Tax Policy @ OptimalPortfolio.net

Replacing wealth taxes with a flat consumption tax.

December 19th, 2008

Dismantling the Middle Class

I was reading some of Thom Hartmann’s laments recently, including some of the pages promoting his books.  I applaud his effort to expose the problem, but after reading his democracy will save the middle class rant, his labor perspective becomes more obvious. Hartmann is a rock star every-man author with an armful of book titles to his credit on all sorts of popular subjects, including several on the deconstruction of the middle class, representative democracy, corporate dominance, etc., perhaps the most notable being Screwed: The Undeclared War Against the Middle Class… by Hartmann, Miller, and Palast, but Hartmann is long on productivity and short on substance.

A much better source (probably Hartmann’s too) would be Donald L. Bartlett and James B. Steele’s 1992 America: What Went Wrong? or their 1994 sequel, America: Who Really Pays the Taxes?. Although neither is on the level of Noam Chomsky’s Fateful Triangle dissertation, within the space of the target audience for every-man books on taxes and the economy, Bartlett and Steele deliver the facts in succinct, easily digestible fashion.

Hartmann seems to believe that a conspiracy to dismantle organized labor is the ultimate cause of the deconstruction of the middle class. Conspiracy theories sell books, so it’s likely that Hartmann is tweaking mainstream readers to juice his own royalty stream. Bartlett and Steele don’t draw the conclusions for you, but after digesting the evidence they present, you’d be hard pressed not to conclude that nothing more sinister than unmitigated greed led to the web of policies responsible for expanding the wealth gap and thereby dismantling the middle class.

Ayn Rand defined the capitalist ideal to be a freedom to pursue one’s self-interest, completely unfettered by government regulation, little differentiated from Gordon Gekko’s ‘greed is good’ standard. Unfortunately, the competitive drive coupled with innate human goodness (sic) makes mere independence from government intervention insufficient. Marketplace competition, government regulators, and other potential success inhibitors are most efficiently overcome by lobbying government for grants, contracts, spending programs, and regulatory exemptions. The path represented by conceiving and building innovative products and creatively marketing them is substantially more error prone.

So you might say that it’s natural and inevitable for the tax landscape to become corrupted by special interest lobbying. Perhaps a share of the legislators involved are actually well intentioned (even the most cynical observer must have hope that there’s some good somewhere in government) or maybe they just don’t understanding the downstream consequences of their actions. The unfortunate result, clearly identified by Bartlett and Steele, is an unprecedented transfer of wealth away from the labor class (in which I include most office workers, but not doctors and lawyers), to the capital class. Bartlett and Steele even address Gekko-class corporate raiders. Some of the figures they cite border on astonishing - the very first page in the prologue documents a gigantic transfer of wealth from the middle class to the capital class between 1959 and 1989. In 1959 it took the combined wealth of the bottom 35% of the U.S. population to equal the wealth of the richest 4%. By 1989, the combined wealth of 51% of the population was required to equal the wealth of the richest 4% (using figures published by the Internal Revenue Service). And it’s grown worse… Taylor McKenzie reports that the combined wealth of the top 1% (circa March 2008) equals that of the bottom 95% of the population.

Returning to the prologue of America: What Went Wrong?, there are a slew of uncanny similarities between the Washington Post, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Boston Globe articles cited in 1991 and what we’re seeing in the press today. If you didn’t have the dates for reference, you’d think you were reading about the current depression, not the 1991-2 recession. The Fed was slashing the discount rate (to 3.5%, the lowest level since 1964), but one reporter (Richard Ford) in a press conference with the elder Pres. Bush, lamented that a recovery led by consumer spending fueled by low borrowing rates wasn’t going to cut it because people didn’t have jobs with which to pay back the debt they’d be incurring through credit card spending.

I must have taken a ride on H. G. Wells' time machine.  Aren’t these major economic corrections supposed to be further apart? FYI, the federal funds rate is now below where it was in 1952. Stimulative monetarism is maxed out - the economy is so depressed that cheap (virtually free) money cannot cure it. Government drains ever larger vials of blood from the economy and now that the body economic is weak, the vampire offers free seeds with which to sow next year’s crops.

Inequality.org argues that the legal minimum wage is about a third of the cost of living and I’m inclined to agree that business is a major component in the wealth skewing mechanism - too little is being paid out at the bottom, and too much is paid out at the top. Inequality.org has also argued that the wealth imbalance should be addressed via estate taxes, but I’m not so sure.

Private foundations are so much more efficient than government that it gives me pause to consider turning even a fraction of the Gates, Allen, and Buffet fortunes over to the tax man and frugal (sic) federal legislators. Obviously, philanthropic foundations sidestep that capital seizure, thus ensuring that the endowment is preserved. Warren Buffet has never lived a lifestyle with even a fraction of the bling of Jay Leno, much less Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Paris Hilton, Hugo Boss, or Larry Ellison. He’s dead set against his heirs living like Hollywood stars based on an accident of birth, but I have trouble imagining the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (who he’s bequeathed the vast majority of his fortune to) being any less effective than the Smithsonian at spending the money. Do we really want to capture those fortunes and redistribute them through the federal government?

If the very wealthy avoid the tax man by starting private foundations, where’s the government revenue stream represented by condemning that wealth? In all likelihood, based on the way things have been working since the fifties, a continued inheritance tax will simply be re-engineered to expand the wealth gap further. It would be better to ensure fairness at finer points along the way. If pension plans are going to be subject to corporate/pension raiders, why sanction them in the first place? Why not make the original wage earner the trustee of their retirement assets, just as people do now with IRA, 401K, and KEOGH plans?

The U.S. is on the verge of spending a trillion dollars more than the existing budget deficit to counterbalance the depression. The money will be used to stimulate the economy, create jobs, etc., but the first $350 billion Wall Street bailout resulted in bank acquisitions, not loan restructuring. Working class taxpayers bailed out capital class institutions in yet another massive transfer of wealth from the have-nots to the haves. Executive bonuses paid by Goldman-Sachs in 2006 and 2007 totaled $36 billion. Their 2007 bonuses totaled $20B, despite Goldman needing a $3B bailout that same year! How many regular Joes do you know that received massive bonuses despite failing to meet their MBO goals? If Goldman had paid just $3B less in bonuses in 2007, they wouldn’t have needed a $3B cash infusion.

Why bother embezzling millions when you can get your cronies to cut you a check? If you sign mine, I’ll sign yours. Do you harbor doubts about who controls American corporate assets (stock)? Note that America’s wealthiest 1% owns 36.9% of the corporate stock and the next wealthiest 9% owns 41.9%; the poorest 90% owns the 21.3% of stock left over.

Back to the current depression and the Obama administration’s political inheritance… Assume that 15% of the country is unemployed and we want to get unemployment back to 5%. That missing 10% represents about 19.5 million jobs. If the jobs created by infrastructure improvement programs pay an average of $50k per year (a total fabrication on my part), putting most of the unemployed back to work (assuming that finance and computer geeks can sell their resumes to contractors hiring construction workers) will cost $975B per year, which is just about what the economists are saying it will take to stem the slide. What makes me queasy is that infrastructure improvements do not provide ongoing employment, so the question is: Will the economy tank a year later, when the $1 trillion runs out and the roads and bridges are all fixed up?

Printing $1 trillion in fresh greenbacks will also cause a huge spike in inflation, gut foreign exchange rates, and increase the price of American goods overseas, thereby limiting their marketability, in an environment of substantial existing trade deficits with China, Korea, Japan, etc.

Uncle Sam can’t cash in on capital gains on houses and stock portfolios that are declining in value, so it certainly serves the Treasury’s interests to re-inflate the currency by printing a trillion or two more greenbacks. What a racket! The Treaasury prints a mountain of money to bail out an economy strangled by corrupt federal tax policies, thereby inflating the money supply (and devaluing the dollar overseas), and collects taxes on the apparent ‘gain’. Uncle Sam’s revenues also fall when people are out of work. No income, no tax revenue, so you might say that government is primarily interested in ensuring its own survival.

