McGovern(ment) to Earth

George McGovernment,* speaking from somewhere in space, has transmitted these thoughts to breathlessly waiting Earthlings:

“Liberals are lambasted,” he said. “Some people don’t even want to say the word.”

He said conservatism and liberalism have always had their place in U.S. history and both should continue to be at the cornerstone of American politics.

It’s true that “liberals” don’t even want to say the word; they’ve switched to “progressives”, for all the good it will do them.

So conservatism is okay? What kind of “progressive” are you, McGovernment? But what about libertarianism? Probably never heard of it.
__________
* One of my children — who have always been wise beyond their years — gave McGovern this more appropriate surname sometime in the 1970s.

On Second Thought…

…I retract my implied praise of Will Wilkinson’s Tech Central Station piece titled “Meritocracy: The Appalling Ideal?”. I wasn’t reading carefully enough to notice that Wilkinson, as he says in a followup post at The Fly Bottle, “didn’t actually defend meritocracy in the TCS piece.” As it turns out, Wilkinson is merely engaged in a meaningless metaphysical dialogue with a Rousseauvian socialist, one Chris Bertram. Wilkinson and his sparring partner are arguing about the degree to which market outcomes reflect economic merit, as if that were a discernible quantity, distinct from market outcomes. Talk about angels dancing on pin-heads.

I don’t retract a word of what I said initially about merit, nor do I retract a word of what I’ve said since about Wilkinson’s opponent. All of my previous posts on these two subjects are here, here, here, here, and here.

Refuting Rousseau and His Progeny

I’ve been pinging on Rousseauvian philosophy in recent posts (here, here, here, and here). Rousseau is the spiritual father of socialism and communism. His modern adherents, who might disclaim socialism and communism by name, nevertheless spout the party line when they claim that we don’t deserve what we have. Their ideas hark back to Rousseau’s The Social Contract, about which Wikipedia says, in part:

According to Rousseau, by joining together through the social contract and abandoning their claims of natural right, individuals can both preserve themselves and remain free. This is because submission to the authority of the general will of the people as a whole guarantees individuals against being subordinated to the wills of others and also ensures that they obey themselves because they are, collectively, the authors of the law.

In other words, individuals will be free only if they surrender their freedom to the “collective will” — which, of course, will be determined and enforced by a smaller group of citizens, whose authority cannot be questioned by the majority.

Latter-day Rousseauvians dress it up a bit by making assertions like this:

[T]here’s no good reason to believe that a system of free-market and private property is anything close to a merit-based system. Some people work hard on worthy projects for their whole lives or take exceptional risks on society’s behalf and nevertheless remain comparatively poor; others, through being lucky or rich, get to be as rich as Croesus. Is Warren Buffet more morally deserving than the firefighters on 9/11? Of course not. He doesn’t think so, they don’t think so, we don’t think so….

Warren Buffet can speak for himself. Those who remain comparatively poor can speak for themselves. And the “we” at Crooked Timber can speak for themselves. But they cannot speak for me or the millions like me who disagree with them. They are promoting a view of the world as they would like to see it — nothing more, nothing less.

And therein lies the refutation of their worldview. There is no Rousseauvian social contract. There cannot be when millions of us reject the concept. Rousseau’s self-appointed priests and acolytes may judge us to their heart’s content, but their judgments are meaningless because we, the millions, do not accept those judgments.

The Social(ist) Contract

In two earlier posts (here and here) I tore into a blogger for his presumption that we don’t deserve what we earn. The blogger is, apparently, a proponent of Rousseau, who penned The Social Contract. Here are some tidbits about The Social Contract from Wikipedia:

Perhaps Rousseau’s most important work is The Social Contract, which outlines the basis for a legitimate political order. Published in 1762 and condemned by the Parlement of Paris when it appeared, it became one of the most influential works of abstract political thought in the Western tradition. Building on his earlier work, such as the Discourse on Inequality, Rousseau claimed that the state of nature eventually degenerates into a brutish condition without law or morality, at which point the human race must adopt institutions of law or perish. In the degenerate phase of the state of nature, man is prone to be in frequent competition with his fellow men whilst at the same time becoming increasingly dependent on them. This double pressure threatens both his survival and his freedom. According to Rousseau, by joining together through the social contract and abandoning their claims of natural right, individuals can both preserve themselves and remain free. This is because submission to the authority of the general will of the people as a whole guarantees individuals against being subordinated to the wills of others and also ensures that they obey themselves because they are, collectively, the authors of the law. Whilst Rousseau argues that sovereignty should thus be in the hands of the people, he also makes a sharp distinction between sovereign and government. The government is charged with implementing and enforcing the general will and is composed of a smaller group of citizens, known as magistrates…Much of the subsequent controversy about Rousseau’s work has hinged on disagreements concerning his claims that citizens constrained to obey the general will are thereby rendered free….

Rousseau was one of the first modern writers to seriously attack the institution of private property, and therefore is often considered a forebearer of modern socialism and communism (see Karl Marx, though Marx rarely mentions Rousseau in his writings). Rousseau also questioned the assumption that the will of the majority is always correct. He argued that the goal of government should be to secure freedom, equality, and justice for all within the state, regardless of the will of the majority….[emphasis added]

In other words, the magistrates decide what’s best for the people. As I said before, “there’s a philosophy that’s fit for (dare I say it?) Hitler’s Germany, Stalin’s Russian, and Mao’s China.” I rest my case.

