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Tuesday, March 30, 2004
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Hero of Peace and Capitalism. The great Kiyoshi Amemiya of Hitachi, the businessman who--after seeing the horrific results of US landmines in Cambodia--built the world's first mine-clearing machine, which he gives away, but will not sell to any military. (Link thanks to Aaron Gunn) Read... [LewRockwell.com Blog]
6:21:39 PM
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The Impossible Dream of Limited Government. Some interesting musings over on LewRockwell.com from Butler Shaffer on the wild utopianism of limited government. An excerpt: Those who criticize me for alleged visionary tendencies are, more often than not, themselves the defenders of the most pervasive of utopian schemes: constitutional democracy. Most Westerners have an unquestioning attachment to the belief that political power can be limited by the scribbling of words on parchment! Most of us have been conditioned in the myth that a so-called "separation of powers" among the various branches of government will generate a competition assuring that governmental authority will not be exceeded. Students of law and political science become rhapsodic over the writings of 18th and 19th century philosophers who were the architects of such air castles!
A belief in constitutional government remains nothing but a collection of undigested reveries. Like the gullible soul who purchases stock in a non-existent gold mine and hangs onto his investment lest he admit to himself that he was bilked, most of us are fearful of confronting the inherent dishonesty of the idea of "limited government."
[Hit & Run]
I generally agree with Mr. Shaffer. The Constitution was written as a great experiment by its authors to see whether a limited government was possible, and sadly the experiment has failed.
11:48:46 AM
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© Copyright
2006
Ken Hagler.
Last update:
2/15/2006; 2:00:32 PM.
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