Grassroot Perspective – Jan. 3, 2003

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“Dick Rowland Image”

It is a pleasure to offer a daily summary of ideas and activities from the think tank world. In addition to the activities of the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii (GRIH), items from more than 100 public policy and opinion organizations throughout the world are offered or summarized. For detailed background information about GRIH, coming events etc., see https://www.grassrootinstitute.org

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”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

— One of the continuing projects of GRIH is “Stossel in the Classroom.” Four of ABC commentator John Stossel’s thought provoking television
documentaries are available in a format specially designed for high
school (11 & 12 grades) and college classrooms. Available are:

*”John Stossel goes to Washington”

*”Is America #1″

*”Greed”

*”Are we scaring ourselves to death”

These programs present a fresh and innovative approach to each subject and include teacher and student guides to aid in producing brisk discussion and strong, sometimes uncomfortable constructive thinking and learning. Success of our program requires one or more of three actions from sponsors (you):

*Donate to buy programs for a school or a teacher ($45 per program)

*Identify schools or teachers who would want to use one or more of the programs in the classroom.

*Identify one or more teachers who are interested in having Hawaii Pacific University college students present Stossel in the Classroom to one or more their classes.

For more information, or to volunteer, call Richard O. Rowland at
(808) 487-4959 to discuss or e-mail us at mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com

— Quoted in ltcbullets@www.centerltc.org 12/10/02 in a discussion of a Wall Street Journal article 11/21/02 by David Wessell is Dan Crippen of the Congressional Budget Office on government health care, Social Security & Medicaid spending: “How much of our children’s economy are we going to take to support ourselves in retirement?” “The U.S. isn’t going to raise taxes sufficiently to cover the cost of keeping current promises. It ought to take steps now to reduce future costs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and to make the future economy bigger so both retirees and workers can live well. …”

”Roots (Food for Thought)”

The Role of Private Property in Protecting Liberty

By Tom Bethell

Recent initiatives in Virginia, such as the move toward urban planning and “smart growth,” or restricted growth, will weaken property rights in the commonwealth, and this in turn will undermine our liberties.

People who live in societies where private property has historically
been well protected often fail to see the advantages of such a system, because they take them for granted. They are as inconspicuous as the taste of water. But such people are also good at visualizing some more perfect condition-one in which they do not have to spend so much time in traffic jams, for example. In using the political system to advance such a goal, therefore, they may fail to anticipate the loss of benefits they had never considered in the first place.

Before the fall of the Berlin Wall, the many advantages of a private
property system were hardly analyzed at all. You might say that private property was attacked — by Karl Marx and by many intellectuals since — before it was defended. Among those benefits are justice, peace, liberty and prosperity.

Consider justice, briefly. A group of people goes to a restaurant and
orders a meal. If the bill is shared equally, those who ate hamburger
will subsidize those who ate steak. Separate checks would be a more just arrangement. Diners are billed in proportion to their consumption. In short, a communal system has been privatized, and justice has been introduced. “To each his due” was the classical definition of justice, used by St. Thomas Aquinas before the dubious notion of “social justice” was introduced into Western thought.

When Plymouth Colony was founded in Massachusetts in 1620, the Pilgrims at first held their property in common. They were on the verge of starvation when ownership was privatized in 1623. The change succeeded. It “made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been,” William Bradford reported. The communal arrangement had not worked because it “was thought injustice.”

More recently, a vast experiment in life without private property was conducted in the Soviet Union. It lasted for seventy-four years, and it conclusively showed that transferring the control of property to the state is a formula for social impoverishment. There wasn’t much in the way of justice either. As for liberty, that was lost completely. An Iron Curtain had to be constructed north-to-south in Eastern Europe, and a wall divided Berlin.

At tax time, it is worth reflecting that for the average Virginian the most burdensome abridgment of property rights is probably the income tax. Our income is our property, and for young people and those with few assets, it may be the only way of saving enough to buy real property. The tax burden is a matter of degree. Americans now pay about 40 percent of their earnings to governments at all levels. In most Western democracies it is higher than that. If the tax burden were to rise to 100 percent, we would labor wholly for the state and would have been entirely deprived of our liberty. Under such conditions, of course, work would be minimal and society impoverished.

Over the centuries, neighbors and strangers have often posed a more
serious threat to life and liberty than governments. It was for that
reason that property rights were instituted — to provide individuals and their families with zones of privacy where they could pursue their own initiatives free from interference. That is the essence of liberty.

“There can be no liberty without private property,” the economist Milton Friedman has said. For this reason, the protection of property rights has historically been among the most important functions of government, and to that end laws and police forces were instituted. If governments ceased protecting property rights, liberty would be gravely threatened, at least until citizen groups formed their own protective militias.

Despite the failure of socialism, however, governments at all levels
continue to abridge our freedoms almost as much as they protect them. And just as the inflation of the 1970s moved people into higher tax brackets, so the environmentalism of the 1990s gave government new rationales for controlling the use of our property. We may believe that cleaner air or less traffic congestion will be the good effect, but we may be sure that our liberties are also being restricted. Production and prosperity will also tend to decline, and in the case of those people who bought land anticipating that they would be able to develop it, but now find that they have paid a high price to keep it idle, there is also manifest injustice. When our property rights are restricted, prosperity, liberty and justice will all decline together.

”’Tom Bethell, an editor of the American Spectator, is the author of The Noblest Triumph: Property and Prosperity through the Ages (St. Martin’s Press), and a member of the Board of Governors of the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, an education and research organization headquartered in Potomac Falls, Virginia. Reprinted with permission from Virginia Institute for Public Policy, 20461 Tappahannock Place, Potomac Falls, Virginia 20165-4791, (703) 421-8635. See its Web site at:”’ https://www.virginiainstitute.org

”Evergreen (Today’s Quote)”

— A new Independent Institute book “School Choices: True or False” by John Merrifield, Professor of Economics U/T at San Antonio points out that 20 years after the National Commission on Excellence in
Education published its famous study on educational decline, the USA is still “a nation at risk.” Merrifield advocates genuine, competitive parental choice, pointing out that most current proposals are dumb-down versions of the real thing. Order through https://www.independent.org

”’See Web site”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org ”’for further information. Join its efforts at “Nurturing the rights and responsibilities of the individual in a civil society. …” or email or call Grassroot of Hawaiii Institute President Richard O. Rowland at mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com or (808) 487-4959.”’

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