Deregulate Everything!
By Robert E. Wright for Porcfest, somewhere in New Hampshire, Community Tent, 1 pm, 23 June 2022
One big knock against
gun control regulations is that criminals don’t obey laws. So to the extent
that guns are regulated, law abiding citizens get stripped of a core
constitutional right while bad guys kill people with impunity. And the cops
hide behind sovereign immunity, marble columns, and parents.
Understand this: all
regulations are subject to the same critique. Laws do not prevent bad behavior
and regulating the means by which, or the tools used to commit, bad behavior
punish only the innocent and aid only the bad guys, the bootleggers in Bruce
Yandle’s parable of the Baptists and the bootleggers.
More generally,
regulations typically stem from an unholy alliance between paternalist zealots
who think they know what is best for other people, policymakers eager to be
seen quote unquote doing something, partisan ideologues, and the bad guys.
All those competing
interests mix in a toxic stew where each party tries to get regulations
tailored to match their various, often conflicting, goals, some quite distant
from the putative problem to be solved. For example, if gasoline or diesel
vehicles are used to run over people, as they often are, calls come out to
regulate them even more than they already are. Due to their instant torque, EVs
are even more efficient at running over people in crowds but they are
subsidized instead of regulated because of the influence of Greens, who just
want to suppress direct fossil fuel consuming vehicles and don’t really care
about babies criss-crossed with tire tracks.
Because of such
political dynamics, policies rarely efficiently address the problems they
purport to address. Instead, they represent a hodgepodge of compromises that
usually render them monstrosities that aid special interests but that rarely
ameliorate the original problem. Worse, one set of regulations often gives rise
to the perceived necessity of yet more regulations.
For example, speaking of
actual bootleggers, consider the national prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s.
Rum runners and organized criminal gangs supported it because it drove their
legitimate competitors, the good guys, out of the market. Instead of competing
on price and quality, the gangs instead competed on the basis of the number of
Tommy guns – Thompson machine guns – they could summon to key locations at key
times. So, the Feds passed a law making it more difficult to own machine guns.
But Al Capone et al kept right at it, until they died or surrendered up
to the cops.
And now the brainiacs at
the FDA want to ban menthol cigarettes. They don’t believe they have the
authority to ban all cigarettes but they do think they can ban specific
subcategories, like menthols and flavored cigars. Supposedly the ban will
prevent some young people from getting hooked on tobacco. Problem is, tobacco
will still be available and menthol is made from mint, which grows naturally
over most of the northern hemisphere. So people who want menthol will get kits
and make them themselves and organized crime will sell them to kids anyway. And
the government’s cigarette tax revenue will decline but that’s okay because all
of us are an endless source of cash. Did you know that? And if we get fussy
about explicit taxes, the Federal Reserve is ready to tax us via inflation.
Governments suck at just about everything except causing chaos, so the
inflation tax is perfect for it.
But higher inflation
will mean more organized crime, which will mean more guns, even, gasp! 9 mm pistols
and ARs, which does not stand for assault rifle, by the way. So one dumb
regulation will lead to another, further restricting your Second Amendment
rights. If, for some strange reason, you never aspired to own a machine gun, or
a bump stock, you might not find their regulation terribly onerous at present, but
you have surely heard of the slippery slope. Next thing you know some president
will assert that BB guns decapitate and de-lung people.
And gun control is only
one of numerous unnecessary regulations that do cost you, big time, whether you
know it or not.
Old timers like myself
remember when it cost a considerable amount of money to call anyone outside of
your local area code. A map from 1928 that I have here shows that you could
call from NYC to California for only $9! For the first three whole minutes!
As a reminder, the
dollar was worth a lot more then. Nine dollars in 1928 could buy you 27 pounds
of top sirloin, or 36 pounds of real buttah! Today you can’t touch a pound of
top sirloin for $9 and probably soon for butter too.
Granted $9 was during
business hours. Like the good monopolist it was, AT&T price discriminated
by reducing its rates on nights and weekends when business call volumes
subsided and most calls were between friends and family. But it was still very
expensive and the phones, which Americans had to lease from AT&T, were
cumbersome, ugly, and difficult to use. You could get any color, so long as it
was black, and you had to dial by sticking your finger in holes corresponding
to numbers, crank it, and then wait until the dial clanked its way back to starting
position. All thanks to regulations that ensured AT&T’s monopoly on long
distance telephone calls.
