When the Law Does the
Opposite of What it Intends to Do:
One Hundred Twelve Theses on Government Failure
One Hundred Twelve Theses on Government Failure
First Table
of Contents
Part 1: Introduction (Including Eighteen Bad Basic Laws of Government)
I. First Introduction: Government Failure
II. Second Introduction: Five Reasons Why We Shouldn't Trust the
Government
III. Three Clauses That Enable Legislative Action, But
Are Used to Excuse Government Overreach
IV. Six Laws with
Deceptive Names
V. Eight Self-Defeating Amendments (Plus the
Draft)
VI. The War on Terror: Fourteen Laws That Fail to Protect People from War, Terrorism, and
Violent Crime
VII. The Wars on Drugs and Our Health: Twenty-One Laws That Failed to Achieve Affordable Health Care, Failed to Ensure the Legal Sale of Safe Drugs, or Failed to Protect the Environment
VIII.
The War on Poverty, Part 1: Eleven Laws That Fail to Protect Workers'
Rights and the Interests of Labor Unions
IX. The War on Poverty, Part 2: Seven Laws That Intended to Protect Minorities and/or Property, But Failed
X. The War on Poverty, Part 3: Six Budgetary and Monetary Policies That Have Led to Economic Ruin
XI. The War on Poverty, Part 4: Ten Laws That Intended to Make the Markets Free, But Rigged Them Instead
Part 3: Other Topics (Including Twenty-Five Bad Laws, and a Conclusion)
XII. Five Failed Laws and Policies Related to Insurance
XIII. Four Laws That Tried to Prevent Frivolous Lawsuits, But Go Too Far
XIV. Five Laws That Tried to Protect the Rights or Safety of Women and Homosexuals, But Failed
XV. Eight Laws and Programs That Fail to Protect Children
XVI. Three More Terrible Laws
XVII. Conclusion: New Laws Don't Work
Part 1: Introduction (Including Eighteen Bad Basic Laws of Government)
I. First Introduction: Government Failure
II. Second Introduction: Five Reasons Why We Shouldn't Trust the Government
III. Three Clauses That Enable Legislative Action, But Are Used to Excuse Government Overreach
V. Eight Self-Defeating Amendments (Plus the Draft)
10. Amendment I
11. Amendment II
12. The military draft
13. Amendment III
14. Amendment V
15. Amendment VIII
16. Amendment X
17. Amendment XIII
18. Amendment XIV
Part 2: The Wars on Terror, Drugs, and Poverty (Including Seventy Bad Laws)
