[Lnc-business] the national response to the pandemic
Caryn Ann Harlos
carynannharlos at gmail.com
Mon Apr 6 11:44:08 EDT 2020
We have done fantastic on certain issues, but to be honest, I think we are
doing lackluster on addressing the civil rights violations and government
overreach in its mandates. We should be screaming bloody hell rather than
at best quietly whimpering. This piece by Wes Benedict is exactly what we
need:
Libertarian Prescription for Coronavirus
PRESS RELEASE - AUSTIN – March 18, 2020
True, most Libertarians aren’t doctors. Our remedies are for the government.
People are rightly concerned about the current coronavirus outbreak. A
March 13, 2020 New York Times article quoting the CDC says that, in the
worst-case scenario, as many as 214 million Americans might get infected
and 1.7 million could die. Other experts expect far fewer infections and
deaths once better data on infection rates becomes available, and as people
change their behaviors to prevent the spread of the virus.
Wes Benedict, founder of the Libertarian Booster PAC, commented, “In times
of crisis, Americans are too quick to reach for the government as a default
solver of problems. Politicians wanting to appear to be ‘doing something’
are all too eager to act, but they have a long history of doing things that
make situations worse, both in the short term and the long term.
“Libertarians believe that free people and free markets are best equipped
to respond to crisis situations. Often government remedies, which might
make us feel good, get us hooked and cause long-term damage. The war on
poverty, war on terror, war on drugs, and other government responses to
perceived threats have given us restrictions and programs that rarely get
revoked. We don’t need a new expensive freedom-killing war on viruses which
may kill more people than it helps by reducing economic development
worldwide.”
Benedict added, "Instead of asking what new program or law is needed in
response to every problem like the coronavirus, we should be asking, 'What
existing laws are adding to the problem?'"
Below are activities the government should avoid, followed by prescriptions
for activities the government should take.
Governments should avoid the following:
Mandatory restaurant and other business closings. People should be free to
decide for themselves what risks they are willing to take. I’d highly
recommend most senior citizens and those with weakened immune systems do
their best to stay away from restaurants and stores. Many already do that
during flu outbreaks. But it’s wrong for the government to force businesses
to close, and doing that now sets a dangerous precedent.
Quarantines and limits on public assembly. Quarantines can backfire. People
who might be sick may avoid getting tested for fear of being held against
their will. At-risk individuals have the choice to isolate themselves and
use extra caution as they do during flu outbreaks. Healthy individuals are
free to avoid public gatherings as well, but they should not be able to
prevent others from assembling.
Carriers of the disease can create risks for vulnerable individuals.
However, Libertarian tenets of personal freedom and personal responsibility
put the onus on the at-risk individual to stay isolated, rather than demand
that the rest of the world change their behavior.
The power to quarantine is very dangerous, because it amounts to
imprisonment without a crime. That same power could be used in the future
by government officials who want to get dissidents out of the way. The
First Amendment protects people’s right to assemble, for good reason.
As an example, the City of Austin has banned gatherings of more than 10
people. That’s wrong, violates the Constitution, should be reversed
immediately, and should never be done again.
Bailouts and other financial rescues. Government should avoid causing a
financial pandemic on top of the disease pandemic. Forcing businesses to
close, monkeying with interest rates, quantitative easing, promising
bailouts, and other subsidies only make the financial problems worse in the
short and long run. The world has suffered disease outbreaks in recent
years such as Ebola, SARS, MERS, and swine flu. A new contagious disease
outbreak should be a surprise to no one. It’s the responsibility of
individuals and businesses to be prepared for occurrences like this. We
should not punish prudent businesses by taxing them and giving that money
to businesses that might otherwise fail.
Things government should do:
1. Remove price-gouging restrictions to help suppliers meet demand and
avoid shortages.
2. Pass legislation to restrict the power of local officials to close
businesses and limit group sizes.
3. Suspend the minimum wage so the unemployed can more easily find
alternative work, and so businesses teetering on bankruptcy can survive.
