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12 December 2010 By Jacob G. Hornberger While supporters of WikiLeaks are criticizing
Amazon, Paypal, Mastercard, and other companies who
are distancing themselves from WikiLeaks, we should at
least consider why such companies might be doing so.
When it comes to the U.S. government, everyone knows
that we're not dealing with pikers. This is a tough,
ruthless, vicious gang of statist politicians and
bureaucrats who will stop at nothing to inflict harm
on those who buck it. This is especially true with
businessmen, who are particularly vulnerable under the
highly regulated and taxed statist society in which we
live. The fact that the federal government has been
wounded by WikiLeaks' leaks only makes it that much
more dangerous. Consider Joseph Nacchio and Mark Cuban, both of
whom bucked the feds and who have paid a high price
for doing so. Recall the illegal NSA spying scheme engaged in by
the Bush administration after 9/11 — the one involving
private telecommunications companies and the NSA. When
federal officials approached the telecoms seeking
private and confidential information about their
customers, all but one of them agreed to play ball
with the feds, notwithstanding the fact that the
scheme was clearly illegal and unethical. After all,
the government had no search warrants and the
companies had promised their customers
confidentiality. What should the companies have done? They should
have refused to violate the law and they should have
lived up to their contractual promises to protect the
privacy of their customers. Instead, perhaps fearing
governmental retaliation or perhaps wishing to curry
favor with the government or perhaps operating under
some sort of misguided sense of patriotism, most of
the companies buckled under federal pressure. Falling
for the government's representations that the
information was needed to protect "national security"
(the magic term for keeping federal wrongdoing
secret), most of the telecoms decided to play ball
with the feds, broke the law, and sold their customers
down the river. Not so with Joseph Nacchio, CEO of Qwest
Communications, who should go down in history as one
of the most courageous heroes of our time. Unlike the
CEOs of the other telecoms, he refused to buckle. He
refused to sell out his customers. He refused to break
the law. He said no to the feds. (See my 2007 article
"The War on Telephone Privacy.") What happened to Nacchio? Did the feds punish him
for making that choice? Of course not! This is a free
society. Don't you know that? Nacchio had every right
in the world to refuse to engage in that illegal,
unethical scheme concocted by the feds. Just coincidentally though, after he refused to
play ball with the feds Nacchio was indicted for
violating silly economic regulations known as
insider-trading laws. Oh, of course it didn't have
anything to do with his refusal to play ball with the
feds. It was all because he just happened to have
violated those silly economic regulations at the time
that he was refusing to play ball with the feds. And
of course, they got him. Convicted of 19 counts of
insider trading, he was sentenced to six years in
federal prison, where he currently resides. Now, sure, statists would say, "Well, the law is
the law, and he shouldn't have broken the
insider-trading law." But statists miss the point, or
maybe not. The real purpose of a regulated society is
to ensure that a Sword of Damocles is always hanging
over people in the business community. In that way,
they are able to be kept in line. If they refuse to
play ball with the government, officials can go after
them for any number of regulatory or tax violations
any time they want, while, at the same time, claiming
that it has nothing to do with their refusal to play
ball. Every businessman, especially those who run big
companies, knows that at any given time he can be
found in violation of some regulatory or tax law. Why
do you think there are millions of economic
regulations? Why do you think the income tax code is
so complicated? It's that way because then they're
able to go after businessmen whenever they want to.
The rationale for the statist society was best
summed up by Dr. Floyd Ferris, the slimy bureaucrat
from the State Science Institute, who said to Hank
Rearden in Atlas Shrugged: "Did you really think that we want those laws to be
observed?" said Dr. Ferris. "We want them broken.
You'd better get it straight that it's not a bunch of
boy scouts you're up against — then you'll know that
this is not the age for beautiful gestures. We're
after power and we mean it. You fellows were pikers,
but we know the real trick, and you'd better get wise
to it. There's no way to rule innocent men. The only
power any government has is the power to crack down on
criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals,
one makes them. One declares so many things to
be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live
without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of
law-abiding citizens? What's there in that for anyone?
But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be
observed nor enforced nor objectively interpreted —
and you create a nation of law-breakers — and then you
cash in on guilt. Now that's the system, Mr. Rearden,
that's the game, and once you understand it, you'll be
much easier to deal with." Consider Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the
Dallas Mavericks. He hacked the feds off by publicly
questioning the government's official version of 9/11.
So, did they punish him for that? Oh no, of course
not! Don't you know that we have freedom of speech in
this country? Instead, they went after him in a civil
suit alleging insider trading violations. Yes, the
same type of stupid economic regulation that they used
to go after Joe Nacchio. I suppose it's only fair to point out that the U.S.
government isn't the only government that uses tax and
regulatory provisions to go after businessmen who
don't play ball with the government. The Russian
government, under Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev,
does it too. None of this, of course, is to defend Amazon,
Paypal, Mastercard, and or the other companies that
are distancing themselves from Wikileaks. It's just a
way to put their conduct into context. Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. |