Technology eventually
got us out of that expensive hole but there were many, many others. Ever take a
train in France or Japan? They are like horizontal rocket ships: super-fast,
modern, and smooth as the cheek of a baby crying from a lack of formula caused
by useless regulations. The record speeds are over 370 mph:
Acela’s Amtrak isn’t
even on the top ten fastest chart, even though the comparison run on the
infographic I have here is NYC to Montreal. All the trains on the top ten chart
could easily do that 373 mile run in less than two hours. When I recently tried
to book a train from NYC to Albany, NY, I couldn’t even do it, instead
receiving an error message:
One third party site
says that it takes about 4 hours for the trip on Amtrak. Note that Albany is
about halfway to Montreal.
Ever actually ride on
Amtrak? If so, congratulations for not being killed in one of the many recent
derailments. But even if you survived, you likely did not have a pleasant
experience as the thing clickety clacked its way along, when it was moving at
all. And if you had to eat, or go number two, during the journey, you might
have been praying for a derailment, especially if you were not on one of the
newer, but still painfully slow, Acela trains.
Why did America – Murica
– once the world’s leading nation for intercity passenger rail service, become
the laughingstock of the developed world? One word: regulation. Regulators beat
on the railroads for decades, especially with price controls and labor
regulations. At the same time, the government subsidized personal automobiles,
buses, and, eventually, airlines. So, all the smart people and people with
money moved into those industries and out of intercity passenger rail.
Funny story. With a
business professor named Jan Traflet, I’ve written a biography of a lovely
corporate activist and financial journalist named Wilma Soss entitled Fearless.
Born in 1900, Wilma grew up crisscrossing the nation on commercial passenger
trains. During World War II, she commuted between New York City and Detroit via
the rails. By the mid-1960s, however, she had to chide railroad bigwigs for flying
– flying! to their annual meeting in Chicago. It was a sign of
the end, just like when Wilma noticed that way more than half the cars in the
parking lot at the American Motor Company annual meeting were not AMC models.
AMC, like private passenger rail service, was soon toast.
Auto safety regulations
eventually doomed AMC, which is now part of Chrysler, because it just didn’t
have sufficient scale to keep up with arbitrary demands. But thank Uncle Sam
for those safety regulations, right? Or we’d all be driving around with metal
spikes sticking out of our steering wheels! Or maybe not. Turns out that most
people want to get to their destinations as quickly as safely possible, so they
prefer safer vehicles. All the best auto safety stuff was developed to lure
purchasers away from competitors, not to satisfy government regulators.
Moreover, the best auto safety tests are conducted by the insurance industry,
not the government.
Speaking of insurance,
we don’t even need government regulation of drivers. Let insurers handle it via
pricing. Government driver’s licenses allegedly ensure a minimum level of
competence on the road but it’s a gross guess at best, and not at all
contextual. Some people mature sooner than others but in many states you cannot
even begin the learning process until you are 16. Some adults who are fine to
drive on local country roads should not be allowed to drive on highways or in
major cities. But they scored 1 for a binary license, so they can.
Insurers could price
major variables, issuing cheap insurance for the best drivers in the safest
conditions and dear insurance for the less experienced in dangerous conditions.
And no insurance at all for the worst. Premiums could even vary by location and
time of day. Insurers could also feed recommended speed limits based on road
conditions and driver aptitude right to people’s cars. But nooooo, because of
regulation of insurance premiums. The government’s sole role could be to punish
people for driving without an insurer-issued license and insurance.
But would deregulation
really work across the board? Well, a zero regulation environment served just
fine in America’s pre-regulatory past. You think the nation’s Founding Fathers
and Mothers faced numerous, onerous regulations? Only on their international
commerce, and we know what that led to. There were some local
regulations on the books, like the assize of bread, which fixed the weight of a
pennyloaf of bread up to some minimum standard. But it isn’t clear how much
local regulations were actually followed as America was not then a police state
or even an administrative state. Justices of the Peace handled almost
everything according to local conditions and customs. And juries of peers
handled the worst situations.
