of youth.”

Final Word
So why the blatant calculated dishonesty in regards to a philosophy that is premised on individual rights, that advocates a political system that protects those rights (of everyone, the poor included), that says happiness is attainable here and now, that their is no need to suffer, that prosperity, not hopelessness, is the result of rational behavior? If ignorance is their excuse, I certainly hope this post has clarified a few things. But it seems just from the nature of the attacks that there is something larger at play here; an intentional “war on reason,” if you will, with fear as their weapon of choice. One just does not evade reality on such a scale and purposely twist the facts of reality unless reality is one’s enemy, unless reality does not serve one’s own political agenda, an agenda premised on the exact opposite of what Rand advocated, an agenda advocating Statism and the violation of individual rights.

Objectivism is “the good” and this, as Ayn Rand would have said, is a classical hatred of the good for being the good.

Fear may be their weapon of choice, but those of us who know better have something much more powerful–reason.



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Sources:
1Rand, Ayn. “Requiem for Man.” Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal. Centennial ed. New York: Signet, 1967. 308. Print
2Rand, Ayn. Atlas Shrugged. Centennial ed. New York: Signet, 1957. 558-560. Print.
3Rand, Ayn, and Leonard Peikoff. The Journals of Ayn Rand. New York, NY: Plume, 1997. Print.
4Rand, Ayn. “The Nature of Government.” The Virtue of Selfishness. Centennial ed. New York: Signet, 1964. Print.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Chick-Full-A Hate? Another Contrived Controversy from the Left

“I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” —Beatrice Hall, “The Friends of Voltaire,” 1906, summating the philosophy of Voltaire.

The world sure has changed from the time of Enlightenment thinkers such as Voltaire. Gone are the days where we can disagree without being disagreeable and without forcing (or threatening to force) others to accept our premises. 

Of course, I’m referring to the reactions from some of the Statists we live amongst in regards to Chick-fil-A’s “southern values” stance on same-sex marriage (if you haven’t heard, they are opposed to it) which are laughable at best, scary at worst. The Democrats’ love affair with Statism was on full display when a few prominent mayors (including Thomas Menino of Boston, Rahm Emanuel of Chicago, and Vincent C. Gray of Washington, D.C.) gave serious thought to banning this establishment in their cities simply because they are opposed the beliefs of the company’s CEO, Dan Cathy. Mayor Gray took to twitter that Chick-fil-A is "hate chicken." Mayor Emanuel oddly lamented “Chick-fil-A’s values are not Chicago’s values.” Assuming that's true (which seems impossible considering the vast diversity of Chicagoans), so what? Freedom entails that individuals with various value-systems coexist free from the coercion of others. Not to mention the sheer arrogance on their parts to believe that them being elected mayor grants them the power to enforce any one particular value system on the city. The role of mayor is to ensure the rights of the citizens are protected at the city level. That’s it. 

But more than that, this is a great example of the danger of embracing the belief that corporations are not people. Accepting this false premise means that it’s acceptable to initiate force against them, to silence them, even to ban them from a particular area, because only people have rights. The odd thing about this view is that inanimate objects do not hold political views nor do they voice opinions. Of course corporations are people! A corporation is a group of people coming together for a common business purpose. The fact that people join groups (be they a corporation, a charity, a reading/study group, and even a society) does not negate one’s rights as an individual. The reality is that one neither gains nor loses his rights by assembling with others.

The other bizarre thing about this whole controversy is that months ago, President Barack Obama was on the record as being opposed to same-sex marriage. Mayor Emanuel, who oddly enough was President Obama’s Chief of Staff before being elected mayor, never once said that President Obama does not reflect American values or that President Obama was full of "hate." Another fact one should remain cognizant of is that Chick-fil-A has consistently held this view. This is nothing new. It's clear to me that, once again, all this is just a ploy by the left to further distract from the fact that the policies of our Statist president are crumbling our economy and bringing this country to its knees.

On a final note, I couldn’t agree more with the beliefs of Voltaire. I absolutely disapprove of the stance that Chick-fil-A’s CEO has taken, but I defend his right to hold such beliefs and I denounce any political figure who would dare to even suggest using force, threats, and intimidation to silence him. At the end of the day, the beauty of the free market is that if you do not like the policies and views of a business, you are free not to patronize such venue. It’s just that simple. Live and let live to prosper.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

SCOTUS Affirms Fascism as Domestic Policy


"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power." –Benito Mussolini

The battle lines have been drawn. For those who have taken the apathetic path, the luxury of a middle ground is fading away. The time to pick sides is now and the choices couldn't be any more clear: Capitalism, freedom, individual rights, and economic prosperity or Statism, a society equal only in suffering, enslaved to the whims of the mob, unfettered force released upon you and your fellow man, and economic degradation.

