What I see among the leadership of the Democratic Party is at best ignorance of the socioeconomic axioms that have guided our nation and at worst a rejection of them, accompanied by the political intention to further entrench the Modern Welfare State as the paradigm for the American socioeconomic system.
By democratic capitalism I mean the socioeconomic system described vividly in Walter Russell Mead's penetrating new book, God and Gold: Britain, America and the Making of the Modern World. It is the system pioneered in some of the Italian City States nearly five hundred years ago, picked up in the Low Countries thereafter, but adopted and developed with the greatest success by Great Britain and the United States over the last three hundred years. It has many attributes, but for the purposes of this article, let us define it as a society in which the economy is characterized by free markets, private ownership of property and means of production, and respect for the profit motive and the pricing mechanism, all operating under the rule of law guaranteed by a government that intervenes very little in the economic and social life of the people. The people are completely free to decide what to produce, what to charge, where to sell it, and to whom. Contracts are freely entered into and their legal sanctity is enforced by the government. Such an economy can exist only in a democratic society, that is, one in which the people are free to choose their political leaders and means of organization. The overarching structure could be a republic (like the US), a constitutional monarchy (like the UK), or a pure parliamentary democracy (like Estonia), but democracy is a sine qua non.
History has demonstrated beyond any conceivable doubt that democratic capitalism leads to mass prosperity. Without the stultifying hand of government weighing them down, the people are free to develop new products, open new markets, produce copious consumer goods, trade with their neighbors and with partners around the globe, and lift the overall standard of living far beyond any ever achieved in a planned or centrally controlled economy. This assertion is unchallengeable. The sorry history of societies organized under feudalism, mercantilism, socialism, communism, fascism, absolute monarchy, religious fundamentalism, oligarchy or any system other than democratic capitalism makes the assertion self-evident.
But there is a catch. Because democratic capitalism is characterized by free and open competition, it results in winners and losers. In a general sense, people prosper. Some individuals and groups prosper immensely. Others falter, usually due to their own poor performance, but sometimes just because of bad luck. A classic example of the latter is the individual who invests heavily in a product or technology immediately prior to it being superseded by a newer and better technology or product invented by a competitor. This process of creative destruction that typifies capitalism can convert winners into losers in a brutal and sudden fashion. Well, that kind of phenomenon is often offensive to our sensibilities: "It's not fair. It's inequitable. Why should some prosper at the expense of others? Shouldn't we shield the weak from the predatory practices of the strong?"
Such sentiments are not without merit. People should take no joy in seeing their fellow man fail — at least compassionate people should not. And aren't we all striving to be compassionate these days? Compassionate or not, people often experience guilt feelings when they succeed, but friends and relations do not. Egalitarianism is not a philosophy that is easily compatible with democratic capitalism, but history shows that it runs deep in us.
It seems to me that there are two approaches for dealing with this "flaw" in democratic capitalism. The first approach accepts the superiority of the system, but seeks ways to ameliorate its potential ill effects without disrupting the fundamentals of the system and thereby curtailing the great benefits it yields.
The second approach, while paying lip service to the benefits of democratic capitalism, postulates that either: (a) it is in fact not the ideal system and that a substantial modification of it would be better and fairer; or (b) regardless of whether an improvement is possible, the price that capitalism exacts is just too high and should not be paid. In this approach, in either case, a just-minded and powerful referee must supervise the game, intervening where necessary to ensure more equitable outcomes than would result under unregulated laissez-faire rules.
To implement the first approach, the people develop civic associations, religious associations and other non-governmental organizations designed to aid the less fortunate in society for whom the competition has not gone well. Their focus is on those who played by the rules; but didn't play very well, or on whom the ball took a funny bounce. Because of the overall prosperity of the nation, the percentage of the population in need of assistance is small. Therefore, the goal of designing and implementing palliatives to help the deserving without compromising the overall system becomes attainable. Such an approach characterized the US for more than two hundred years — until the onset of the Progressive Era in the early twentieth century.
