Here
are some thoughts to keep in mind when attempting to sell the
ideas of liberty to friends and associates. They are designed
to convert people, not to win arguments against them.
Principles of Government
There are seven principles that must be recognized regarding
any government program -- no matter what the program, no matter
how laudable the objective of the program, no matter what terrible
things the program is supposed to do away with. If you understand
these principles, you can speak effectively regarding an existing
or proposed government program or law, even if you don't know
all the details of the program.
1. Government is force. Every government program
is backed by the coercive power to compel people to alter their
lives. For government to provide what you want, it must take
it by force from someone else. The force isn't apply only against
criminals or other bad people. The force must first be applied
against the innocent -- the people who must be forced to pay
for the program, the people who must be forced to open their
homes, their businesses, their bank accounts to the government.
2. Government is politics. Whenever you turn
anything over to the government, you transform it from a financial,
medical, scientific, military, or social matter into a political
issue -- to be decided by whoever has the most political influence.
And that will never be you nor I.
3. You don't control the government. No government
program will operate as you imagine it should. The politicians
and bureaucrats will transform your wonderful idea to suit themselves
-- into something quite different from what you envision. So
all the talk about the wonderful things this program or law
is supposed to do is just talk. It's just a game of "pretend,"
and has no relevance to how politicians and bureaucrats will
use the force of government to get what they really want.
4. Power always grows. No government
program stands still. Whatever the original budget amount, whatever
the original area to be covered, whatever the original objectives,
the program or law will grow much larger, be applied to areas
never discussed when the original law was enacted, and serve
as a precedent to apply the same kind of pseudo-solution to
other issues. When Medicare was set up in 1965, the politicians
estimated that its in 1992 cost would be $3 billion -- which
is equivalent to $12 billion when adjusted for inflation to
1992 dollars. The actual cost in 1992 was $110 billion -- nine
times as much.
5. Power is sure to be misused eventually. When
you give a good politician the power to do good, you give many
future bad politicians the power to do bad. As Michael Cloud
has pointed out, "The problem is not the abuse of power,
it is the power to abuse." The problem doesn't arise when
a bad politician starts doing bad things; it arose earlier when
politicians in general were given the power to do what you might
have thought were good things.
6. Government doesn't work. Because government
is force, because it is political, because your intentions won't
matter, because power will always be misused, government simply
won't deliver what you want. I don't know of any government
program that has achieved what it promised.
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7. Government must be subject to absolute limits.
Because politicians have every incentive to expand government,
and with it their power, and because there will always be people
who can profit from that expansion and thereby provide "public
support" for the expansion, there must be absolute limits
on government. The Constitution provides the obvious limits
we must reimpose upon the federal government. Until the Constitution
is enforced, we have no hope of containing the federal government.
You don't have to use all these principles. In fact, you should
focus on using and expanding upon the three or four you're most
comfortable with.
Paint a Picture
Try to bring the conversation around to the better life the
individual could enjoy in a libertarian America. Paint a picture
of a better America, showing the prospect how much his life
could be improved. Here are some examples:
* If you're like the average American family, when we repeal
the income and Social Security taxes, you'll have $10,000 or
more to spend every year. What would you do with the money?
Will you put your child in a private school? Will you take a
better vacation every year? Support your church or favorite
cause or charity in a way you've never been able to do before?
What will you do with that money?
* Stopping government from regulating business means better
jobs available with higher pay as well as more products available
and lower cost -- with no increase in your vulnerability. Employers
will be able to satisfy their best employees, instead of the
bureaucrats, and companies will be able to satisfy their customers,
instead of the government.
* Getting government out of health care will give you lower
costs, easier access to medical care, better insurance that's
less expensive. A hospital stay might cost you a day's pay instead
of two week's pay. And doctors would be able to make house calls
again.
* An end to the Social Security tax means you could put a small
portion of your earnings in a bank savings account and come
out way ahead of what Social Security is promising now. You
could be a millionaire when you retire.
* An end to the insane War on Drugs means safer schools, no
drug dealers on the street, no more excuses for Treasury agents
to snoop in your bank account. And the prisons would be emptied
of non-violent people, so that there's room for the real thugs
to be put away where they no longer can threaten you.
* A non-interventionist foreign policy means a peaceful and
secure America, much lower taxes, no one wanting to commit terrorist
attacks to influence our government. It would be safe again
for you to travel throughout the world, because Americans would
no longer be thought of as bullies.
* * *
SUGGESTION:
For an extensive collection of soundbites and arguments in favor
of liberty, see Harry Browne's book,
Liberty
A-Z: 872 Libertarian Soundbites You Can Use Right Now.
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