The problem is that taxing incomes is what wreaked the economy’s shock absorbers in the first place. Applied Forecasting cites a Gallup poll showing that Joe Public believed a recession was brewing back in November 2007, yet economists didn’t officially declare one until as much as a year later. What gives?

If Joe Public can call the plays better than professionally trained economists (who can’t officially declare a recession until negative growth has been evident for two consecutive quarters ), wouldn’t it make sense to empower that foresight by putting individual taxpayers back in charge of capital conversions (income taxes being a largely involuntary conversion of individual capital into spending on government)? If individuals had the right to control the conversion of their earnings into government spending (e.g. through consumption taxes), rather than having earnings subject to government condemnation (in analogous fashion to the way that real property is condemned), Joe Public would have more savings with which to weather economic downturns and government wouldn’t need to play such a large role in the recovery.

One can conclude two things: 1) Government conversion of individual capital into current spending has sapped so much of the country’s capital reserve that the economy sits upon a knife edge of instability - a hiccup here propagates and snowballs into a crisis over there, sometimes in seemingly unrelated economic sectors (mortgages to Wall Street to Main Street). 2) No amount of quantitative oversight by Nobel prize winning economists provides the same degree of foresight as an unbiased poll of consumer confidence.

Rand objects to elevating the values and rights of society over those of the individual on principle, and we’ve seen evidence that individuals are better at forecasting the economy, so why have we embraced big government, now running over 30% of GDP ?

In Rand’s insular capitalism (free from government intervention), WaMu, AIG, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, etc. would be allowed to fail and their stockholders would suffer the loss. Two things make this sort of economic natural selection politically inconvenient on Wall Street: 1) Where was the oversight from the Securities and Exchange Commission in the months leading up to the debacle? Admitting that Wall Street collapsed would be an indictment of the SEC’s oversight. 2) Thousands of non-executive staffers lose their jobs along with the superstar executives and their multimillion dollar annual bonuses. Aside from the after-the-fact government funded intervention, corporate America enjoys a keiretsu-like symbiosis with government actively ameliorating harsh conditions in the business environment.

Curiously, socialists have seized upon the meltdown in mortgage backed securities and the subsequent Wall Street correction as signs that capitalism has failed. The root of the problem stems from the Clinton administration, when Fannie Mae was encouraged to loosen down payment requirements. Fannie Mae’s chairman sounded a warning note at that time, concerned that an economic downturn would likely escalate into a rescue similar to one we saw in the 1980’s. There were other factors, namely a disastrous separation of loan originators from mortgage investors, though speculative interest in default credit swaps (which were exempt from regulation), also played a significant role. So, the current economic crisis isn’t so much the result of capitalism failing as it is the confluence of a social agenda (making mortgages accessible to previously under-qualified buyers), the albatross of federal spending becoming too much for taxpayers to shoulder, and greed driving a gigantic wedge into the wealth gap.

Bartlett and Steele’s first chapter opens with a striking graph depicting aggregate workforce salary increases in three income categories during the 1980’s. In ten years, the income of the entire workforce earning between $20k and $50k increased by 44%. In the $200k to $1M salary range, the aggregate increase in wages over the period was 697%. In the greater than $1M salary range, the aggregate increase in wages during the period was 2,184%. Naturally, all categories can grow via an increase in the number of individuals in the category as well as via an increased average salary within the segment, but as dramatically ambiguous as the opening graphic is, the chapter includes all sorts of insights into where income tax policy is broadening the wealth gap. Notable examples include anecdotes on lavish executive expense accounts; the conglomerate and take public profit cycle; and asset purchase and sweetheart lease back deals that suck the economic vitality out of once sound corporations (not unlike the executive bonuses paid to Goldman Sachs execs in the last few years).

America: What Went Wrong? is 235 pages long including the index. It’s a fast read, even amidst distractions, yet it’s packed with sometimes eye popping facts - it’s a worthwhile read for taxpayers and politicos alike.