Some "Thinkers" Just Think Too Hard

Graham Allison, director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, writes:

What if Al Qaeda acquired a nuclear bomb? In releasing its report, the 9/11 Commission underscored bin Laden’s nuclear ambitions. As the commission members said, “Our report shows that Al Qaeda tried to acquire or make weapons of mass destruction for at least 10 years.” In commission chairman Thomas Kean’s words, “Everybody feels that they are trying to mount another attack, and everybody feels that, given their ideology, they’re doing their best to make it chemical, biological and nuclear because it kills more people.”

For most Americans, the question of what bin Laden could possibly hope to achieve by such devastation has been confused by Bush administration rhetoric that characterizes Al Qaeda as “nothing but cold-blooded killers.”

To the contrary, any careful reader of bin Laden’s fatwas, statements, and tapes will find a chilling but quite specific list of strategic objectives. Bin Laden’s demands of America include:

Withdrawal of all American troops from Saudi Arabia.

Elimination of American political and economic influence from Muslim countries.

End of the “Judeo-Christian crusades” that have occupied and/or corrupted Muslim countries.

End of American’s military, financial, and public support for regimes in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and other Arab countries.

Let’s see if I understand this. Suppose you own a store and an intruder rushes into your store brandishing an Uzi. He demands that you close your store because your business “offends” him. You know that he has killed other store owners whose businesses also offended him. Now he threatens to kill you if you don’t close your store.

It’s true that the intruder isn’t just a cold-blooded killer. He’s a cold-blooded killer who happens to be a fanatic. His fanaticism doesn’t cancel his cold-bloodedness, it only magnifies it.

(Thanks to The American Thinker for the tip.)

Aha!

In the previous post I suggested that a certain Chris Bertram was either omniscient or arrogant, and I pointed out that his line of thinking empowers the beast of the state.

Well, it turns out that Bertram is a member of the Rousseau Association. There’s a link on the Association’s site to a biography of Rousseau. It seems that Bertram, who presumes to judge whether we deserve what we have, emulates Rousseau in his arrogance, pretensions to omniscience, and willingness to entrust all to the state:

Rousseau reacted against the artificiality and corruption of the social customs and institutions of the time. He was a keen thinker, and was equipped with the weapons of the philosophical century and with an inspiring eloquence. To these qualities were added a pronounced egotism, self-seeking, and an arrogance that led to bitter antagonism against his revolutionary views and sensitive personality, the reaction against which resulted in a growing misanthropy. Error and prejudice in the name of philosophy, according to him, had stifled reason and nature, and culture, as he found it, had corrupted morals. In Emile he presents the ideal citizen and the means of training the child for the State in accordance with nature, even to a sense of God. This “nature gospel” of education, as Goethe called it, was the inspiration, beginning with Pestalozzi, of world-wide pedagogical methods. The most admirable part in this is the creed of the vicar of Savoy, in which, in happy phrase, Rousseau shows a true, natural susceptibility to religion and to God, whose omnipotence and greatness are published anew every day. The Social Contract, on the text that all men are born free and equal, regards the State as a contract in which individuals surrender none of their natural rights, but rather agree for the protection of them. Most remarkable in this projected republic was the provision to banish aliens to the state religion and to punish dissenters with death. The Social Contract became the text-book of the French Revolution, and Rousseau’s theories as protests bore fruit in the frenzied bloody orgies of the Commune as well as in the rejuvenation of France and the history of the entire Western world.

Ah, yes, “training the child for the State in accordance with nature,” and “banish[ing] aliens to the state religion and…punish[ing] dissenters with death.” Now, there’s a philosophy that’s fit for (dare I say it?) Hitler’s Germany, Stalin’s Russian, and Mao’s China — speaking of “frenzied bloody orgies.”

Who Decides Who’s Deserving?

I explained why we deserve what we have after being inspired to do so by Will Wilkinson’s Tech Central Station essay “Meritocracy: The Appalling Ideal?”. Now, Chris Bertram at Crooked Timber takes Wilkinson to task over a technical issue, which is whether the idea that we don’t deserve what we have can be attributed to John Rawls. Who cares? Stick to the point.

Bertram actually concedes the point that we deserve what we have when he says:

There does seem to be a psychological need for those who have profited from the system to be comforted by the idea that they deserve what they have. (Maybe some of them even do deserve what they have!)

Bertram gives away the game in the parenthetical comment. If “some of them” deserve what they have, which ones do and which ones don’t? If Bertram pretends to know the answer he is either delusional (thinks he’s God) or arrogant (thinks he knows who’s deserving and who isn’t). Or perhaps he has a formula for deciding who’s deserving and who isn’t: If you make more than, say, $200,000 a year you’re not deserving, but if you make a penny less, you’re deserving.

Mmm…as long as we’re being arbitrary, which Bertram is apparently willing to be, let’s try this definition of “deserving”: If you believe that all people aren’t deserving of what they have, then obviously you aren’t deserving of what you have. Your income will therefore be taxed at 100 percent, for redistribution to the deserving masses. Well, that’s how much sense he makes.

To quote my earlier post, here’s my take on the matter:

There are many, many, many people whose IQs are lower than mine but who have earned far more than me and who live far more lavishly than me. Do I begrudge them their earnings and lavish living? Not a bit. Not even dumb-as-doorknob Hollywood liberals whose idea of an intellectual conversation is to tell each other that Bush is a Nazi.

Unlike Chris Bertram, I don’t presume to judge whether people are deserving of what they have. That’s the difference between socialists like Bertram (well, he talks like one) and libertarians like me. And it’s an important difference, because once you let the state (who else?) decide who’s deserving and who’s not deserving, you have ceded omnipotence (if not omniscience) to the state. That’s okay as long as the state is doing things the way you’d like them to be done, but what happens when the state turns on you? Won’t you be sorry that you vested great power in the state?

