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THE MORALITY OF THE WELFARE STATE
by Jacob G. Hornberger
The following FFF op-ed appeared in both the print and on-line versions of
last Sunday's edition (April 15) of the Washington Times http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/
20010415-996124.htm
As a compassionate conservative, President Bush wants to give federal aid
to faith-based organizations. His plan has drawn attacks from religious
leaders on the right and civil libertarians on the left.
Religious leaders object to Bush's plan on the ground that it will lead to
governmental interference with religious organizations. The point they
make was summarized by the Supreme Court in 1942 in the case of Wickard
vs. Filburn: "It is hardly lack of due process for the government to
regulate that which it subsidizes."
Those on the left end of the political spectrum are complaining that
federal aid to religious groups would breach the wall of separation
between church and state that is guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Unfortunately, Bush and his critics on both the right and the left are
missing a much more fundamental question: Why should government even have
the power to take money from one person in order to give it to another?
George Washington is reputed to have said, "Government is not reason.
It is not eloquence. It is force." By its very nature, government
consists of laws and regulations that either mandate conduct or prohibit
it. The rules are not advisory. They are compulsory, and they are enforced
by the state's monopoly on the use of force in society.
If a citizen intentionally breaks a law or regulation, he must submit to
the state's judgment or pay the consequences for resistance, because
behind the state's judgment are armed law-enforcement officers, fines, and
penitentiaries.
We regularly witness the state's use of force with respect to the
enforcement of laws against violent crimes, such as murder, rape, and
theft, and most of us favor the state's use of force in those cases. But
the state also initiates force when people violate laws and regulations
that govern peaceful behavior.
How does all this pertain to President Bush's plan to give federal aid to
religious organizations? If the nature of government is organized force,
then the collection and distribution of monies that are ultimately paid to
religious organizations is itself based on force. Such being the case, how
can force be reconciled with principles of morality and compassion?
Consider for example the U.S. federal income tax, which came into
existence in 1916. Despite periodic IRS claims to the contrary, the
payment of income taxes is not voluntary. That is, the government does not
give people a choice of paying their income taxes or not. Every citizen is
required by law to file an annual report of his income and render payment
for the taxes due.
What happens if a citizen refuses? Once the IRS targets him, the process
of collection will begin with polite requests, but if the resistance
continues, the state will ultimately resort to force. For example, the IRS
will file a lien on the person's property and then ask a court to
foreclose the lien. Once the foreclosure sale is completed, the court will
issue an order commanding the tax resister to surrender possession of the
property to the new owner. The order will be enforced by armed
law-enforcement officers.
In fact, this is exactly what happened to a church in Indiana. Church
officials stopped withholding federal income taxes and Social Security
taxes from employees' salaries in 1984. The IRS filed a lien for $3.6
million against the church property and secured a judicial foreclosure of
it. Recently, at the point of armed force, church officials were compelled
to surrender possession of the property.
I wonder whether any of the money that the IRS collected in the
foreclosure sale of that church will be going to faith-based
organizations.
So, who's the moral and compassionate person in all this? The taxpayer?
The IRS agent? President Bush? Congress? The welfare official?
The answer is: None of the above. Because in the arena of peaceful
behavior, morality and compassion mean nothing when they are the product
of force. They are meaningful only in the context of voluntary, willing
choices of individuals.
Equally important, it's only in a climate of individual freedom, not
coercion, in the area of peaceful choices, that morality and compassion
tend to rise in a society. When government forces people to help their
neighbors, conscience atrophies. When people are free to choose whether to
help their neighbors or not, conscience is strengthened.
Thus, if people care about morality and compassion, they should not only
be opposing Bush's plan to distribute government aid to faith-based
organizations. They should also be questioning government aid to anyone.
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom
Foundation
(www.fff.org) in Fairfax, Va., which
published Your Money or Your Life: Why We Must Abolish the Income Tax by
Sheldon Richman. Permission is granted to print, forward, copy, and share
this article, provided this credit is
included.
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