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How to think about regulation

June 8, 2010
The following is an educational service of the Downsize DC Foundation.

Millions of people believe . . .

We need the government to regulate business people, otherwise they will run wild, laying waste to the environment, and selling us bad food, bad drugs, and harmful products.

It would be silly to claim that business people never do these things. After all . . .

* Not all people are good.
* Neither are people who are mostly good, consistently good.
* And sometimes goodness has nothing to do with it -- sometimes people simply make mistakes, out of ignorance or carelessness.

But politicians and bureaucrats are people too, and subject to these same failings. Do we really solve the problem of human imperfection by giving one small group of imperfect people vast power over all the others?

That last sentence is so important that it bears constant repeating:

Do we really solve the problem of human imperfection by giving one small group of imperfect people vast power over all the others?

To this we might add, "Is there any form of human being more imperfect than the politician?"

To give this question its proper weight, do not think only about politicians you love (if there are any). Do not cherry-pick the evidence. Instead, think also of the politicians you hate. Should such people have great power over other people?

We think a strong case could be made that the worst politicians, and the worst bureaucrats, have done far more harm to humanity than the worst business people. In fact, this simply has to be true for the simple reason that the power scales are so vastly different . . .

* Politicians and bureaucrats have a monopoly over the use of coercion.
* They also have access to vastly greater resources than even the largest businesses.
* And they cannot be easily fired, unlike a business.

You can refuse to trade with Wal-Mart, or Microsoft, or Exxon, but you cannot refuse to submit to anything that the politicians and bureaucrats tell you to do. You can easily walk out of Wal-Mart and go to K-mart or Target, or a host of other stores, but you cannot easily fire a bureaucrat or a politician.

Given this, isn't it reasonable to ask . . .

* Can anything other than politicians and bureaucrats regulate how business people behave, and if so . . .
* How do these non-state sources of business regulation compare to the regulations politicians and bureaucrats provide?

Consider the following points . . .

Consumers regulate businesses.

Consumers punish every business that provides a bad product or service. They also spread the word about bad companies to other consumers. Many consumers will even refuse to do business with companies that harm the environment. This form of regulation is enshrined in the proverb "The customer is always right."

Because "the customer is always right" investors and lenders also regulate business owners.

They do this to protect their investments from potential retaliation by dissatisfied customers. Sometimes this regulation involves direct oversight, and sometimes it involves the purchase of insurance, which then leads to this . . .

Regulation by insurance companies.

Unlike the politicians and bureaucrats, insurance companies have their own money at stake. This motivates them to regulate the companies they cover. One approach to this is product-testing through organizations like Underwriter's Laboratory. Insurance companies will only cover products that test safe.

Legal liability also regulates businesses.

This liability is determined through due process in a government court, but it differs from government regulation in a crucial way. Government regulation attempts to prejudge which products and services may be harmful, and to dictate how this danger must be mitigated, in advance.

This sounds good, but there are serious problems with it, as you will see below. By contrast, legal liability presumes that a product or service is innocent until there is evidence of harm. This is the commercial equivalent of the principle we know so well from our criminal law, innocent until proven guilty.

The above points expose a bit of commonly believed mythology, that a completely free market is also completely free of regulation. Clearly, nothing could be further from the truth. A free market actually has multiple levels of regulation. In fact . . .

It is inherently impossible to have a de-regulated society, for the simple reason that consumers, investors, lenders, and insurance companies will always take steps to control what businesses do, even if the state does nothing.

Taking notice of these overlooked facts allows us to think more clearly, and to refine the questions we need to answer . . .

* Does the state have a role to play, beyond providing a court system for determining legal liability when there is evidence that a product or service causes harm?
* Do we really need politicians and bureaucrats to craft regulations that prejudge whether a product or service is potentially harmful, and that dictate how this risk must be mitigated?

Answering these questions depends on how you respond to concerns that are even more fundamental . . .

* Will the politicians and bureaucrats who devise these regulations be liable for the mistakes they make, in the same way that businesses are held liable by consumers, investors, lenders, insurance companies, and courts of law?
* Can you fire politicians and bureaucrats who regulate incompetently?
* Will politicians and bureaucrats have to personally pay the cost of any harm they cause, the way businesses must?
* What do you do if politicians and bureaucrats abuse their power of regulation in order to reward friends and punish enemies?
* What recourse do you have if politicians and bureaucrats use their vast power and resources to serve their own selfish interests?

These are powerful questions. But they are really only a more detailed way of asking the question we began with:

Do we really solve the problem of human imperfection by giving one small group of imperfect people vast power over all the others?

We would humbly submit to you that the answer is no. The real problem is NOT how to better regulate businesses, but rather, how to better regulate the politicians and the bureaucrats.

