Showing posts with label Right to Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Right to Work. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Janus Decision Reveals Two-Faced Nature of Collective Bargaining Law

The case of Janus v. A.F.S.C.M.E. Council 31 could not possibly have been named with any more poetic irony than it was. That's because Janus reveals the two-faced nature of federal labor laws, and the two-faced nature of the manner in which Democrats and Republicans talk about those laws.
The Supreme Court ruled 5-to-4 in favor of the plaintiff, Illinois state employee Mark Janus, against the defendant, the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31. The court's decision ends compulsory "fair share" fees for public sector workers, meaning that a government employee no longer has to pay dues to the union which is obligated to represent them, if that employee does not wish to be a member of that union.
Critics of the decision argue that it turns the whole set of people on government payroll into an effective "Right to Work" system. Right to Work laws, now enforced in 28 states, prohibit "union shop" and "closed shop" union security agreements; contracts between unions and management which, respectively, require employees to join a union (union shop) or the union (closed shop).
Critics also suggest that Right to Work laws, and the Janus decision, enable "free riders" to take advantage of being represented by unions, without having to pay anything. But what critics of Janus and Right to Work laws miss, however, is that, since the Wagner Act (the National Labor Relations Act of 1935), three quarters of the states have begun to allow public sector unions to engage in collective bargaining, emulating the Wagner Act (which pertains to employees in the private sector).

The Wagner Act required all employees in a private sector workplace (or bargaining unit) to be represented by the union receiving the majority vote in a union election, in all unions affiliated with the National Labor Relations Board (which the Wagner Act created).
So 80-year-old federal labor law - the Wagner Act / N.L.R.A. of 1935, signed into law by F.D.R., a Democrat - is the reason that there are free-riding workers who receive representation but don't pay for what they receive.
Remember, "free riders" are workers whom do not consent to be represented by "their union" (which they don't pay for). Most "free riding" workers don't want to pay for those union benefits; either because they don't feel that those benefits are adequate or otherwise appropriate, or because they don't want to settle for those benefits or settle for the union in charge.
These are people who might even want to form their own union. However, the union in charge, if affiliated with the N.L.R.B., would probably appeal to the N.L.R.B., and sue the smaller union, seeking to put it out of business for "cutting in on their action" by competing against the monopoly wielded by the union which won the legal right to represent workers through winning a union election.
The notion that government is a business - and an ordinary actor that can behave anywhere nearly as fairly as an enterprise that can actually go out of business - is contributing and the misguided idea that public and private sector union policy ought to look more or less the same. It is ironic that - after progressive government entered labor policy in order to counteract the power of monopolies, bust the trusts, and ensure competition - government is now enabling the anti-competitive and monopolistic behavior of unions. But it should not come as unexpected.
The lack of a clear delineation in the law between private property and enterprises offering public accommodations, and the number of forms of public assistance to ostensibly private enterprise, only serve to further complicate this blurring of public sector collective bargaining policy together with private sector policy.

If the Janus decision seems wise, then, in my opinion, it is only because it reveals the hypocrisy of the components of the law which serves as the underlying assumption upon which the foundation of misguided labor law rests.
This is to say that it reveals the hypocrisy of the "majority unionism" (unionism by majority vote) and "compulsory unionism" (extension of union representation through legal decree) through which the Wagner Act created the problem at hand; namely, the free rider problem, which Right to Work laws and the Janus decision aim to solve, but which merely serve as bandages upon the problem.
But to say that Right to Work laws and the Janus decision serve as "bandages" is an insult to bandages; they actually create new problems on top of the old ones, adding insult to injury. Right to Work laws create new problems which weren't there before, by limiting the right of unions and businesses to freely engage in contract, and have their contracts honored by the government. Now, in the aftermath the Janus decision, the Supreme Court has taken credit for taking action, when in reality it has merely refused to redress an already existing problem; that non-consenting private sector employees in most states receive union representation which they don't think benefits them.
And that will continue to be a contentious issue, whether employees represented by a union are paying for those benefits or not.