Today's Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruling in regards to ObamaCare reminds us of a very simple fact; both political parties are united on a statist vision for this country, differing only in how to achieve that vision. 

It also reminds us of the consequences of compromising one's principles. Chief Justice John Roberts is nothing less than a traitor to all liberty-seeking people. The entire purpose of the SCOTUS is that of keeper of our republic- to preserve the individual rights of the people recognized by our Constitution and protect them from encroachment by the Executive and Legislative branches. It has utterly failed as such institution. It is true this hasn't been the first time such a failure occurred. ObamaCare is the culmination and consequence of a decades long slide away from freedom. But today’s ruling has now affirmed fascism as the de facto domestic economic policy of the United States.

As Benito Mussolini pointed out, fascism is merely the merger of political power (force) and economic power (trade). It involves property “ownership in the hands of private individuals, but transfers control of the property to the government,”1 in this case, health insurance. Also, it should be noted that individualism holds the tenet of self-ownership; your body is YOUR property and under YOUR control. What this ruling essentially does is invalidates any vestige of individualism existing within this country’s borders and declares that even though you own your body, it is under the control of the federal government. You must buy this product because Big Brother says so. 

Now, I’ve tried to wrap my head around how a Supreme Court Judge, seen as a Constitutionalist in the eyes of many, could uphold such an obvious abrogation of individual rights. In his Washington Post piece entitled “Why Roberts did it,” Charles Krauthammer, essentially states that by calling it a tax, Chief Justice Roberts has cornered President Obama to admit it is so, with the hope that this fires up the people enough to support and elect Romney to the presidency and Republicans to the House and Senate, who promise to repeal it. It’s an interesting theory, but there's one problem with it: if Obama is reelected it falls apart and we are left with four more years of a Statist plus ObamaCare. If the theory holds and Romney wins the presidency and is able to rescind such a “tax,” the dangerous precedent set today by the Supreme Court remains–Congress can now compel any action from the people, so long as it is justified as a “tax”. Chief Justice Roberts had the option to just strike it down, to stand on principle and vote against it which would have been the deciding vote in outright invalidating the law today while protecting and preserving the rights of the people. He compromised and now it’s the people who will suffer. 

Krauthammer also asserts that Roberts voted this way to give the appearance of a non-ideological Court. That is a total cop-out. So what if people believe the decision was ideological? It should have been! To be ideological is to have a set of core beliefs and principles that one stands by no matter what. That is not a vice, that is a virtue! We need leaders who are rationally ideological, who understand the importance of individual rights and who are not afraid to defend them absolutely. This justification, if true of Roberts, shows him to be nothing more and nothing less than a coward. 

Also, there seems to be an odd denial of the “law of identity” at play here. As I recall from the first day of oral arguments, it was decided that the case can be tried since this was not a tax being imposed. The Anti-Injunction Act stipulates that one cannot bring suit against a tax before it has been levied. The individual mandate, which is now considered a tax, won’t be levied until 2014.  So, according to Roberts, a non-tax is a tax. A is not A. Go figure.

But make no mistake about it, individualists like myself have surely been empowered by this ruling to advance the cause of true freedom, to ensure that the government works for all people, and not just those in need, and not just those with large bank accounts. A government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth–because we won’t let it. 

Emboldened we are!

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1 "The New Fascism: Rule by Consensus," Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, 202

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The Nature of Deficits: It’s the Spending, Stupid!

Earth to Democrats/Statists/Leftists: tax breaks do not cause deficits!

If there is one economic fallacy that completely drives me crazy, it’s this one! So, in order to dispel this notion that truly defies all logic, I figured the best way to prove this point is through graphical analysis. But first, let’s define some terms relating to the three possible scenarios pertaining to government taxation and spending.

Surplus: A situation in which assets exceed liabilities, income exceeds expenditures, exports exceed imports, or profits exceed losses.1

Deficit: A situation in which liabilities exceed assets, expenditures exceed income, imports exceed exports, or losses exceed profits. 2

Balanced Budget: a budget is balanced when current expenditures are equal to receipts. 3

With those terms in mind, let’s imagine a hypothetical society. We’ll call this society Atlantis. Atlantis' government was just founded and has immediately incurred expenses for its functioning. In total, these expenditures will cost $75.00 (Hey, we’re talking Atlantean dollars here! After all, their economy is just starting off.). 




No matter how much Atlantis spends greater than $0, absent tax revenue, it will never be in the positive (i.e. deficit). Spending is an expense and an expense is a negative (-). You either have spending (-) or no spending (0).

Now, let’s take a look purely on the revenue side. Let's say the government of Atlantis has imposed an income tax on all productive members of society as a source of revenue and brought in a total of $100.00.




No matter how much tax revenue Atlantis takes in greater than $0, absent any spending, it will never be in the negative. Taxes are a source of revenue and revenue is a positive (+). You either have revenue (+) or no revenue (0). 

