Human
Events...
A
New Day in Politics
by
John Stossel
06/29/2011
Most
Americans used to call themselves
Republican or Democrat. These days, more call themselves independent.
What does
that mean for American politics? A lot.
“Independents
are everywhere, and
they’re becoming the largest single voting bloc in the country,” Reason
magazine Editor Matt Welch says. “ (T)hey can determine every national
election
and every ... election for state office. So independent voters --
people who
refuse to say, ‘I’m a Republican or I’m a Democrat’ -- that’s where all
the
action is.”
Welch
and Reason.tv Editor in Chief
Nick Gillespie just published a book on what to expect from this
change:
“Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What’s
Wrong
With America.”
The
big change they see stems from
independents’ refusal to be absorbed by any party. “Compare the tea
party to
the ... Howard Dean antiwar movement,” Welch said. “Howard Dean became
the
chairman (of the) Democratic National Committee. But the tea party has
kept an
arm’s length and said, ‘No, we’re not going to be Republicans. ...
(W)e’re
going to focus on ... government spending, deficit, and debt, and
that’s it.’
... And by maintaining that independence they have retained power.”
“Independence
in politics means that
you can actually dictate some of the terms to our overlords,” Welch and
Gillespie write, adding that we need independence not just in politics
but from
politics. Welch said, “When we look at the places where government
either
directly controls or heavily regulates things, like K-12 education,
health
care, retirement, things are going poorly.”
It’s
very different outside of
government where -- from culture to retail stores to the Internet --
there’s been
an explosion of choice. “(Y)ou were lucky ... 20 years ago (if) you
would see
one eggplant in an exotic store,” Welch continued. “Now in the
crappiest
supermarket in America you’ll see four or five or six varieties of
eggplant,
plus all types of different things. ... (W)hen you get independent from
politics, things are going great because people can experiment, they
can
innovate. ... We should squeeze down the (number of) places where we
need a
consensus to the smallest area possible, because all the interesting
stuff
happens outside of that.”
Government
is a zero-sum game: Someone
wins, and someone loses, unlike in the market, where it’s win-win,
where
merchant and customer thank each other. “Anytime that you have the
government
expressing anything,” Welch continued, “it’s a battle of values. If a
government is supporting an art show, people who find that art
offensive have a
legitimate claim. If a government buys ... a new baseball stadium,
well, my
wife hates baseball, so how is that fair to her?”
“Fifty-one
percent of the people get
to tell the other 49 percent what to do, how much to pay, where you
have to
show up,” Gillespie added. In the private sector, everybody gets to
pick what
he or she wants.
“There
are troubles and tradeoffs,”
Gillespie said. “But ... if somebody starts selling stuff you don’t
like, you
don’t hold a rally and you don’t try and get a bunch of people to vote
to
change it. You go to the next grocery store ... or you build your own
grocery
store. It’s hard to do that with schools ... with health care and ...
retirement.” Of course, as government makes more decisions for people
and
limits competition, it reduces our choices. It’s also given us
horrible,
unsustainable debt.
But,
surprisingly, the Reason folks are
optimistic.
“There
are cases (of big government
rollbacks),” Gillespie said. “New Zealand did this. Canada did this.
The U.S.
did this after World War II -- dramatically ramped down the amount of
spending,
both in absolute terms and in relative terms as a percentage of
economic
activity. Political change happens.”
But
for now, the politicians continue
to move us in the wrong direction. Last year, the feds alone added
another
80,000 pages of rules. Despite talk of cuts, spending keeps growing. So
does
the debt.
And
yet maybe the optimists are right.
Maybe the human spirit is so powerful it will overcome the stupidity of
politics.
I
sure hope so.
Read
it at Human Events
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