>
> "Have you ever heard anything so ridiculous in your entire life?"


Actually, this question - which the author asks at the beginning of this, 
um, *article* - is one we should all keep in mind whenever we read 
someone's opinion of what they think other people think, or sadly, even 
some news stories that make the underground rounds...

If you find yourself answering yes to the question, you are probably 
reading some genuine fake news, or at a minimum the author's most sincere 
effort at warping some set of facts or circumstances into the most 
outrageously manipulative hit piece they could possibly imagine.

In other words, if what you are reading is among the most ridiculous things 
you've ever heard, don't bet the mortgage on its truthfulness or accuracy...

On Thursday, July 20, 2017 at 11:33:57 AM UTC-4, MJ wrote:
>
>
> July 20, 2017
>
> *PROGRESSIVES’ WARPED VIEW OF DEMOCRACY AND FREEDOM *by Jacob G. 
> Hornberger
>
> Liberals/Progressives have a fascinatingly warped and perverted view of 
> democracy and freedom.  They believe that what people do with their own 
> money should be subject to majority vote. If people are free to choose what 
> to do with their own money, these statists say, that would constitute a 
> severe threat to democracy.
>
> Have you ever heard anything so ridiculous in your entire life?
>
> In fact, not only is such a view warped and perverted, it’s also highly 
> hypocritical. Let’s examine how.
>
> Consider what people read. Should it be subject to democratic vote? 
> Liberals-progressives correctly respond: “Of course not, Jacob. People 
> should be free to read whatever they want, even if the vast majority of 
> people disagree with what is being read.”
>
> In other words, what people read is beyond the control of the majority. We 
> don’t put those particular choices up to a vote of the populace.  That’s 
> because what people choose to read (or not read) is an aspect of liberty, 
> which is a fundamental, natural, God-given right, one that preexists 
> government and that is not legitimately subject to control or interference 
> by government, democratically elected or not.
>
> This principle is enunciated in the Declaration of Independence and 
> enshrined in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Notice something 
> important about the First Amendment: It does not give people freedom or any 
> other rights but instead prohibits government from infringing on such 
> rights. That’s a critically important distinction. Our ancestors understood 
> that liberty and other rights do not come from either the federal 
> government or the Constitution.
>
> Liberals-progressives get that. They have no problem recognizing that 
> people’s freedom to choose which books to read is not a threat to democracy 
> even though it deprives the majority from dictating what books people can 
> read. They understand that even though public officials are democratically 
> elected, government nonetheless lacks the legitimate power to determine, 
> through majority vote, what people read and don’t read.
>
> The liberal-progressive blind spot comes into play with respect to 
> people’s money. They cannot see that what people do with their honestly 
> acquired wealth is no different in principle from what books people choose 
> to read.
>
> Yet, it’s plain to see that the principle is exactly the same: What people 
> choose to do with their own money is no different in principle from what 
> they choose to read.
>
> Suppose John has $1,000 that he has received at his job. It’s his money. 
> It’s his right to do what he wants with it. Let’s say that a local minister 
> approaches him and asks for a $100 donation. John has the right to say yes 
> and the right to say no. If he says no, the minister cannot rob him. That’s 
> partly what freedom is all about ­ the right to decide what to do with your 
> money.
>
> Liberals-progressives (and, for that matter, conservatives) agree with 
> that but also believe that what a person does with his money should be 
> subject to the vote of the majority. So, if the majority decides that John 
> should donate $100 to the minister, even though he doesn’t want to, they 
> see nothing wrong with using the state’s taxing power to forcibly take the 
> money from him and give it to the minister. They say that this is what 
> democracy is all about. In fact, for statists “freedom” is measured by the 
> extent to which the state is empowered to control and dispose of people’s 
> wealth. In the liberal-progressive mind, the more power the state has to 
> control the disposition of people’s money, the “freer” that society is.
>
> So, in the liberal-progressive mind, freedom is a democracy in which the 
> majority lacks the power to determine what a person reads but, at the same 
> time, wields the power to determine what a person does with his own money. 
> Like I say, it’s a warped and perverted view of democracy and freedom. 
> Hypocritical too.
>
> https://www.fff.org/2017/07/20/progressives-warped-view-democracy-freedom/ 
>

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