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Tag: Fox News

N95 Mask Shortage Amid Coronavirus Crisis: A Government-Created Mess?

President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act of 1950 to direct the multinational conglomerate 3M to cease the exportation of N95 respirator masks due to the coronavirus crisis.  coronavirus covid-19 n95 3M monopoly masks The decision followed a segment of Tucker Carlson’s show on Fox News highlighting the story of Jared Moskowitz, the director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management.  During his interview, Moskowitz said that 3M would not let him buy a large quantity of the respirator masks because they were being shipped abroad. “What I asked 3M is that, are they aware that their authorized distributors — U.S. companies — are telling me that the reason our orders are being pushed down is because foreign companies are showing up with cash to purchase the orders?” Moskowitz told Carlson. In light of this news, Trump decided to pressure 3M to boost its distribution of respirator masks to the American market, using the COVID-19 pandemic as an excuse.  “We hit 3M hard today after seeing what they were doing with their Masks,” Trump tweeted. “‘P Act’ all the way. Big surprise to many in government as to what they were doing—will have a big price to pay!” For its part, 3M told media outlets that meeting the demand for masks prompted by how governments across the globe are responding to reported cases of coronavirus has not been easy. As a result, Trump managed to force 3M to redirect some of the shipments back to American soil — but not all While this action was praised by some, it didn’t come as a surprise to proponents of free markets. After all, there is a lot more to this story than what was on display during Carlson’s show.  Monopolies, Shortages, & High Costs Considering that the N95 masks are treated as essential equipment for medical professionals dealing with potentially contagious patients, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear told news outlets that if 3M simply can’t meet the demand it should consider dropping its hold on the patent of the respirator device.  Despite defending the broadening of the N95 mask production, Beshear stopped short of defending an end to patent protection altogether, highlighting that freeing other companies from liability if they sought to produce the same masks should be limited to this particular crisis.  “The procurement is incredibly difficult, as is the manufacture because it’s under patent. I’d like to see the people with that patent, which is 3M, provide that to the nation under a license for this period of time,” he said. “I believe it’s their patriotic duty, and they should put it out there so everybody else can manufacture it.”  What the Kentucky governor may have not realized is just how many more lives would be saved under different circumstances if companies like 3M didn’t hold a government-backed right to produce these items. Unlike what proponents of intellectual property laws may suggest, Dr. Timothy Farrell explained in this Mises Institute article that patents aren’t necessary to help boost innovation in the healthcare field. “Even where new drugs could be reverse-engineered and copied, innovation could still be rewarded in a world without patent laws.”  As a matter of fact, government agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which are in charge of securing patents such as the one owned by 3M, are the ones that should be under heightened scrutiny as people in America struggle to find N95 masks.  If it weren’t for the added costs imposed by the process of getting the FDA to approve drugs and medical devices, as well as the added taxes and regulations, manufacturers of both drugs and life-saving devices wouldn’t have an opportunity to artificially limit the supply by charging higher prices and keeping competitors from developing similar and more affordable products, as explained by patent law expert Stephan Kinsella.  If government agencies did not give companies like 3M highly lucrative incentives to monopolize the production of said masks, we might have never seen a real global shortage in light of COVID-19. Why not look at this problem and use it as a means to explore how much better prepared we would be for something similar in the future by just dropping the legal barriers keeping competitors from developing N95 masks?

Tucker Carlson: Enemy of Capitalism and Freedom

Tucker Carlson and Bernie Sanders became one on June 5, 2019, as the Fox News host trashed capitalism as unethical. In his tirade, Carlson opted to rant about protecting the “American worker,” and how the federal government should buy American goods. These ideas come from Elizabeth Warren in a plan she calls “Economic Patriotism.” Carlson, of course, chose to attack libertarians, claiming that they run the economy. If libertarians ran the economy, this world would be a VERY different place. Tucker Carlson: Ignorance Meets Arrogance Carlson exposed his ignorance when he claimed that libertarians are “controlled by the banks.” I guess Carlson has never read Ron Paul’s End the Fed. Perhaps he should look into Murray Rothbard’s What Has the Government Done to Our Money? Carlson’s ignorance continues when he talks about how Republican policymakers care about Austrian Economics. I’m assuming Carlson hasn’t read Human Action. I assume this charitably. The only other explanation would be that Carlson lacks the reading comprehension to read Human Action (or any economics book, for that matter). While Carlson chooses to call for socialism as though that is freedom, perhaps he should consider educating himself. If he truly supported putting America First, he would oppose the tariffs he shilled for in this broadcast. What is a better way to ensure prosperity for the average American than to lower the cost of living? But instead of this, Carlson calls for an increase on taxes for American consumers. This is not protecting the American worker. Tucker talks about his skepticism of corporations, but then promotes Elizabeth Warren’s plan to subsidize American business. Nationalist Social Control, Socialist Economic Control In his opening monologue, Tucker Carlson makes the claim that the average American voter wants an economic nationalist. By this, he means that he wants someone to subsidize American business and provide social welfare for the people. In essence, Tucker Carlson is an unapologetic socialist. Perhaps if he wants to mock those who defend free trade, perhaps he should join Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren if he admires their disastrous economic policies so much. But he can’t do that because Carlson wants someone who is a social traditionalist. He wants someone to continue the failed drug war according to his broadcast. Carlson, in other words, wants to force his culture on everyone else. Perhaps he should see that one of the benefits of Western Civilization is that people get to choose their own values. Western Civilization empowers the individual and the community, not the State. Carlson is not just a socialist, but also a nationalist. Tucker Carlson Should At Least Be Honest Tucker Carlson would not call his political philosophy what it truly is for obvious reasons. He beats around the bush as he calls for socialist economic policy mixed with nationalist social policy. He will not give a name to this code. This grand idea he has is not new. Rather, it is national socialism. It is a rejection of any economic theory. It is faith in the super-state; and it puts the state above all else. National Socialists, of course, are dedicated, central planners. It is the rejection of private property rights, which has lifted more people out of poverty than any government program ever could. In other words, what Tucker Carlson calls for is nothing short of pure unadulterated fascism no matter what label he puts on it. This becomes clear when all that matters to him is empowering America. By America, of course, Carlson means the American government and the heavily subsidized businesses he claims to despise. If Tucker Carlson truly cared about America, he would embrace capitalism, as any true opponent of fascism and tyranny would.

Utah Resolution Claims Pornography is a ‘Health Crisis’ — Lawmakers Want to Handle it Like Tobacco

Utah Resolution Claims Pornography is a ‘Health Crisis’ — Lawmakers Want to Handle it Like Tobacco

