-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

Now the Bad News
by Mark Brandly

Eight years of government expansion and political
corruption was enough. The good news is that the
Clinton-Gore era is coming to a close, and all their
political appointees in government are starting to
pack their bags.

For those who love liberty, however, the bad news is
that fundamental freedoms will continue to be at risk.
Nothing in the presidential campaign suggests that
George W. Bush is anxious to do that much about it.

Consider Bush's 457 page manifesto, Renewing America's
Purpose, where he lays out a plan that will actually
end in expanding government intervention in our lives.

To his credit, Bush complains that the government
takes more from us in taxes than the cost of food,
clothing, and housing combined. True, but Bush's plan
will not change this fact. Even if there are no new
programs enacted over the next five years, government
spending will still increase. According to the
Congressional Budget Office, total mandatory spending
is expected to grow 31% by fiscal year 2005 (the fourth
budget to be designed by the Bush administration).
Medicaid will increase 49.6%, Medicare 44.4%, Social
Security 27%, and unemployment compensation 47%. Bush
is not calling for cuts in any of these programs.

But this is not enough for Bush. His scheme is loaded
with new programs and increases in current spending
levels. Consider Bush's education proposals. Instead
of demanding the elimination of the Department of
Education, Bush would increase federal meddling in
our local schools.

On top of current spending levels, Bush wants to spend
your tax dollars to provide $5 billion to improve
reading skills, $2.4 billion to recruit and train
teachers, $1 billion for math and science education,
$3 billion for an education technology fund, $500
million for states to improve student performance,
$3 billion of loan guarantees for charter schools,
$1.5 billion for a merit scholarship program, $2.4
billion for states to enact teacher accountability
systems, and a $30 million increase in funding to
encourage military personnel to become teachers.
He also would increase funding for Black and Hispanic
Colleges, strengthen the Head Start program, increase
the maximum Pell Grant by over 50%, and expand loan
forgiveness for math and science majors who teach
in high schools for five years.

Bush also wants to increase federal regulations of
our schools by requiring annual testing for students,
report cards for schools, improvements in school
safety, and increased teacher accountability.

But that is only the tip of the iceberg. To buy votes
from seniors, Bush would provide them with a prescription
drug benefit and catastrophic Medicare coverage, and
spend $3.6 billion, over five years, to build 1,200
Community Health Centers. He would also entrench Social
Security with one of the largest spending proposals in
history. Instead of allowing people to plan their
retirement by spending their money as they see fit,
Bush would use tax dollars to fund personal savings
accounts. This is not only an immense increase in
spending, it also takes dangerous steps towards the
socialization of capital markets.

In addition, Bush's other funding proposals include
an increase in defense research and development of
$20 billion over 5 years, $1 billion to help "families
in crisis," funding to make gun safety locks available
"for every single handgun in America," $450 million
annually to preserve natural resources plus $5 billion
in the next five years to restore the national parks,
$400 million for free internet access and computer
training, an increase in agricultural emergency
assistance, expanding government backed crop insurance
and agricultural research and education, $1 billion
in new spending for the disabled (remember that the
elder Bush gave us one of the most oppressive set of
regulations, the onerous American Disabilities Act),
and increase the drug war, by increasing spending
on interdiction, prevention, and treatment.

With this blueprint, and given that Republicans
now control the presidency and both houses of Congress,
expect government spending to grow more in the next
four years than it has under Clinton in the past
four years.

And Bush will not restore freedoms already lost. There
are two prime opportunities to roll back intrusive
government intervention. The attack on Microsoft
demonstrates the need to scrap antitrust laws, and
the current debate regarding gun laws provides us
with an opportunity to regain liberties guaranteed
in the Constitution. However, Bush assures us that
existing antitrust and gun laws will be strictly
enforced.

And he's no better on trade issues, where he would
increase the power of the presidency, calling for
greater authority to negotiate trade agreements.
Instead of free trade, Bush wants greater government
management of our trade.

What about the vaunted Bush tax cut? While the
economy will certainly be better off with Bush than
Gore on this issue, tax revenues will still increase
under Bush's plan. They will simply increase at a
slightly lower rate if his tax cut proposal is
enacted. Bush's tax plan reflects the views of his
economic advisors: That is, tinker with the tax code
but do not cut government revenues; merely find a tax
structure that is seemingly more efficient. In this
view, tax levels are not important, but finding the
right tax is crucial.

This is wrong. As Austrian economists have explained,
it's not the type of tax that matters, it's the amount
of taxation. High taxes damage the economy no matter
what tax plan is in place.

Under the Bush plan, our tax burdens will not be cut,
rights already lost will not be restored, private
markets will not be freed from bureaucratic interference,
federal intervention in our schools will not be reduced,
there will be no rollback in unreasonable environmental
and workplace regulations, and the government will
continue to manage our international trade.

This is antithetical to the principles of our country's
founders. Patrick Henry, my college's namesake, argued
that the establishment of "liberty ought to be the direct
end of government." Instead of fostering liberty, the
Bush plan will consolidate federal power and liberty
will continue to be under attack.

But all of this comes from his words during the election.
They are not set in stone. And perhaps the Bush team has
learned something about the true nature and goals of its
enemies during the post-election meltdown: they represent
the class that lives off the leviathan state, which is
another reason why leviathan ought to be dismantled.

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