The anti-Canutes of today
We need to end the orgy of rule-making at once and embrace the simple rules that true liberals like America’s founders envisioned.
By John Stossel
“If you have 10,000 regulations,” Winston Churchill
said, “you destroy all respect for law.”
He was right. But Churchill never imagined a
government that would add 10,000 year after year. That’s what we have in
America. We have 160,000 pages of rules from the feds alone. States and
localities have probably doubled that. We have so many rules that legal
specialists can’t keep up. Criminal lawyers call the rules “incomprehensible.”
They are. They are also “uncountable.” Congress has created so many criminal
offenses that the American Bar Association says it would be futile to even
attempt to estimate the total.
That’s not good. It paralyzes life.
Politicians sometimes say they understand the problem.
They promise to “simplify.” But they rarely do. Mostly, they come up with new
rules. It’s just natural. It’s how the public measures politicians.
Schoolchildren on Washington tours ask, “What laws did you pass?” If they don’t
pass new laws, the media whine about the “do-nothing Congress.”
This is also not good.
When so much is illegal, common sense dies. Out of
fear of breaking rules, people stop innovating, trying, helping.
Think I exaggerate? Consider what happened in Britain,
a country even more rule-bound than America. A man had an epileptic seizure and
fell into a shallow pond. Rescue workers might have saved him, but they
wouldn’t enter the 3-foot-deep pond. Why? Because “safety” rules passed after
rescuers drowned in a river now prohibited “emergency workers” from entering
water above their ankles. Only 30 minutes later, when rescue workers with
“stage 2 training” arrived, did they enter the water, discover that the man was
dead and carry him to the approved inflatable medical tent. Twenty other cops,
firemen and “rescuers” stood next to the pond and watched.
The ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu, sometimes
called the first libertarian thinker, said, “The more artificial taboos and
restrictions there are in the world, the more the people are
impoverished....The more that laws and regulations are given prominence, the
more thieves and robbers there will be.” He complained that there were “laws
and regulations more numerous than the hairs of an ox.” What
would he have thought of our world?
Big-government advocates will say that as society
grows more complex, laws must multiply to keep up. The opposite is true. It is
precisely because society is unfathomably complex that laws must be kept
simple. No legislature can possibly prescribe rules for the complex network of
uncountable transactions and acts of cooperation that take place every day. Not
only is the knowledge that would be required to make such a regulatory regime
work unavailable to the planners, it doesn’t actually exist, because people
don’t know what they will want or do until they confront alternatives in the
real world. Any attempt to manage a modern society is more like a bull in a
darkened china shop than a finely tuned machine. No wonder the schemes of
politicians go awry.
F.A. Hayek wisely said, “The curious task of economics
is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine
they can design.” Another Nobel laureate, James M. Buchanan, put it this way:
“Economics is the art of putting parameters on our utopias.”
Barack Obama and his ilk in both parties don’t want
parameters on their utopias. They think the world is subject to their
manipulation. That idea was debunked years ago.
“With good men and strong governments everything was
considered feasible,” the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises wrote. But
with the advent of economics, “it was learned that ... there is something
operative which power and force are unable to alter and to which they must
adjust themselves, if they hope to achieve success, in precisely the same way
as they must take into account the laws of nature.”
I wish our politicians knew that. I wish they’d stop
their presumptuous schemes.
We need to end the orgy of rule-making at once and
embrace the simple rules that true liberals like America’s founders envisioned.
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