Written on June 27th and 28th, 2018
Published on June 28th, 2018




Click the following link to read an speech for the 2018 Bughouse Debates,
which was based on this article:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2018/07/janus-decision-reveals-two-faced-nature.html

Monday, October 30, 2017

20 Goals for Labortarians: Crafting a Libertarian Policy on Unions

1. Craft a free labor policy.
2. Less government, more unions.
3. End Right to Work laws.
4. Liberalize professional licensing.
5. Fix the free rider problem.
6. Free movement and integrated markets.
7. End unions' monopolies on negotiation.
8. Protect concerted activity.
9. Continue to require bargaining.
10. Ensure the right to strike.
11. Legalize illegal union activities.
12. Make full boycott possible.
13. Keep divestment legal.
14. Unionize all walks of life.
15. Establish free union elections.
16. Free-market anti-capitalism.
17. End slavery, domination, and dominion.
18. Counter the rhetoric of self-ownership.
19. Free association and non-discrimination.
20. Promote acceptance and tolerance.



          1. CRAFT A FREE LABOR POLICY: Advance a labor policy which celebrates the contributions that the organized labor movement has made to advancing human liberty - and which is in keeping with the Libertarian Party platform, strict-constructionist and originalist interpretations of the Constitution, and frameworks to ensure free and fair markets - by consistently supporting voluntary collective bargaining activities over compulsion, hierarchy, and state interference in the affairs of organized labor.

          2. LESS GOVERNMENT, MORE UNIONS: Retain the portion of the 1935 National Labor Relations Act (N.L.R.A. / Wagner Act) which promotes the practice and procedure of collective bargaining, but also promote the radical privatization of government services wherever possible and prudent, and demand that most or all necessary government activities be performed by non-state actors. Increase overall union membership in the United States.

          3. END RIGHT TO WORK LAWS: Support the freedom of unions to exercise their right to become party to contracts with enterprises, by opposing efforts to pass Right to Work laws and amendments, in all jurisdictions and at all levels of government. Call on state governors to nullify and repeal such laws, and state and federal courts to rule them unconstitutional, due to their prohibition of union-shop and closed-shop arrangements, union security agreements which are perfectly free and voluntary (although they may have some undesirable effects). Repeal the portion of the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act which prohibits closed-shop union security agreements.

          4. LIBERALIZE PROFESSIONAL LICENSING: Make Right to Work laws unnecessary, by demanding an alternative method to preventing the domination of professions within given states by the set of unionized professionals already employed within them. Demand the liberalization of professional licensing laws, in order to accommodate independent contractors and those seeking to form unions.

          5. FIX THE FREE RIDER PROBLEM: Ensure that workers everywhere are free to “not consent and refuse the benefits” of union negotiation. Leave all employees free to refuse to pay dues to unions, but only on the condition that the employee refuse all benefits of union negotiation which he can feasibly refuse (i.e., not physical workplace safety and health conditions). Consider liability waivers as a possible solution to the safety and health free-rider problems.

          6. FREE MOVEMENT & INTEGRATED MARKETS: Fight globalism and ultranationalism, while supporting globalization, integration and interconnectedness of markets, and the free movement of labor and capital (including the freedom of locomotion for travelers and workers alike). Fight to liberalize immigration laws; end immigration quotas; lower barriers to trade; decrease tariffs, duties, and imposts; and oppose efforts of established unions to lobby for legal measures that unfairly protect or favor domestic labor. Use education to combat the stigmatization of legal and undocumented immigration.

          7. END UNIONS' MONOPOLIES ON NEGOTIATION: End compulsory unionism in the private sector, and end the rights of unions to monopolize the representation of workers in negotiation with management. Repeal the section of the Wagner Act which mandates that there is to be one exclusive bargaining representative for a unit of employees. Spread awareness of, and normalize, the practices of members-only collective bargaining, and dual and minority unionism (the presence of two or more active unions in a single workplace). Increase the diversity of the types of union security agreements which are practiced in the United States.

          8. PROTECT CONCERTED ACTIVITY: Retain the Wagner Act's provisions that require the federal government to protect the right of union and non-union employees to engage in concerted activity, and retain the protection for discussing wages. Protect these rights, as well as the right to form a union, in all jurisdictions, and at all levels of government.

          9. CONTINUE TO REQUIRE BARGAINING: Retain the Wagner Act's requirement that employers must negotiate with employees, on the grounds that a fair market is not possible unless the buyer and seller of labor have equal say in determining the price at which the labor is to be sold.

          10. ENSURE THE RIGHT TO STRIKE: Abolish the National Labor Relations Board, and repeal the provision of the Taft-Hartley Act which prohibits wildcat strikes. No union should have to request permission from a government bureau in order to go on strike, nor should any segment of a workplace or work force be denied the right to strike without the approval of a union leader.