This article was featured in our weekly newsletter, the Liberator Online. To receive it in your inbox, sign up here. Small government and libertarian advocates often like to poke fun at the nanny state. Now, it just got easier. According to Fox News, the Utah House of Representatives has just passed a resolution that declares pornography a “public health crisis.” The resolution is causing quite the uproar, especially among people who are concerned about the potential ramifications. CigarettesAccording to S.C.R. 9, “pornography is a public health hazard leading to a broad spectrum of individual and public health impacts and social harms.” Representatives who authored the resolution state in the document that there’s a “need for education, prevention, research, and policy change at the community and societal level,” which must address the “pornography epidemic that is harming the citizens of Utah and the nation.” While the resolution is nonbinding and is incapable of effectively banning the production or consumption of pornographic material, the fact lawmakers came together to bring this to light seems somewhat unsavory. Especially when you consider the limited role the legislature should have in the private lives of citizens. “Society must see this evil like the epidemic it is,” said Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, a supporter of the resolution and member of the LDS Church’s Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. “We do need to see this [pornography] like avian flu, cholera, diphtheria or polio, … It needs to be eradicated.” To Sen. Todd Weiler, a sponsor of the resolution, pornography is “a serious issue.” To the legislator, we must not “pretend that this has no impact on our values and on our society and culture.” His goal with this resolution is “to start a national movement to do the same thing with pornography—not to ban it, but to protect our children from it.” Seeing Internet providers change their policies in order to adopt an opt-in solution to the pornography issue—much like Great Britain providers already do due to government pressure—is one of the ideas Sen. Weisler would like to see implemented in America. So shouldn’t this pressure come from consumers instead? While claiming pornography is a public health crisis may seem odd to many of our readers, this isn’t the first time prominent groups make such claims. In November of 2015, the US Bishops’ Conference condemned the damage of pornograpy during the group’s Fall General Assembly, calling it a public health crisis. While leaders of the Catholic church appear to agree with Sen. Weiler in character, their actions were never interpreted as an effort that could lead to a legal ban or restriction. According to an article on Utah Political Capitol, what Utah lawmakers may be trying to do in the long run is to restrict pronography through the development of policies that would make pornographic material less accessible to consumers. In other words, handle pornography the same way we handle other “vices.” “We recognized as a nation a couple of decades ago that tobacco was addictive and it was harmful,” Sen. Weiler told the House Health and Human Services Committee last week. “We didn’t ban tobacco. What we did instead was we changed our approach in order to try to protect children from tobacco,” an effort that Weiler wants to repeat by urging lawmakers to deal with “pornography … more like tobacco and alcohol.” According to Heartland Institute, “sin taxes” and other efforts to discourage individuals from consuming products deemed “harmful” are discriminatory, and often represent a disproportionate burden to lower- and middle-income people. If Utah decides to take that path, effectively applying “sin taxes” to pornography, history shows us that consumers will end up relying more on the black market for their needs. Is that an effective way to keep our children away from products deemed “unhealthy?”

Immigration is Good for the Economy

Immigration is Good for the Economy

This article was featured in our weekly newsletter, the Liberator Online. To receive it in your inbox, sign up here. The Republican presidential race has devolved into a contest about who can spew the most venom at immigrants. Make no mistake about it, the rhetoric on the campaign trail hasn’t been limited to illegal immigrants but even those who came to the United States through the legal process. immigration at ellis islandMuch of the focus has been on the comments of Donald Trump, the businessman turned celebrity turned presidential candidate turned general annoyance of anyone who wants a serious discussion of the issues facing the United States. Trump has already accused Mexico of “sending people that have lots of problems,” accusing immigrants from our neighbor to the south of being drug runners and criminals. Of course, that isn’t true. But Trump has continues to spout of this nonsense to appeal to a certain segment of the public that, simply put, just doesn’t like people of color. On Tuesday evening, for example, Trump told Fox News host Bill O’Reilly that he wants to eliminate citizenship for children who are born to immigrant parents in the United States. He actually said that Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees citizenship to people “born or naturalized in the United States”, is “unconstitutional.” “What happens is, they’re in Mexico, they’re going to have a baby, they move over here for a couple of days, they have the baby,” Trump said on The O’Reilly Factor. “It’s not going to hold up in court, it’s going to have to be tested.” Yes, seriously. He said that, and it’s painfully ignorant of, you know, the Constitution – the “supreme law of the land.” Other Republicans contenders have made equally asinine comments. Ben Carson, a neurosurgeon turned presidential candidate, said he wants to use militarized drones to police the southern border. “We can use a whole series of things to do that, not just fences and walls but electronic surveillance, drones and many of the techniques that are used to keep people out of top secret places,” Carson told a crowd in Phoenix on Wednesday. “All of those things are available to us. We have the ability to do it; we just don’t have the will to do it. That will change when we have the right administration in place.” “The reason that is so important—a lot of people think there are just people coming from the south of the border—there are radical global jihadists who want to destroy us and our way of life and we have to keep them out. We have to make it not easy for them to get in here. This is a matter of our own security,” he said. “Then once we have that border sealed, we have to turn off the spigot that dispenses the goodies. If there are no goodies, guess what? They won’t come. It won’t be worth trying to get through our borders if there are no goodies. That includes employment—we should make it illegal to employ people in this country who are not legally here.” Carson’s nativist logic – which has been repeated by a handful of other Republican contenders – is baseless. Immigrants contribute to the economy. A 2006 study conducted by the Texas Comptroller found that immigrants contributed $17.7 billion to the state’s economy and paid $1.58 billion in taxes, more than the $1.16 billion they consumed in services. On the whole, immigration, much like trade, is a net-benefit for the economy. This doesn’t mean that immigration reform proposals in previous congresses were worth passing, but as a general principle, immigration is a good thing. Republican candidates need to stop demagoguing this issue and propose serious policies to educate to the party’s base rather than appealing to the lowest common dominator of it.