* They are the monopoly.
* Their power of coercion is inherently dangerous.
* They have vastly more resources than businesses.
* They are vastly more difficult to control.
 

Poll: Reps and Dems support down, tea party up

June 2, 2010
http://abclocal.go.com/wjrt/story?section=news/local&id=7472736

(06/01/10) -- As the election season approaches, politicians might find themselves in a tough race to win voter confidence.

The top issue among voters continues to be the state of the economy and how lawmakers are dealing with it.

Our exclusive ABC 12 EPIC-MRA poll finds that 67 percent of the people we surveyed say Congress is being too partisan in how it handles economic issues.

The poll finds voters split when it comes to performa...
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More Dangerous Than Democrats

May 28, 2010
The local RINO* establishment thinks YOU are more dangerous than Democrats. They have been terrified of the Tea Party ever since it started, even if they would like to whip us into line and take advantage of us.

Their actions speak louder than their words and they have repeatedly demonstrated that they don't support the Principles of Liberty.

You deserve to know what has gone on behind the scenes and why some of your efforts have been frustrated. It's also helpful in understanding how so many ...
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Get Out The Vote

May 25, 2010
Have you noticed how fired up people are all over the country for new faces, new ideas and a return to limited, constitutional government?
 
Tuesday's election here in Idaho will almost entirely decide who our next representatives will be, and yet the primary will be decided by only 3% of the population. Races are sometimes as close as one vote that decides who the winner will be. Let that vote be yours!
 
If we elect more career-first, establishment politicians, we won't get balanced budgets. Th...
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Third Party announcement, the GOP "establishment" !!

May 23, 2010
PRESS RELEASE
Establishment Republican Party (ERP)
The Nelson Rockefeller Building
K Street
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) GET-PORC
BREAKING: Establishment Republicans Break to Form New Third Party!
 
-- Abandoned by the grassroots, disenfranchised GOPers break ranks --
-- Crist enthused, Bennett contemplates, Specter may join! --

 
Washington, D.C. – In a bold preemptive move in anticipation of Tea Partiers, conservatives, and other regular Americans taking over the Republican Party, Republican Nation...
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Your Candidates' Homeschooling Statements

May 23, 2010
Do you know where your candidates stand on homeschooling?

Candidate statements concerning home education are posted on the Idaho Coalition of Home Educators website at http://iche-idaho.org/candidatestatements.html.

For further candidate comments on home education and other issues go to www.IdahoVoterGuide.org.

This election is crucial. To find your polling place go to www.IdahoVotes.gov.

Vote on Tuesday, May 25th!
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Crony Capitalism Is NOT Capitalism

May 17, 2010
by Dom Armentano

It's all the current fashion to dump on "capitalism."

It was the greedy free market, supposedly, that created both the housing bubble and the housing bust and led, inevitably, to the "great recession." Capitalism, according to most liberal pundits (and even Alan Greenspan in a bad mood), is an inherently risky and unstable system that requires government regulation to correct its flaws and moderate its excesses.

Let me dissent sharply from that conventional wisdom and argue that...
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Fiscal Conservative vs. Fiscal Recklessness

May 12, 2010
State Controller's Four-Year Term Brought 25% Budget Increase and Huge Losses in the School Endowment Fund

Boise - The incumbent was elected to the office of Idaho State Controller in 2006. While serving her current four year term, the Controller’s budget has increased 25%. It had a 45% increase appropriated for 2009, but that was held back by the Governor and Legislature. This expansion of government has not brought a benefit to the citizens of Idaho.

Todd Hatfield is running for State Co...
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Tea Party Tide Ousts RINO U.S. Senate Incumbent

May 9, 2010
US Sen. Bob Bennett ousted at Utah GOP convention

SALT LAKE CITY — Republican U.S. Sen. Bob Bennett of Utah has lost his bid to serve a fourth term after failing to advance past the GOP state convention.
 
Bennett is the first incumbent to lose his seat in Washington this year, the victim of a conservative movement angered by rising taxes and the growth of government.
 
Bennett was targeted by tea party activists and other groups for supporting a massive bailout of the financial industry, securi...
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Berlin Scientist To Present His Photos Of Fall Of Berlin Wall

May 5, 2010
On Friday May 7th the people of Pocatello will have a rare opportunity to see eyewitness photos, and hear firsthand descriptions, of the fall of The Berlin Wall from a scientist born and raised in Berlin who took the photos and experienced that world- changing event.  Christian Segebade lived in Berlin during the time the Berlin Wall was being built, during its oppressive years of dividing the city, and to witness the day in November, 1989 when the wall’s gates were opened and the tyranny w...
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