Libertarian Review Now Online by David Boaz

- news coverage and analysis of inflation, the energy crisis, economic reform in China, the 1979 Libertarian Party convention and the subsequent Clark for President campaign, the Proposition 13 tax-slashing victory, the rise of the religious right, the emergence of Solidarity, Jerry Brown, Three Mile Island, and the return of draft registration.
- classic essays like Jeff Riggenbach on "The Politics of Aquarius" and "In Praise of Decadence," Joan Kennedy Taylor on Betty Friedan, Rothbard on "Carter's Energy Fascism."
- interviews with F. A. Hayek, Howard Jarvis, Paul Gann, Henry Hazlitt, John Holt, and Robert Nozick.
- and especially Roy Childs: on William Simon's A Time for Truth, on Irving Kristol, on the rise of Reagan, on drugs and crime, on the hot spots of Iran, Afghanistan, and El Salvador.
Posted on September 9, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Born-Again Budget Hawks (D-BS) by David Boaz
The candidate was outraged -- just outraged -- at the country's sorry fiscal state. "We have managed to acquire $13 trillion of debt on our balance sheet," he fumed to a roomful of voters. "In my view, we have nothing to show for it." And that was a Democrat, Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado, who voted "yes" on the stimulus, the health-care overhaul, increased education funding and other costly bills Congress approved under his party's control.Meanwhile,
Paul Hodes, the Democratic Senate candidate in New Hampshire, recently proposed $3 billion in spending cuts that would slice airport, railroad and housing funds. Elected to the House four years ago as an anti-war progressive, Hodes lamented that "for too long, both parties have willfully spent with no regard for our nation's debt."So Senator Bennet is outraged at the national debt -- for which we have "nothing to show" -- but he has voted, apparently, for every one of the spending bills in his time in the Senate that have created today's $13 trillion debt. The National Taxpayers Union says his overall voting record on spending bills rates an F. And Representative Hodes is calling for a $3 billion spending cut. Sounds big, eh? Front-page news indeed. But of course, it's less than 0.1 percent of the 2011 federal budget -- and that's assuming that all these cuts would come out of this year's budget. Hodes's press release doesn't make that clear; they might be cuts over 5 years or so. And his very next press release said he was fighting for federal funds for local New Hampshire services. Both Republicans and Democrats want voters to think that they're getting tough on spending, deficits, and debts. But their statements are at wide variance with their actual records and actions. We didn't pile up $13 trillion in debt while no one was looking; members of Congress, of both parties, voted for these bills. Voters need to watch what they do, not what they say. My colleague Chris Edwards, quoted by reporter Shailagh Murray, is a little more polite:
"The problem from a fiscal conservative voter's point of view is that every member or wannabe member claims to be a fiscal conservative these days, so it's more difficult than usual to separate the wheat from the chaff," said Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian-leaning think tank.
Posted on September 4, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Born-Again Budget Hawks (R-BS) by David Boaz
Posted on September 4, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
David Friedman: The Machinery of Criminal Defense by David Boaz

Posted on September 2, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
And Then There Were None by David Boaz
The four Republican rebels -- Larry E. Craig (Idaho), Chuck Hagel (Neb.), John E. Sununu (N.H.) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) -- have joined all but two Senate Democrats in arguing that more civil liberties safeguards need to be added to the proposed renewal of the Patriot Act.Let's hope that some of the prospective new senators who consider themselves constitutionalists will raise their voices on issues like this.
Posted on August 30, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Budget Choices by David Boaz
Struggling Cities Shut Firehouses in Budget CrisisBecause certainly American cities spend their money on nothing that is less important than fire protection. More on the Washington Monument Syndrome here.
Posted on August 27, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Let’s Regulate Barney Frank’s Pay by David Boaz
Posted on August 26, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Spending and Deficits by David Boaz
That the deficit increased primarily because of two tax cuts and two wars was not part of most conservatives' calculation because acknowledging this was ideologically inconvenient.That's one explanation. Of course, spending did rise by more than a trillion dollars during Bush's eight years, and it wasn't all military spending. And as Michael Tanner writes today, "The Deficit Is a Symptom, Spending Is the Disease."
Traditionally, federal spending has run around 21 percent of GDP. But George W. Bush and (even more dramatically) Barack Obama have now driven federal spending to more than 25 percent of GDP. And as the old joke goes, that's the good news. As the full force of entitlement programs kicks in, the federal government will consume more than 40 percent of GDP by the middle of the century.The real objection of libertarians and many conservatives to Bush is the massive increase in federal spending. As Tanner says, the deficit is just the symptom of an out-of-control, overspending federal government.
Posted on August 26, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Or a Program That Was Actually Going to Work by David Boaz
On the eve of the [1982] election, with the unemployment rate at a postwar high, a New York Times/CBS News poll found that 60 percent of likely voters thought Reagan’s economic program would eventually help the country. That’s a sign of a successful political operation.
Posted on August 25, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty
Journalists Warn of Regulation’s Costs by David Boaz
Currently there are 21 abortion clinics in Virginia. Abortion service providers say at least 17 of those might shut down if state officials use their authority to regulate those clinics. Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli says abortion clinics provide many other medical services beyond abortions, so they're subject to the same regulations as larger medical facilities. That opinion was issued in response to a request from Virginia State Senator Ralph Smith, who says his only interest is to protect the health of the patient. "I certainly feel that for the safety of all involved that they should be as regulated as other procedures," says Smith. For most clinics, meeting a higher regulatory standard could mean additional equipment or space renovation. Tarina Keene director of NARAL Pro-choice Virginia says the cost involved could drive some clinics out of business.Yes, indeed, they noted those potential costs right there in the first line. And so did the Washington Post, front page, third sentence:
Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II has concluded that the state can impose stricter oversight over clinics that perform abortions, a move immediately decried by abortion-rights organizations and others as an attempt to circumvent the General Assembly, which has repeatedly rejected similar measures. Cuccinelli's legal opinion empowers the Board of Health, if it chooses, to require the clinics to meet hospital-type standards. Abortion-rights advocates say that could force some clinics to close because they would be unable to afford to meet the new requirements.Now if only we could get journalists to take such prominent note of the costs that new regulations impose on other kinds of services, from lemonade stands to local restaurants to for-profit colleges to internet service providers.
Posted on August 24, 2010 Posted to Cato@Liberty