Lefties like Bertram rail about things like the war on drugs, the Patriot Act, and corporate welfare, to name a few. How do they think such things came about? They didn’t happen overnight. They’re the result of a long accretion of power by the state, which began in earnest in the 1930s, thanks to the Chris Bertrams of that era.

It cuts both ways, laddie. When you loose the beast of the state, you are at its mercy, like the rest of us.

Krugman and DeLong, a Prevaricating Pair

A few days ago I called Brad DeLong for dishonestly focusing on the transition costs of privatizing Social Security. Now, DeLong’s intellectual peer, Paul Krugman, has done the same thing:

Social Security is, basically, a system in which each generation pays for the previous generation’s retirement. If the payroll taxes of younger workers are diverted into private accounts, there will be a gaping financial hole: who will pay benefits to older Americans, who have spent their working lives paying into the current system? Unless you have a way to fill that multitrillion-dollar hole, privatization is an empty slogan, not a real proposal.

Krugman conveniently ignores the same fact that DeLong ignores. I must, therefore, repeat what I said about DeLong:

[T]he cost of not privatizing Social Security will far exceed the transition costs. If Social Security isn’t privatized, benefits will be cut and/or payroll taxes will rise — and it will be forever, not just during a transition period….

Does Krugman not know that the transition costs argument is phony — a diversionary tactic to scare people away from privatization — or does he know this all too well?

In other words, is Krugman an idiot or a liar? Well, Krugman is a Ph.D. economist, so he’s probably not an idiot (though I’ve known some Ph.D. economists who came close). I must conclude that he’s a liar.

Let’s Just Say He’s a Bit Evasive

Brad DeLong has a post with the title “Why Oh Why Are We Ruled by These… Are They Idiots? Or Are They Liars?”. The idiots or liars, of course, are Bush and company. Why? Well, DeLong quotes from a Wall Street Journal article:

“I support the idea of creating a personal saving account for younger workers,” Mr. Bush told his audience.

The problem with that idea is finding the money to pay the current generation of retirees, if revenue from current workers is diverted into the workers’ own accounts. As a leading proponent of creating private accounts from Social Security, South Carolina’s Sen. Graham said he hopes Mr. Bush will promote the idea, which is the single biggest unfinished item from the 2000 campaign platform. But Mr. Graham has been willing to address the $1 trillion transition costs, whereas Mr. Bush has not. Mr. Graham would raise the amount of wages subject to payroll taxes to cover costs. But Mr. Bush has said he won’t raise taxes or reduce benefits…

Okay, so Bush isn’t going to stand on a campaign stump and announce that someone will have to pay for the transition costs. But neither is he going to spend valuable time on the campaign stump explaining that the cost of not privatizing Social Security will far exceed the transition costs. If Social Security isn’t privatized, benefits will be cut and/or payroll taxes will rise — and it will be forever, not just during a transition period.

DeLong chooses to focus on the transition issue:

You cannot–not given current projections–“support” all three of (a) diverting Social Security revenue to young workers’ private accounts, (b) maintaining benefits at their current levels, and (c) keeping payroll taxes from rising. One of the three must crack. Does Bush not know this? Or does he know this all too well?

Does DeLong not know that the transition costs argument is phony — a diversionary tactic to scare people away from privatization — or does he know this all too well?

In other words, is DeLong an idiot or a liar? Well, DeLong is a Ph.D. economist, so he’s probably not an idiot (though I’ve known some Ph.D. economists who came close). I must conclude that he’s a liar.

He Must Be a Manhattan "Intellectual"

Art Spiegelman, creator of something called Maus, for which he apparently won a Pulitzer, has now created something called In the Shadow of No Towers, which The New York Times calls his “artistic response to the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, as well as an expression of his deep opposition to the war in Iraq.” The following quotations are from interviews conducted at his Lower Manhattan studio, as well as by telephone and e-mail.

Spiegelman recalls the morning of September 11, 2001:

My wife…and I had just walked out our door when we saw that first plane crash into the tower about 10 blocks south of us. We ran down to find our daughter, Nadja, a freshman at Stuyvesant High School, and got her out of the school just before the north tower collapsed right behind us. Then we made our way to the U.N. School to scoop up 10-year-old Dash. I was willing to live through the disaster wherever it took me, as long as we were all together as a family unit.

Then he comments on Mikail Moore’s Fahrenheit 911:

I sure admire his ability to make effective arguments that can be understood outside the rarefied circles of one’s already-convinced friends. His sympathy for that woman who becomes the star of the second half of the film [whose soldier son was killed in Iraq] is, to me, so admirable. I was just so impatient with her. It allowed him to express more clearly than I the class-war aspects of this and how to talk to people who are acting against their own best interests.

Class war? Is he talking about Saddam and all those palaces from which he was evicted? Is he talking about the Iraqis who were impoverished by Saddam’s rapaciousness and control of Iraq’s oil? What class war does he have in mind? Perhaps he’s referring to all those American draftees who were marched off to Iraq at gunpoint.

He doesn’t talk about the innocents who were slaughtered on September 11, 2001. He doesn’t talk about the cretins who flew the planes into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, or about Osama bin Laden, or about terrorism in general. It’s all about him. It’s all about his hatred of the war in Iraq. But he’s going to make some money off September 11, by selling copies of his thing to like-minded Manhattan jerks.