VI. The War on Terror: Fourteen Laws That Fail to Protect People from War, Terrorism, and Violent Crime
19. Incarceration in jails and prisons
20. The death penalty
21. Life sentences
22. Gun-free zones
23. Laws requiring publication of gun owners' home addresses
24. Gun personalization requirements
25. Gun buyback programs
26. The War Powers Act of 1973
27. The state's monopoly on violence
28. The War on Terror
29. The 2001 A.U.M.F.
30. The U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act
31. Laws allowing warrantless searches and wiretaps
32. The Whistleblowers Protection Act
33. The taxation of health goods and services
34. Federal negotiation of drug prices
35. Subsidization of pharmaceutical companies
36. The ban on denying emergency room treatment
37. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
38. Ecstasy prohibition
39. Heroin prohibition
40. Marijuana prohibition
41. Marijuana legalization
42. Alcohol prohibition
43. Corn subsidies
44. The criminalization of purchasing alcohol for minors
45. The criminalization of purchasing tobacco for minors
46. Laws authorizing the Food and Drug Administration (F.D.A.) to approve or deny pharmaceutical drugs
47. Laws authorizing the Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.)
48. Federal vehicle emissions standards
48. The Clean Air Act
50. The Clean Water Act
51. Bans on tree-line thinning
52. The "Roadless Rule"
53. Superfund sites
VIII. The War on Poverty, Part 1: Eleven Laws That Fail to Protect Workers' Rights and the Interests of Labor Unions
54. The law that established Labor Day
55. The Department of Labor and Commerce
56. The McCarran-Ferguson Act
57. The Wagner Act (National Labor Relations Act of 1935)
58. The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947
59. State Right-to-Work laws
60. Overtime pay laws
61. The Federal Reserve's "dual mandate" on interest rates and unemployment
62. Laws that established the U1, U2, U3, U4, and U5 unemployment measurements
63. The Employee Free Choice Act, and the Card Check bill
64. Disability and Medicaid provisions which limit people's ability to be employed and receive benefits at the same time
IX. The War on Poverty, Part 2: Seven Laws That Intended to Protect Minorities and/or Property, But Failed
65. The federal minimum wage law
66. The Civil Rights Act of 1964
67. Redistricting laws
68. Laws against sagging pants
69. The Clinton omnibus crime bill
70. Laws establishing racial quotas for police
71. The Homestead Act
X. The War on Poverty, Part 3: Six Budgetary and Monetary Policies That Have Led to Economic Ruin
72. The Agricultural Adjustment Act
73. Laws establishing natural resource extraction permits
74. Property tax laws
75. Sales tax laws
76. Income tax laws
77. Laws providing for Unconditional Basic Income programs
XI. The War on Poverty, Part 4: Ten Laws That Intended to Make the Markets Free, But Rigged Them Instead
78. The Enumerated Power which authorizes Congress to coin and regulate money
79. Laws limiting usury
80. The Sherman Antitrust Act
81. Laws enabling the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
84. Laws authorizing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (F.D.I.C.)
85. Laws enabling the Securities and Exchange Commission (S.E.C.)
86. The Glass-Steagall Act
87. Laws authorizing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (C.F.P.B.)
Part 3: Other Topics (Including Twenty-Five Bad Laws, and a Conclusion)
XII. Five Failed Laws and Policies Related to Insurance
88. Insurance regulations
89. Home insurance regulations, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (H.U.D.)
90. Laws establishing public firefighting forces
91. Insurance regulations regarding emergency medical care
92. Insurance regulations regarding public school students' medications
XIII. Four Laws That Tried to Prevent Frivolous Lawsuits, But Go Too Far
97. Laws requiring fees and licenses to get married
98. The Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court decision
99. Legal limitations and prohibitions on abortion
100. The Violence Against Women Act (V.A.W.A.) of 1994
101. Legislative proposals to require women to register for the draft
XV. Eight Laws and Programs That Fail to Protect Children
102. Laws establishing minimum ages for consent to sex
103. Laws establishing minimum ages for consent to marriage
104. The federal law establishing a minimum age for consent to sex
105. Laws requiring registration as a sex offender
106. Laws establishing Child Protective Services -type agencies
107. The federal law which established the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
108. Policies against establishing laws requiring minimum ages for tattooing and piercing
109. Social Security Title IV-D (child support)
XVI. Three More Terrible Laws
110. The Enumerated Power which authorizes Congress to "fix the standard of weights and measurements"
111. Laws which regulate identity theft, in regards to banks' and credit agencies' customer information
112. Laws which regulate identity theft, in regards to immigrants' Social Security
XVII. Conclusion: New Laws Don't Work
IX. The War on Poverty, Part 2: Seven Laws That Intended to Protect Minorities and/or Property, But Failed
X. The War on Poverty, Part 3: Six Budgetary and Monetary Policies That Have Led to Economic Ruin
XI. The War on Poverty, Part 4: Ten Laws That Intended to Make the Markets Free, But Rigged Them Instead
Part 3: Other Topics (Including Twenty-Five Bad Laws, and a Conclusion)
XII. Five Failed Laws and Policies Related to Insurance
XIII. Four Laws That Tried to Prevent Frivolous Lawsuits, But Go Too Far
XIV. Five Laws That Tried to Protect the Rights or Safety of Women and Homosexuals, But Failed
XV. Eight Laws and Programs That Fail to Protect Children
XVI. Three More Terrible Laws
XVII. Conclusion: New Laws Don't Work
Second Table of Contents
Part 1: Introduction (Including Eighteen Bad Basic Laws of Government)
