-Caveat Lector-

How Voting Threatens Freedom
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Ilana Mercer
http://www.ilanamercer.com/

Republicans are the drag queens of politics.

According to libertarian legal scholar James Ostrowski's there is a
succinct distinction between a republic and a democracy.

Most people confuse democracy with a republic.

Democracy is nothing more than the numerous and their manipulators bullying
the less numerous. It is an elaborate and deceptive rationalization for the
strong in numbers to impose their will on the electorally weak by means of
centralized state coercion .

Both forms of government feature voting by the people to select officials.
The primary difference between them is that while republican voting is done
for the purpose of choosing officials to administer the government in the
pursuit of its narrowly defined functions, voting in a democracy is done,
not only to select
officials but also to determine the functions and goals and powers of the
government.

The guiding principle of republics is they exercise narrow powers delegated
to them by the people, who themselves, as individuals, possess such powers.

Some claim the bad guys are "liberals" or "socialists," who are often
associated with the Democratic Party, the Green Party and others. They
wrongly claim as good guys "members of the second group, referred to as
'conservatives,' and often associated with the Republican Party and other
groups."

Since most establishment politicians are social democrats of one or another
variety, the "liberal" appellation, with few exceptions, includes almost
all Republicans.

The Democrat is open about his devilishness - he finds the idea of a
constitutional government with narrowly delimited powers as repellant as
Dracula finds garlic. Modern-day conservatives, on the other hand, are less
up front about their aversion to a Jeffersonian republic. In a sense,
Republicans are the drag queens of politics. Peel away the pules for
family, faith and fetuses and one discovers either, what economist and
political philosopher Hans-Hermann-Hoppe calls "neoconservative
welfare-warfare statists and global social democrats." Or, conversely,
national socialists of sorts, who fuse economic protectionism, populism and
a support for the very welfare infrastructure which is at the root of
social rot.

In a word, the social democratic bona fides of the Republican are beyond
reproach. "Contrary to popular myth," demurs Ostrowski, "every Republican
president since and including Herbert Hoover has increased the federal
government's size, scope or power - and usually all three. Over the last
100 years, of the five presidents who presided over the largest domestic
spending increases, four were Republicans. Include regulations and foreign
policy, as well as budgets approved by a Republican Congress, and a picture
begins to emerge of the Republican Party as a reliable engine of government
growth."

Bush's stupendous spending on terrorism-related government job-creation
schemes has seen the counter-productive public sector balloon, something
that's akin to a hidden tax. Protectionist policies for the steel, softwood
lumber and agriculture industries, legislation like the McCain-Feingold
campaign finance regulation bill, and support for gender-based quotas in
college athletics combine to make Bush's Great Society Democrat credentials
respectable.

Yesterday's vote was not about the inviolability of rights to life, liberty
and property. Instead, the toss-up was between a candidate who would loot
to ensure prescription medication for those who think their health is the
collective's responsibility, and the candidate who pillages for warfare -
this "principled" fellow thinks nothing of pilfering taxpayers to finance
the imposition of democracy on far-flung nations, without their democratic
consent, naturally.

Indeed, the American republic rests in peace. Your vote was invariably for
a social democrat, who thinks nothing of mob rule as a moral philosophy.
Your support was for the coerced distribution James Madison, the Father of
the Constitution, eschewed in his 1792 disquisition on "Property": "What a
man has honestly acquired is absolutely his own, which he may freely give,
but cannot be taken from him without his consent."

Claims that "freedom begins at the ballot box" isn't valid in a social
democracy, where government's confiscatory - and other - powers are a work
in progress. Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn almost got it right when he said,
"Fifty-one percent of a nation can establish a totalitarian regime,
suppress minorities and still remain democratic." Correction: All that can
be achieved with 51 percent of the voters!

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