Sunday Editorial: Our Patrick Henry Moment Is
Here<http://americangrandjury.org/sunday-editorial-our-patrick-henry-moment-is-here>
August
1st, 2010


By Monty 
Pelerin<http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/08/our_patrick_henry_moment_is_he.html>

Obama’s election was supposed to transform America, at least in his mind.

This country’s first socialist president strode into office confident that
he would remake this country. Fortunately for the country, the timing of his
election was twenty, if not fifty, years too late. Socialism has failed in
its pure form wherever it has been tried. Now it has failed in its modified
form. While much of the world realizes this, President Obama is either
ignorant or has more sinister plans for the country.

In the 1920s, Ludwig von Mises demonstrated via economic reasoning why
socialism could not work. His argument was that without market prices, there
was no way to properly allocate resources. About ten years later, Friedrich
Hayek supported Mises’ conclusion from a different angle. He approached it
as a “knowledge problem” and argued that no central authority, regardless of
how intelligent, could possess enough information to make proper and
efficient decisions for tens of millions of people and businesses.

History validated the theory of the two Austrian economists. Russia, China,
Eastern Europe, Cuba, and North Korea produced inevitable the misery,
poverty, and brutality. The two countries that continue the system are
amongst the poorest countries in the world, held together only by
totalitarian rule and outside economic support.

With the recognition that socialism did not work, “do-gooders” changed their
efforts to a system that would be part capitalism and part socialism. They
believed that capitalism could be used for resource allocation while the
“caring nature” of socialism could ensure equitable distribution of wealth.
President Clinton expressed interest in what was then referred to as a
“third-way.” Western Europe had adopted this approach decades earlier.

Interestingly, Mises argued that a “third way” could not work, either. In
the 1940s, Mises demonstrated that one intervention begets additional
interventions. A so-called mixed system is nothing more than capitalism with
interventionism imposed. Mises showed that any such system eventually
degenerates into full-fledged socialism.

*In a collection of essays entitled “Planning for Freedom,” Mises concluded:
*

There is no other alternative to totalitarian slavery than liberty. There is
no other planning for freedom and general welfare than to let the market
system work. There is no other means to attain full employment, rising real
wage rates and a high standard of living for the common man than private
initiative and free enterprise.

The countries of Western Europe have, as Mises predicted, deteriorated into
social welfare states likely never imagined or intended at their inceptions.
As full-blown socialism approached, these countries became insolvent. Soon
all will be forced to either dismantle their welfare states or incur
sovereign defaults. The U.S., while never formally adopting either socialism
or the mixed system, drifted into the mixed system by gradually adopting
many socialist programs. As a result, the U.S. faces the same future of
insolvency as its European counterparts.

In terms of history, the mixed system dates back only to Bismarck in the
1880s. It was initiated in a few countries in the first quarter of the
twentieth century. Its widespread acceptance occurred after World War II,
when several countries chose not to return to the decentralized economies
that existed prior to the war. England was the prime example. Industries
nationalized for the war effort remained nationalized after the war. England
rapidly devolved into a third-rate economy as a result. Prime Minister
Thatcher reversed the decline by re-privatizing most of these industries.

It took only about fifty to seventy years for the mixed systems to fail.
That is literally a moment in terms of history. Many people are still
reluctant to admit that socialism is a failure despite the theoretical
warnings and the actual failures themselves. With socialists, it is never
the system and always the people that are the cause of failure. “If only we
had better leaders.” As Hayek and Mises pointed out, it has nothing to do
with leadership. There is a fatal flaw in the concept.

As a result of attempting to extend the socialist myth, governments and
their populations are now burdened with debt, much of which will never be
paid. We are on the verge of a worldwide depression that will hit as
governments run out of resources. It is likely that politicians will
continue to play the game of “extend and pretend.” But we have reached Ms.
Thatcher’s end-point: “The problem with socialism is that you run out of
other people’s money.”

How ironic that President Obama’s first major achievement was ObamaCare. In
May, Greece was ordered to privatize its health care system. This month, it
was reported that England was going to overhaul their health care system.
England was frequently referenced as a model of affordable, efficient health
care by ObamaCare advocates. Apparently, the English government and its
people view it differently.

These instances are not one-time events. Nor will they be limited to health
care. The welfare states of Europe will soon be dismantled in part or whole.
So too will the entitlement programs in the U.S. The laws of economics and
physics are immutable. They are above legislation. Countries do not have the
resources necessary to honor their commitments, period!

Our Founding Fathers, without using the term socialism, designed a
Constitution to protect against such incoherent schemes. Over time, the
Constitution was vitiated by “living document” interpretations, penumbras,
and other nonsense. Now, the U.S. stands on the precipice of failure just as
Western Europe. It is insolvent, and there are no other alternatives than to
default or dismantle.

The world is at a very dangerous inflection point. We are about to enter a
depression. Politicians are not going to back away from socialism willingly.
They and large numbers of other beneficiaries will do whatever they can to
retain the status quo. Despite the unequivocal failure of the modern welfare
state, it is unlikely to disappear quietly. The status quo is always
difficult to change. It becomes especially so in desperate economic times
and for people who believe they are entitled to be taken care of by others.

The welfare state is headed for the dustbin of history. That is certain
because it is no longer sustainable. The critical question is what will
replace it. As Mises pointed out, there are only two alternatives: freedom
or totalitarianism. There is no middle ground. There is no political
compromise that can bridge this gap.

Regardless of which side of the issue you are on, the battle will be bitter
and likely last a decade or more. Economically, everyone will be hurt,
including many of the “well-off.” Whether our moral and ethical code is
strong enough to get through this together is moot. We are not like our
ancestors in the sense of their strong commitment to community,
responsibility, forbearance, and integrity. We are the pampered generation,
entitled to gratification now and willing to cut corners to get it.

In many ways, this problem is more serious than that faced by our Founding
Fathers. After all, King George had little control over their lives or
fortunes. Yet these principled men risked both rather than accept even a
little bit of tyranny. Theirs was a fight of principle; ours is one of
survival. The fight is made more important when it is coupled with a
depression. We know what monsters rose to power during the last depression
and their effect on the world.

We will either get liberty or totalitarianism. There is no middle ground.
For me, the choice is clear and was stated by Patrick Henry more than two
centuries ago:

*“Give me liberty or give me death.”*

I am willing to sacrifice just as much as our Founding Fathers did so that
my grandchildren and their grandchildren can live in the same country I grew
up in. I hope enough others feel the same.



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