I. First Introduction: Government Failure
II. Second Introduction: Five Reasons Why We Shouldn't Trust the Government
III. Three Clauses That Enable Legislative Action, But Are Used to Excuse Government Overreach
1. The General Welfare Clause
2. The Necessary and Proper Clause
3. The interstate Commerce Clause
IV. Six Laws with Deceptive Names
4. The Citizens United decision
5. N.A.F.T.A. (The North American Free Trade Agreement)
6. The 2008 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (E.E.S.A)
7. The Protect Life Act
8. The Restoring Internet Freedom Act
9. The Defense of Marriage Act (D.O.M.A.)
2. The Necessary and Proper Clause
3. The interstate Commerce Clause
IV. Six Laws with Deceptive Names
4. The Citizens United decision
5. N.A.F.T.A. (The North American Free Trade Agreement)
6. The 2008 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (E.E.S.A)
7. The Protect Life Act
8. The Restoring Internet Freedom Act
9. The Defense of Marriage Act (D.O.M.A.)
10. Amendment I
11. Amendment II
12. The military draft
13. Amendment III
14. Amendment V
15. Amendment VIII
16. Amendment X
17. Amendment XIII
18. Amendment XIV
Part 2: The Wars on Terror, Drugs, and Poverty (Including Seventy Bad Laws)
19. Incarceration in jails and prisons
20. The death penalty
21. Life sentences
22. Gun-free zones
23. Laws requiring publication of gun owners' home addresses
24. Gun personalization requirements
25. Gun buyback programs
26. The War Powers Act of 1973
27. The state's monopoly on violence
28. The War on Terror
29. The 2001 A.U.M.F.
30. The U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act
31. Laws allowing warrantless searches and wiretaps
32. The Whistleblowers Protection Act
VII. The Wars on Drugs and Our Health: Twenty Laws That Failed to Achieve Affordable Health Care, Failed to Ensure the Legal Sale of Safe Drugs, or Failed to Protect the Environment