Age Does Not Become Him

From a Guardian Unlimited profile of neo-octogenarian Paul Fussell:

He thinks Bill Clinton is “wonderful”, and argues that anti-semitism was one reason why Americans were so eager to punish his affair with Monica Lewinsky.

That’s a new one. If you can’t defend Clinton on his own merits, make up an absolutely silly reason to discredit his opponents.

“Conservatives know that I cannot be trusted… I hate them in general, I grew up in that atmosphere, my father was a corporate lawyer and always voted Republican — that’s one reason I decided not to. It’s a standard boy’s reaction. If your father’s a dentist you either become a dentist or you ridicule dentists for the rest of your life.”

At least he admits that his liberalism arose from adolescent rebelliousness, which I have contended is a primary source of liberalism.

Fussell was vigorously opposed to last year’s invasion of Iraq: “If you don’t get angry about this war you don’t deserve to be alive.”

If he’s serious, he’s certainly an examplar of today’s hateful version of liberalism. If he’s merely trying for hyperbole, he’s not doing a very good job of it.

Fussell, having fought in World War II, rightly attacks those who romanticize war. But the fact that war isn’t a romantic adventure doesn’t make it any the less necessary, from time to time.

A Pseudo-libertarian Whiner, Cornered

The Corner‘s Ramesh Ponnuru zaps a pseudo-libertarian:

John Perry Barlow was being interviewed, with much of the discussion concerning his turn away from the Republicans. He said: “…in the past I found it most effective to be inside the Republican Party acting as a libertarian. But I’ve switched. One of the things going on in my mind when I wrote that note [announcing the decision to embrace political activism over lifestyle libertarianism] was that I’d just been busted for having a really trivial amount of marijuana in a checked bag under a PATRIOT Act search. I was arrested, hauled off in irons, an ugly experience. At San Francisco airport, for, like, three joints’ worth of dope. Before the plane took off, Delta employees came on and said, Mr. Barlow, you have to step off the plane, and bring your personal effects. Then San Francisco cops arrested me. I spent the day in Redwood City in jail. It was a chilling experience. It’s happening, and happening a lot. The Transportation Security Administration is now routinely searching checked bags. They are not just looking for explosives….”

The Transportation Security Administration is doing more intensive bag searches than we used to have, and when they find illegal substances they are not ignoring them. You can wish that marijuana were legal, or that the TSA were prohibited from enforcing the law in this way. But what any of this has to do with Patriot is beyond me.

Exactly! I speed a bit, but I’m not about to become a Democrat if I’m pulled over for speeding. Get over it, Mr. Barlow.

He’s Right, Don’t Listen to Him

Sometimes — well, perhaps most of the time — “conservative” columnists, like left-wing actors and singers, ought to just shut up. Now comes David Brooks of The New York Times (free registration required) to opine that

we need an ambitious national service program to demystify the military for the next generation of Americans. It also seems clear, looking at our history, that combat heroism is not an essential qualification for a wartime leader. It’s much more important to have the political courage that Lincoln had and Kennedy celebrated. But don’t listen to me. I never served.

I never served, either, but I know a dumb idea when I read it.

Brooks started with the observation that, in the campaign of 2000, veterans in South Carolina seemed less awed by John McCain than did non-veterans in New Hampshire. Being a “creative” writer, Brooks couldn’t simply stop with the obvious truth: South Carolinians, being more conservative than New Hampshirites were therefore more likely to favor Bush over McCain. Instead, he extrapolated and embellished his four-year old observation into the notion that “national service” ought to be required. To put it baldly, which Brooks can’t bring himself to do, he wants to restore the draft.

There are many good arguments against the draft, which this succinct essay summarizes. My favorite argument against the draft, however, is one that I coined some years ago: A nation that must draft its defenders probably isn’t worth defending.

Fair and Balanced Commentary

Scott Simon of NPR (yes, that’s National Public Radio) assesses Michael Moore’s Farenheit 911 in an OpinionJournal piece entitled “When Punchline Trumps Honesty”. Here’s the bottom line:

[W]hen 9/11 Commission Chairman Kean has to take a minute at a press conference, as he did last Thursday, to knock down a proven falsehood like the secret flights of the bin Laden family, you wonder if those who urge people to see Moore’s film are informing or contaminating the debate. I see more McCarthy than Murrow in the work of Michael Moore. No matter how hot a blowtorch burns, it doesn’t shed much light.

I may have to rethink my aversion to NPR. Well, I might give Scott Simon a shot. But Nina Tottenberg is just too much.

I Just Can’t Help It

When Cass Sunstein shows up as a guest blogger, I’m compelled to renounce my earlier resolution to say no more about him. Here he is, at Glennreynolds.com, regurgitating his line about FDR’s Second Bill of Rights. Mercifully, he does it quickly — this time.

Because there’s nothing new in Sunstein’s latest utterance, I will simply refer you to my earlier posts about Sunstein: here, here, here, here , here, and here. The last post is actually funny, in the way that Chaplin’s The Great Dictator was funny about Hitler.

Reich Is (Inadvertently) Right

Eugene Volokh quotes Robert Reich in The American Prospect. Reich’s target is the religious right, which he finds less threatening than terrorism: “Terrorism will disrupt and destroy lives. But terrorism itself is not the greatest danger we face.” In spite of ample evidence that al Qaida and its ilk are indeed acting out of religious hatred for infidels, Reich asserts that “Terrorism is a tactic, not a belief.” I say that the tactic is inseparable from the belief.

Here’s where Reich is inadvertently right:

The great conflict of the 21st century will not be between the West and terrorism….The true battle will be between …those who believe in the primacy of the individual and those who believe that human beings owe their allegiance and identity to a higher authority….