Statists protest that
times were simpler then, that more complex technologies require regulation, and
so forth. That’s a big, steaming pile of bull … oney! More complexity suggests
less regulation, not more, due to what is called the Knowledge Problem. Nobody
alone can understand the complexity of goods production, especially how it
might evolve over time, so nobody can know enough to make sensible rules and
regulations.
Consider, for example,
two of the modern marvels of the twentieth century, stock exchanges and
commercial passenger air travel. Both got much better and cheaper when they
were price deregulated in the 1970s. Something called competition kicked in,
leading to innovations that drove brokerage commissions to close to zero and
airplane travel to real low real levels, which is to say adjusted for
inflation. Until the recent spate of regulatory b.s. anyway.
And, again, if you think
government inspectors have made airline travel safer, you haven’t been paying
attention. Insurers and the fear of getting sued out of existence do way more
to prevent crashes than guhmint does. Like automakers and railroads, fear of
lost business and getting sued or suffering higher insurance premiums keeps
airline passengers safer than FAA regs do.
The same goes for your
food. If you think that every bite of your food has been approved by a loving
bureaucrat, think again. Almost none of it is inspected. Competition, not the
FDA, added to your own common sense, is your real savory savior.
That same assessment
also applies to fire safety. America’s cities no longer burn to the ground, as
many did in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, because insurers raised
the premiums of businesses that did not implement fire safety best practices, like
not leaving oily rags in the smoking break room.
But it isn’t just that
government regulations are useless, many actually hurt Americans by raising
costs, costs that get passed on to consumers and investors. Every second wasted
filling out a government form or waiting for a government inspector means a
higher market price and/or lower profits.
Government building
codes and zoning laws, for example, make much more costly the construction of
housing and is the leading causing of the alleged housing affordability crisis.
Most infamously, government officials in the city of angels proved themselves
quite unangelic when they ordered the seizure of mobile housing units that cost
only $300 to construct because they were not up to some building codes. Better
that people live in tents or under the stars, where their possessions are
easily stolen and their bodies easily violated, than in secure and fire safe
barebones units.
Because why? Only Kafka
knows!
Perhaps the biggest
problem with regulations is their opportunity cost. The salary of a useless
food inspector could be used to pay a police officer, or a public defender.
Resources thrown into the Drug War, which is simply a regulatory scheme that
enriches drug dealers, the DEA, and the pharmaceutical-medical complex, and the
Sex War, which is simply a regulatory scheme that enriches pimps, madames, and
law enforcement officers, are not available to fight crimes with actual
victims, like murder, rape, and robbery. America spent trillions failing to
keep long pointy things out of the bodies of consenting adults but can’t keep
schoolkids safe. What’s up with that?
Not that we need law
enforcement to keep schools safe. The teachers could do that, were it not for a
regulation making schools so-called gun free zones. They are gun free alright,
until a bad guy with a gun shows up. School covid masking policies showed that
many teachers care more about themselves than their students. We all get that,
but most teachers don’t want to shoot their students and those who do, can do
so anyway. But most teachers will save their own skin and, in the process, like
an invisible hand, save their students, if allowed to carry.
Almost everything wrong
with this country is due to regulations, many begun under the administration of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, or FDR for short. F’in Dumb Retard as some of his
critics call him. I’m currently writing a book called FDR Exposed! that
I hope will be out in late 2023. But if you can’t wait that long, over a decade
ago I published a book called Fubarnomics that also shows how New Deal
regulations messed up this country but good. It’s got a toilet paper roll of
dollar bills on the cover. Should have been Benjies instead but the publisher
didn’t want to be seen as too extreme.
Wanna know why healthcare
costs so much? An FDR-era regulation that allows employers to take a tax
deduction on health insurance. So Murica is the only country in the developed
world where health insurance is linked to employment instead of to individuals.
Hence all the uninsured people, the pre-existing condition problem, and the
inability of insurers to rate risk. Technically, we do not have health
insurance in the country at all because the rate can’t go up and down with
individual risk. As a result, some people are charged too much and some too
little. The people being charged too much know it and drop out. Hence the
necessity of the Obamacare mandate. If we deregulated health insurance, we’d
see innovations in insurance and medical care that would soon put the kibosh on
out-of-control healthcare costs.