34. Federal negotiation of drug prices
35. Subsidization of pharmaceutical companies
36. The ban on denying emergency room treatment
37. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
38. Ecstasy prohibition
39. Heroin prohibition
40. Marijuana prohibition
41. Marijuana legalization
42. Alcohol prohibition
43. Corn subsidies
44. The criminalization of purchasing alcohol for minors
45. The criminalization of purchasing tobacco for minors
46. Laws authorizing the Food and Drug Administration (F.D.A.) to approve or deny pharmaceutical drugs
47. Laws authorizing the Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.)
48. Federal vehicle emissions standards
48. The Clean Air Act
50. The Clean Water Act
51. Bans on tree-line thinning
52. The "Roadless Rule"
53. Superfund sites
VIII. The War on Poverty, Part 1: Eleven Laws That Fail to Protect Workers' Rights and the Interests of Labor Unions
54. The law that established Labor Day
55. The Department of Labor and Commerce
56. The McCarran-Ferguson Act
57. The Wagner Act (National Labor Relations Act of 1935)
58. The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947
59. State Right-to-Work laws
60. Overtime pay laws
61. The Federal Reserve's "dual mandate" on interest rates and unemployment
62. Laws that established the U1, U2, U3, U4, and U5 unemployment measurements
63. The Employee Free Choice Act, and the Card Check bill
64. Disability and Medicaid provisions which limit people's ability to be employed and receive benefits at the same time
IX. The War on Poverty, Part 2: Seven Laws That Intended to Protect Minorities and/or Property, But Failed
65. The federal minimum wage law
66. The Civil Rights Act of 1964
67. Redistricting laws
68. Laws against sagging pants
69. The Clinton omnibus crime bill
70. Laws establishing racial quotas for police
71. The Homestead Act
X. The War on Poverty, Part 3: Six Budgetary and Monetary Policies That Have Led to Economic Ruin
72. The Agricultural Adjustment Act
73. Laws establishing natural resource extraction permits
74. Property tax laws
75. Sales tax laws
76. Income tax laws
77. Laws providing for Unconditional Basic Income programs
XI. The War on Poverty, Part 4: Ten Laws That Intended to Make the Markets Free, But Rigged Them Instead
78. The Enumerated Power which authorizes Congress to coin and regulate money
79. Laws limiting usury
80. The Sherman Antitrust Act
81. Laws enabling the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
82. Executive Order 6102 (which enabled gold confiscations)
83. The Emergency Banking Act of 193384. Laws authorizing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (F.D.I.C.)
85. Laws enabling the Securities and Exchange Commission (S.E.C.)
86. The Glass-Steagall Act
87. Laws authorizing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (C.F.P.B.)
Part 3: Other Topics (Including Twenty-Five Bad Laws, and a Conclusion)
XII. Five Failed Laws and Policies Related to Insurance
88. Insurance regulations
89. Home insurance regulations, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (H.U.D.)
90. Laws establishing public firefighting forces
91. Insurance regulations regarding emergency medical care
92. Insurance regulations regarding public school students' medications
XIII. Four Laws That Tried to Prevent Frivolous Lawsuits, But Go Too Far
93. Legal immunity for gun manufacturers
94. Legal immunity for the military and police
95. Laws enabling the granting of L.L.C. designation94. Legal immunity for the military and police
96. Statutes of limitations on reporting rape, sexual assault, sexual abuse, and sexual harassment
XIV. Five Laws That Tried to Protect the Rights or Safety of Women and Homosexuals, But Failed97. Laws requiring fees and licenses to get married
98. The Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court decision
99. Legal limitations and prohibitions on abortion
100. The Violence Against Women Act (V.A.W.A.) of 1994
101. Legislative proposals to require women to register for the draft
XV. Eight Laws and Programs That Fail to Protect Children
102. Laws establishing minimum ages for consent to sex
103. Laws establishing minimum ages for consent to marriage
104. The federal law establishing a minimum age for consent to sex
105. Laws requiring registration as a sex offender
106. Laws establishing Child Protective Services -type agencies
107. The federal law which established the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
108. Policies against establishing laws requiring minimum ages for tattooing and piercing
109. Social Security Title IV-D (child support)
XVI. Three More Terrible Laws
110. The Enumerated Power which authorizes Congress to "fix the standard of weights and measurements"
111. Laws which regulate identity theft, in regards to banks' and credit agencies' customer information
112. Laws which regulate identity theft, in regards to immigrants' Social Security
XVII. Conclusion: New Laws Don't Work
Content
Part 1: Introduction (Including Seventeen Bad Basic Laws of Government)
I.
First Introduction: Government Failure
Can
you name a law that has ever worked? A law that has worked the way it
was intended?
In
our society, we're used to talking about market failures; high
prices, high profits, price manipulation, monopolies, etc..
But I submit that we're not talking enough about government
failures.
Things like regulatory capture, and the erection of corporate
privilege. Those things are every bit as important to talk about as
market failures, because they cause
most
of those market failures in the first place (giving businesses power
by handing them taxpayer money and/or writing special privileges for
them into the law).
In
this essay, I will name ninety-five laws (or types of laws) in the
United States – most of them federal laws – and explain how they
achieve the exact opposite of their desired or intended effect. In
explaining this, I will defend the idea that most
attempts by the voting American public, to secure some equal liberty
or new positive right – in many
different
policy arenas – have historically resulted in surrendering
more decision-making power to the government regarding
those policy issues, instead of resulting in more freedom or equality
for the people.
I will focus on two basic sets of policy areas:
1) general constitutional powers which enable or limit government;
and
2) the failures of the “War on Terror”, the “War on Drugs”,
and the “War on Poverty”.
In discussing the failures of those “wars”, I will explain how
putting too much trust in the government to solve problems, has led
to disastrous declines in the quality of policy regarding the
military, policing, health care, legal and illegal drugs, and various
economic issues pertaining to relations between workers and employers
(and the government).
And all of these issues are interrelated, I might add. Our police
and military enforce not only the “War on Terror”, but they also
defend (or decline to defend) ourselves and our property, enforce the
“War on Drugs” and the “War on Poverty”, they enforce the
financial and business and labor regulations.
Whether it is constitutional that those agents enforce those laws –
that is, whether the enforcement of these laws, is itself “legal”
in the first place – should be considered an issue of extreme
importance. So should the issues of whether the police, or other
government officials, publicly-protected companies, should do what
they're told; as well as the matter of whether the policy works in
the first place; and, at that, works they way it was intended to
work.