          11. LEGALIZE ILLEGAL UNION ACTIVITIES: Demand the legalization of prohibited union activities wherever they could be engaged in voluntarily. Repeal the portions of the Taft-Hartley Act which prohibit secondary strikes, secondary boycotts, secondary and mass picketing, jurisdictional strikes, and monetary donations from unions to federal political campaigns.

          12. MAKE FULL BOYCOTT POSSIBLE: Fight for the full right of workers and taxpayers to engage in full boycott of enterprises and unions with which they do not wish to associate. Allow taxpayers to withhold their taxes from governments that would spend it to enrich their favored business cronies and favored unions. Call for tax strikes, which demand either the abolition of the entire corporate welfare state, or that individual citizens be free to decide which programs they will pay for and which ones they will not.

          13. KEEP DIVESTMENT LEGAL: In addition to supporting the full rights to engage in strikes and boycotts, fight for the right to engage in divestment campaigns. Encourage enterprises to end their membership in lobbying agencies that disguise themselves as chambers of commerce, and to instead join independent business alliances that promote fair treatment for workers. Keep divestment legal, whether against enterprises, unions, or even governments.

          14. UNIONIZE ALL WALKS OF LIFE: Fight for the rights of freelancers, independent contractors, free agents, unemployed people, welfare recipients, homeless people, ex-convicts, non-violent black market laborers, tenants, open-source workers and peer-to-peer process contributors, and people of all professions. to form unions. Additionally, to demand negotiation with their employers, and to resist state control, exploitation, hierarchy, and bossism.

          15. ESTABLISH FREE UNION ELECTIONS: Ensure that union members may vote in union elections, and that non-dues-paying members and dues-paying members alike are free to abstain from voting. Advocate for the freedom of union members to hold elections featuring voter privity, with results visible and subject to review by all members of the union(s) and workplace(s) involved.

          16. FREE-MARKET ANTI-CAPITALISM: Reject the Libertarian Party's endorsement of private property as a core principle, and oppose any attempts to have the party list “capitalism” or “fiscal conservatism” among its guiding economic principles, Promote the idea that markets must be completely immune from price distortions and undue limitations and inhibitions on markets (which are caused by the state and its cronies, their hoarding, and their participation in the capitalist mode of production), in order to be both fair and truly free. Combat untrue anti-socialist and anti-communist propaganda, and ignorance about left-wing economics, through education and peaceful civil discourse. Oppose misinterpretation of the Non-Aggression Principle that excuses or ignores intimidation, exploitation, and economic pressures that coerce people and make their decisions limited and effectively involuntary. Oppose cutthroat competition, monopolistic competition, and competition to lower prices that neglects the right of workers to receive sufficient compensation for their effort.

          17. END SLAVERY, DOMINATION, & DOMINION: Oppose the extension of markets to the realms of “living capital”; i.e., human labor and work, and other living things. Empower consumers to resist the commodification of labor, man, and nature; calling for such market activities to cease. Abolish the markets for exclusively held landed property, the product of human labor, sex work under economic pressure and exploitation, toxic chemicals and poisons that kill when used properly, and perhaps the markets for human organs and endangered animal species. Support the rights of human beings, living or dead, to resist being owned, kept, domesticated, overworked, denied the right to negotiate what amounts to the full product of their labor, and required, pressured, or threatened into performing labors and actions against their will.

          18. COUNTER THE RHETORIC OF SELF-OWNERSHIP: Oppose the characterization of liberty as “self-ownership”, in order to resist the perception of the human body and its efforts as things – tangible pieces of property - which can or should be owned, which gives the impression of tangibility, suggesting that the body can or should be owned.

         19. FREE ASSOCIATION & NON-DISCRIMINATION: Oppose discrimination and segregation in the public sector, and oppose discriminatory behavior in all ostensibly private firms which receive any forms of taxpayer funded subsidies and/or services, and/or are directly involved in interstate commerce. In the social sphere, and on residential properties, support the full freedom of, to, and from association.

          20. PROMOTE ACCEPTANCE & TOLERANCE: Fight reactionaryism, religiously motivated bigotry, anti-Semitism, Judeophobia, Islamophobia, chauvinism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, classism, ageism, ableism, lookism, Social Darwinism, cultural monism and assimilationism, and predjuice against people of every race, color, and creed. Use education to combat ignorance of sociology, human needs, intersectionality theory, institutional privileges, commonly agreed upon parental responsibilities, the stigmatization of mental disorders (especially those that keep people from working), and the stigmatization of homelessness, poverty, and welfare receipt, especially in Libertarian circles.