Speaking of health-related
mandates, what good did mask and vax mandate regulations do? None on net. In
fact, like other regulations, they not only diminished liberty, they hurt innocent
people, especially those who survived Covid early on and were hence a threat to
no one, but still had to wear the mask and get the shot.
Know what else keeps
healthcare costs so high in this country? CONS. No, not incarcerated persons,
Certificates of Need, legal barriers to entry into various healthcare services
like those provided in hospitals and nursing homes. Proponents argued that
regulations restricting supply would lower prices. Yeah, that’s
not how prices work. Holding demand constant, decreasing supply increases
prices. But policymakers and politicians went along with the healthcare
bootleggers, and we all paid the price in 2020, when Covid raged through
overpacked nursing homes. Somehow, it was okay for hospitals to shut down before
Covid hit, so that hospitals wouldn’t have to shut down when Covid hit.
And elites wonder why so many people started putting clown emojis next to world
emojis.
Without CDC and state
emergency regulations, and with a little common sense, the whole Covid thing
would have sorted itself out. Think about it. You run a business and half your
customers are too afraid of Covid to come in, but the other half think that masks
and vaccines don’t work. What to do? Well, how about opening one day without
any mask or vaccine requirements and the next day with them? Everybody gets
served and feels safe, from Covid on the one hand and tyranny on the other. But
in most states and nationally, regulators came in on the side of the Covid nuts
and said no soup for you, at least no soup seated at a table in a restaurant.
What’s that tell ya?
Another costly
regulation to come out of the New Deal FDR era was Social Security. The
government forced workers into the program, which simply earmarked a regressive
payroll tax to fund a crappy life annuity and, later, an even crappier any occ
disability policy with politicized claims service. It kept heading toward bankruptcy,
so the government kept forcing more and more people into it, like a Ponzi
scheme. And it kept raising the payroll taxes. Social Security is facing
bankruptcy again and there are no more workers to add so the only question is
how much payroll taxes will go up versus how much Social Security benefits will
go down and how many disabled people will be turned away without getting any
help.
Regulations have totally
screwed up Americans’ ability to save for retirement. You pretty much have to
throw it all into the stock, bond, and securitized real estate markets and if
you take it out before what regulators deem to be your proper retirement age,
regulators tax the bejesus out of it. What would the stock market be at today
if Americans were not forced to invest in it, and stay invested in it? A lot
lower, I suspect, because who would voluntarily invest in companies subject to
onerous, volatile regulations on everything from carbon emissions to the
employment terms of their own workers? Did you see how corporations were so
quick to become Woke in 2020? They tremble in fear of regulators, especially
the IRS but also the FDA, FAA, FCC, CDC, the SEC, and the other alphabet soup
agencies that collectively comprise The Swamp, the swamp, the swamp.
Yeah, the stock market
does go up over the long term but not because corporations become more
efficient, because more money has to come into a market with only a few
thousand choices. To keep gobs of money flowing into the market, regulators do
something that should be unspeakable. They give tax breaks to people for the
interest they pay on home mortgages instead of the equity they
put into their homes. The former helps mortgage lenders, but it keeps people
leveraged up instead of putting their savings into someplace they can live when
retired, and maybe rent out portions for income. Buying a house and renting
part of it was the normal retirement strategy of Americans before the New Deal.
But noooo, Americans
interested in investing for retirement have to invest in financial securities,
which are subject to inflation risk as many learned to their chagrin in the
1970s and as they are learning again today. High inflation means high nominal
interest rates which means lower bond and stock prices, all else equal. High
peacetime inflation is possible because FDR devalued the dollar in terms of
gold, confiscated private gold holdings, and by the end of World War II took
America off the classical retail gold standard. He put the once mighty nation
onto a fixed gold-exchange system doomed to fail, as it did during the Nixon
administration a mere quarter century later. That led directly to the floating
fiat mess we have today. The US dollar’s only redeeming quality today is that
it is not quite as bad as other fiat currencies. Or so most people seem to
believe.