Whoa: Donald Rumsfeld Criticizes George W. Bush’s Iraq Policy

Whoa: Donald Rumsfeld Criticizes George W. Bush’s Iraq Policy

This article was featured in our weekly newsletter, the Liberator Online. To receive it in your inbox, sign up here. Hell may have just frozen over. Donald Rumsfeld, who served as Secretary of Defense from 1975 to 1977 and again from 2001 to 2006, says that President George W. Bush’s attempt to bomb Iraq into accepting “democracy” was “unrealistic.” Rumsfeld made the comments during an interview with The Times of London. “The idea that we could fashion a democracy in Iraq seemed to me unrealistic. I was concerned about it when I first heard those words,” Rumsfeld told the paper. “I’m not one who thinks that our particular template of democracy is appropriate for other countries at every moment of their histories.” The comments are surprising. Rumsfeld was one of the major figures promoting the Iraq War. In fact, he was one of prominent administration figures who tried to connect the Middle Eastern country’s dictator, Saddam Hussein, to al-Qaeda and the 9/11 attacks. In September 2004, Rumsfeld, who has since denied making the connection, said the ties were “not debatable.” President Bush announced Rumsfeld’s resignation November 8, 2006, a day after Republicans were shellacked at the ballot box in that year’s mid-term election and lost control of both chambers of Congress. In August 2006, only 36 percent of Americans supported the Iraq War while 60 percent, the highest number at the time, opposed it due to almost daily reports of violence in Iraq. By the end of that year, more than 3,000 American soldiers were killed in the line of duty, according to iCasualties.org. With the rise of the Islamic State and Levant, which has taken control of swaths of Iraq, Rumsfeld may have had a change of heart. The question is, will Republicans currently pushing for war with other countries heed his words? It’s not likely. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., has firmly supplanted himself as one of the top Republican war hawks in the upper chamber, which isn’t an easy task considering that he serves alongside Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. Although Cotton is frequently touted as a fiscal conservative, his doesn’t seem to understand that perpetual war is inconsistent with limited government. Last week, Fred Boenig, an antiwar activist whose son, Austin, committed suicide in May 2010 while serving in the Air Force, confronted Cotton during an event at the Johns Hopkins University campus in Washington, DC. “When do we get to hang up the ‘mission accomplished’ banner,” Boenig said, referring to the May 2003 photo op and speech by President Bush, “and when do I get my kids to come home safe again?” “There’s no definite answer because our enemies get a vote in this process,” said Cotton. “In the end, I think the best way to honor our veterans…” “Is to have more killed?” asked Boenig, who interrupted Cotton. “[I]s to win the wars for which they fought,” the freshman Arkansas senator said.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is also trying to position himself as Bush-style foreign policy hawk. During a recent appearance on Fox News, obviously, Rubio gave an unusual answer to a question about Iraq. “I think we have a responsibility to support democracy. And if a nation expresses a desire to become a democratic nation, particularly one that we invaded, I do believe that we have a responsibility to help them move in that direction,” said Rubio. “But the most immediate responsibility we have is to help them build a functional government that can actually meet the needs of the people in the short- and long-term, and that ultimately from that you would hope that would spring democracy.”

When a host said that Rubio sounds like he backs nation-building, the freshman Florida Republican said: “Well, it’s not nation-building. We are assisting them in building their nation.” That’s a distinction without a difference, senator. Maybe Rumsfeld’s comments, which are only now getting traction in American media, will put Republican hawks on the defensive, forcing them to answer tough questions about the failed the failed foreign policy Republicans all too frequently promote. But don’t hold your breath.