Further reading…

Florida Economists Declare State is in Recession

Goldman Sachs 2007 executive bonuses totaled $20B

Goldman Sachs fund gets $3 billion bailout

Goldman Sachs 2006 executive bonuses totaled $16B

Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights

Economic Inequality in US

Federal outlays as a percentage of GDP, 1940-2003

Concentration of Wealth fact sheet

July 12th, 2008

Drug Eradication Program - Roots of Tyranny

I’ve been reading the U.S. Department of Justice’s PR on their Domestic Marijuana Eradication Program and various outside commentary, finding that marijuana is the largest cash crop in the United States, with an estimated $35.8B value to growers, overshadowing corn and wheat together (which total only $30.8B).

Jeffrey Miron, a visiting Harvard professor studying the situation at the behest of the Marijuana Policy Project suggested that legalization would not only save $7.7B (it’s about $10.1B today) in eradication efforts, it could also generate $6.2B in sin taxes. Five hundred economists (including Milton Friedman) subsequently wrote an open letter to the Bush administration calling for the legalization of marijuana. The DEA’s response was: it’s a drug and therefore needs to be eradicated, the trade encourages violent trafficking groups, and they have no way to tax Mexican trafficking groups.

Coffee (caffeine) is a drug, but the DEA isn’t raiding Starbucks, at least not forcefully. Too much sugar will make your kids behave erratically and long term abuse can cause diabetes, but the DEA isn’t seizing the cache of sodas, cookies, and sugary cereals at local grocery stores. Tobacco (nicotine) is as addictive and harder to kick than heroin, but the DEA is not storming the gates at Philip Morris. Strike infantile defense number one.

The DEA apparently doesn’t recognize that the dangerous elements transporting the stuff are dangerous because marijuana possession and distribution has been deemed illegal. Law abiding and enforcement fearing folks generally steer clear of such risky enterprises. Mom and pop stores don’t want to risk a raid by the DEA or the local sheriff, but gangs fit the risk/reward profile and are willing to meet the market demand. If we gave the DEA spokesperson a couple more IQ points and turned drug policy into a tool for hunting down criminal elements in society - at least the government strategy would be believable (probably the real truth behind the ban). Unfortunately, even if that were the case, the most effective means of dismantling gangs and organized crime is to take profit out of the equation, not to pursue participants through sporadic paramilitary action. Without the risk of illegal distribution to justify the healthy profits, gangs wouldn’t be able use drug distribution to finance their other ventures. Strike infantile defense number two.

Finally, tobacco and alcohol are both legal commodities (one of which was formerly prohibited), yet both are taxed despite the ready availability of Puerto Rican rum; Canadian, Russian, and Polish vodka; Scotch whiskeys; Nicaraguan, Honduran, and Dominican cigars; etc. all of which are also paying taxes. Society doesn’t share the DEA’s view - even JAG’s all American Cmdr. Harmon Rabb enjoys a Cuban cigar when he can get one. The end result of blockading Cuban products is to make them less available at higher cost to a smaller (elite) audience, tax free. If it weren’t for the ready availability of similar quality Caribbean derived cigars and alternative tobacco products, Cubans would probably be smuggled in much larger quantities. Strike infantile defense number three.

Jon Gettman (a pubic policy wonk that contributes articles to High Times) estimates that domestic eradication and enforcement efforts cost taxpayers $42B annually. Despite $1B in cash seizures and exhaustive interdiction and eradication efforts, the trade that escapes DEA action is estimated to be $113B annually. If the DEA were a business, Wall Street would have shut them down years ago with that performance record.

To put the $42B cost of the War on Drugs in perspective, consider that the Three Gorges Dam and hydroelectric plant on the Yangtze River generates 22.5 gigawatts, providing power for all of Shanghai (a city of 20 million people), at a construction cost of ~$25B. [ By comparison, the Grand Coolee Dam, the largest electric power generating facility in the United States, produces six gigawatts (the equivalent of six modern nuclear power plants). ] So, the War on Drugs is costing the American taxpayer the equivalent of $42B / $25B * 22.5 = 37.8 gigawatts of new power generating capability every year. It should be clear that the War on Drugs represents a truly massive drain on national productivity. Even if North America’s power consumption is not expanding at a rate of 37.8 gigawatts annually, imagine what could be done with $42B in reduced taxes, improved health care, education, or public transportation systems.