Written on October 30th, 2017

Friday, December 11, 2015

Why I Didn't Vote in the 2012 Scott Walker Recall Election


Originally Written on May 4th and 24th, 2012
Edited and Expanded on December 11th, 2015


            The following was written in response to a question about whether I would have a reaction to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel’s endorsement of Scott Walker in the 2012 Wisconsin gubernatorial recall election, in which Walker faced a rematch of the 2010 election. Walker became the Governor of Wisconsin that year, defeating Democratic challenger Tom Barrett, the mayor of Milwaukee.

            For the majority of the period during which Scott Walker said that he had no plans to turn Wisconsin into a Right-to-Work state, I took the opposite position, but not just out of disagreement with Walker. This put my overall labor policy to the fiscal right of Walker’s.
But later, after discovering, and coming to agree with, Friedrich Hayek’s position on the issue, I changed my position on Right-to-Work laws, because I felt that they impose conditions upon what kinds of contracts people and businesses are allowed to make, and inhibit the obligation of contracts. I felt that to impose these kinds of restrictions upon the people, businesses, and unions of an entire state, is too egregious an incursion into popular liberties.
However, in May 2012, Walker came out in support of Right-to-Work laws, so my reversal on the issue took place at about the same time as Walker’s reversal. My position opposing Right-to-Work makes my overall political positions slightly more palatable to the left.

As a social liberal and an opponent of corporate welfare and personal political corruption, I understand the unpopularity of defending or making excuses for Scott Walker on small government and fiscally conservative grounds.
In general, I see the need for fiscal austerity, and for cuts in the size and scope of government, as well as cuts in government payroll, public services, and taxes. While some solutions to fiscal irresponsibility such as cutting taxes or refraining from implementing federal block-grants of funds to the states, can be seen as putting the cart before the horse, I see this need because I feel that cuts in government services can lead to growth in the size, number, and variety of non-governmental organizations which provide similar services, and can help to avoid the risk of bureaucratic overhead which so often accompanies over-centralized and over-bureaucratized management.
 I feel that Wisconsin’s budget crisis is more the fault of the federal government – in particular, the Federal Reserve - than it is the fault of Governor Walker. I am more likely to support austerity when the people decide it’s the appropriate time, not when governors have allowed the federal government to bankrupt state and local governments. It is regrettable that it has taken a divisive governor to advocate for the financial mindset from which the state could have begun to benefit several years ago.
Moreover, it is a pity that Scott Walker has become one of the most prominent poster-boys of austerity in America, when those in Congress and at the Federal Reserve are much more responsible for the mess we are in, than Scott Walker or Chris Christie, being that those in the federal government have spearheaded the bankruptcy of state and local governments, for the benefit of a select group of European bankers and few others.

Walker bore the brunt of criticism that his union-rights-assaulting Budget Repair Bill can only justify itself upon the notion that it would have been inappropriate to accept federal funding for high-speed rail in Wisconsin and its neighboring states.
Indeed, it was Arthur Louis Kohl-Riggs, the young man from Madison who ran against Scott Walker for the Republican nomination in the 2012 recall effort, who said something to the effect of “any reasonable governor would have accepted that federal high-speed rail money” (it was these funds which are said to have created the hole in the state’s budget).
I disagree, and I commend Walker for rejecting it, because I believe that high-speed transportation infrastructure that almost exclusively benefits Midwesterners, does not promote the general welfare of all Americans. I feel that unanimous “general welfare” should be the necessary condition for federal spending.
If Wisconsinites should not be expected to help pay for a bridge in Alaska, why should Alaskans be expected to help pay for high-speed transit infrastructure in Wisconsin? They shouldn’t. Federal funding for transportation infrastructure is fertile ground for mismanagement, over-bureaucratization, personal political corruption, market distortions, and civic discrimination in favor of regional special interests. For Wisconsin or any other state to use federal funds for such regional projects would only serve to excuse pork projects in other parts of the country; to do so would further threaten federal budget stability.
Being that the State of Wisconsin’s involvement in the financial crisis was brought about through over-dependency of the various regional banks on the Federal Reserve, continued dependence on federal funding is no way out of this mess.

