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JOHN STOSSEL
TAKES A SKEPTICAL LOOK AT GOVERNMENT IN HIS NEW ABC NEWS SPECIAL “John
Stossel Goes to Washington”, Saturday January 27 at 10pm
(Note:
Please make certain you find time to watch this special and pass
the word to others. High
ratings will help assure John Stossel gets more opportunities to do
programs such as this in the future! This should be Stossel's most
sweeping hour ever, featuring everyone from Bruce Babbitt to Russell
Means, and Rep. Ron Paul.)
What happens when a skeptic visits the center of government? He finds
out how bad the waste, incompetence, and abuse of power can be.
For years, ABC News reporter John Stossel was a consumer reporter,
exposing businesses that ripped off consumers. In his latest hour-long
special, he does a consumer report on government, exposing programs that
squander money and rules that make no sense. Some government officials
aren't eager to talk about the problems, as Stossel discovered when
then-Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt walked out of an interview.
For 150 years, America's government guaranteed liberty - and little
else. But over the past 60 years, under Republicans and Democrats,
government has grown so sharply - that it costs the average American
$10,000 per year in taxes to pay for it. Philosophy professor Tibor
Machan tells Stossel that's not what the framers of the Constitution
wanted: "The Founders tended to believe that government should be
restricted. It should be limited to the function of securing our
rights." Instead, government has taken on countless duties, from
running subways to inspecting pickles.
Stossel looks at a typical St. Louis family and their tax burden - about
one out of every three dollars they earn - and talks to tax expert Amity
Shlaes, who notes that "Americans pay more in taxes than we do in
food, clothing and shelter combined." Government can't even keep
track of much of the money, as Stossel learns when he drops in on D.C.
committee hearings and the General Accounting Office.
Much of what government does do, it does poorly, finds Stossel. The
Interior Department spent billions to help Native Americans, but Indians
are the poorest people in America. Billions more have been spent on
centrally-planned public housing, but instead of safe homes, low-income
families often end up with dilapidated buildings where elevators don't
work and security is poor. Charities complain that government rules make
it tougher to help people. Today "if Jesus Christ...wanted to start
Christianity, he wouldn't be able to do it," says Mimi Silbert, who
runs a mutual aid network in San Francisco, "because there are too
many regulations."
Despite government's failures, Stossel points out that it continually
seeks more power, whether on a local scale-such as seizing homes under
the auspices of urban renewal - or on an international scale,
intervening militarily in over a hundred countries.
What's the alternative? Stossel finds private organizations taking over
formerly government-run functions and doing the job better. Competition
- sorely lacking in government monopolies - gives these private
companies an incentive to guarantee such necessities as clean water, and
flights that actually arrive on time. In Jersey City, NJ, for instance,
Mayor Bret Shundler got so disgusted with high-cost, lousy-tasting
water, he put the
water contract out for bid. "If they blow it, we're going to give
the
contract to somebody else," Shundler tells ABC News.
"John Stossel Goes To Washington" concludes with Prof.
Machan's comment:
"Government was intended to have a few, clearly-defined
functions such as running the courts and the military, and it would do
it much better if it didn't do all this other stuff that it has gotten
its nose into."
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