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Lawrence W. Reed

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Lenin.jpg

A Deal with the Devil →

April 16, 2021

The first communist state enslaved millions and bedeviled the world until its collapse in 1991.

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Just Say No to the Marijuana War

April 9, 2021

If we banned milk, we would produce precisely the same effects we’ve seen with marijuana prohibition. The streets would be full of milk pushers. The milk business would go to the Al Capones of the world instead of your local grocer.

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The Deficit That Matters Most

April 8, 2021

Audiences ask me all the time, “Mr. Reed, what do you think the #1 problem is in the country today?” They expect me to say it’s government spending, or deficits, or crime, or opioids, or taxes, or racism, or the national debt. It is none of those.

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The First Female Mayor →

April 4, 2021

Until the polls opened on election day, she had no idea she was even on the ballot.

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Origins of the Modern Nanny State →

April 1, 2021

The modern welfare state began not as a utopian vision of altruism and compassion, but as nothing more than a political ploy for one man to keep himself and his party in office.

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Speech is Freedom's First Line of Defense →

March 30, 2021

Restriction of free thought and free speech might be the most dangerous of all subversions.

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The Tyranny of the Short-Run: What I Would Tell the Romans →

March 25, 2021

Do you think the Romans would applaud or boo? Would my short but pointed speech change anyone’s behavior?

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The Disappearing Entrepreneur: The Case of Jim Thompson →

March 25, 2021

What if all entrepreneurs took a walk and disappeared?

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Lenin's NEP: When the Soviets Admitted Socialism Didn't Work →

March 22, 2021

Wouldn’t it make a lot more sense to simply avoid the socialist trap in the first place?

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Neta Snook and Amelia Earhart →

March 19, 2021

While Amelia Earhart certainly deserves to be remembered for her accomplishments, so does Neta Snook.

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Your Friendly Government is Debauching the Currency

March 18, 2021

Ultimately, the laws of economics cannot be repealed by any mortal, not even presumptuous politicians and planners in government.

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Luck or Miracle? Samoset and the Pilgrims →

March 16, 2021

The Plymouth colonists met what were perhaps the only two English-speaking Indians on the eastern seaboard.

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Mario Vargas Llosa at 85

March 11, 2021

Peru missed an opportunity for greatness when its voters narrowly failed to elect Mario Vargas Llosa their President in 1990.

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The Knives of the Cancel Culture are Out to Get Adam Smith →

March 9, 2021

Don’t let presentism sully a great man!

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Why Socialism Stinks--Frank Gaffney Interviews Me on His TV Show - 3/3/21 →

March 4, 2021

Socialism is a tragic joke. This is Part One of two parts. Part Two is here: https://tinyurl.com/9z3fxtbk.

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The Flushing Remonstrance for Lee Habeeb's "Our American Stories" (audio) →

March 4, 2021

The story (in audio) of the Flushing Remonstrance, a pivotal document and moment that established a precedent of religious liberty in what would eventually become the United States. Based on this article: https://fee.org/articles/the-flushing-remonstrance-the-religious-magna-carta-of-the-new-world/.

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Another Dumb Reason to Take Your Money

March 1, 2021

Another Dumb Reason to Take Your Money

By Lawrence W. Reed

A 24-year-old Connecticut state senator, a Democrat, wants to punish you if you don’t vote. His name is Will Haskell and I’m sure he’s full of other non-voluntary plans for your life too.

You know the type: Fresh out of college, ready to shape the world like dough on a kneading board. Infatuated with politics, politicians, power, and the public limelight. Full of self-importance with no real-life, productive accomplishments to justify it. Eager to pass laws—laws, laws and more laws—because repealing bad ones is not fashionable in the corridors of the anointed. The halls of capitol buildings are brimming with these empty suits who may never know what a real, wealth-creating job is. Your life and mine are the toys they get to play with.

Tens of millions of people choose not to vote, at least some of the time. Busybodies and know-it-alls like Haskell want to compel us to confess our reasons to Big Brother. So rather than inspire you with things like truth, honesty and justice that might prompt you to participate at the ballot box, they would rather slap you with a fine. Such boundless arrogance! How quick such people are to call the cops when they don’t like what you’re doing (or not doing)!

