Government Can’t Help; It Can Only Hurt

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Three recent stories regarding three government agencies — the IRS, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) — show why we should oppose big government for practical, as well as philosophical, reasons.

In recent months, many Americans have missed their flights because of longer-than-usual TSA security lines. In typical DC fashion, the TSA claims the delays are because of budget cuts, even though Congress regularly increases the TSA’s funding!

The TSA is also blaming the delays on the fact that few Americans have signed up for its “PreCheck” program. Under PreCheck, the TSA considers excusing some Americans from some of the screening process. Those who wish to be considered must first submit personal information to the TSA and pay a fee. Only a bureaucrat would think Americans would be eager to give the TSA more information and money on the chance that they may be approved for PreCheck.

The TSA is much better at harassing airline passengers than at providing security. TSA agents regularly fail to catch weapons hidden by federal agents testing the screening process. Sadly, Congress will likely reward the TSA’s failures with continued funding increases. Rewarding the TSA’s incompetence shouldn’t surprise us since the TSA owes its existence to the failure of government to protect airline passengers on 9/11.

If Congress truly wanted to protect airline passengers, it would shut down the TSA and let airlines determine how best to protect their passengers. Private businesses have a greater incentive than government bureaucrats to protect their customers and their property without stripping their customers of their dignity.

The head of the VA also made headlines last week when he said it is unfair to judge the VA by how long veterans have to wait for medical care, since no one judges Disney World by how long people have to wait in line. Perhaps he is unaware that no one has ever died because he waited too long to go on an amusement park ride.

For years socialized medicine supporters pointed to the VA as proof that a government bureaucracy could deliver quality health care. The stories of veterans being denied care or receiving substandard care demolish those claims.

If Congress truly wanted to ensure that veterans receive quality health care, it would stop forcing veterans to seek health care from a federal bureaucracy. Instead, government would give veterans health-care vouchers or health savings accounts and allow them to manage their own health care. Congress should also dramatically reduce the costs of providing veterans care by ending our militaristic foreign policy.

Another story last week highlights the one thing government does do well: violate our rights. The House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on impeaching IRS Commissioner John Koskinen over his role in the IRS’s persecution of conservative organizations.

Those who value liberty and constitutional government should support impeaching Koskinen. However, truly protecting Americans from IRS tyranny requires eliminating the income tax. Despite the claims of some, a flat tax system would still require a federal bureaucracy to ensure Americans are accurately reporting their income. Since the income tax is one of the foundations of the welfare-warfare state, it is folly to think we can eliminate the income tax without first dramatically reducing the size and scope of government.

The TSA, VA, and IRS are just three examples of how government cannot effectively provide any good or service except authoritarianism. Individuals acting in the free market are more than capable of providing for their own needs, including the need to protect themselves, their families, and their property, if the government gets out of the way.

 


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5 Comments
Wip
Wip
May 31, 2016 2:08 pm

I love Ron. He makes so much sense.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
May 31, 2016 5:59 pm

Greetings,

You’ve just got to love government. My accountant called me this morning to discuss the fact that the city of Los Angeles was demanding 3 years worth of “back taxes” on a business that I just started this year. We should be able to deal with this online but the city claims we can only get online with the pin number that they would have given me on a previous tax bill which doesn’t exist because the business didn’t exist at the time.

Any brush with any government official results in an encounter that wouldn’t at all seem out of place in any Kafka book.

Ed
Ed
June 1, 2016 12:15 pm

Ever notice how Paul’s solutions are government solutions? He spent 25 years in government. That makes him a career politician. Sorry to criticize anybody’s idol, but he’s a GOP politician.. Maybe he ain’t as bad as some others like him, but that’s like saying that one turd smells a little better than the other ones. You can’t just lie and say that one particular turd doesn’t stink, unless you’re fuckin delusional.

SSS
SSS
June 1, 2016 5:13 pm

“Those who wish to be considered (for PreCheck) must first submit personal information to the TSA and pay a fee.”
—-Ron Paul

True. And you will be fingerprinted plus pay $85/person. As far as I and my wife are concerned, big fucking deal. The federal government – specifically the Air Force, CIA, and FBI – already has a ton of information on both of us, including sets of our fingerprints.

We’re in PreCheck. Worth every penny to “go to the head of the line.” And leave your jacket and shoes on plus not having to stand in one of those intrusive and demeaning body scanners. Just pass through a metal detector.