[Note: The fact that I have included a specific law, or types of law, below, should not necessarily be construed to mean that I believe that such laws, or types of laws, could never work, nor that I believe they do never work. In many cases, I do doubt whether such laws could ever work; but in some of the cases listed below, I am merely criticizing the manner in which those laws have been historically implemented, and saying that the laws did not work as they were intended to work.]
II.
Second Introduction: Five Reasons Why We Shouldn't Trust the
Government
There is a popular libertarian saying whose author is unknown. It
was popularized by Barry Goldwater, often mistakenly attributed to
Thomas Jefferson, and began circulating in 1950s American newspapers.
It goes like this: “A government that is big enough to give you
everything you want, is big enough to take it all away.” Whomever
said it, it certainly seems true.
We should not trust the government to solve our problems, for five
main reasons; because of:
1)
the government's power to regulate or not
regulate – corporations (and to break up, or not break up,
monopolies);
2)
the government's power to create
monopolies
and to create
corporations;
3) the corruptibility of the licensing and permit systems;
4)
the moral hazard involved in trusting the government and
only government
to solve our problems; and
5) regulatory capture (the process whereby an industry comes to be
“regulated” by the same people who work in that industry).
If
we trust the government to regulate corrupt companies, and tax owners
who profit off of the public dime, then the government will do
exactly that. I'm not doubting the government's ability, nor its
will, to do those things. But shouldn't corrupt C.E.O.s, and people
who embezzle taxpayer money, go to jail,
instead of just having their taxes raised, and new “restraints”
placed on them?
But
the issue isn't just that we're not jailing criminals if they happen
to be wealthy; it's also
that the government usually incentivizes
wealthy criminals to commit their crimes. It does this through giving
them special legal and financial protections, and devoting more money
and police resources towards protecting the rich and their
investments than the poor and their homes.
Why
should we trust the government to break up or regulate companies, or
tax them adequately, or decline to abuse their privileges? For two
simple reasons: 1) Government cannot be trusted to regulate nor
break-up monopolies, because government (that is, state
government) is
a monopoly. 2) Why would government want to limit the power of
corporations, when it's the government that's creating
all of these corporations in the first place?
Another
endemic problem with our government is political; the manner in which
large companies manage to secure taxpayer money and privileges for
themselves, having asked for those things as
a consolation for being taxed and regulated.
Those companies and their lobbyists make it impossible to pass
meaningful economic reforms that help the poor, because wealthy
companies get away with insisting to legislators that all laws
designed to help the poor, help them less
than they help the rich.
For all of these reasons, and the following, trusting government is
a terrible idea, and here are ninety-two reasons why.
III. Three Clauses That Enable Legislative Action, But Are Used to Excuse Government Overreach
The
first three laws I will discuss, enable government but intend to
severely limit it. They do the opposite of what they intend to do,
because their language is abused by legislators, so as to excuse more
government overreach and more distortion of the meaning of the law,
instead of abiding by the limitation originally intended.
These three laws are the General Welfare Clause, the Necessary and
Proper Clause, and the Interstate Commerce Clause.
1. The General Welfare Clause.
The General Welfare Clause is a part
of the Taxing and Spending Clause (found in Article I, Section 8,
Clause 1 of the U.S. Constitution). It is the first clause of the
“Enumerated Powers”; the eighteen specifically authorized powers
of Congress.
The General Welfare Clause empowers Congress to “lay and collect
Taxes, Duties, Imposts, and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for
the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all
Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United
States;”.
The General Welfare Clause does the opposite of what
it intends to do, because the meanings of “general” and “welfare”
in “General Welfare” Clause are being distorted.
“General” means that duties, imposts, and excise taxes shall be
uniform throughout the country. Basically, it means that the burden
of taxation must be equal (at least in regards to those types of
taxes). However, even if the burden of income taxation fell on states
equally (which it doesn't), there is no proof that income taxation is
good policy even when it can be done constitutionally.
Additionally, “welfare” meant “well-being” when the
Constitution was written, so it is arguable as to whether something
like a “Department of Health, Education, and Welfare”, or modern
welfare programs, are permissible under this clause of the
Constitution.