4. Raise the threshold for filing a 1099 for contract work (currently
$600), to allow people needing help to hire willing contract workers
without all of the federal paperwork hassles.
5. Remove tariffs to speed the flow of supplies internationally.
6. Remove CDC and FDA restrictions that prohibit rapid development and
rollout of tests, immunizations, and treatments.
7. Relax immigration quotas and hurdles, to allow skilled foreign workers
to come here and help us.
8. Remove economic sanctions on Iran, so they can more easily get what they
need to save their own lives.
Although Libertarians are famous for complaining about what government does
wrong, there’s one area where the government is performing pretty well:
free speech.
Free speech is critical. We don’t want a situation like China where people
who contradict the government are subject to threats, censorship, or
perhaps even worse.
While it’s possible the media has created more panic than we need, or
failed to warn us quickly enough, press freedom is crucial. And freedom of
the press means the freedom to be wrong. Our free media has grabbed
America’s attention and has helped individuals stay informed so they can
take voluntary action.
Freedom of speech for every individual shall not be infringed. Free speech
means the right to criticize the president, Congress, and all government
officials. Free speech also means the right to question experts, to
disagree, and to debate and argue on social media without interference from
the government. Except for some defamation lawsuits and speech codes on
campuses, America mostly does well respecting free speech.
Benedict reaffirmed, “I know people are scared. Government reaction scares
me more than the virus itself. Now is not the time to panic and throw out
our principles. Instead, now is the time to stand firmly on principle, and
remind ourselves what makes America great. Now is the time for us to take
responsibility for our own health, and to voluntarily lend a hand to a
neighbor. Free people, voluntary persuasion, and free markets are the
surest, quickest, cheapest, and safest way for humanity to fight the
coronavirus—not government coercion.”
Wes Benedict is Founder of the Libertarian Booster PAC (
libertarianboosterpac.org
<https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Flibertarianboosterpac.org%2F%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR1dbid9csfAlK4llLikfxseRNl3IHBDamQtyzfAKAZXxo0_rfKbHjBjwiE&h=AT21NB0h2afLFWYA8Bh6_8WlS4sz7naQH5D9MriENq0-1MlzcJ4YjENK4gWwki8MwtzsWj9wkrjjbwp_aaPTTbwlhA373tRfoNSNESHMulxbWTbPuqc4S7DsLxl2svCJkRX1OmwnxqqvJEwifeJHTOPebEuTblt_z-ywfxkbyDSEXMd8tjpIHsCQrdW_uUVCU1mdF5IEWNnhAHr8VQqdzEvYpLf50_PqcwHHItiS7iLK35yie1wttR6cJvBU_QmqP_43DL-3fjPBlX5fWeab39gwssfOsFaYNdwgvB8XUm4w6lPZtBcy7ead22SgjG-VRvCmqsYg5n3nrrJd7QttZ7CHntxpddyb6RbgNj4xIcqWGOKEmiRC2o6V9u6LoN_xwn84cJ57HmgFKDUjdnP0Agahs9oq2V_KhQt7qRzK_bNmGX30nfsd5KaGk6y4cNOB_rfaf2TeUnX5hunEej3Of_oCFwvBk19bdTZdJxDiEDfvz47opljWj6Z428dmbCPFkJ9A4RPy7mvDCuA6aqGivl88chZ-sqrJ1DJlNQyMe9d1MsIkeIhJSL2NntPA6S6Y-wN7Wg_9JH4FdXGrmZ_3_ehLWhm2vI-kKiQ7ZfkuCrWHRcqNCgJ9pc3xua0TxPcsei6NP_V4NQ2T_cjG2qE>)
and former Executive Director of the Libertarian National Committee.
Contact:
Wes Benedict, Libertarian Booster PAC president
wesbenedict at gmail.com
* In Liberty,*
* Personal Note: I have what is commonly known as Asperger's Syndrome
(part of the autism spectrum). This can affect inter-personal
communication skills in both personal and electronic arenas. If anyone
found anything offensive or overly off-putting (or some other social faux
pas) in an actual email, please contact me privately and let me know. *
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