The government monopolization of student loans should be a warning to every business in America. What began as a government incentive by offering discounted rates to banks who would promise to issue educational loans is now being vilified as ineffective—thus prompting further intervention in the form of private obsolescence favoring public ubiquity.

Any business that now takes a tax cut, tax credit, or some other discount for participating in a government agenda must follow the consequences to their logical conclusion. Our current government will—as it did with student loans—eventually portray your service as the intermediary to their benevolence, and argue for public socialization of your business.

This is already happening with the Health Care Reform law. President Obama knew he needn’t completely nationalize health insurance immediately; by acting as an innocuous intercessor, the path quickly follows to make them a frustrating arbiter, and then finally an oppressive master. They must only convince enough people that it is the private company that serves as middle-man, rather the government, to consumer benefits.

After all (their argument may go), why work for a private corporation, who skims off the top to line their CEO’s pockets while receiving tax benefits, when you may receive employment or benefits directly from their benefactor? Why purchase oil from Chevron when the government may provide it at a reduced price? Why sell shoes when the government may distribute them more fairly?

The real question all along, however, should have been, why was the government artificially propping up complementary prices through their initial intervention? Education tuition costs have skyrocketed since the government’s first involvement in distributing loans; health care costs have skyrocketed since Medicare, Medicaid, and forcing emergency rooms to admit patients; automobile prices have risen drastically since the imposition of stricter emissions and safety standards.

The nationalization of student loans will give more people access to education, the demand for college enrollment will rise exponentially, and tuition costs will necessarily rise in direct correlation in order to maintain order and population ratio on campuses. At that point, the government will intervene once again in the name of fairness, eliminate the educational middle-man, and nationalize college education.

Every concession of liberty is one more authorization of tyranny. By allowing the government to restrict the liberties of banks, schools, and ultimately the consumer in their choice in the loan market, we have given them the authority to control one more aspect of our lives. If any middle-man should be eliminated from business it must be the one whose responsibility it is to protect the pursuit of wealth, not the one who provides the path.

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The Deathmobile of Bureaucracy

President Obama, campaigning in Iowa for a law already passed, rebutted the Republicans’ rhetoric to repeal and replace the Health Care overhaul. After taunting the Republicans by double-dog daring them to repeal his landmark accomplishment, he told his supporters in the Hawkeye state, “I don’t believe the American people are going to put the insurance industry back in the driver’s seat. We’ve been there already. We’re not going back.”

The problem is, the insurance company has not had control of the driver’s seat for a very long time. The government has increased its regulation over the industry for a very long time, most notably refusing their operating across state lines.

Even at the health insurance industry’s conception, when it was almost free from all government regulation, it didn’t have the power or authority of a totalitarian bus driver from a horror movie, as Mr. Obama has attempted to portray them. No, the insurance industry—and any industry in a free market—is more like a taxicab driver. They may choose the vehicle, they may set the price, they may even choose the customers; but it is the consumer that has the authority.

The vehicle of government health care

(more…)

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I received a message from a liberal friend on Facebook yesterday. Her son, in his mid twenties, has had Type I diabetes ever since he was very young. Yet even after the health care bill passed, my friend at once began complaining that she had to wait another four years for Obama’s plan to cover her son; she also began asking any of her conservative friends to fork over the dough for medical care and find an insurance company that would help her.

How selfish.

Arguments that appeal to sympathy are popular among liberals. They must use this type of argument because their logic is inherently flawed. Instead of demanding charity (an oxymoron at best) and complaining that she must endure the toils associated with survival, she could have adopted a different perspective—a perspective that is grateful for the technologies that have allowed her son to progress as much as he has while still allowing her to keep her 100-acre ranch.

After all, if universal health care were really her fundamental priority, she could have moved to France or any number of countries a long time ago. Instead, I believe she knows that the quality of care in the United States is far better than anywhere else, but still believes that care should be distributed freely. To borrow from tired old phrase, she wants to have her insulin and inject it, too.

We all have our priorities in life. My friend’s position is the archetypal liberal argument. She and other socialists believe that their own priorities should also be the priorities of the society, and they seek governmental intervention to regulate them. They believe that another’s property should assist them in pursuing their own goals. Again, how selfish.

Margaret Thatcher said “The problem with Socialism is you eventually run out of other people’s money.” While that is true, it is only a problem. What causes the government to run out of other people’s money? The problem with socialism is that it imposes the fiscal burden of others’ priorities on an unwilling people. The more this happens, the more these people will be drained of their wealth. When they have lost their financial independence, they too will demand the government to subsidize their goals.