At which point we slipped into the second approach — starting a long slide down a slippery slope ever since, arriving finally at a new destination, the "Modern Welfare State." In which we pay homage to the superiority of democratic capitalism but in practice we countenance the activities of an increasingly interventionist government on the playing field in an aggressive fashion.
The nature of our federal government; it's enormous influence in the everyday lives of the people; the fact that the vast majority of the people approve of this role for the government — all of this would have been unfathomable to and anathema for the American people, certainly at the time of the founders, but even up to the end of the nineteenth century.
That the federal government would have some role in the people's commerce and transportation is stipulated in the Constitution. But that it would have a primary role in the people's health care, education, retirement, housing, and religious, social and business affairs would be astounding to our forbearers. There is absolutely no such role ascribed to the federal government in the Constitution or other founding documents. However, once we assigned it a paramount role in the machinery that drives our capitalistic economy, it is not surprising that we also accorded it a major role in many other aspects of our lives. We have been rewarded with: judicial rulings like Kelo v. New London, Univ. of Cal. Regents v. Bakke and Roe v. Wade that have no legal basis in Constitutional law; congressional actions like Sarbanes-Oxley or McCain-Feingold, which are incompatible with the role assigned to Congress by the Constitution; and an Executive with the ability to initiate warfare, which is in direct violation of the Constitution. All of these transgressions are tamely accepted by the American people. In its desire to ameliorate the sometimes harsh side of democratic capitalism, the people have ceded to the government — in the economic realm and elsewhere — a role never intended for it. We are so far down the road of the second approach that hardly anyone notices the vast distance we have traveled.
The last sentence summarizes one of my two fundamental assertions in this article. Namely, I do not believe that the American people are even pondering the question of which approach to take any longer. A century is a long time. Three (or more) generations have already lived under the rubric of the Modern Welfare State. Few are thinking about the drastic change it represents. Very few are contemplating the philosophical issue it poses. If we are, as our founders intended us to be, a nation whose socioeconomic system is grounded in democratic capitalism, how can that be reconciled with the fact that we have installed the Modern Welfare State, which violates the basic precepts of democratic capitalism?
Now for the second point: What about our political leaders? It is inconceivable to me that someone who stands for the highest political office in the land could be blithely ignorant of the fundamental changes in the nature of American society that I have described. It would be inexcusable for a presidential candidate not to have a deep understanding of the nearly 400-year history of American society, not to have thought philosophically about our Constitution and its role in our society, not to have pondered the nature of our current socioeconomic system and related it to the deep historical thread woven by the American people over its history. My second point is that based on the evidence I see, I have strong suspicion that the leaders of the Democratic Party, and in particular the three current major candidates for that Party's Presidential nomination, fail these tests.
Ms. Clinton insists "it takes a village to raise a child," thereby paying ultimate homage to collectivism, violating the millennia-old notion that the family is the basic unit of society, and clearly setting a role for a parental government far beyond what we have experienced to date. Mr. Edwards speaks nonsensically of two Americas, urging us toward class warfare and completely missing the well-known point that in our capitalistic system the mobility between the poor and the rich is, and has always been, very robust. Either he is a demagogue or he is totally misguided. And finally, Mr. Obama, with his mindless mantra of "change" without any indication of who will be changing what for whose benefit has no more gravitas than a toothpaste commercial. If one examines what little record he has, it would appear that the change he has in mind would take us much further down the slippery slope.
To conclude, what I see among the leadership of the Democratic Party is at best ignorance of the socioeconomic axioms that have guided our nation and at worst a rejection of them, accompanied by the political intention to further entrench the Modern Welfare State as the paradigm for the American socioeconomic system. It has been thus for a long time. If I asked you to identify the last Democratic Presidential candidate who really believed in democratic capitalism, you might make a case for Kennedy, perhaps Truman. I'm not so sure. The correct answer might be Grover Cleveland.






