It’s true. The great conflict of the 21st century will be between those who believe in the primacy of the individual and those who believe that human beings owe their allegiance and identity to a higher authority: the state.

I know that Reich is on the side of the state. He is therefore my intellectual enemy.

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  • An (Imaginary) Interview with Cass Sunstein

    This is the last of this series of posts about Cass Sunstein, unless he deigns to reply to me. I have many positive things to say about many subjects, and I have been neglecting other targets of opportunity.

    Liberty Corner: Apropos the preceding post, I wish you, Cass Sunstein, would quit beating around the bush. If you want something, you have to spell it out. Don’t be coy, Cass, tell us how you would amend the Constitution to ensure that all internet users are exposed to points of view that they would otherwise eschew.

    Cass Sunstein: Let’s start with the First Amendment, which deals with freedom of speech and of the press, among other things. I’m suggesting that we simply recognize that not all speech is protected and use that fact to force the purveyors of extreme points of view to acknowledge opposing points of view.

    LC: Tell us how you would restate the First Amendment so that it does the right thing.

    CS: I would add the following codicil: Congress, in order to promote a more efficacious deliberative democracy, may require persons to acknowledge opposing points of view when they communicate on a subject. Further, Congress may require communications media to assist in that endeavor and to transmit points of view other than those which they might willingly transmit.

    LC: So, in the name of political freedom you would curtail freedom?

    CS: I don’t think of it that way. We’re all more free, in an intellectual way, when we’re exposed to a diversity of experiences and points of view. Besides, freedom is something we receive from government; government may therefore withdraw some freedom from us when it’s for our good.

    LC: Let’s assume, for the sake of this discussion, that people desire political freedom, and the other types of freedom that flow from it. Would we really be more free if government forced us to hear or at least take part in the transmission of views with which we disagree, or would we simply be encumbered with more rules about how to live our lives?

    CS: That’s a negative way of looking at it.

    LC: Let me draw an analogy from fiction. Have you read Portnoy’s Complaint?

    CS: You aren’t about to slur my ethnicity, are you?

    LC: No, not at all. It’s just that the novel’s protagonist, Alex Portnoy, has an experience that reminds me of your proposed codicil to the First Amendment. His mother stood over him with a knife in an effort to make him eat his dinner. Do you think government should act like Alex Portnoy’s mother?

    CS: Well, she didn’t need to pull a knife on Alex, but she obviously needed to exert her maternal authority.

    LC: You don’t think Alex would have voluntarily eaten his dinner, in a day or two, rather than starve?

    CS: Why take chances?

    LC: So not doing what’s good for one’s self is the moral equivalent of doing harm to another?

    CS: Yes. Alex’s mother obviously suffered from anxiety caused by Alex’s refusal to eat his dinner.

    LC: But Alex’s mother — being older and larger than Alex, though evidently not wiser — might have reflected on the ramifications of her threat. She didn’t really save Alex from starvation, but she did cause him to disrespect and hate her.

    CS: What does that have to do with my version of the First Amendment?

    LC: It has a lot to do with what happens to the cohesiveness of society, which you seem to value, when government forces people to behave in certain, non-neutral ways. You can figure it out if you think about it. But let’s move on. What about the rules that would require the acknowledgement of opposing points of view? Who would make those rules? In particular, with respect to web sites, who would select those “sites that deal with substantive issues in a serious way”? And who would identify “highly partisan” web sites that “must carry” icons pointing to those “sites that deal with substantive issues in a serious way”?

    CS: An agency authorized by Congress to do such things.

    LC: The FCC, for instance?

    CS: The FCC might be the appropriate agency, but Congress would have to take its oversight role more seriously.

    LC: Pressuring the FCC to pressure a broadcaster to stifle a certain radio personality isn’t enough for you?

    CS: What?

    LC: Never mind. Let’s assume it’s the FCC, whose members are appointed by the president, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The FCC is essentially a political body, composed of some mix of Democrats and Republicans.

    CS: That’s inevitably the case with any regulatory agency.

    LC: Right you are. So the FCC, or any agency newly created for the purpose, wouldn’t be neutral about such issues as what constitutes an opposing point of view, which sites deal with substantive issues in a serious way, and which sites are highly partisan.

    CS: You have to rely on the judgment of those appointed to perform the task of making such evaluations.

    LC: But not the judgment — or preferences — of purveyors of news and views?

    CS: No, because they’re likely to be wedded to their positions and not open to opposing ideas.

    LC: Unlike the political appointees on the FCC?

    CS: Well, those political appointees would be scrutinized by Congress.

    LC: Which, of course, is always balanced and neutral in its views, and which never tries to inflict particular points of view on regulatory agencies.

    CS: You’re trying to get me to say that my version of the First Amendment would impose the judgment of politicians and their minions on the news and views of corporate and individual communicators.

    LC: Isn’t that exactly what would happen?

    CS: But we’re better off when our duly elected representatives and their agents make such decisions. That’s how deliberative democracy is supposed to work.

    LC: Oh, we elect them to tell us how to live our lives?

    CS: If that’s what it takes to make us better citizens, yes.

    LC: You think coercion of that sort would make us a more cohesive society and would make us more appreciative of points of view that differ from our own?

    CS: It’s worth a try.

    LC: And where do you stop?

    CS: What do you mean?

    LC: How do you know when society is sufficiently cohesive and that an acceptable fraction of its members have become appreciative of differing points of view? What do you do if society simply refuses to cooperate with your program?

    CS: Well, as to your first question, the FCC would simply monitor the content of broadcasts and web sites. As to your second question, the FCC might shut down uncooperative outlets or place them in the hands of an appointed operator, much as bankruptcy courts use court-appointed receivers to hand the affairs of bankrupt businesses. In the extreme, the FCC might have to resort to criminal sanctions — fines and imprisonment. But that probably wouldn’t happen more than a few times before communicators began to comply with the law.

    LC: Or simply quit trying to communicate.

    CS: Well, that’s always an option.

    LC: I’m beginning to get the picture. Before we stop, however, I’d like to pose a hypothetical. Suppose the FCC were composed entirely of members who had a peculiar regard for the original meaning of the Constitution. Suppose, further, that we had, at the same time, a president who felt the same way about the Constitution, and that Congress was in the hands of a sympathetic majority. Now, in the course of monitoring web sites the FCC comes across your essay on “The Future of Free Speech” and deems it an extremist screed, subversive of the Constitution. What do you suppose would happen?

    CS: The FCC should order The Little Magazine to post a link to Liberty Corner‘s commentary on my essay. Or it might order The Little Magazine to remove my essay from its site.

    LC: Suppose the FCC did neither. Suppose the FCC gave the matter some thought and concluded that it would do nothing about your essay. Instead, it would hew to the original meaning of the Constituion and let you bloviate to your heart’s content.

    CS: I would turn myself in to the FCC and demand to be sanctioned to the letter of the law.

    LC: Oh, really? Can I count on that? I just want to be sure that you’re willing to live by the rules that you would impose on others.

    CS: Most assuredly.

    LC: Thank you very much for your (imaginary) time. That’s all for now. But don’t worry, I’ll be keeping an eye on you.

    Cass Sunstein’s Truly Dangerous Mind

    UPDATED BELOW

    Cass Sunstein’s recent blatherings about FDR’s “Second Bill of Rights” at The Volokh Conspiracy made me want to find out more about his understanding of the proper role of government in our society. I Googled the eminent professor and hit upon “The Future of Free Speech”, which appears in The Little Magazine, a South Asian journal (thus the British English spellings in the quotations below). Hold your nose and follow Sunstein’s argument in these quotations from “The Future of Free Speech”:

    My purpose here is to cast some light on the relationship between democracy and new communications technologies. I do so by emphasising the most striking power provided by emerging technologies: the growing power of consumers to “filter” what it is that they see. In the extreme case, people will be fully able to design their own communications universe. They will find it easy to exclude, in advance, topics and points of view that they wish to avoid. I will also provide some notes on the constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech.

    An understanding of the dangers of filtering permits us to obtain a better sense of what makes for a well-functioning system of free expression. Above all, I urge that in a heterogeneous society, such a system requires something other than free, or publicly unrestricted, individual choices. On the contrary, it imposes two distinctive requirements. First, people should be exposed to materials that they would not have chosen in advance….Second, many or most citizens should have a range of common experiences. Without shared experiences, a heterogeneous society will have a much more difficult time addressing social problems; people may even find it hard to understand one another….

    Imagine…a system of communications in which each person has unlimited power of individual design….Our communications market is moving rapidly toward this apparently utopian picture….[A]s of this writing, a number of newspapers allow readers to create filtered versions, containing exactly what they want, and excluding what they do not want….

    I seek to defend a particular conception of democracy — a deliberative conception — and to evaluate, in its terms, the outcome of a system with perfect power of filtering. I also mean to defend a conception of freedom, associated with the deliberative conception of democracy, and oppose it to a conception that sees consumption choices by individuals as the very embodiment of freedom….

    The US Supreme Court has…held that streets and parks must be kept open to the public for expressive activity. Hence governments are obliged to allow speech to occur freely on public streets and in public parks — even if many citizens would prefer to have peace and quiet, and even if it seems irritating to come across protesters and dissidents whom one would like to avoid….

    A distinctive feature of this idea is that it creates a right of speakers’ access, both to places and to people. Another distinctive feature is that the public forum doctrine creates a right, not to avoid governmentally imposed penalties on speech, but to ensure government subsidies of speech….Thus the public forum represents one place in which the right to free speech creates a right of speakers’ access to certain areas and also demands public subsidy of speakers….

    [T]he public forum doctrine increases the likelihood that people generally will be exposed to a wide variety of people and views. When you go to work, or visit a park, it is possible that you will have a range of unexpected encounters, however fleeting or seemingly inconsequential. You cannot easily wall yourself off from contentions or conditions that you would not have sought out in advance, or that you would have chosen to avoid if you could. Here too the public forum doctrine tends to ensure a range of experiences that are widely shared — streets and parks are public property — and also a set of exposures to diverse circumstances. A central idea here must be that these exposures help promote understanding and perhaps in that sense freedom. And all of these points can be closely connected to democratic ideals, as we soon see….

    The public forum doctrine is an odd and unusual one, especially insofar as to create a kind of speakers’ access right to people and places, subsidised by taxpayers. But the doctrine is closely associated with a longstanding constitutional ideal, one that is far from odd: that of republican self-government. From the beginning, the American constitutional order was designed to be a republic, as distinguished from a monarchy or a direct democracy. We cannot understand the system of freedom of expression, and the effects of new communications technologies and filtering, without reference to this ideal….

    The specifically American form of republicanism…involved an effort to create a “deliberative democracy.” In this system, representatives would be accountable to the public at large, but there was also supposed to be a large degree of reflection and debate, both within the citizenry and within government itself. The system of checks and balances — evident in the bicameral system, the Senate, the Electoral College and so forth — had, as its central purpose, a mechanism for promoting deliberation within the government as a whole….