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Twenty-eighth Amendment

Over 3/4 of the United States have expressed an intent to block the federal government from mandating their citizens to purchase health insurance. Among these states is Virginia, and Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, has vowed to sue to the federal government as soon as President Obama signs the bill into law.

Even if for some reason the Supreme Court allows this dastardly power grab, the news isn’t all bad. With approximately 40 states fighting back against the individual mandate, a new amendment to the Constitution may be possible. I, for one, offer the following language to be amended to our governmental charter that the Democrats have recently ignored.

Amendment Twenty-Eight:

Congress shall make no law that requires or compels on penalty of fine, fee, tax or imprisonment, any state or its citizens thereof to purchase any good, service, or participate in any agenda, that deprives them of life, liberty, or property.

We the American People, having entrusted our representatitive government to the 435 members of the House of Representatives, have just put our faith in the federal government to effectively regualte the priorities of individuals.

The final vote on the Health Care Reform bill has passed it, and now we have entrusted one sixth of our economy into the bickering and fickle hands of bureaucrats. To presume that this body of politicians–and succeeding ones–will hold fast to their word and not allow this program to spiral out of control takes more faith than any religion can ever demand.

The Argument No One Made:

The government is attempting to revive alchemy as a profitable science. While it is possible to turn base metals into gold, it takes much more energy, resources, and wealth than the final product is worth.

Assuming that this Health Care Reform bill does what it says, which is ultimately to allow more people to live longer, what then becomes of our Social Security? What then becomes of Medicare? Will America, with its increasing preference for prolonged life through government assistance, be hoisted by its own petard? These two programs have already cost much more than anticipated and are deepening America’s debt everyday. By the government’s newest intervention in subsidizing life, they have just multiplied their debt.

Rationing will be the only option once the government realizes its folly.

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The Washington Post and other news outlets have reported the alleged racial epithets and expectoration hurled at black members of Congress during their walking of the Gantlet on Saturday, March 21st, 2010.

As Congressmen left their office buildings and marched through the swarm of protesters to attend the President’s speech at 3:00pm, some were met with adulation, others with disdain. Still even others marched by with hardly a recognition of their existence, especially the lesser-known Congressmen from the western extremities of the country. Most of the protesters were from the east coast, and could therefore more easily recognize their Congressmen and urge the crowd’s support or disgust.

When members of the Congressional Black Caucus crossed Independence Avenue from the Longworth building, the crowd’s protestations did indeed grow louder and more boisterous. Invoking images of Jim Crow, Rep. Clyburn claims that he heard things he hadn’t heard since 1960. While it is certainly possible that racial comments were uttered, I certainly never heard any, and no video evidence has been produced that does support his claim. On the other hand, several videos seem to show a story that contradicts his own.

Clyburn chose his words well. “I have heard things today that I have not heard since March 15, 1960,” he told reporters. This does not mean they were actually said, only that he heard them–possibly because it is what he wanted to hear.

The real reason the crowd grew louder at the appearance of black congressmen has nothing to do with racism, although it does have much to do with race. The reason is simple: No black members of congress oppose this bill and they stand united in their support of it. The argument of race, however, is self-imposed by the minorities. By positioning themselves amongst a group that highlights their race and allows their politics to be determined by it–i.e., the Congressional Black Caucus–they allow others to infer that their race is a determining factor in decision-making. If race is a determining factor, as seen by simple definition of the group’s title, then when that factor is displayed, people will more easily recognize it and either voice their support or opposition. It would have been no different at this event if every Democrat were required to wear blue jerseys and every Republican were required to wear red jerseys.

As for members of the CBC themselves, many of their reactions to the crowd were indicative of their own brand of bias. Many black congressmen were scowling, glaring, and making no great effort to display a politic expression. Many other democrats, even some of the more recognizable ones who were met with an equal level of protestory volume, maintained their political composure and smiled at the crowd.

It was fairly evident from my perspective and interaction with the protestors at this event that race was only as much of a factor as the minorities’ self-imposed labels. Racism, however, was nowhere to be seen. (I am sure there were several racists there, but they certainly didn’t constitute a representative sample. They  would have been the statistical outliers in a quantitative analysis.) It would make much more sense if these allegations of racism were reported in order to marginalize the protests, and muster support for the bill, or, at the very least, opposition to the opposition.

 

Received at 12:18PM, 19 Mar 2010

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