In 1974, a couple of friends pooled their cash and bought a pound of marijuana for $100 (believe it or not, for personal consumption). At the time, marijuana was selling for $15 an ounce in Chicago, so they were saving over 50% by buying in bulk. Today, 1/4 ounce of marijuana sells for $140 in Los Angeles. So eradication efforts have been very effective in driving the street price up, if they haven’t suppressed availability. Analogous to Cuban cigars, the poor can no longer afford to imbibe on a regular basis, so the middle class is supporting the trade, and it’s an increasingly rare luxury for the poor. Prohibition hasn’t stopped the marijuana trade, but it has placed the poor at an ever increasing economic disadvantage.

THC content has more than doubled since 1995, echoing the introduction of distilled spirits during the Prohibition, due to improved economies of scale in border smuggling, transportation, and distribution. Cocaine exhibits the same correlation between strength and legal status. In Bolivia and Columbia where coca grows wild, locals chew leaves for a stimulative effect like coffee, but in markets where cocaine is illegal, you couldn’t buy a coca leaf to save your life; instead you get the highly refined and concentrated pure form of the drug because it’s more efficient to get it to market in that form. If the ever increasing strength of street drugs were government’s principal concern, the best course of action would be to legalize and regulate it, so concern over drug strength must not be government’s motivation.

Likewise, if government were really concerned about the health and well being of what it calls ‘drug abusers’ it wouldn’t criminalize their behavior, it would treat them like they were afflicted with a medical condition and allocate spending toward rehab, not seizure of property, prosecution, and incarceration of users and growers. When you look at how many otherwise law abiding young people have lost scholarships and otherwise experienced severe secondary effects as a result of a possession conviction, the ‘concerned government’ posture is simply untenable. If governments were really interested in positively influencing the lives of inner city (predominantly black and Hispanic) kids, we’d certainly stop disproportionately arresting, prosecuting, and incarcerating them for largely innocuous, victimless behaviors.

Perhaps we’re really spending hordes of taxpayer money simply to reinforce the faceless power of government. If so, who does government serve? Perhaps, just as the Grail serves God (an interesting linguistic twist) in Arthurian legend, government is indirectly on a mission from God. However, if that’s the case, the trouble is that the United States is not Iran nor any other sort of theocracy - church and state are supposed to be separated and government is specifically proscribed from establishing religion (in this case supporting it’s objectives). It certainly shouldn’t be going on quests in the name of God. If the concern over drug use is really distress over declining morality or some other rendition of good Christian ethos, government should reserve that territory to churches and back out of the equation.

Marijuana is central to the religious practice of Mahayana Buddhists, the Kasai tribes of the Congo, Tibetans, Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church (Rastafarians), and other minority religious groups, so it could be argued that marijuana prohibition confounds the practice of these religions, thereby acting to establish religions that do not include such practices. There is a move to recognize Rastafarianism as bona fide religion in Spain. Jamaica, St. Vincent and the Grenadines also struggle with marijuana prohibition as a Rastafarian civil rights issue.

The roots of drug prohibitions against opium, marijuana, cocaine, LSD, etc. have been motivated by fear and prejudice and fueled by ignorance. Continued prohibition exacerbates economic divisions and class tension and makes possible organized crime’s billions in tax-free profits. Perhaps the real motivation is the opportunity for selective enforcement. The more behaviors we criminalize, the more we facilitate the use of law as a weapon against classes, races, and more selective targets of oppression.

The Netherlands’ marijuana policy echoes their approach to prostitution, yet despite its ready availability, only 20% of the population smokes. In the U.S. where the DEA actively burns and confiscates, while incarcerating users, growers, and distributors, 42% of the population has smoked marijuana (although a tiny minority apparently didn’t inhale). About 61% of the U.S. consumes alcoholic beverages, so marijuana prohibition can’t be motivated by concern about its recreational use or we wouldn’t have alcoholic beverages either. A few bloggers have asserted that Anheuser-Busch and other liquor manufacturers lobby for marijuana prohibition and eradication because marijuana represents a competitive threat to alcohol’s monopoly position as the sole legal recreational drug. If suppressing the rights of 42% of the population to make their own choice in recreational drugs doesn’t strike you as bully majority politics, shouldn’t we be concerned about government spending $42B annually to enforce the liquor industry’s monopoly on recreational drugs? Let the liquor industry fund their own war on their competition.