    We are now in a position to distinguish between two conceptions of sovereignty. The first involves consumer sovereignty; the second involves political sovereignty. The first ideal underlies enthusiasm for “the Daily Me.” The second ideal underlies the democratic challenge to this vision, on the ground that it is likely to undermine both self-government and freedom, properly conceived.

    Of course, the two conceptions of sovereignty are in potential tension. A commitment to consumer sovereignty may well compromise political sovereignty — if, for example, free consumer choices result in insufficient understanding of public problems, or if they make it difficult to have anything like a shared culture….

    Group polarisation is highly likely to occur on the Internet. Indeed, it is clear that the Internet is serving, for many, as a breeding ground for extremism, precisely because like-minded people are deliberating with one another, without hearing contrary views….

    The most reasonable conclusion is that it is extremely important to ensure that people are exposed to views other than those with which they currently agree, in order to protect against the harmful effects of group polarisation on individual thinking and on social cohesion….

    The adverse effects of group polarization…show that with respect to communications, consumer sovereignty is likely to produce serious problems for individuals and society at large — and these problems will occur by a kind of iron logic of social interactions….

    The phenomenon of group polarisation is closely related to the widespread phenomenon of ‘social cascades’. No discussion of social fragmentation and emerging communications technologies would be complete without a discussion of that phenomenon….

    [O]ne group may end up believing something and another the exact opposite, because of rapid transmission of information within one group but not the other. In a balkanised speech market, this danger takes on a particular form: different groups may be led to dramatically different perspectives, depending on varying local cascades.

    I hope this is enough to demonstrate that for citizens of a heterogeneous democracy, a fragmented communications market creates considerable dangers. There are dangers for each of us as individuals; constant exposure to one set of views is likely to lead to errors and confusions. And to the extent that the process makes people less able to work cooperatively on shared problems, there are dangers for society as a whole.

    In a heterogeneous society, it is extremely important for diverse people to have a set of common experiences….

    This is hardly a suggestion that everyone should be required to participate in the same thing. We are not speaking of requirements at all. In any case a degree of plurality, with respect to both topics and points of view, is also highly desirable. My only claim is that a common set of frameworks and experiences is valuable for a heterogeneous society, and that a system with limitless options, making for diverse choices, will compromise the underlying values.

    The points thus far raise questions about whether a democratic order is helped or hurt by a system of unlimited individual choice with respect to communications. It is possible to fear that such a system will produce excessive fragmentation, with group polarisation as a frequent consequence. It is also possible to fear that such a system will produce too little by way of solidarity goods, or shared experiences. But does the free speech principle bar government from responding to the situation? If that principle is taken to forbid government from doing anything to improve the operation of the speech market, the answer must be a simple Yes.

    I believe, however, that this is a crude and unhelpful understanding of the free speech principle, one that is especially ill-suited to the theoretical and practical challenges of the next decades and beyond. If we see the Free Speech Principle through a democratic lens, we will be able to make a great deal more progress.

    There should be no ambiguity on the point: free speech is not an absolute. The government is allowed to regulate speech by imposing neutral rules of property law, telling would-be speakers that they may not have access to certain speech outlets….Government is permitted to regulate unlicensed medical advice, attempted bribery, perjury, criminal conspiracies (“Let’s fix prices!”), threats to assassinate the President, criminal solicitation (“Might you help me rob this bank?”), child pornography, false advertising, purely verbal fraud (“This stock is worth $100,000”), and much more….And if one or more of these forms of speech can be regulated, free speech absolutism is a kind of fraud, masking the real issues that must be confronted in separating protected speech from unprotected speech….

    If the discussion thus far is correct, there are three fundamental concerns from the democratic point of view. These include:
    • the need to promote exposure to materials, topics, and positions that people would not have chosen in advance, or at least enough exposure to produce a degree of understanding and curiosity;
    • the value of a range of common experiences;
    • the need for exposure to substantive questions of policy and principle, combined with a range of positions on such questions.

    Of course, it would be ideal if citizens were demanding, and private information providers were creating, a range of initiatives designed to alleviate the underlying concerns….But to the extent that they fail to do so, it is worthwhile to consider government initiatives designed to pick up the slack….

    1. Producers of communications might be subject…to disclosure requirements….On a quarterly basis, they might be asked to say whether and to what extent they have provided educational programming for children, free airtime for candidates, and closed captioning for the hearing impaired. They might also be asked whether they have covered issues of concern to the local community and allowed opposing views a chance to be heard….Websites might be asked to say if they have allowed competing views a chance to be heard….

    2. Producers of communications might be asked to engage in voluntary self-regulation….[T]here is growing interest in voluntary self-regulation for both television and the Internet….Any such code could, for example, call for an opportunity for opposing views to speak, or for avoiding unnecessary sensationalism, or for offering arguments rather than quick ‘sound-bytes’ whenever feasible.

    3. The government might subsidise speech, as, for example, through publicly subsidised programming or Websites….Perhaps government could subsidise a ‘public.net’ designed to promote debate on public issues among diverse citizens — and to create a right of access to speakers of various sorts.

    4. If the problem consists in the failure to attend to public issues, the government might impose “must carry” rules on the most popular Websites, designed to ensure more exposure to substantive questions. Under such a program, viewers of especially popular sites would see an icon for sites that deal with substantive issues in a serious way….Ideally, those who create Websites might move in this direction on their own. If they do not, government should explore possibilities of imposing requirements of this kind, making sure that no program draws invidious lines in selecting the sites whose icons will be favoured….

