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Tuesday, August 5th, 2003

TAKE A PEAK AT CHINA’S TOP SECRET NUCLEAR TESTING GROUND AT LOP NOR

This is a satellite imagery via Adobe Acrobat so if you have dial-up you might want to go out for a sandwich while this downloads.

It occurred to me just now that China cannot initiate any new nuclear tests without the United States and india wondering if they aren’t actually testing Pakistani or North Korean atomic devices. India of course, is worried about China’s nuclear program on it’s own merits aside from any help the Chinese might be extending to Islamabad.

Tuesday, August 5th, 2003

CAERDROIA ON THE CONSTITUTION

In a thoughtful post on Caerdroia :

“I really like our Constitution as is, but I suspect that I am in the minority. The reality is, we have not actually been following large portions of the Constitution since the 1930’s. The Federal government has been increasingly becoming intrusive on private Liberties, and the States have increasingly been becoming puppets of Federal laws and regulations. (Hence, a State may pass a medical marijuana law, but not prevent the enforcement of Federal regulations banning the use of marijuana.) The combination of redistribution of income (both to individuals via various welfare programs, and to States using mechanisms such as highway funding) and the removal of limits to Federal power (via doctrines such as “interstate commerce refers to anything that happens that might effect the economy” and “the government has a compelling interest to do anything it says it has a compelling interest to do” and “a limited time means any time which is not actually infinite, up to and including 3 billion years” and so on and so on).”

I share Jeff’s dismay at the current state of Constitutional affairs which themselves may have contributed to decline in public support for our basic liberties. Or selective non-support, since most people are more interested in curtailing the rights of groups of people they dislike rather than waiving their own freedoms. Jeff continues:

“It is clear to me that, no matter how much I hate the idea, it is time for the States to invoke their authority under Article V and call a Convention for the purpose of rewriting the Constitution. It is far better for us to have a mediocre Constitution that we actually follow, than an excellent Constitution which we ignore at our leisure.

I hate the idea too. Not because Caerdroia’s Constitutional Convention idea isn’t intellectually honest -it is – it’s just that given human nature and the overweeening will to power of the progressive Left and the zanies of the religious right they won’t respect an accurate but mediocre version of the Constitution either. In fact, they’d respect it less because whatever new Frankenstein monster hodgepodge that might be left after a Convention shredded our system of government would not have an ounce of the sanctity in the public mind of the old version. Today at least, the Supreme Court occasionally acknowledges the existence of the Tenth amendment and treats with some seriousness the phrase ” Congress shall make no law…”. After a modern Convention ( you think there are a lot of kooks running for Governor in California ? Call a Convention and watch who files papers) we might as well simply have a small directorate rule by decree because that would be the long term result in fact if not in form.

Octavian became Augustus and Republican Rome became an Empire not by revolution but by doing new things under hallowed old names.

Tuesday, August 5th, 2003

SYMPOSIUM ON IRAQ

David Horowitz’s Frontpagemag.com has had a lively series of roundtable symposiums on controversial topics. Generally, the discussion is of a substantive quality and ideological diversity unseen since ” The Firing Line ” and certainly missing in the mainstream media, including on Left-Right match-ups like Crossfire or even the much vaunted Sunday morning talk shows. The current one on Iraq is no exception and features James Woolsey, Jacob Heilbrunn, David Kaiser and Stan Goff.

Tuesday, August 5th, 2003

ARE LIBERTARIANS EXTREME ?

I had an interesting exchange with my prolific counterpart at Prometheus 6 on the nature of libertarianism that was sparked by comments made by Brad DeLong and John Constantine

I commented on Prometheus 6’s site:

Speaking for the Libertarians, if such a thing is possible, most are *not* as extreme as Murray Rothbard’s zero regulation ” anarcho-capitalism”.

Most libertarians broadly defined and thinkers who influenced them including Ayn Rand, Friedrich von Hayek, Milton Friedman and the ” Chicago School” of Economics generally acknowledge the value of the rule of law and an orderly if sharply limited government. Not buying into government ownership of Amtrak or confiscatory tax rates is not to be equated with a desire to restore feudalism or become a gun-totin’warlord in a Hobbesian fight to the finish.