In a February 5, 2021 editorial, the Wall Street Journal explained how the Haskell plan would work (https://www.wsj.com/articles/didnt-vote-heres-your-20-fine-11612481828):

Starting in 2024, every eligible Connecticut voter would have an obligation to cast a ballot, “with the option to leave such ballot blank.” Those who didn’t participate would later receive paperwork from the state, demanding an excuse. Accepted reasons would include “travel,” “illness,” and “conscientious objection.” Failing to give a good enough alibi would trigger the fine of $20, though the scofflaw could perform two hours of community service instead.

Incidentally, lots of people do vote but for bad reasons. They want a politician to steal what they don’t have the courage to go next door and swipe themselves. Or they think that by voting for somebody who says he’ll help the poor, they’re absolved of any obligation to do it themselves. Or they believe it’s their mystical duty to vote even if they know nothing of the candidates or the issues. Should we impose fines on people with such anti-social motivations? Though I wouldn’t favor it, I can make a stronger case for penalizing those folks than the ones who don’t vote.

Don’t get me wrong. I cherish the right to vote—so much so that I don’t want it belittled by those who think that just showing up at the polls is all it takes to assure the survival of representative government.

Writing in the Stamford Advocate in response to the Haskill bill (https://www.stamfordadvocate.com/opinion/article/Opinion-Haskell-bill-to-make-voting-mandatory-is-15907888.php), Karen Fassuliotis points out that the First Amendment guarantees both the right to speak and the right NOT to speak. She rightly claims that the 24th Amendment, outlawing poll taxes, would apply in this instance too because the Haskell fine is a kind of “reverse poll tax”:

If a person votes they are, in reality, speaking as to their choice of which candidate they prefer. Conversely, when a person does not vote they are exercising their right NOT to speak and, as a result, they are sending a political message….

Indeed, research has shown that the vast majority of those who do not vote are simply either not interested in the candidates, do not identify with the issues of the election or they are simply not interested in the political process. Their choice not to vote is a political message unto itself — and to force them to speak differently by forcing them to vote is simply prohibited by our Constitution and is contrary to what this nation was founded on.

What people commonly think of as “democracy” is preferable to dictatorship because it permits peaceful changes in government policy without the need to shoot, hang, or guillotine anybody. Those changes, however, will be in whatever direction public opinion is blowing at the moment—good or bad, smart or stupid, helpful or destructive. An electorate can democratically vote itself into bankruptcy and slavery. Slapping fines on people who don’t vote would simply get us there more quickly.

Low voter turnout does not endanger our political system. Here’s what does: politicians who lie, steal, or create rapacious bureaucracies, voters who don’t know what they are doing or vote for bad reasons, and people who think that either freedom or representative government will be preserved by pulling levers or punching ballot cards.

The right to vote, frankly, is too important to be cheapened and wasted by anyone who does not understand the issues and the candidates. The uninformed would be doing their duty for representative government if they either became informed or left the decisions at the ballot box up to those who are. How did the idea that voting for the sake of voting is a virtue ever get started anyhow?

Politicians who bemoan low voter turnout shouldn’t be so critical of non-voters. If a non-voter’s excuse is that he doesn’t know what he should to vote intelligently, he should be thanked for avoiding decisions he’s unprepared to make and encouraged to educate himself. If a non-voter is simply disgusted with lies and broken promises, or just doesn’t want to choose between Scarface and Machine Gun Kelly, then maybe it’s the politicians who should listen and learn; the non-voters are trying to tell them something.

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Lessons from The Telegraph for the Biden Crew

February 26, 2021

Americans of the 1800s learned from the development of the telegraph that it was entrepreneurs in a free market, not government, that really promoted the “public interest.”

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Louis Armstrong's Great Music and Legacy →

February 24, 2021

When he died in 1971, fellow Jazz great Duke Ellington said of him, “He was born poor, died rich, and never hurt anyone along the way.”

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Wisdom From Three Great African Americans →

February 17, 2021

Marian Anderson, George Washington Carver, and Booker T. Washington possessed wisdom and character that deserves to resonate and inspire for many generations to come.

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