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06 Jan 2012 By Jacob G. Hornberger Conservatives love to accuse President Obama of
being a socialist. But as the old adage goes, when
they point their finger at Obama, they've got three
fingers pointing back at themselves. Consider, for example, three of the biggest
socialist programs in America: Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid. How many conservatives want to
repeal those three programs? Hardly any. Almost all of
them say they want to save these programs and simply
reform them. Now, that's not to say that conservatives favor a
complete government takeover of all property in the
country and total control over economic activity, as,
say, socialists did in Cuba and North Korea. But then
again neither does Obama, and conservatives
nonetheless call him a socialist. We're talking about socialist programs — those in
which the government takes money from one group of
people in order to give it to another group of people.
That's what Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid
do. They forcibly take money from one group of people
through the tax system and give it to another group of
people through the welfare system. Yes, I know — conservatives, like liberals, claim
that Social Security isn't really a welfare program
but instead a retirement account. But that's just a
rationalization for their support of a socialist
program. There isn't a Social Security fund and there
never has been such a fund. Social Security is a straight tax and spend
welfare-state program. It is the crown jewel of the
welfare state. Liberal icon Franklin Roosevelt brought
it into existence. He got the idea from Otto von
Bismarck, the so-called Iron Chancellor of Germany,
whose bust is on the website of the U.S. Social
Security Administration. Bismarck got the idea for
Social Security from socialists in Germany. What about the so-called Social Security fund?
Suppose a parent has saved $20,000 for his child's
college education. The money is in the form of cash in
a home safe. One day, the parent takes the money out
and spends it on a new stereo system. But he places a
promissory note for $20,000 into the safe. When his
kid asks how his college fund is doing, the parent
responds, "Don't worry. It is fully funded." That's
what the Social Security trust fund is all about. Medicare and Medicaid are no different. They too
are socialist programs. The government forcibly takes
money from one group of people to pay for the
health-care costs of another group of people. The
program was enacted during the regime of liberal icon
Lyndon Johnson, whose mentor was Franklin Roosevelt.
Do conservatives want to repeal Medicare and
Medicaid? Are you kidding? They are as committed to
those two socialist programs as liberals are. At best,
all they want to do is repeal Obamacare and substitute
their own reform plan that they're convinced will
finally fix the health-care crisis produced by
government intervention into health care (including
medical licensure, which conservatives also endorse
and which libertarians oppose). Consider the Federal Reserve. Here we have a
classic example of the concept of central planning,
which is also a feature of socialism. A small group of
government officials purports to have the requisite
knowledge to plan the monetary affairs of hundreds of
millions of people. No wonder there are booms and busts, recessions and
depressions, deflation and inflation, and all sorts of
monetary crises. But when libertarians call for the Fed be abolished
and replaced by a gold standard or a free-market
monetary system, conservatives go ballistic, claiming
that such an idea is "loony." I suppose they'd say the
same thing about Nobel Laureates Milton Friedman and
Friedrich Hayek, both of whom (here and here) favored
the abolition of the Fed, even though, ironically,
conservatives often praise them in their speeches and
articles. While we're on the subject of loony, I ask you:
What could be loonier than to call yourself a
capitalist when you embrace big socialist programs? I
mean, if a person came up to you and said, "I believe
in God and I believe the atheists have it right,"
wouldn't you think he might be a bit loony? And hey, let's not forget that it's not just those
three big socialist programs — Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid — that conservatives support.
They're also firmly committed to other statist
programs, as reflected in the following statement that
most conservatives would undoubtedly embrace: As a conservative, I support economic liberty,
free markets, and limited government, and I
fervently oppose socialism and statism … well,
except for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid,
corporate bailouts, education grants, foreign aid,
SBA loans, FDIC, food stamps, public works, the
Federal Reserve, immigration controls, agricultural
subsidies, public (i.e., government schooling),
trade restrictions, and drug laws. With all due respect, what could be loonier than
that? Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of the
Future of Freedom Foundation. |