Given the USA Patriot Act, the Bank Secrecy Act, the Telecommunications Privacy Act, proscriptions against prostitution, and a network of drug prohibitions, the United States is just steps away from the police state tyranny we observe in Singapore. Sure the sidewalks are clean enough to eat off of and the police have particularly smart looking uniforms, but I’d feel no consolation after being fined for spitting on the sidewalk, even if the cop just walked out of a photo shoot for GQ. You can put Demi Moore’s face on tyranny, but no amount of attractive PR can make up for the resulting oppression.

If you grant police the power to invade private property and confiscate colocated assets, you foster tyranny. Naive supporters believe that U.S. government is or will be the first benevolent Big Brother, or think they have influence or inside information about where it will strike next, but the reality is that it’s a mountain of shifting sand with a complex nature that only a climatologist has a prayer of predicting. Perhaps they don’t remember Dalberg-Acton’s warning that “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” They ignore the capricious nature of enforcement and the deliberate and inadvertent human errors involved. The targeted classes are therefore not the only victims of enforcement, interdiction, and confiscation - police have gotten bad information and raided tomato hydroponics operations, or they go to the wrong address and kill people.

Once law enforcement has a tool (a law) to use against individuals, it inevitably gets used indiscriminately. Sheriff Chris Abril and Assistant District Attorney Doug Munday of Polk County, North Carolina repeatedly applied the state’s marijuana laws to arrest and prosecute Steve Marlowe, a known medical marijuana advocate. The third arrest included coercion of a local informant to provide probable cause - all for the purposes of distracting the local press from the sheriff’s own trial in a statutory rape case. Once laws are on the books giving individuals in government the opportunity to exercise selective enforcement, those laws will inevitably be applied to support the personal agendas of the law enforcement individuals involved.

Politicians, the most conservative and opportunistic marketing sensitive elements in society are beginning to catch the wave. In the 2008 presidential campaign, every single Democratic candidate promises to stop the DEA raids on state sanctioned medical marijuana labs. It’s probably the most visible struggle between overarching federal control and states rights in fifty years. The presidential candidates that would level the playing field between alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana (by legalizing it) are the only ones that really understand freedom…

  • Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel
  • Texas Rep. Ron Paul

Every other candidate would either take halfway measures like halting DEA raids in states that have legalized medical marijuana (without addressing the role of the federal government)…

  • New York Sen. Hillary Clinton
  • Illinois Sen. Barack Obama
  • North Carolina Sen. John Edwards
  • New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson

those that believe we should grant doctors the first right of refusal in all things related to health, thus denying individuals the right to self-medicate…

  • Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich

those that haven’t read or didn’t understand the medical reports regarding marijuana’s analgesic, antidepressant, and appetite stimulating benefits…

  • Delaware Sen. Joe Biden
  • New Hampshire Sen. Sam Brownback
  • New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani
  • Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee
  • California Rep. Duncan Hunter
  • Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney

those that prefer to duck the issue by passing it to state legislatures to decide…

  • Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd
  • Colorado Rep. Tom Tancredo
  • Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson

and finally, the truly deluded who believe marijuana is a gateway drug, that society needs to be protected from itself, and government always knows best. The last two qualifiers used to be exclusive Democratic territory, but the group is populated solely by staunch Republican…

  • Arizona Sen. John McCain

Or is it just that McCain digs government power and thinks we can ‘manage’ tyranny like we’re managing AIDS. He’s certainly the strongest advocate for ’staying the course’ in Iraq.