Additionally, I believe that the private sector would do a more efficient and responsible job of constructing transportation infrastructure than the government would, and that, if handled by the private sector, there would be less of a chance that those funds would have been diverted to other spending projects, and of ending up in the pockets of politicians and lobbyists. Some might respond to this by saying that the money would end up in the hands of C.E.O.s and the like, and we all know how much Walker likes giving tax breaks to businesses and the wealthy.
Walker and I do not share the same economic nor political philosophy. Although Walker took some steps protecting Wisconsinites from the aforementioned dangers, he failed to take additional steps promoting the political and fiscal independence and sovereignty of the people, the communities, and the state. Walker is a corporatist technocrat who, to some extent, supports states’ rights. I, on the other hand, favor the rights of local communities, and individual liberties.
In contrast to Walker’s strategy of giving tax breaks to the wealthy, I have favored taxing the creation of income disparity. But I also support introducing reforms to foster competition in governance, in order to allow people to choose fair and neutral parties to arbitrate the disputes which they cannot resolve by themselves. This would curb the power of state governments to intervene in such disputes uninvited, and it would allow people to create contracts between themselves, rather than being burdened by legislation which limits their rights to do so.

In my opinion, Walker is not polarizing because he is farther to the right than many Wisconsinites are used to, or would care to tolerate; he is polarizing because - as with any politician, especially a governor or a president – it’s Walker’s way or the highway. But that is the same way things will be if Tom Barrett wins the governor’s seat.
Nobody will be satisfied – and my interpretation of the General Welfare Clause will never be fulfilled – as long as people are not free to vote “none of the above” in every election, with “none” being taken as the final result of that election, without a special election having to take place later. Nobody will be satisfied as long as people cannot choose to be governed by any agency other than the federal government, and the state and local governments, which function as little more than federal subsidiaries.
Nobody will be satisfied as long as governments are not permitted to compete across state borders, which – given that all government-administered distribution of goods and services is inherently commercial in nature – flies in the face of a rational revisitation of the strict-constructionist interpretation of the Interstate Commerce Clause.
Additionally, the only politician who will not be a polarizing influence, is a candidate who lets people refrain from associating politically with people whose ideologies are nearly, or completely, irreconcilable with their own.

In these disastrous economic times, during which - the data I have encountered would seem to indicate – the federal government is approximately four decades’ worth of annual revenue in debt, it comes as no surprise that we are experiencing a very divisive atmosphere in regards to the intersection of finance and civics.
            But the staunch big-government supporters and the staunch small-government supporters have forgotten that it is their mutual opposition to the center’s corruption and its belligerence on foreign policy which typically unites them, when indeed they are united, however temporarily and tentatively. One can only wonder how the various extremist civic-financial factions would work out their differences once the expensive specter of the military-industrial complex were removed from the equation.

Polarizing, extremist politicians are in-style this political season. While figures like Scott Walker, Paul Ryan, and John Boehner are polarizing, they are not extremists. Many Americans have come to see the benefits of the unity of extremists of both sides, particularly in regards to foreign policy, civil liberties, and campaign reform (I’m speaking of the “libertarian-progressive alliance” between the likes of Ron Paul and Ralph Nader). It is these so-called extremists who escape the false dichotomy of bipartisanship, and which venture into the yet-untreaded realm of non-partisanship and “trans-partisanship”. The most prominent so-called extremists – people like Ron Paul and Gary Johnson – are somehow not polarizing; Paul, who has said that there is too much partisanship in Washington, D.C., has been described as “trans-partisan”.
I feel that all this demonstrates that what we need is not “compromise, not capitulation” (as Democratic congressman Mark Pocan put it), but “consensus, not compromise”. This premise, and the premise of “principles over pragmatism”, would help satisfy the constitutional requirement that federal spending and legislation benefit the general welfare, ensuring that people need not compromise-away their principles and property to get the government services they need.

