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May 27, 2005

 

We Have Ways of Making You Speak

by Tibor R. Machan, Ph.D.

 

The US Supreme Court ruled, on Monday, May 23rd, 2005, that to compel people to support its propaganda with which they disagree does not violate the First Amendment to the US Constitution, the one about everyone having the right to freedom of speech. Yes, the court acknowledged, no one may be coerced into funding some private party's advertisements or related speech. But when the government or some part of it decides it will proselytize for something, it can make us all fund it.

Justice Scalia, writing for the majority in the 6 to 3 decision, explained: "Compelled funding of government speech does not alone raise First Amendment concerns." He added: "Citizens may challenge compelled support of private speech, but have no First Amendment right not to fund government speech."

Of course, since government has come to be legally authorized by courts after courts to take money from people for whatever the government's agents want to fund, why would it not then extend this same legal authority to fund propaganda? After all, government supports National Public Radio, PBS, Voice of America and umpteen public service messages, many of them contrary to what millions of American citizens want supported. And, of course, thousands of government projects are funded with which millions of Americans disagree.

In short, this is nothing very new. But it is a case that makes it very clear and unambiguous that we aren't free to spend our resources for our purposes and that government may rob us to fund theirs. Why? Well, the theory is, the government is us. Once the election is over, the administration and its hooligans may all spend away at their hearts' content since this isn't a free country but a tyranny of the majority.

In a free country, in contrast, there would be nothing besides the protection of our individual rights that government would be authorized to have us all fund. That, as the US Declaration stated with no ambiguity at all, is why governments are instituted among us: "To secure these rights" (those listed in the Declaration, ones we all have and need protected). Because that is the only true public interest, the legal authorities of a free society would be justified in spending funds on advancing it. That is what we all would be paying the government to do, freely, by being citizens of the country.

Supporting various special interest projects, such as promoting beef eating, has absolutely no relationship to such a bona fide, genuine public interest. But, because the original idea of what government is supposed to do has been totally corrupted by now, and because one of the main forces of this corruption has been the US Supreme Court, it is hardly any wonder why this same court reaffirmed government's legal authority to loot us all of our resources so as to promote yet another pet project the government's agents have cooked up.

As reported in The New York Times, "Justice Scalia's opinion was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Clarence Thomas and Stephen G. Breyer," while Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg concurred separately, saying that she viewed the assessments in all the marketing cases as 'permissible economic regulation'." Notice how chummy all these otherwise quarrelling justice have become when it concerns government spending the resources of the citizenry on matters having absolutely nothing to do with the true public interest but with some cockamamie project of its hirelings. Of course, they themselves are part of this gang, so why would you expect it otherwise?

As an aside, this bit about how such spending amounts to "permissible economic regulation" is poppycock. The commerce clause, of Article 1, Section 8, which empowers Congress "to regulate commerce ... among the several states," meant nothing like this mess of government intervention the court has been rationalizing for decades now. It meant "to regularize commerce," which had been irregular because the different colonies didn't share a common free market. The whole point was only to eliminate barriers to the free flow of commerce, not to empower Congress to act like some fascist or socialist economic planning agency.

Alas, if there were any integrity left to the US Supreme Court, we could perhaps hope for some liberty in our future from that corner but that hope has been squelched a long time ago.

Machan Archive

 

Copyright © 2005 Tibor Machan and reprinted with permission.


Tibor Machan holds the Freedom Communications Professorship of Free Enterprise and Business Ethics at the Argyros School of Business & Economics, Chapman University, CA. A Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, he is author of 20+ books, most recently, Objectivity: Recovering Determinate Reality in Philosophy, Science, and Everyday Life.

 

You might also enjoy Dr. Machan's new autobiography:

The Man Without a Hobby: Adventures of a Gregarious Egoist, by Tibor R. Machan

A memoir of Tibor Machan, a first generation refugee who escaped both a political and a personal tyranny early in his life and embarked upon a search for an understanding of what it means to live freely and wisely. The book is a record of the main events and some interesting tidbits of his life. Detailed are Professor Machan's reflections, interpretations, and lamentations of his riskiest judgments and noteworthy achievements.

More Books by Dr. Machan in The Academy Bookstore


Dr. Machan can be reached at: machan@chapman.edu and machatr@home.com
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