Individual Rights versus Political Meddling:
    A Dialogue between Two Friends
    A Poem by Richard W. Grant
    It has been said by not a few,
    "Society comes first!"
    But is that true?

    "Society," they call it – or, if they can,
    "Humanity," -- or "Fatherland,"
    Or maybe "Public Interest"!
    But, any old way it's cast,
    They've got their order just reversed!
    For when they say those things come first,
    What must, necessarily, come last?

    The Individual! In thrall!
    In service to the "Good of All!"
    The "good" to be determined by the State!

    I say NO!
    It isn't so!

    THE INDIVIDUAL COMES FIRST!
    And society will fare no worse!
    Society will prosper hence --
    Not as cause, but consequence!

    I repeat: The individual comes first!

    My friend Jack had listened
    Quite attentively all the way
    "Well," said Jack, "It sounds alright
    In THEORY, anyway
    What I want to know is:
    What in PRACTICE does it say?"

    I said, "It means that one is
    Independent of the State;
    Each individual would be sovereign
    Of his life and of his fate
    His private property would be his
    To do with as he may,
    Regardless of what others wish,
    Or what the group might say"

    Jack shook his head, but I explained,
    "Let's emphasize the fact:
    Do as one wishes with ONES OWN,
    NOT SOMEONE ELSE'S, Jack!

    It doesn't mean the right to cheat,
    But, having sown, to reap
    It doesn't mean the right to steal,
    But, having earned, to keep!

    Whether it's your business,
    Your house, your life, or even views,
    It's all your private property
    To do with as you choose!"

    "But you carry it too far!" Jack said
    "Now, you have things reversed!
    Property rights are fine, I'm sure --
    But HUMAN RIGHTS COME FIRST!

    "But property rights ARE human rights!"
    Said I, "You simply must agree:
    Since it's HUMANS who own property,
    How else could it be?"

    "Oh, stop!" said Jack
    "Now say no more!
    I've heard these arguments before!
    On 'basic rights' and 'property' --
    You waste your breath, it seems to me!
    For, rights do not belong to you
    Just because you say they do!
    Though you say that hot is hot,
    Unproven! I can say it's not!

    You quote the Constitution's laws?
    I quote the 'gneral welfare' clause!
    Your property is yours by right?
    I say it's yours only by might!
    You say these rights are man's innate?
    I say they're granted by the State!
    Nothing's certain -- which assures
    My argument is as good as yours!
    You say private property is moral?
    I say, 'Why?'
    You can't prove it -- so, I deny!"

    WELL NOW, this was MY reply:

    "Ones property is his by right!
    It's no problem to derive
    It arises simply from
    Ones own right to survive!

    The right to life --
    This is a right we can agree upon?
    You agree LIFE is a moral right?"
    Jack nodded, so, I went on:

    "The means of our survival
    Is the property we earn --
    The house, the food, and all the rest
    So, now we can discern:
    Since life depends on property,
    Whatever else you give,
    To deny the right to property,
    Denies the right to live!"

    Jack thought a moment, then said, "Wait!
    Suppose the food came from the State!
    The house & clothing, the State could give
    No private property! Yet, we'd live!"

    "The State can give, then take away"
    Said I, "Don't change position:
    You just agreed that man may live
    By RIGHT -- not by permission!

    It's this moral right to life itself,
    From which right extends
    The right to ones own property
    On which that life depends!"

    Jack thought, then answered with a smile,
    "I'll have to think on that awhile
    You might be right
    You might be wrong
    Yet, even if I went along,
    Still a theory's practice might
    Fail -- even though the theory's right!"

    "Then the theory's wrong," said I
    "Forget I said it," was Jack's reply
    "Let's leave theory, if we may
    Let's get down to 'everyday'!

    First: majority must rule, Jack said
    The group! You must agree!
    We cannot leave each to his own
    For, CHAOS it would be!"

    "The Bill of Rights," then answered I,
    "It should not be forgot,
    Says not what the 'group' must do --
    But what the 'group' MUST NOT!"

    "I'm for the Bill of Rights," he drawled
    "That's why property, you see,
    Must in accordance be CONTROLLED
    In our society!"

    "Your great zeal for civil rights
    Is touching, Jack," I said
    But if private property were gone,
    Those rights would soon be dead!

    If the State owned paper mills,
    For example, I suggest,
    We would not for long enjoy
    Our freedom of the press!

    Or, if businesses which advertise
    Were subject to the State,
    And supported the 'wrong' paper,
    What would be their fate?

    PRIVATE PROPERTY MEANS FREEDOM!
    And those who doubt it will discover
    That to sacrifice the one will mean
    They've sacrificed the other!"

    "That's just theory," Jack declared

    Said I, "Then please explain
    Why Fascist Italy and Red Russia,
    Nazi Germany and Spain
    All had one thing in common;
    In each case it sealed their fate:
    All property was managed
    By and for the State!

    The Constitution of the Soviets
    Each 'civil right' defends,
    Except that single basic right
    On which the rest depend!
    And when that happens, people find
    That they're no longer free
    Their fate's no longer in their hands,
    But in the State's -- you see?"

    "But your alternative," Jack said,
    "I can't believe you mean it!
    There could be no place THAT free --
    At least, I've never seen it!"

    "No, you haven't
    That is true," Said I, "No one denied it
    This idea has been around --
    But no one has REALLY tried it!"

    "Well, what's it called, this thing," said he
    "For which so much you claim?"
    "'Laissez Faire' it is called," I answered,
    "That's its name."