Fiscal sanity – although not the Scott Walker style soft money and tax breaks for businesses and the wealthy – helps the pocketbooks of all Americans. A humble foreign policy with a strong national defense – not George W. Bush style interventionist military belligerence – makes all Americans safer.
It benefits all Americans to demonstrate that laissez-faire capitalism is not irreconcilable with the destruction of artificial hierarchies, and that it is irreconcilable with evils like coercive expropriation (i.e., legitimized theft by government), and an expensive warfare state which is financed and perpetuated through its own power to compel persons to come to it exclusively for protection and justice.
The dual-federalist solution - and the validity of the idea behind Reagan’s “vote with your feet” catch-all solution - notwithstanding, the minuscule degrees of sovereignty possessed by the state and local governments are no viable competition against this Leviathan monopoly government, as they have largely surrendered their authorities and responsibilities in exchange for monetary favors (such as would have been the case with Wisconsin and the federal high-speed rail money), becoming all but vertically-integrated subsidiaries of the oligopolistic corporate United States federal Government.
The only way to undermine this artificial near-oligopoly government is to fulfill the meaning of our nation’s creed; that “all men are created equal, and endowed… with certain inalienable rights”; that the only legitimate government gets its authority through consensual delegation by the governed, who originally possess those authorities. Additionally, that all government spending should serve the welfare of all partners and parties to political associations, unless such parties agree that democratic reform is worth its risks, and agree to bind themselves to its decision-making processes, but revocably, and of their own volition.

While I am a market-anarchist, I am also a republican, but only in that republicanism is a means to an end. I respect so-called extremists from both ends of the economic spectrum, because they have goals, and are true to their ideologies. The only things that the often polarizing, non- “extremist”, “pragmatic” Democrats and Republicans, have to offer us, are an all-or-nothing, “my way or the highway” mindset, and a political culture in which about 49% of the people are dissatisfied and envious of those whom are better represented.
            In 1980, Scott Walker benefactor David Koch (of the infamous Koch brothers) was the Libertarian Party’s candidate for vice president. Then, libertarians knew he wasn’t one of them – denouncing the growing influence of the “Kochtopus” on the party and its platform - and they know today that he isn’t one of them.
            Those on the extreme left – for the sake of a chance at a humble foreign policy – owe it to libertarians to permit an attempt to prove that libertarianism is not about corruption, nor corporate tyranny, nor slavery, but about discovering to what extent any existing corporate tyranny is the fault of the government; of centralized state power.
The results of a political quiz I recently took, shows that libertarianism is nowhere near as “all-or-nothing” as the framed, false dichotomy of the “left-vs.-right”, Democrat vs. Republican debate; the quiz described me as, first, a Libertarian Party sympathizer, a Green Party sympathizer second, a Republican third, and a Democrat fourth.
            As German military officer turned nonuagenarian acid freak Ernst Junger, once said (to paraphrase), there is no left-vs.-right; there is only centralization of power vs. diffusion of power. And who would know better than a German military officer turned acid freak?

            In conclusion, I am not going to vote in the recall election. I will vote in a Wisconsin gubernatorial election, when, and only when, a candidate makes credible promises to start issuing passports on behalf of the state (treating the state as a country foreign to the federal government); to advocate for the construction of consular offices with the purposes of establishing diplomacy with the foreign, alien federal government; to re-assert the state’s status as free, independent, and sovereign (a status which has been referenced in official federal government documents spanning from 1778 to 2009); and to push for full-reserve banking at the federal level, or, failing that, to push for permits for the states and private persons to introduce competition into the market for currency.
            Until that day comes, I urge my fellow Wisconsinites to vote “none of the above” if that is an option. I also urge them, when making excuses for their representatives at any and all levels of government, to remember that we are only presumed to have consented to delegate powers to them, and that we only become citizens of the many legal jurisdictions by accident of birth or our parents’ travel.

            Additionally, I will decline to support Tom Barrett because of his association with Rahm Emanuel, his pro- big business attitudes, his support for gun control, and the prospect that his support of Big Labor will only serve to augment the power of government to set conditions for union strikes, and serve as an impediment to the creation of new unions.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

On the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel's Endorsement of Scott Walker in the Recall Election

Written on May 20th, 2012
Edited in April 2014



   The following is my response to a question from Ryan Haack: Are you going to say something about the Milwaukee Journal[-]Sentinel "endorsing" Walker.[?] ..."



   When Walker said he had no plans to make Wisconsin a Right-to-Work state, I wanted it to be an RTW state, but not just out of disagreement with Walker. That made me to the fiscal right of him.

   I changed my position to being against state RTW laws because I feel that they condition and inhibit contractual obligations for too large a geographical area and too many people. Walker came out in the last week or so saying he supported RTW laws, so now I disagree with him again, which makes my overall policy slightly more palatable to the left.