    5. The government might impose “must carry” rules on highly partisan Websites, designed to ensure that viewers learn about sites containing opposing views….Here too the ideal situation would be voluntary action. But if this proves impossible, it is worth considering regulatory alternatives….

    Emerging technologies are hardly an enemy here….But to the extent that they weaken the power of general interest intermediaries, and increase people’s ability to wall themselves off from topics and opinions that they would prefer to avoid, they create serious dangers….

    So let’s all put on our brown shirts and march to a public rally at which we will be “allowed” to shout: “Dark is light; black is white; Sunstein is right.”

    In an earlier post I said that Cass Sunstein is to the integrity of constitutional law as Pete Rose is to the integrity of baseball. It’s worse than that: Sunstein’s willingness to abuse constitutional law in the advancement of a statist agenda reminds me of Hitler’s abuse of German law to advance his repugnant agenda.

    Oops, I should link to an opposing view. Sunstein doesn’t have a blog, so how about this?

    UPDATE (04/05/05): Tom G. Palmer has an excellent take on Sunstein at NRO. (Thanks to Freespace for the tip.)

    Sen(seless) Economics

    Cass Sunstein’s penultimate Volokh Conspiracy essay on FDR’s Second Bill of Rights invokes Amartya Sen:

    Randy [Barnett] asks whether the Second Bill should be seen as protecting “natural rights.” To say the least, the natural rights tradition has multiple strands; a good contemporary version is elaborated by Amartya Sen (see his Development as Freedom).

    In other words, the Bill of Rights (the real one) codified certain natural rights, but not all of them, according to Sunstein and his fellow travelers. The Second Bill of Rights envisioned by FDR would (and perhaps did) codify the Sunstein-Sen version of economic freedom as a natural right on a par with, say, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and freedom from self-incrimination.

    Here’s Dr. Sen (the 1998 Nobel laureate in Economics and a professor at Trinity College, Cambridge) to explain what he means by economic freedom (from an online essay entitled “Development as Freedom”):

    We…live in a world with remarkable deprivation, destitution, and oppression….

    Overcoming these problems is a central part of the exercise of development. We have to recognize the role of different freedoms in countering these afflictions. Indeed, individual agency is, ultimately, central to addressing these deprivations. On the other hand, the freedom of agency that we have is inescapably constrained by our social, political, and economic opportunities. We need to recognize the centrality of individual freedom and the force of social influences on the extent and reach of individual freedom. To counter the problems we face, we have to see individual freedom as a social commitment….

    I view the expansion of freedom both as the primary end and as the principal means of development. Development consists of removing various types of unfreedoms that leave people with little choice and little opportunity of exercising their reasoned agency….

    Development requires the removal of major sources of unfreedom: poverty as well as tyranny, poor economic opportunities as well as systemic social deprivation, neglect of public facilities as well as intolerance or overactivity of repressive states.

    What’s wrong with this picture? Sen, Sunstein, and their ilk — clever arguers, all — equate economic freedom (delivered in the form of make-work jobs, welfare, the minimum wage, social security, subsidized housing, free medical care, legalized extortion of employers through unionization, etcetera, etcetera) with political freedom (or liberty as it’s better known). The two things are incommensurate. Indeed, they are incompatible.

    In order for some persons to enjoy the kind of economic freedom envisioned by FDR and his acolytes, government must impose what Sen would call economic unfreedom and on other persons, through taxation and regulation. “Robbing Peter to pay Paul” still says it best.

    Political freedom (liberty) works the other way around. One person’s political freedom — the freedom to speak out, to publish a newspaper, to cast a vote, and so on — doesn’t diminish another person’s political freedom. To the contrary, political freedom is most secure when it is widely held.

    True economic freedom flows from political freedom. True economic freedom encompasses such things as pursuing a better education, limited only by one’s ability and financial resources; finding and keeeping a job, without paying union dues or belonging to a minority group; starting a business of one’s own and running it freely, without extorting or cheating others; making a campaign contribution in any amount to any political candidate; not being forced to subsidize candidates one opposes; and saving for one’s old age (in a real savings account) or buying a sports car, as one chooses. These are just a few of the many economic freedoms that government has circumscribed in its typically Orwellian effort to improve us by making us less free.

    More importantly, from the Sunstein-Sen point of view, FDR-style economic freedom reduces the range of options available to individuals by significantly diminishing the economy (see “The True Cost of Government”). If the economy hadn’t been stunted by FDR-style economic freedom, and if FDR-style economic freedom hadn’t discouraged the habit of private charity, the poor, infirm, and aged of this land — and many other lands — would be far better off than they are today.

    The irony would be amusing if it weren’t tragic.

    More from Sunstein

    Cass Sunstein, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Chicago, is guest-blogging at The Volokh Conspiracy. His first post provoked this response from me. Now he says, “A system of free markets isn’t law-free; it depends on law. Property rights, as we enjoy and live them, are a creation of law; they don’t predate law.”

    Please get it right, professor. Free markets and property rights have existed and still exist without being protected by or codified in law. But free markets (which rest on property rights) operate more efficiently when markets and property are protected by law from force and fraud. It is therefore a legitimate function of law (government) to protect free markets and to codify property rights. That isn’t “government intervention”, as Sunstein (or is it his hero, FDR?) calls it. No, that is simply government acting in its proper, nightwatchman role.

    When government goes beyond its proper role to actively intervene in free markets and destroy property rights, it harms everyone (except selected interest groups) by making markets inefficient.

    Note to the University of Chicago’s economics department: Please give Professor Sunstein a lecture in the principles of microeconomics — now!