Three Card Monte. Photo by ZioDave. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
Plans to cut various taxes seem to enjoy high levels of public support around the country right now. Florida’s voters will have an opportunity in November to cut residential property taxes; last week a Massachusetts court ruled against letting that state’s voters cut their own income tax bills.
On the other side of the ledger, proposed and actual tax INCREASES seem to be driving “the rich” out of New York City and California to less greedy political climes.
Watching the public discussion of these various tax topics — especially on a local social media here in Florida — I see that most opponents of tax cuts and supporters of new taxes or higher rates keep playing the same card: “If we do/don’t do that, public services will have to be cut.”
I personally consider that a feature, not a bug. Most “public services” — that is, government operations — fall into one of two categories:
First, things that shouldn’t be done at all (for example, war, including domestic wars on e.g. drugs and immigrants).
Second, things that the private sector not only could do, but in the past has done, less expensively and more effectively than government does them (for example, pretty much everything else).
I’ll leave that first category open for your further exploration and focus on the second.
“The state,” 19th century French economist Frédéric Bastiat wrote, “is the great fiction by which everyone seeks to live at the expense of everyone else.”
Many, maybe even most, people seem to believe that without government we not only wouldn’t, but couldn’t, have things like roads, schools, mail delivery, and electricity.
And yet all those things existed long before any of the governments that provide them today existed, and in some cases long before political government itself, as we understand it, existed.
In the US, most government roads were, early on, “post roads” to facilitate delivery of mail. Which, by the way, was often a private sector activity until the US Postal Service put its competitors out of business with the “Private Express Statutes.” One of those competitors, Lysander Spooner’s American Letter Mail Company, delivered letters between New York City and Philadelphia not just cheaper, but faster, than the US Snail. Other roads were privately built and maintained.
Horace Mann kicked off the “public education” movement in the US for the express purpose of turning out compliant, obedient factory workers. Before that, most kids got educations at home or in small cooperative or community schools. It took nearly 50 years to make “public education” universal — the last resisters, in Vermont, saw their children marched off to the custody of the new system at bayonet point in the late 19th century — but I guess “public education” really falls into the first, rather than second, category, since its job is to provide daycare and indoctrination, not to actually educate.
In the early days of electrical power, private utilities built the plants, ran the lines, and provided the energy. But in the early 20th century, their owners went to governments and complained that competition kept prices too low, leading to “natural monopoly” legislation that ended competition in most places and let utility-dominated “public service commissions” jack up prices for consumers who could no longer take their business elsewhere.
The list goes on and on: We’re sold “public services” as if they are things that must be done, and can only be done by government. Those “services” enjoy constituencies which want the “services” … and want other people to pay the costs. Almost everyone seeks to live, in this or that way, at the expense of everyone else … and believes it’s working.
As WC Fields said, “you can’t cheat an honest man.” Government became the most lucrative scam in the history of humankind by convincing the victims that they’re the ones getting over … so much so that they panic if it looks like anyone else might get a tax break.
Thomas L. Knapp (X: @thomaslknapp | Bluesky: @knappster.bsky.social | Mastodon: @knappster) is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.
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