But innovators and
entrepreneurs have started looking for alternative monies, like Bitcoin, not
subject to political inflationary pressures. Regulators, though, are again
messing everything up. Two big ones, the SEC and the FDIC, both came out of the
New Deal. FEMA is also totally unnecessary but nevertheless it should swallow
the Securities and Exchange Commission because the SEC is a disaster area, and
always has been. I’ve been trying to write its despicable history but it uses
FOIA requests and the National Archives to block me at every turn, especially
after my article with Andrew Smith came out that showed how SEC regulations
promulgated in the 1970s led directly to the subprime mortgage crisis that
fomented the Global Financial Crisis of 2008.
That is ironic indeed
because FDR and his minions ostensibly created the SEC to prevent another
financial crisis like the stock market crash of 1929, which was blamed for
causing the Depression when in fact it was merely the messenger of deeper
economic problems. The SEC was also supposed to stop insider trading. Ask Nancy
Pelosi how that is working out.
Surely, though, the FDIC
is good, right? I mean there haven’t been any bank runs since its
implementation … except for when there were some bank runs. But seriously, the
FDIC does seem to have decreased the number of bank runs. That is a problem,
though, because it achieved that goal by lulling depositors asleep. They no
longer watch their banks very closely because they don’t have to. The FDIC will
bail them out if their bank fails. So bankers can, and do, take on more risk
without being chastised by net deposit withdrawals. At best, then, the FDIC and
the spate of regulations that come along with it are a wash on net. Yay
regulators!
Regulations that are
downright pernicious are difficult to expunge so you can imagine what happens
to innocuous ones. They linger, seemingly forever. I am sure that you have seen
one of those websites with the crazy regulations from the past that are still
on the books. You know, like the one in Alaska that says that you can’t awaken
a sleeping bear to take its picture. You can shoot it with a gun though. Or the
one in “R-Kansas” that makes it illegal to mispronounce the state’s name. Or
the one in California that makes it illegal to eat a frog that has died in a
frog jumping contest. Obviously, a dead frog is totally inedible, which is why
the French serve frog legs still attached to living frogs. Or the regulation in
Georgia that forbids people from putting an ice cream cone in their back
pockets on Sunday. Any other day of the week, just stuff drumsticks back there
to your butt’s content, but on the Lord’s day? Hell no. Or the one in Kentucky
that forbids the sale of fewer than six ducklings dyed blue. Obviously, that
was put in place to protect Big Blue Duckling from competition from new
entrants that can’t afford to buy more than six ducklings, which by the way
come free with chicken chicks, or fiddy cents worth of blue dye. Big Green
Duckling just didn’t have the lobbying bucks to protect itself and now look at
the dying duckling dying industry in Kentucky.
Meanwhile, in Washington
State it is illegal to harass a certain large, hairy biped still unrecognized
by science. Best of all, though, is Utah, where it is illegal not
to drink milk. Yes, you heard that right. I am not sure that it is correct, but
it does point out the cause of many regulations, simple rent seeking, or
somebody trying to get something for nothing by mandating the use of their
product. At least in Utah the mandate is for milk and not a dangerous
experimental injection. [Good, the drones aren’t out yet today.]
Rent seeking was behind
another response to the Great Depression called the Smoot-Hawley tariff.
American manufacturers tried to save themselves by throwing consumers under the
bus with high taxes on their competitors. But, as usual, high tariffs ended up
hurting everybody, including the manufacturers themselves, after foreign
countries reciprocated and world trade volume plummeted. See when trade is
voluntary, both the buyer and the seller benefit. Implement a tax or regulation
and not as many voluntary trades take place, hurting the buyers and the sellers
who would have traded were it not for the extra burden.
Economists call such
unrealized gains deadweight losses because they are losses that nobody else
gains. They are lost to humanity. Hence in today’s hyper-hyperbolic lingo,
deadweight losses literally kill people. Literally. Ergo,
regulations kill people and should be banned. Or in other words, everything
should be deregulated.
Really? Everything? What
about hunting and fishing regulations? Well, I have a book just out about that
called The History and Evolution of the North American Wildlife Conservation
Model, which might have been the best set of regulations ever devised. You
can read the book for all the juicy details but basically a set of regulations
that evolved a little over a century ago saved a lot of critters, including
deer and moose, from going extinct. But the model was not the only solution to
the root problem, which essentially was what economists call the tragedy of the
commons or the common pool problem.
