Pubdate: Wed, 01 Nov 2000
Source: National Review (US)
Copyright: 2000 National Review
Contact:  215 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10016
Website: http://www.nationalreview.com/
Forum: http://www.nationalreview.com/forum/forum.shtml
Author: Dave Kopel, of the Independence Institute

WHY I'M VOTING FOR NADER

The Real Libertarian In The Race

I'm  a life-long registered Democrat; most of my political friends are 
Republicans; and in my heart I'm a Libertarian. So why am I going to vote 
for Green party candidate Ralph Nader? Because a vote for Nader, strangely 
enough, offers the most practical opportunity to actually reduce the power 
of the government, especially the federal government.

The choice between Bush and Gore is the choice between growing the 
government medium-fast versus very-fast. I respect people who vote for Bush 
because he won't increase government as rapidly as Gore, but the record of 
Texas Governor Bush, and of former President George Bush, III, offers no 
reason to hope that another President Bush would actually shrink government.

What about Libertarian Harry Browne? The Libertarian party platform is 
wonderful, and I agree with about 95 percent of it. But there are two major 
problems with voting for Harry Browne this year. First, it is obvious that 
Browne will capture the usual dismal 7/10th of 1 percent that Libertarian 
presidential candidates usually get.

Second, as detailed in Liberty magazine, Browne has turned the national 
Libertarian party into a feeding trough for his consultants, and he has 
ripped off Libertarian party donors with direct-mail advertisements making 
patently absurd promises of imminent electoral success. The LP needs to get 
rid of Harry Browne; to vote for him is only to encourage Browne's crowd to 
maintain their chokehold on the national party.

In contrast, Ralph Nader's Green party is on the cusp of getting 5 percent 
of the popular vote, and thus qualifying for federal campaign funds. (Which 
shouldn't even exist, but that's another story.) Voters in states where one 
major party candidate has an insurmountable lead can still have a national 
impact by helping the Greens get to 5 percent in the popular vote. With 
federal funding, the Greens can become an important long-term influence in 
the political process.

Why would the Green's influence be positive, given its hysterical and 
unscientific positions on environmental issues, and their demands for more 
federal regulation of the economy? Well, on these issues, the Greens are 
only worse in degree - not in principle - than the Republicans and Democrats.

George Bush believes in the dystopian fairy tale of global warming, while 
Gore wants to outlaw the internal combustion engine. The first President 
Bush lobbied for and signed the two biggest regulatory expansions in the 
last 25 years - the revised Clean Air Act and the Americans With 
Disabilities Act. (Both of which are nice in principle, but badly 
miswritten, and often pernicious in practice.) The current Bush can't even 
bring himself to say that he'll end the Clinton/Gore persecution of 
Microsoft - probably because his campaign has gotten so much money from 
former Netscape executives and other computer "entrepreneurs" who asked the 
Department of Justice for help when they failed in the marketplace.

But there are two important issues in which the Greens are starkly 
different in principle - not just in degree - from the Republocrats. The 
first of these is corporate welfare, which the Greens adamantly oppose - 
and which the supposedly "radical" Republicans in Congress and the 
supposedly "populist" Clinton/Gore administration have boosted to record 
levels.

The best way to increase the size of government is to increase the number 
of people who are directly dependent on it. Political genius Franklin 
Roosevelt knew this when he created Social Security. Clinton and Gore 
likewise know that when they call for "a hundred thousand new [fill in the 
type of government employees]" they are calling for a hundred thousand more 
families directly dependent on the federal government.

The most important reason why most American big businesses have been 
missing in action from the fight for smaller government is because many big 
corporations make more money from corporate welfare than they could save 
from smaller government. When we take big business off the dole, we remove 
the most powerful political force that supports a complex federal tax code 
with taxes that are too high for most people, but which can be jerry-rigged 
with "tax credits" and the like for businesses with good lobbyists. Get rid 
of corporate welfare, and you'll find a lot more corporations willing to 
stand up for liberty.

Nader also differs dramatically from Gore and Bush in his forthright 
opposition to the failed drug war. Gore prattles about "privacy" and 
"choice," but his Department of Justice killed California writer Peter 
McWilliams, by preventing McWilliams, who had AIDS, from using marijuana in 
compliance with California law, in order to keep his AIDS medications down.

The Texas record of Bush, and the national record of Clinton/Gore/Bush the 
Third, plainly illustrate that the drug war is the most dangerous current 
threat to the Bill of Rights. People are being killed by machine-gun 
wielding home invaders wearing masks and breaking down doors with 
"no-knock" raids for trivial amounts of contraband. Prison capacity has 
tripled in the last two decades, and drug prisoners now outnumber violent 
prisoners. Wiretaps are at record levels, as is the size of the FBI, and 
the amount of federal money being used to subsidize police militarism in 
every state.

National Guard helicopters fly over people's houses looking for marijuana 
plants on the front porch, while sophisticated thermal sensors are used to 
pry into the privacy of the home. Federally mandated drug testing invades 
the privacy of the human body, forcing employees to disclose detailed 
information about their prescription medications. Financial privacy is 
being abolished, in the name of preventing money laundering. Neo-Stalinist 
programs like DARE encourage schoolchildren to inform on their friends and 
family. And drug war forfeitures amount to little more than legalized piracy.

More generally, the violence that results from the turf wars which the drug 
war generates are one of the most serious dangers to Second Amendment 
rights. Remember that the drug war was the pretext for the import ban on 
so-called "assault weapons" during the first Bush administration; and the 
law which led to the creation of the current FBI gun-registration system 
was part of the 1988 "anti-drug" bill.

The biggest group of losers in the whole drug war are the people who don't 
use drugs, since their rights and privacy are devastated, in exchange for 
the government "protecting" them from using something which they wouldn't 
want to use anyway.

The Bush/Gore response to this civil-liberties disaster is "we need more." 
Ralph Nader's response is "we need to end it." Nader's major point is to 
end the war on marijuana users, but in practical terms, this is as good as 
ending the drug war itself. Marijuana arrests far outnumber all other drug 
arrests, and without a large and steady diet of marijuana prosecutions and 
forfeitures, the current drug-war machine cannot sustain itself.

If you're for limited government, think about almost any topic on which 
Ralph Nader is wrong (there are lots of them), and you'll see that his 
differences with Gore/Bush are usually only a matter of degree.

Do you believe that it would benefit the nation's general political 
dialogue (and especially benefit the Democratic party), to have a forceful 
new voice against one of the major foundations of the welfare state? Do you 
believe that the most precious part of our American heritage is the Bill of 
Rights, and that the number one political priority ought to be stopping the 
gravest threat to our fundamental liberties? If so, then consider whether a 
strategic vote for Ralph Nader might, ironically, be the best way to vote 
for limited government this November.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart