Smyslov_Fan wrote on 11/06/08 at 13:38:37:
I think BPaulsen has either forgotten the 14th Amendment or believes the Supreme Court has misinterpreted it since at least 1933. The Federal government, slang for big centralized government, is viewed as the root cause of American corruption by a large minority of radicals, many of whom graduated from Hillsdale College.
The 14th Amendment does nothing to aid your cause, and its usage (ie: Jim Crow, Brown vs. Board of Education, Lawrence vs. Texas) is easy to understand. Everytime it is invoked is to make sure people are treated fairly in application of the law.
The 14th Amendment is one of the least complicated Amendments, and it doesn't, in any way whatsoever, provide the basis for a huge federal government that involves itself in issues reserved by the 10th Amendment. Every issue not mentioned in the Constitution itself is to be reserved by the States. The 14th only comes up when the 10th is being practiced unfairly to some individuals.
Constitutional issues aside, what in the world makes you believe the government is a source of
good as opposed to
corruption? Is there anything in mankind's entire history that endorses this notion?
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I have two friends who graduated from Hillsdale, and while both are extremely intelligent, one has bought into the economic world view of the minor Austrian political economist Mieses lock stock and barrel. This world view is a radicalised form of Adam Smith's Invisible Hand theory. The fact that so many Nobel laureates in the last twenty years or so have given proof after proof that there is no such invisible hand, and the market does not act rationally, and that government intervention is essential for a healthy economic system has been lost on this minority of American Libertarians.
What model do you follow? Keynesian?
Considering I am a right-leaning Libertarian, I will tell you now there are more Austrian following American Libertarians than there are any other economic model. I should know since I am actively involved in politics, and other Libertarians.
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BPaulsen, if anything I say is untrue of you, please correct me. Don't attack me by saying that I'm patronizing, challenge my ideas.
You haven't been patronizing in the slightest, and the only reason I called the other guy out for it was his ridiculous notion of flat-earth level thinking, and other ad hominems.
Quote:Challenge the ideas of those who believe that government is now and has been since at least the Great Depression, the only force large enough to take on the big businesses, who in acting according to Smith's own credo of self-interest, cause more harm than good to the economic well-being of of many Americans. The other ones, admittedly, I do not feel like investing the time in enough to argue it. However, I will challenge this one:
#1) The federal government created the problem of big business when Lincoln began playing favorites with the railroad barons. When the government involves to ensure the success of companies it eliminates competition, usually in the form of regulations that make it harder for competitors.
#2) The notion that government "takes on" big business is completely absurd, given that corporatists have undue influence on government. To the contrary, government ensures their success.
#3) If you want a great example of how government "takes on" big business just look at Monsanto, and the sheer amount of government backed evil (for lack of a better word, I don't know how else to describe getting farmers thrown in jail for not buying their terminator seeds all under the guise of being humane) they get away with in the agricultural industry. Is this the government standing up for the people, or the government standing up for big business?
#4) My idea is that the government aids big business more than it hinders it, and I am proven entirely right in what just happened with the bailout. That is the biggest proof I will ever need.
#5) Follow the money trail. Corporations are the ones giving money to our politicians, do you
really think the politicians are going to represent the people first? Our president-elect pocketed over 100,000$ from Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, who went under. Dodd, Chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee took even more than that.
I can only think of two politicians immune to influence: Kucinich (D-OH), Paul (R-TX). Unless, of course, I'm missing all of the ones that fight purely for the people. The easiest way to find a straight politician is to find one that doesn't take money from corporations, and that number is few and far between.