An Objectivist Constitution
At some point, either in the somewhat distant future of this country or in secret enclaves hidden throughout it very soon, it will be necessary to write a document defining government and its role in guaranteeing freedom. I would be curious to see suggestions from the people on this website as to how such a document might read.
And yes, the US Dollar may, some time in the future cease to be The World's Reserve Currency, but I think that point is less relevant to the concept of backing away from The Abyss gradually and predictably, rather than the typical Congressional solutions of "let's pass this law and everything will be fixed in time for my re-election."
:)
I've looked at Flat Taxes and Fair Tax proposals and found some flaws in them, too, although I currently tend to support Flat Tax policies... again, if they're well-defined and some of the unintended consequences are brought into consideration before enactment...
http://www.plusaf.com/lessons/flattax.ht... is where I've collected some references and comments.
Members of the Federal Government would have no say at all about what amendments are proposed.
I suggest that you read Levin's book before passing judgment on a very carefully thought out plan.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_F...
shift the problem/solution methodology to one of "ok, it took scores of years to get into this mess; let's back out gradually...." Phase in the necessary changes over APPROPRIATE time spans.... want to get rid of mortgage interest deductions? Lower the deduction 5% a year for 20 years until it's gone. That's probably a lot longer than the average duration of a home mortgage.... anyone who can't adjust to that change in 20 years shouldn't own a house...
Ditto for ALL subsidies for ALL industries... perhaps over a ten-year span?
and so on... Thoughts?
I think strong sunset laws might help, but I can't imagine ANY congressmonkey proposing one.
"All great democracies have committed financial suicide somewhere between 200 and 250 years after being founded. The reason? The voters figured out they could vote themselves money from the treasury by electing people who promised to give them money from the treasury in exchange for electing them.
"The United States officially became a Republic in 1776, 238 years ago. The number of people now getting free stuff outnumbers the people paying for the free stuff."
[from my home page]
I'd say Lincoln was the beginning of the end for the republic, ironically.
While I am currently a professor, that is because my employer plays by Galt's rules, or at least allows me to do so. I have been a minor partner in two small businesses, but I refuse to do so during this administration that took $100 K of my parents' retirement money in the form of GM bonds and offered them $225 in a threatening letter. Being a professor right now is my form of strike.
I've worked with computer assisted manufacturing in many forms and in many computer languages in many different environments practically since it was invented. I certainly do not know all there is to know because the field is gigantic, but it's fascinating as anything could possibly be. I was constantly learning and that was all part of the fun. This field, the way I've experienced it, always keeps you on the edge of technology. How DO "they" really make that super thin nearly unbreakable touchscreen glass on a cell phone or tablet? Been there and seen it.
One of my grandsons asked me what I do and I related some of my experiences to him, but in the end I asked if he ever saw the movie "The Matrix". When he said yes, I recalled for him the scene where Neo and the Commissioner were standing on the balcony overlooking the chasm containing the manufacturing sector. The Commissioner told Neo (I'm paraphrasing here) "There are the machines that purify our water, make our food, our clothing, our energy, and many other things. Nobody knows how they work anymore but they keep on working". "Well", I told him," I am one of the 'ancients' that has a knowledge, even if imperfect, of how a good slice of it works. I can program the computers that make computers." He smiled.
Hey, this old guy has probably bored you enough for now and I have other things to do. Catch you later!
I live about an hour south of there, and work 1/2 hour further south in Melbourne at Florida Tech.
Enjoy Bike Week coming up right after the Daytona 500. If you want to come down and chat, call me at 321-749-3437. You pick the evening.
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