Americans used to
consider critters gifts from God, ya see, so they believed they could shoot ‘em
whenever, and wherever, they wanted, even on your private property. As
the countryside became more populated, that led to lots of hunting and,
eventually, people specializing in providing wild game to urban markets and
restaurants. They all competed to kill critters themselves, before the other
guy shot ‘em. You can see how that could lead to the local extirpation of some
species, like beaver and deer, and a series of local extirpations of course
eventually lead to extinctions.
So state and national
governments said we are your new god, we own these critters and we are going to
charge you fees for killing them, establish tag and bag limits, seasons,
methods of harvest, trespassing restrictions, and so forth. And no more selling
wild game meat. The regulations worked, though too well in places now overrun
with deer, wild hogs, geese, turkeys, and such. But regulators don’t want to
change the regulations much, like allowing the sale of wild game meat again.
Think about that when you crash your car into a deer or bear some dark night.
A different solution to
the extirpation problem would also have worked and been more flexible over
time. Just enforce property rights so that critters could thrive on private
lands. Private property rights saved the bison and private property rights
explain why exotics from Africa thrive on ranches in Texas, New Zealand, and
South Africa. But the private property approach does not compute with statists.
After you’ve read all my
books, check out James C. Scott’s Seeing Like a State. He explains how
regulators want to make everything quote unquote “legible” by reducing complex
realities to simple, quantifiable categories. Unfortunately, those categories
obscure complex realities, leading to disasters like government-managed
forests. Imagine the hubris needed to think that your puny human brain can plan
a forest better than Mother Nature can. All that the government foresters
managed to do was to plant a first generation forest that produced more
products that humans wanted. The second generation, though, saw decreased
yields and the third was an ecological disaster because it turns out that
various species depend on each other in ways that humans can never fully
understand, much less improve upon with a top-down plan. Now Greens have gone
in the other direction and regulate in favor of biodiversity for its own sake.
Some government policies
have even led to desertification. Much of North Africa and the Middle East is a
government-made desert because regulations induced herders and farmers to strip
topsoil, which decreased vegetation, which decreased local water mass and hence
rainfall and rainfall retention, leading to rapid erosion of the remaining
topsoil and hence desertification. Something similar is happening in California
right now, with regulatorily induced superfires speeding the process.
To be clear, I don’t
claim that life will be perfect with complete deregulation, only that it will
be better than at present. Shit happens. Life’s a bitch. If something can go
wrong, it will. All that. But regulators cannot fix much of anything and are
likely to make matters worse. So let’s do away with regulators and regulations
and unleash entrepreneurs -- commercial and social -- to find marginal
improvements and, occasionally, breakthrough technologies that can improve life
for billions. Unburdened by regulations and our current tax distortions,
entrepreneurs would soon discover new ways of doing things. Many will prove
duds, but others will work and spread.
Consider three examples
related to recidivism, school shootings, and gender equity in corporate
boardrooms. All seem to cry out for more regulations, but all could be
ameliorated with a little ingenuity.
Many people released
from prison commit crimes and go back, at great expense to the public as well
as their victims. Why not pay nonprofits for each week they manage to keep the
ex-cons in their charge alive and out of prison? They’ll figure out the best
ways to do so or fail for lack of funds.
School shootings are
horrible, but we know that banning guns in them, or in the nation overall, is
no solution. Even if all guns could be confiscated, bombs and vehicles could be
used instead, perhaps with more deadly effect. And although not all cops are
cowards, they do not have a legal duty to protect Americans, even kiddies. But
what if every school and other soft target was protected by drones controlled
remotely by skilled operators? And if the drones could also double as medical
first responders?
When statists hear that
women are under-represented on corporate boards, they immediately want a
regulation imposing a quota, like the one recently shot down as
unconstitutional in California. Why not instead randomly pick board members
from a pool of qualified candidates to ensure that corporate boards represent
those presently qualified? Over time, more women and members of other
traditionally underrepresented groups would acquire the necessary
qualifications because they would rationally compute that they would have a
chance of being chosen.
