I can believe it. The talking heads are always telling us
that small businesses are the backbone of our economy. I’m sure they are, but
not the way Washington thinks. The household service industry, kitchen,
basement and garage based factories, and family businesses, for example, employ
millions of people who get paid in cash and never give a dime to Uncle Sam.
For anything. No income tax. No social security tax. No
Medicare tax. They don’t pay, and neither do their employers. It’s called the
underground economy. It is raw free enterprise. Capitalism at its basic, most
natural, most instinctive level.
And no government, least of all a national government
thousands of miles away, is ever going to be able to stop it, slow it down or
tap into it to pay politicians, bureaucrats, teachers, policemen or soldiers.
Which is why local governments collect real estate and sales
taxes. Everybody’s got to sleep someplace and everybody’s got to eat.
We read that the social security system is going to go broke
sometime in this century. When FDR invented it, there were dozens of people
paying social security taxes for every one recipient of benefits. Not so today,
and in a few years there will be only two or three workers for every old timer
living on monthly checks from Uncle Sam.
We live in an artificial economy in which children are seen
as a luxury and a financial burden. For most of the planet’s seven billion
people, children and grandchildren are still assets: God’s social security. The
family is the basic economic unit. Kids help on the farm. Child labor? You
betcha. Mom and Dad are the bosses. There is no retirement age. People work
until they die or until their kids and grandkids can take care of them.
UnAmerican, you say? Uncivilized? Third world living? How
wrong you are. It’s natural, instinctive and it is exactly the way the underground
economy which supports millions of Americans works. And works better than the
intelligentsia are willing to admit.
Which brings me to another exchange I recently had with a correspondent on the Internet. It had to do with the national government requiring employers to compromise their religious beliefs by providing employee health insurance that covers birth control and abortifacients.
Which brings me to another exchange I recently had with a correspondent on the Internet. It had to do with the national government requiring employers to compromise their religious beliefs by providing employee health insurance that covers birth control and abortifacients.
My friend’s argument was that religious beliefs give way to
sound public policy. It’s a strong argument. The state of Utah was denied
admission to the union until they adopted a constitution that prohibited
polygamy. If God hadn’t stopped Abraham from setting Isaac on fire, someone
would have called the cops.
In our day, we talk about cultural warfare; the conflict
between traditional Judea-Christian standards of behavior and the libertarian
hedonism that is justified as personal freedom and privacy.
Unhappily, too few Americans realize that culture, like the
economy is a layered phenomenon. The smaller the universe of the layer, the
more minute are the regulations. The household has rules about when to eat and
sleep; the village tells you when you can water your lawn, the county tells you
where to vote, and the state makes you get a drivers license.
In a republic, we put up with localized cultural dictates
because free men and women can get up and go. The easier it is to relocate, the
more regulation by the majority can be tolerated.
Modern communication tends to blur the boundary lines of
communities. Facebookers and Facebookettes chat from afar like neighbors, but
they aren’t. Appleton, Wisconsin and San
Francisco, California are not interchangeable communities, despite the
symbiosis of dozens of teenagers on the Internet.
The great tragedy of our times is the assumption that the
United States of America, through its courts, its congress and its executive
has proper authority to decide the minutia of human life in the fifty states.
What kind of light bulbs you can use, how much water you can flush down the
toilet, who can get a driver’s license, a barber’s license or a marriage
license are decisions which our constitution never intended or authorized to be
made in the national capital.
Not when there were only three million Americans, much less
when there are three hundred million Americans.
This project will end the income tax and the IRS,
ReplyDeleteIn James Madison's Federalist No. 43 he writes "It, moreover, equally enables the general and the State governments to originate the amendment of errors, as they may be pointed out by the experience on one side, or on the other":
Federalist No. 43
In Federalist No. 85, Alexander Hamilton writes "We may safely rely on the disposition of the State legislatures to erect barriers against the encroachments of the national authority":
Federalist No. 85
http://articlevprojecttorestoreliberty.com/article-v---group-overview-and-proposal.html
http://articlevprojecttorestoreliberty.com/article-v-library.html