Thus,
distortion of the terms “general” and “welfare” has permitted
an uneven income tax burden
across the states, in order to spend that money on - not the general
welfare
(which really just means the equal benefit of all people across the
country), but – the vague
or specific
welfare. Any and every type of spending is allowed, to benefit any
and every particular social safety net project or corporate welfare
giveaway. And so, with no rationale as to why we're spending this
money on these particular people and causes, we justify taxing
people
with no rationale as to whether we're taxing them equally.
The
General Welfare Clause enables government overreach, although its
intent was to limit government. But I say “its
intent”;
the law
doesn't have any intent. I mean to refer to the intent of the
legislators who
wrote it.
And they, of course, worked for the government. We should expect no
less, for as Thrasymachus explained, justice always serves “the
advantage of the stronger”. This is to say that any government we
can elect, will always rule in its own benefit; in favor of
incumbents, and in favor of continuing the same style and structure
of government.
The General Welfare Clause would better be called the “Specific
Welfare Clause”, the “Vague Welfare Clause”, or the “General
Harm Clause”.
2. The Necessary and Proper Clause
The final clause in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, empowers the Congress “To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States...”.
The final clause in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, empowers the Congress “To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States...”.
The
Necessary and Proper Clause is often used to excuse doing whatever
people think
is necessary and proper for the government to do. But the term, as
used in the Constitution, does not mean that at all. What is
“necessary and proper” here, is not
for the government to do whatever it wants, nor whatever the people
wants; the intent here is to limit
government's ability to do anything
other than what
is necessary and proper to execute “the foregoing Powers”.
And what are “the foregoing Powers”? The Enumerated Powers. The
preceding seventeen powers of Congress which are named before that
sentence in the Constitution. The powers to create military and
diplomatic policy, and monetary and treasury policy, and to punish
piracy and regulate slavery, protect scientific discoveries,
designate post roads, and little else.
Congress was never intended to have the authority to do anything
other than the seventeen things listed in Article I, Section 8, and
the eighteenth congressional power enables Congress to do what is
necessary to do those other seventeen things, and nothing else.
The Necessary and Proper Clause would better be called the
“Unnecessary and Improper Clause”, or the “Do What You Feel
Clause”.
3. The Interstate Commerce Clause
The third clause in Article I, Section 8, empowers the Congress “To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.”
The third clause in Article I, Section 8, empowers the Congress “To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes.”
Today,
this clause is used to justify regulating not only business activity
which substantially affects interstate commerce, but also anything
that could remotely be described as economic activity,
which could theoretically
be construed as subtly affecting interstate commerce in any small
way.
The
power to regulate interstate Commerce Clause is not even used; much
less as intended. The clause intended to restrict economic regulation
to what is necessary to prevent states from passing preferential laws
that unduly favor the domestic commerce occurring within those
states, over
commerce
from other states. Today, states are allowed to propose laws like
this – for example, a law proposed in Minnesota that would have
imposed a tax on craft beers from out-of-state - without anyone
noticing that they violate the interstate Commerce Clause.
The
Commerce Clause thus enables Congress to regulate any and all
economic activity, and enables states to consider laws that violate
the Constitution and destroy the fairness of the American free trade
zone, when the clause originally intended to strictly limit the power
of the federal government to regulate interstate commerce, and to
limit the power of the state
governments to pass laws that protect local state business interests
over the interests of other states.
The interstate Commerce Clause would more appropriately be called
the “Let the States Unfairly Protect Their Own Companies Clause” or the "Let the Federal Government Regulate Whatever it Wants Clause".
IV. Six Laws with Deceptive Names
There are many laws in America – the P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act and the Patient Protection Affordable Care Act, for example (which I'll get to later) – which have deceptive names. These deceptive names reveal precisely how the law does the opposite of what it states it is trying to do.
4. Citizens United
The Citizens
United v.
Federal Election Commission
Supreme Court decision allows unlimited campaign donations; on the
basis of the idea that donations to political campaigns are a form of
free expression which is protected by the First Amendment to the
Constitution. The ruling has divided the country.