We’re spending upwards of $40B in a failed bid to eradicate a substance that is demonstrably less harmful than both tobacco and alcohol, yet we’ve managed to touch so many lives in a positive way: arrested 13,000,000 people and incarcerated 705,000 since 1970, and continue to subject all of society to the whim and consequential errors of selective enforcement, exporting our prejudices and imperialist drug policies to 62 countries (where the DEA maintains active overseas offices), burning crops, confiscating property, executing military operations, killing and incarcerating people domestically and abroad. All this to save our children (I guess) from the evils of illicit drugs? I wonder how many people have died from inhaling marijuana smoke (probably zero). The U.S. and sixty-two countries too weak to defend their sovereignty in the face of U.S. bully diplomacy are certainly disrupting (in fact, ending) an awful lot of lives in a bid to suppress drug use.

The War on Drugs really takes abdication of parental responsibility to an unprecedented level. The reality is that the absolute best access to illicit drugs is your local high school. Isn’t that the converse of what we have with tobacco and alcohol? At least there, you have a high granularity of local enforcement, e.g. the 7-11 store clerk refusing to sell cigarettes to minors. Despite the notorious inconsistency of that avenue of proscriptive denial, its sheer ubiquitousness offers substantially better protection of minors than the much less evenly applied, but substantially more heavy handed police action against marijuana growers and users. It also conveniently provides an avenue for sales tax collection associated with consumption.

Government’s role used to be protect and serve, but it has morphed into the enforcement of the majority will or perhaps an idealistic American lifestyle on every element of society that can’t muster 50% of the vote to protect their right to make their own life decisions. Representative democracy was never meant to subjugate every minority to the will of the majority - it was intended as a mechanism for making every voice heard. The thing we lost since Ben Franklin’s heyday is the primacy of the rights of individuals over those of the state.

Although it started with the Sixteenth Amendment to fund WWI and expanded to meet the needs of the New Deal and WWII, perhaps the original PR sound bite for people serving government (instead of the other way around), was President Kennedy’s inaugural admonition to “ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country.” With mandatory wealth and income taxes granting government the first (and overwhelmingly economically predominant) right to make capital planning decisions, government has also usurped the churches’ right to define marriage, the individual’s right to self-medicate, and to decide which drugs to use recreationally.

Legislative representatives can’t possibly know each of their constituents personally, yet they seem comfortable passing legislation that enforces what they deem best for all constituents, in spite of immense diversity of opinion, consequent deleterious effects on the criminalized minority, and numerous calls for legislative reform from economists, sociologists, and judges. This legislative behavior is mirrored in communist state central planning. It’s indicative of a belief in man’s superiority over Nature. The dawn of the Industrial Age and subsequent Information Age have man ‘mastering’ electric power, telecommunications, information technology, the nearby solar system, and the genome, yet like young children we have so profoundly impacted the environment that island and coastal regions have already retreated or succumbed to rising oceans, and weather in general is demonstrably more volatile, as evidenced by multiple 100 year flood events in the same geography within a decade.

Global changes in climate, run-off pesticides and fertilizer, and overfishing threaten biodiversity and our ability to harvest ocean food sources - all areas where government could make a difference, yet legislators turn a blind eye or invest paltry sums to mediate pollution, greenhouse gas production, etc. while spending extravagantly to suppress 42% of society’s freedom to use marijuana, whether medically or recreationally. Don’t we have bigger fish to fry? The places where central planning could make a difference to a continent, hemisphere, or the planet are largely being ignored, and the areas where a bit of diversity might produce the next Grace Slick, Salvidor Dali, Carl Sagan, Jean-Paul Sartre, Ray Charles, Vincent van Gogh, William Shakespeare, Jimi Hendrix, Jules Verne, William Butler Yeats, Grateful Dead, etc. are getting their asses whacked with a fraternity paddle labeled “To Hell with Freedom” and “To Hell with Darwin” on alternate sides. My life and millions of others are richer for the creative contributions of these and other artists and thinkers, and I willingly admit that there’s a downside - Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin being examples that come immediately to mind (though heroin, not marijuana, claimed their lives). That’s where Darwin comes in.

Everybody makes choices that affect the safety and future of their lives every day, be it ignorantly, inadvertently, or with fully informed consent. What you eat and where you live have a huge influence - living in the Midwest U.S. (probably the water) gives you a much higher propensity for kidney stones than people in other geographic areas - blizzards, searing heat, earthquakes, tornadoes, h