Prometheus6 replied:

I understand that. My point, or John Constantine’s with which I agree, is that the results of paring the government back to the point that your average libertarian-on-the-street promotes will result in social chaos.

Your problem is that the meaning of “libertarian” has been hijacked just as surely as the true meaning of “conservative” has been. We live in an age of extremists, Mark. Though for different reasons than Dickens, we can just as surely call this “the best of times, the worst of times.”

Part of this debate revolves around whether we are discussing ” Libertarians ” or ” libertarians”. The former are usually adherents of the Libertarian Party or are self-described, closed system Objectivists ( some irony to this as Ayn Rand repudiated the Libertarians and their guru Murray Rothbard) clustered around Dr. Leonard Peikoff, Rand’s heir and successor. Both groups, despite their differences tend to promote a systemic and uncompromisingly radicals-for-capitalism critique of American society. Whatever their intellectual, moral or cultural influence, large-case ” L ” Libertarians have next to none politically – even Congressman Ron Paul has switched back to the Republicans.

The reason for this is that their uncompromising, all-or-nothing, philosophical position is poorly suited for the American legislative process and their Free-market vision, however laudable, would be a total shock to the average American if suddenly enacted in toto. In a democratic society a libertarian legal-economic framework must be supported by a wider acceptance of libertarian values, an ethic of freedom and it’s corrollary of personal responsibility. America has made tremendous strides since 1980 in terms of elevating Freedom and Free markets to pride of place but I would suggest that as a whole, we are still somewhat lacking in the self-responsibility department. Wanting low taxes and unlimited information, entertainment and educational choices combined with massive middle-class entitlement spending and government regulation of pornography, “hate speech”, campaign commercials, abortion and prayer is not merely unreasonable – it’s schizophrenic.

That’s why I am a libertarian, small case ” l “. Moving America in the direction of greater freedom in the sphere of economics and politics requires a sense of realism about the workings of our Constitutional democracy and no small measure of patience. Like Ronald Reagan we need to be prepared at times to take half or even a quarter of a loaf so long as we have the persistence to return to the bargaining table later on for more. There will also be a finite limit to the public acceptance to the extent of Free-Market prescriptions, most of which will sell themselves if enacted in a reasonable format. The electorate is simply not going to tolerate seeing examples of extreme Third World style poverty in a nation as rich as America regardless of how much screwed up individuals may have brought their condition upon themselves. And if we advocates of Liberty try to force that issue in the name of ideological purity the electorate will swing Leftward to folks whose agenda has a lot more to do with social control and maximizing their political power than actually helping the poor move upward.

Most libertarians are Republicans for the same reason that most socialists are Democrats instead of Greens. It’s better to work within a larger party-coalition and lose some battles ( outside of the tax cut libertarians aren’t doing so hot in the GOP lately – and even the tax cuts aren’t what we’d like them to be) than to lose chronically as marginalized outsiders. An acceptance of a permanent but narrowly tailored social safety net constructed on libertarian principles that emphasize opportunity rather than governmental dependence is certainly far more palatable than someday reading Cato Institute reports on the wastefulness of President Hillary Clinton’s new Department of National Child Care.

So, John Constantine is wrong to equate most libertarians, certainly a more numerous group by far than Libertarians, with fanatical idealists who would unleash some kind of wild anarchy. ( Frankly, I don’t even think that description applies to most members of the Libertarian Party or Objectivists either). Perhaps the more pragmatic libertarians need to, as Prometheus suggested, speak up a bit louder than our more ideologically rigid cousins.

That way at least, we will be less likely to be confused with Men of Straw.

Tuesday, August 5th, 2003

THE NATIONAL INTEREST

Has an outstanding issue- ” The Lost World of Atlanticism ?” on the stands right now with articles that touch upon many issues currently topical with the blogosphere. I would direct readers to three in particular – “The Old-New Anti-Semitism” by Robert Wistrich; “Money and Power” by Richard Rosecrance; and ” Stopping the Iranian Bomb ” by Geoffrey Kemp. Note that The National Interest maintains an online magazine as well but it differs somewhat in style as well as in content from it’s dead tree counterpart.


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