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ethics
10-02-2004, 11:21 PM
I think this is one of the most easily understood reasons that many people choose to be Libertarians. Mark Steyn, whom I admire, writes:

<blockquote>The silliest thing Dick Cheney has ever said was a couple of weeks after 9/11: `One of the things that's changed so much since September 11 is the extent to which people do trust the government - big shift - and value it, and have high expectations for what we can do.'

Really? I'd say 9/11 vindicated perfectly a decentralised, federalist, conservative view of the state: what worked that day was municipal government, small government, core government - the firemen, the NYPD cops, rescue workers. What flopped - big-time, as the Vice-President would say - was federal government, the FBI, CIA, INS, FAA and all the other hotshot, money-no-object, fancypants acronyms. Under the system operating on that day, if one of the many Algerian terrorists living on welfare in Montreal attempted to cross the US border at Derby Line, Vermont, and got refused entry by an alert official, he would be able to drive a few miles east, attempt to cross at Beecher Falls, Vermont, and they had no way of knowing that he'd been refused entry just half an hour earlier. No compatible computers.
</blockquote>
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http://www.spectator.co.uk/article.php?table=old&section=current&issue=2004-10-02&id=5065

Coot
10-03-2004, 12:29 AM
That sentiment used to be a Republican value as well :( The last time I believed a Republican talking about a smaller, decentralized government was when it was Ronald Reagan doing the talking.

ethics
10-03-2004, 01:36 AM
That sentiment used to be a Republican value as well :( The last time I believed a Republican talking about a smaller, decentralized government was when it was Ronald Reagan doing the talking.


I know, Coot, which is a shame that people who believe in smaller government, less hands out via our taxes from our pockets going to things we have no way of knowing or approving.

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