“It is inconceivable to me that someone who stands for the highest political office in the land could be blithely ignorant of the fundamental changes in the nature of American society that I have described.”
For liberals, history started this morning.
OH, I don’t think it’s ignorance! They know they are preaching a sermon that Lenin wrote. What bothers me is that no one mentions Adam Smith anymore. They just like to talk as if Health Insurance equals Health and a government that forces you to take Zetia will solve all your problems.
The titular question has already been clearly answered by the last 80 years of Democratic politicians and their policy initiatives. A resounding “No”. It’s not like they even pretend to. They’re not at all ashamed of their socialist and Marxist ideology. And Republicans and conservatives, at least since 2000, seem to have fallen victim to the adage, “Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.”
“Individual conscience, not collective compulsion” sums up, I think, the alternatives you identify in order to cater for the compassion aroused as a consequence of the effects of Democratic Capitalism.
And, as you rightly state, the Founders of the Constitution did not intend the government to exercise compassion on behalf of the people, and certainly not by compelling some to exercise compassion for the benefit of others. Compassion is what develops and defines the human character. When government assumes that role, it deprives us of the very foundations for the development of individual character; and that diminishes the character and virtue of the nation as a whole – people feel relieved of the need to exercise compassion when they perceive that government is doing the job for them, and especially when government is using their hard earned money to do so.
But I should take issue with your contention that Welfare is prohibited by the Constitution. That is entirely a matter of construction. And it is an issue that goes back to the very foundation of the United States. It seems to me to have its origin in the Hamilton/Jefferson dispute regarding the establishment of a Bank of the United States.
As I am sure you are aware, Jefferson strenuously denied that the Constitution provided a power to the Federal government to establish such a corporation. In respect of Article 1, Section8, he said this: “To lay taxes to provide for the general welfare of the United States, that is to say, ‘to lay taxes for the purpose of providing for the general welfare.’ For the laying of taxes is the power and the general welfare the purpose for which the power is to be exercised. They are not to lay taxes ad libitum for any purpose they please; but only to pay the debts or provide for the welfare of the Union. In like manner, they are not to do anything they please to provide for the general welfare, but only to lay taxes for that purpose. To consider the latter phrase, not as describing the purpose of the first, but as giving a distinct and independent power to do any act they please, which might be for the good of the Union, would render all the preceding and subsequent enumerations of power completely useless.”
Jefferson did not expand on the concept of the ‘general Welfare’, because, as you rightly say, it would probably not have entered his thoughts that the ‘power’ to lay taxes on one section of society could be construed to be for the ‘purpose’ of benefiting another section of society, and not for the benefit of the ‘general welfare’ of the United States as an entity. But, I sure you will agree that it is not a logical stretch to say that the ‘general welfare of the United States’ would be served by appropriating what some would regard as an ‘excess’ accruing to a few, for the benefit of those with insufficient to meet their basic needs. That is in effect what the Bush administration is arguing in helping those at risk of losing their homes in the ‘sub-prime loans’ debacle. And that is in essence the rationale behind ‘social security’ – that it cannot be to the ‘general Welfare of the United States’ having the elderly starve on the streets because they haven’t, or were unable, to provide for their later years. [Please don’t throw your hands up in horror at this point – I am wholly opposed to such measures, as I argue so strongly in my book.]
But Hamilton eloquently won the skirmish with Jefferson by arguing for a more ‘liberal’ construction of the Constitution, one which at least persuaded Washington.
He said this: “There is also this further criterion which may materially assist the decision. Does the proposed measure abridge a preexisting right of any state, or of any individual? If it does not, there is a strong presumption in favor of its constitutionality; & slighter relations to any declared object of the Constitution may be permitted to turn the scale.”