“Citizens United” would
better be called “Citizens Divided”.
5. N.A.F.T.A. (The North
American Free Trade Agreement)
The 1993/1994 North American
Free Trade Agreement was a multilateral trade compact (or treaty)
between several national governments. Its intention was to promote
free trade, but it only worked
towards a
zero-tariff scenario and real free trade.
Furthermore, N.A.F.T.A. went
backwards on
protecting property, the environment, and the sovereignty of foreign
countries. It did this by allowing the Mexican Constitution to be
amended so as to allow the exploitation of native land in Mexico by
international property developers (among other negative consequences
of the deal).
Moreover, trade deals can be
negotiated without
governments, and they are probably even best
negotiated without governments. Thus, N.A.F.T.A. achieved the
opposite of free trade; it was a government-managed trade deal.
Some criticize N.A.F.T.A. for
creating a “North American free trade zone” that threatens to
flood America with cheap products, cheap labor, or both. But that is
to criticize the deal for making trade “too
free”. I criticize
it because it makes trade too unfree.
The
North American Free Trade Agreement would more appropriately be
called “the North American Unfree
Trade Agreement” or the “Make North America Submit Economically
to the United States Agreement”.
6. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act
The 2008 Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act (E.E.S.A) was a congressional bailout measure
intended to mitigate the damage of the 2007-08 financial crisis.
While its stated intention was to “stabilize the economy”, what
it actually did was authorize the Secretary of the Treasury to buy up
to $700 billion in troubled assets.
The E.E.S.A. was just the
first in a series of bailouts, which affected nine major companies.
Financial analysts have argued as to whether the total cost of the
bailouts and restructuring ended up amounting to $10, $12, or even
$29.6 trillion
dollars, as opposed
to the initial $700 billion troubled asset purchase authorization
which made the Troubled Asset Relief Program “necessary” to
create.
Thus, the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act would better be called the “Emergency Economic
Destabilization Act”,
because it was a risky piece of legislation that put the economy in
further peril.
7. The Protect Life Act
The Protect Life Act, which
was passed by Congress in 2011 but not signed into law, would have
prohibited Obamacare funding from being spent on abortion. Its
express purpose would have been to protect the life of the unborn
fetus.
However, that proposed law
also would have made it legal for hospitals to deny abortions to
pregnant women even
if they have life-threatening conditions.
Thus, the Protect Life Act
would more appropriately be called the “Protect Fetus' Lives Only
Act” or the “Let Women Die in Childbirth Act”.
8.
The Restoring Internet Freedom Act
The
Restoring Internet Freedom Act, enacted in 2018, destroys
the freedom of the internet - its open-source, collaborative commons,
peer-to-peer nature - because it prohibits the F.C.C. (Federal
Communication Corporation) from classifying I.S.P.s (internet service
providers) as common carriers. The law also prohibits the F.C.C. from
“imposing certain regulations on providers of such service”.
Thus,
the Restoring Internet Freedom Act, would more appropriately be
called “the Destroying Internet Freedom Act”.
9.
The Defense of Marriage Act (D.O.M.A.)
The
Defense of Marriage Act, which was federal law from 1996 to 2015,
prohibited married same-sex couples from collecting federal benefits.
Thus,
the Defense of Marriage Act defended solely
the marriages of heterosexuals,
in treating same-sex couples in a discriminatory manner. So it
doesn't defend marriages; if it did, then it would defend all
marriages (between
consenting adults), and it would want there to be more marriages. But
the people who wrote and approved D.O.M.A. didn't want that.
That's
why the Defense of Marriage Act would better be termed the “Defend
Straight Marriages Only Act”, the “Destruction of Marriage Act”,
the “Preferential Treatment for Straight Couples Act”, or the
“Offend Gay Marriages Act”.
[Explanations for examples of government failure #10-#110 will appear on this
page at a later date.]
Written
on July 27th,
2019
Based
on Notes Taken in June and July 2019
Written
for the Bughouse Square Debates, held in Chicago, Illinois on July
27th,
2019
and delivered in part at the debates
Edited on August 13th, 2019
and delivered in part at the debates
Edited on August 13th, 2019
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