At what point is
there too much government? Many Americans believe we have long since passed
that threshold. The federal government has co-opted Americans from freely
deciding many routine things that not so long ago were theirs to decide. The
degree of government control is demonstrated by a huge collection of rules and
regulations.
Last year’s Federal Register – the daily publication for
Rules, Proposed Rules, and Notices of the Federal Government – contained more
than 81,000 pages. The Tax Code’s
length is nearly 17,000 pages, and the Code of Federal Regulations this
year has 165,000 pages.
According to the
Weidenbaum Center at Washington University in St. Louis and the Regulatory Studies
Center at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., that jointly studied
the federal government, agencies spent an estimated $55.4 billion in budgetary
expenditures to administer and police the regulatory enterprise in a recent
year. Adding the $1.75 trillion in off-budget compliance costs, the total
regulatory burden is $1.8 trillion.
“In 1787, there were four federal crimes. Now there are over
4,000,” an article in the American
Spectator told readers earlier this year. “In an average year, Congress
will pass about 200 bills and agencies will enact over 3,500 regulations,” the
article continued. Many of those regulations – written by bureaucrats, not
Congress – have the force of law and carry prison terms.
William Anderson of Frostburg State University writes that “The
only thing that stands between almost any American and doing a stretch in
federal prison is the choice of whom prosecutors will target. This is a serious
problem that shows no signs of disappearing. The transformation of federal
courts into indictment and conviction machines imperils the U.S. business
environment. Entrepreneurs and business owners face enough uncertainty in the
current economic climate without having to worry about going to prison because
an ambitious federal prosecutor can convince a jury that someone violated a
vague, murky law.”
As serious a problem as this is, it is not the most serious
threat Americans face at the hands of their government.
Constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead believes we have
gone over the edge where policing is concerned. “Among those federal agencies
laying claim to their own law enforcement divisions are the State Department,
Department of Education, Department of Energy, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
and the National Park Service,” to name just a few of the 73 agencies that have
Offices of Inspectors General that exercise police powers, frequently using
SWAT teams that evoke visions of a police state.
Predictably, overzealous and sometimes poorly trained SWAT teams
abuse American citizens without cause, like the California man and his three
young children rousted from their home at 6 a.m. by a Department of Education
SWAT team looking for information on the man’s estranged wife’s education loan.
Yes, that’s right: a SWAT team was sent to break into his home because of an
education loan.
Much worse, a young ex-Marine was killed after a SWAT team crashed
into his home during a drug raid and opened fire. According to news reports,
the father of two young children grabbed a gun in response to the forced
invasion but never fired. He was allegedly fired upon 71 times, but police
found nothing illegal in his home.
Mistakes are bound to happen, of course, but that raises the
question of how many times the federal government should be allowed to abuse or
kill innocent citizens with impunity? The answer is: Never!
Mr. Whitehead notes that “Nationwide, SWAT teams have been
employed to address an astonishingly trivial array of criminal activity or mere
community nuisances: angry dogs, domestic disputes, improper paperwork filed by
an orchid farmer, and misdemeanor marijuana possession, to give a brief
sampling.” Even worse, he continues, “All too often, botched SWAT team raids
have resulted in one tragedy after another for the residents with little consequences
for law enforcement” because “judges tend to afford extreme levels of deference
to police officers who have mistakenly killed innocent civilians but do not
afford similar leniency to civilians who have injured police officers in acts
of self-defense.”
How did our
government, conceived in ideals of liberty at a cost of the lives of patriots
fighting for that liberty, turn into an overbearing mechanism that
micro-manages our lives, and even unleashes military-like power against its citizens
without accountability?
We have allowed
government to grow in size and power, supported by citizens who have been
conned into believing that government knows better than they how to do
everything, and encouraged by a cadre of Americans who prefer depending on
government support to having to fend for themselves. The interests of the people
have been trampled by statists and socialists who happily wallow in the power
they gain from a huge, domineering government apparatus like pigs in mud.
John Adams was right about a nation with democratic ideals:
“It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself.”
RIP, America, and Happy New Year.
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