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How
to make people
more
responsible
BY
HARRY BROWNE
Some
people object to libertarian ideas because there are too many irresponsible
people in the world -- people who will cause trouble if the government
doesn't restrain them.
They say we must have big government because some people won't act decently
toward others, some people won't plan for their own retirement, some
people are too stupid to take care of themselves properly.
In fact, the entire effort to wed morality and politics is based on
the assumption that there are immoral or irresponsible people whom the
government must control.
Yes, there are plenty of people who won't act responsibly. There are
people who have no regard for the consequences of their own acts. There
are people who seem incapable of behaving wisely or benevolently.
But we already have a $2 trillion federal government. Why is it that
after amassing so much power and taking so much of our money, the government
hasn't already protected us from irresponsibility?
It's because politicians don't use the power and money you give them
to do the things you want. They use those resources to do what they
want. And all they want is more power
and more power
and
more power.
You are the target
That power is aimed at you, not at the people you want to control.
Politicians exploit the existence of irresponsible people to justify
rigid controls on your life. Because some people won't plan for their
old age, you must be forced into Social Security. Because some people
will do strange things if they look at dirty pictures on the Internet,
your access to the Internet must be restricted.
We ask for a government that will restrain or punish those who impose
their way physically on others, but we get instead a government that
regulates virtually all areas of our own lives.
Discouraging irresponsibility
So what should we do about people who won't take responsibility for
their own actions? I believe the answer is simple:
Set them free.
Give them the freedom to make their own decisions, to face the consequences
of their own acts, to see for themselves what their actions do to others
and how others respond to them.
Only free people have an incentive to be virtuous. Only people who bear
the consequences of their own acts will care about those consequences
and try to learn from their mistakes.
A free society rewards virtue and punishes irresponsibility. Government
does just the opposite -- subsidizing irresponsibility while taxing
work and responsibility.
What do we do about people who might not plan for their own retirement?
Set them free.
Let each person know that his future depends largely on his own actions.
If younger people see older people who haven't planned ahead and have
to rely on charity, the young will be more likely to provide for the
future. Today when someone plans poorly, the only consequence people
see is a demand for more government.
What do we do about people who are insensitive to other people?
Set them free.
Let other people shun them or respect them for what they do. Let each
person bear the results of being civil or uncivil.
Freedom and responsibility
It's often said that freedom and responsibility are two sides of the
same coin -- that if you want freedom, you must first accept the responsibility
that goes with it.
The truth is simpler. Freedom and responsibility aren't interconnected
things. They are the same thing.
Freedom is responsibility. Responsibility is experiencing the consequences
of your own acts -- not the consequences of others' acts or making others
pay for what you do.
And that's what freedom is. Without government to force others to pay
for your pleasures or mistakes, and without forcing you to pay for what
others do, you are a free, responsible human being.
Freedom and responsibility are inseparably linked -- not because they
should be, but because they are. Responsibility accompanies freedom,
whether or not you want it to.
So the only way to induce people to be more responsible is to set them
free.
First things first
We are told America must have a moral revival before we can have greater
freedom -- that people must be taught responsibility before they can
be free. This puts the cart before the horse.
If we wait on government to make people responsible, we will wait forever.
We have to decide whether we want a nation of self-reliant individuals
who improve their own lives by offering needed services to others --
or a nation in which everyone is responsible for everyone else and so
the government must control every aspect of our lives.
We don't need a moral revival, we don't need politicians making moral
decisions for us, we don't need more controls. If we want people to
act more responsibly, there's only one way to bring it about:
Set them free.
Date of publication: February 21, 2002
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
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