   Generally, I see the need for austerity and for cuts in government services, but I feel that it's more the federal government's fault than it is Walker's. I'm more likely to support austerity when the people decide it's the right time, not when governors have allowed the feds to bankrupt state and local governments.

   Arthur Kohl-Riggs said something to the effect of "any reasonable governor would have accepted that federal high-speed rail money". I disagree, and I commend Walker for rejecting it. High-speed rail that almost exclusively benefits Midwesterners does not promote the general welfare of all Americans, which I feel should be a necessary condition for federal spending.

   Besides, I think the private sector would do a more efficient and responsible job of constructing transportation infrastructure than the government, and there is less of a chance that that money would have been diverted to other spending projects and ending up in the pockets of politicians and lobbyists.

   Some might respond to the above by saying that the money would end up in the hands of CEOs and the like, and we all know how much Walker likes tax breaks for businesses and the wealthy. But Walker and I do not share the same economic or political philosophy.

   Walker is a corporatist technocrat who supports states' rights to some extent. I favor local communities' rights, and - under such conditions - taxation based on the creation of income disparity (but I also support introducing competition in governance, so that people can choose which fair and neutral party arbitrates disputes which they cannot resolve by themselves).

   In my opinion, Walker is not polarizing because he is farther to the right than people are used to. He is polarizing because – as with any politician, especially a governor or a president, under the current monopoly-government system – it’s Walker’s way or the highway. And that’s just the way it will be if Barrett wins.

   Nobody will be satisfied – and the “general (read: ‘universal’) welfare” clause will never be fulfilled – as long as people cannot vote “none of the above” in every election without having to vote again, and as long as people cannot choose to be governed by anyone other than the federal government along with its state and local subsidiary governments.

   The only politician who will not be polarizing is a candidate who lets people refrain from associating politically with people whose ideologies are nearly or completely irreconcilable with their own.

   Polarizing, extremist politicians are in-style in this political season. Scott Walker and Paul Ryan may be polarizing, but they are not extremist. But the most prominent extremists - people like Ron Paul and Gary Johnson – are somehow not polarizing; Paul has in fact been described as “transpartisan”.

   I feel that this shows that what we need is not “compromise, not capitulation” – as Democratic congressional candidate Mark Pocan put it – but “consensus, not compromise”, as independent congressional candidate myself puts it. This premise alone would satisfy the general welfare requirement.

   Fiscal sanity – not Scott-Walker-style soft money and tax breaks for businesses and the wealthy – helps the pocketbooks of all Americans. A humble foreign policy with a strong national defense – not George-W.-Bush-style interventionist military belligerence – makes all Americans safer.

   I am a Republican only in that republicanism is a means to an end. I respect extremists from both ends of the economic spectrum, because they have goals. All that polarizing, non-extremist, “pragmatic” Democrats and Republicans have to offer us is an all-or-nothing, “my-way-or-the-highway” mindset, and a political culture where an average of 49% of the people are dissatisfied and envious of those who are better represented.

   David Koch was the Libertarian Party Vice-Presidential candidate for president in 1980. Libertarians knew he wasn’t one of them then, and they know he isn’t one of them now. Libertarianism is not about corporate tyranny; it's about discovering to what extent any existing corporate tyranny is the fault of the State.The results of a (very in-depth, I must say) political quiz I recently took shows that libertarianism is nowhere near as all-or-nothing as the framed, false Republican-Democrat, "left-vs.-right" dichotomy. The quiz described me as a Libertarian Party sympathizer first, a Green Party sympathizer second, a Republican third, and a Democrat fourth.

   In conclusion, I am not voting in the recall election. I will vote in a Wisconsin gubernatorial election when and only when a candidate makes credible promises to start issuing passports; to advocate for the construction of consular offices with the purposes of establishing diplomacy with the foreign, alien federal government; and to re-assert the state's freedom, independence, and sovereignty, which is referenced in official federal government documents spanning from 1778 to just three years ago.

   Until that day happens, I urge my fellow (automatic, de-facto, default) Wisconsinites to vote "none of the above" if that is an option, and to remember to make as many qualifications as possible when making excuses for a representative of any agency at any level of one of the several governments to which we were presumed to have consented to delegate powers when we decided (without informed consent) to be born within the unnatural borders of a corporate State in proximity to the parent company which calls itself the United States Government.





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