Now, let’s see what happens when the two are stacked up side by side.




Atlantis’ revenue is greater than its expenditures by $25.00. As mentioned above, this is known as a surplus. 

Calvin Coolidge, America’s 30th President, once said “Collecting more taxes than is absolutely necessary is legalized robbery.” Atlantis agrees, and so it has decided to cut its income tax by 50% (For now, we'll assume everything else remains constant. And later we'll see examples of what actually happens to state coffers when taxes are raised). 




Ah, we’ve arrived at the dreaded deficit and the source of all this confusion. In the beginning I asserted that the belief that tax breaks cause deficits defies logic. But it seems logical that this is exactly what happened. Spending didn’t change, taxes were cut, and now a deficit has arisen. But this is one-dimensional thinking that does not get at the fundamentals. It’s important if we are to solve a problem that we get to the fundamental nature of its cause. What the left ignores is the side of the graph the deficit resides on. It’s not coming from the revenue side but the spending side. They ignore the nature of the deficit: spending.

To further concretize my point, let’s examine just the revenue side. If it is true that tax breaks cause deficits, then we will arrive at one in this example and put this debate to rest, either way.

Let’s once again start with $100.00 of tax revenue. 




From the outset, we have a surplus of $100.00. Now let’s offer a tax break and give back 50% of what we took in back to the people. Now remember, the mindset is that tax breaks cause deficits, so we should surely arrive at a deficit after enacting this tax break...




Hmmm… no deficit. We just hacked the revenue a whopping 50% and not only did we not arrive at a deficit, on the contrary, we still have a surplus. No matter how much we lower taxes, we will still have a surplus until the point where we take in no revenue, where we will ultimately reach $0.00. There is no possible way to get into negative territory. The fundamental truth to be gained here is that there can be no deficit without spending. 

Keep in mind in order to make that point, assumptions were made above that everything else remained constant. In actuality, tax revenue is known to increase when tax rates are lowered. There is a plethora of evidence that shows government revenue actually decreases when taxes are raised, especially on the rich, and increases when taxes are lowered. It has a lot to do with the fact that lowering taxes allows more money into the private sector leading to greater and more efficient use of capital visa vi investments in start-up companies and expansion of already established businesses. Also, people are less inclined to seek out loopholes in the tax code when they perceive their rate of taxation to not be oppressive. 

A great example of this phenomenon is what happened in Oregon in 2010. Reported by The Wall Street Journal, "Oregon raised its income tax on the richest 2% of its residents last year to fix its budget hole, but now the state treasury admits it collected nearly one-third less revenue than the bean counters projected... One reason revenues are so low is that about one-quarter of the rich tax filers seem to have gone missing. The state expected 38,000 Oregonians to pay the higher tax, but only 28,000 did."4 Can somebody say "Who is John Galt?"

But this scenario is not exclusive to Oregon. Another similar case played out in New York a few years back. Then Governor Paterson is quoted as saying "We increased the income tax for millionaires last year. We projected that we would get $4 billion and we actually got well short of it. Tax the rich, tax the rich. We've done that. We've probably lost jobs and driven people out of the state."5

And how about the state of Maryland? "We reported in May that after passing a millionaire surtax nearly one-third of Maryland's millionaires had gone missing, thus contributing to a decline in state revenues... Well, the state comptroller's office now has final tax return data for 2008, the first year that the higher tax rates applied. The number of millionaire tax returns fell sharply to 5,529 from 7,898 in 2007, a 30% tumble. The taxes paid by rich filers fell by 22%, and instead of their payments increasing by $106 million, they fell by some $257 million."6

So the left says tax breaks cause deficits but in reality tax increases actually bring in less revenue. I guess another truth to be gained from this is that wishful thinking clouds all reason.

Final Word:
I am unequivocally against all forms of coercive taxation. The reason is simple: a person who does not get to keep the products of his labor is a slave. At tho point one might ask "But who will fund the government?" This saying succinctly makes my point: 'I don't need to know who is going to pick the cotton to know that slavery is wrong.'

But for those who are still unsettled by that unanswered question, a great mind at The Objective Standard, Craig Biddle, has written on exactly this subject with an article entitled "How Would Government Be Funded in a Free Society?" (The link offers just a preview of the article but it's well worth the purchase price.)

Now, the unfortunate reality is we live in a country that has imposed an immoral right's violating income tax. With that knowledge, currently the best we can ask of our government is to act in the most moral way possible. When faced with a deficit, the more moral and more responsible thing to do is not to further violate one's rights by increasing taxes (we know from examples above that this also lacks practicality), but to reduce the spending, reduce the burden on the people, and bring the budget into balance. Not only is it a moral imperative for our government to do so, our future quality of life is depending on it!

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