Except for the drones
example, where a company is actually working on the concept, such ideas do not
gain traction precisely because they do not require onerous regulations and the
expensive bureaucratic apparatuses that accompany them.
A fourth innovation that
will go nowhere is my Ministry of Truth proposal. Now before you storm the
stage, let me explain. The government wants to regulate your Free Speech, a
clear violation of your natural and Constitutional rights. What I want is a Ministry
of Truth as a fourth branch of government that would only identify, stop, fine,
and punish disinformation, misinformation, and propaganda spread by government
officials, politicians, and candidates for office. It would have the same
powers as the rest of government, including the power to own F-16s and nuclear
weapons. A tip of the hat to President Biden for that tip.
My version of the
Ministry of Truth would also have the power to seize and sell any personal or
government assets used to create or disseminate misinformation and to impose
heavy fines and jail terms for dissembling government officials under
administrative law procedures and mandatory arbitration. Finally, it would be
headquartered in Wyoming or South Dakota and be utterly independent of the
federal government except for its budget, which will automatically be 10
percent of the country’s combined federal, state, municipal, and special
district budgets, which should of course all be capped in nominal terms
immediately.
The Ministry of Truth’s
first order of business will be to fine Tony Fauci one trillion dollars. If
that sounds excessive, remember that inflation has not been transitory as
claimed, so the Ministry’s second order of business will be to fine Federal
Reserve officials, seize and sell off the Fed’s assets, and shutter it.
Gold and/or Bitcoin will
soon fill the void the Fed will leave, especially when cryptocurrencies are
deregulated and the states make gold and silver a legal tender, which they can
do under Article I, Section 10, Clause 1 of the US Constitution, which
reads, in case you forgot your pocket Constitution: “No State shall … make
any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts.”
Of course, it is not
at all clear that the government will ever deregulate crypto, which threatens
its seigniorage profits as well as its much-vaunted anti-money laundering laws.
Those are regulations that force banks and other financial service providers to
spy on you on the government’s behalf, so that it can enforce other useless or
downright pernicious regulations, like the aforementioned wars on consenting
adults putting pointy things into their own bodies. At the rate we are going,
soon only the government will be able to decide what you put into your own
body. Experimental things called vaccines maybe, or tracking devices, for your
own safety of course. [Exaggerated eye roll.] And the government will keep
things out too, like baby formula and real beef.
Speaking of baby
formula, do you know that if you happen to have a full breast of milk you can
make quite a nice bit of money selling it to babies rendered hungry by
government overregulation? Breast milk is one of the few unregulated markets
left. You can’t lawfully sell raw cow milk in some states, but raw booby juice
is aokay. Let’s keep it that way, before we end up in a life-and-death
situation instead of merely suffering further annoyances, like those regarding
contact and eyeglass subscriptions, which require an annual examination. The
contacts I wore yesterday were fine but the same ones today are illegal until I
pay a vig so someone can tell me what I already know, that my existing
prescription is fine. They are my eyes, after all, and “which is better, A or
B, B or C, C or B?” is not scientific or all that helpful.
But regulations keep ophthalmologists
and regulators employed, so it is good, right? No! They could all be doing
something else, something that consumers actually want. Regulations are like
broken windows in that Frederic Bastiat’s broken window fallacy applies to
them. That which is seen are the regulators and their beneficiaries, like ophthalmologists
and Utah dairy farmers, getting paid. That which is not seen are the other
things that people would rather have put their time, attention, and money into
if the regulation didn’t exist.
Again, the whole regulatory apparatus is such a joke. Somebody else did something bad so the government has to restrict your rights. Crazy! Regulations passed on such grounds violate due process by punishing people not proven guilty of anything by a jury of their peers. If eliminating such crap sounds pie-in-the-sky to you, check out the recent federal court decision in Jarkesy vs. my friends at the SEC. The court ruled that administrative law is unconstitutional on due process grounds, especially denying Americans the right to trial by a jury of their peers. It’ll probably get overturned by statists, but many Americans are beginning to wake up to the fact that regulations, even if they appear irrelevant or innocuous, are not their friends.
Let’s deregulate everything in New Hampshire and show the rest of America the way! Whattaya say?
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