Jefferson recognized that such ‘liberal’ construction was dangerous. “Our peculiar security”, he said, “is in possession of a written constitution. Let us not make it a blank piece of paper by construction … Let us go on then perfecting it, by adding, by way of amendment to the Constitution, those powers which in time and trial show are still wanting.”
Notwithstanding his reservations however, Jefferson still went ahead with the Louisiana Land Purchase despite believing that it was unconstitutional. Expediency trumped his principles.
So even Jefferson recognized that the Constitution was vulnerable to great distortion from
its original intention; that it was perfectly capable of being a “blank piece of paper”, and even availed himself of that weakness when it suited him (as in the Lewis/Clark expedition).
But to give Jefferson due credit, when he first saw the draft constitution he was not happy. He had expected it to follow the format of the Constitution of Virginia which he had been instrumental in drafting. He expected that the Constitution would be preceded by a set of Principles. In the end, as a result of his efforts, a Bill of Rights was annexed to the end of the Constitution.
Yet, ironically, the Bill of Rights has weakened not strengthened the Constitution. Hamilton’s rebuttal of Jefferson perfectly illustrates the point. When the construction of the Constitution is under consideration, the “criterion” becomes whether any “proposed measure [would] abridge a preexisting right of any state, or of any individual.”
So, let’s take welfare. Would the government taking from one for the benefit of another interfere with either’s right to Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness? On the face of it such a measure would interfere with the Liberty of the person who loses the money. But the problem with such an argument is that it assumes that the Right to Liberty has some substantive content. It assumes that a fundamental Principle underpins this Right. It even assumes that the Right to Liberty somehow means that the government cannot take your money without your consent. But that flies in the face of the Constitution. The Constitution does not provide that Congress can only lay taxes with the consent of the person being taxed, which is what one would expect a Right to Liberty to mean.
So what does the Right mean? It is simply a procedural expectation. That is, the citizen can expect that the government will not incarcerate him unless it properly promulgates a law specifying in what circumstances it can deprive him of his liberty, then to follow the procedures to ‘prove’ that he has contravened that law. In that procedure, other so-called ‘rights’ come into play, such as knowing the case against him, being entitled to representation, a fair trial by his peers, etc. It would be futile for any person to challenge his obligation to pay taxes, where he can show that those taxes are simply to be used to hand some other person a sum of money, by invoking a ‘right to liberty’.
Neither could someone invoke his ‘right to the pursuit of happiness’ to challenge his tax burden. I can just imagine someone arguing in court that his happiness is being infringed by the government taking his money and giving it to someone else. The Right to Life is the same. It simply prohibits government from snuffing out a life on a whim. It must follow the procedures.
Now these ‘rights’ were obviously welcome in the age they were conceived – at least people could expect to know in what circumstances government could kill them, or throw them into prison, and they could even expect that the government follow the correct procedures to do so. And I have no problem with these procedural expectations. It is just that that is all they are, with very few exceptions. Ironically, about the only ‘right’ which has any substantive content is the ‘right to choose’. And its substantive content derives from the obliteration of the Right to Life of the unborn child.
In effect, then, what all this comes down to is that those who fashioned the Constitution and Bill of Rights failed in two respects. First, they failed to base the Constitution on clear Principles; secondly, when they sought to remedy that by attaching a Bill, they did not give the Principles they sought to attach any content. They were in uncharted territory, so they should not be ridiculed for these shortcomings; but neither should we treat them with what Jefferson called “sanctimonious reverence”.
We are now effectively at a fork in the road. We can either give the politicians a “blank piece of paper”, or we can “arise again and take our stand for freedom”. And I do believe that the Ten Principles of Freedom (oops, there they are again) which I have enumerated are the only Principles which can prevent a total capitulation of our freedom by limiting government to the consent of the people – all the people, even though many will be giving their consent while kicking and screaming about their superior intellects, and more highly tuned consciences.
Joseph BH McMillan http://www.freedomvrights.com