    "Laissez faire?" my friend mused,
    "I've heard that once or twice
    I don't recall the context --
    But it wasn't very nice!"

    "And it would never work," said he
    "The first thing I would fear
    Is that business would be 'dog eat dog'!
    That's how it looks from here!"

    "The analogy is strained," said I,
    "For dogs, you will agree,
    Are not competing to produce,
    But to consume, you see."

    "Now, what I've said is valid, Jack,
    But there's just one thing more
    That's even more important,
    And one we've touched upon before;

    It's this attitude we sometimes have
    Enacted by the State
    That OTHER men must serve us
    And on terms that WE dictate!

    But it isn't so! No ones obliged,
    Not in a land that's free,
    To serve the 'group' or live his life
    As others may decree!"

    Then Jack grinned, and said, "Egad!"
    "The way you put it, it does sound bad,
    But don't you think you put it kind of strong?
    Without State planning, don't you think that
    Society would fall down flat?
    Any kid in public school would say you're wrong!"

    "Not only would, but often do!"
    I answered with a wince
    "But if they took a closer look,
    They'd see the evidence
    That laissez faire took the blame
    For many ills and flaws,
    When INTERFERENCE WITH IT
    WAS, IN FACT, THE CAUSE!

    Take the 'Robber Barons'
    LIke Fisk, or Daniel Drew,
    Or California's famed 'Big Four'
    -- Not a pleasant crew!

    But how did crooks like those get rich?
    The point of this debate
    Is that the trouble usually was
    Created by the State!
    Through subsidy, or franchise,
    Or tariff -- or about
    A million special laws
    To keep the competition out!

    Politicians sold 'protection'
    Blackmail was the game
    Plunder was made legal!
    Yet, it's the moral men we blame!

    Men like Vanderbilt, and J. J. Hill,
    And Henry Ford, too --
    Who now are called 'exploiters'!
    But I don't believe it's true!
    For, if we took the trouble,
    I think, perhaps, we'd find
    That what they earned would not compare
    To what they left behind!"

    "That's interesting," Jack said,
    "But it doesn't prove your point
    That governmental planning
    Simply twists things out of joint
    Now, how about depressions --
    Is government to blame?

    "You bet it is," I quickly said,
    "The principle's the same!

    Not just the one in 'twenty-nine,
    But some that came before
    What government's been doing
    For a hundred years and more
    Is inflate the nation's credit
    Then, what do you see?
    Malinvestment is encouraged
    What else would it be?

    With this artificial credit,
    It inevitably must
    Follow as the night the day:
    First the boom -- then bust!

    Inflation's a narcotic
    Like heroin or cocaine, perhaps
    With more and more they can postpone,
    But not prevent, collapse!"

    "Good Lord!" said Jack,
    "You sure sound sad!
    But I cannot believe
    That government planning Is all THAT bad!
    Now, here is something
    That rings the bell
    That the government does --
    And does quite well!
    I know you'll have to agree this time:
    GOVERNMENT SPENDING
    KEEPS THE PUMP WELL-PRIMED!"

    "We're not living in a pump," said I
    "Now think what they're about
    THE STATE CAN ONLY PUT BACK IN
    WHAT FIRST IT'S TAKEN OUT!
    No wonder that such high-flown schemes
    Collapse with such a thud:
    It's like trying to gain nourishment
    By drinking ones own blood!

    "Well, business isn't everything
    Said Jack, "Taxes, I can show,
    Support much more important things --
    Like WELFARE -- as you know"

    "But, Jack," said I, "I do suggest
    That you surely must deduce
    That bureaucrats cannot give away
    What hasn't been produced!

    And, if you tax away incentive,
    You destroy those who create
    It's businessmen and workers who
    Produce wealth -- NOT THE STATE!"

    "That's just theory!" my friend cried
    "Let's get to the source!
    WE WISH TO HELP OUR FELLOW MAN!
    There's charity, of course
    But, taxes give a better way:
    CHARITY BY FORCE!
    If you need what others earn,
    No longer need you steal it
    Government will do the job --
    And people hardly feel it!"

    "Jack, you put it well," said I
    "But I would think you'd wonder
    At the implications of thus
    LEGALIZING PLUNDER!"

    "My gosh," said he,
    "From what you've said,
    As far as I recall,
    It seems to me that what you want is
    No government at all!"

    "Well, there's 'government' and 'State,'" I said
    "They're really not the same
    The first is quite essential
    It's the second that I blame"

    "So," I said, "permit me to
    Distinguish, if I may:
    The former protects property;
    The latter takes it away!"

    "Now, just a minute," then said Jack
    It seems to me that there's a lack
    Of what I'd call consistency --
    At least, so it seems to me

    From start to finish, you insist that we
    May do as we wish with our property
    And so it sounds to me as though
    There'd be no taxes! Is not that so?

    "Ideally, yes, that's so," said I

    "How about defense?" was Jack's reply
    "Your freedom cannot be expected
    To survive if unprotected!
    There is indeed no other source
    Than by TAXES gained by FORCE!
    For, why would you and I pay tax
    So someone else would just relax?

    I agreed it sounded grim,
    But this is what I answered him:

    "I don't think we'd have the right
    To force a pacifist to fight,
    Or use taxes to subsidize those who do
    This applies, as well, to you"

    "Well," sneered Jack, "We finally start
    To see your system fall apart!
    Now, I'd say from what I've heard
    That what you want is just absurd!

    "Government's essential!
    This you have agreed
    Now you cut off all the taxes
    By which it can succeed!
    You concede a point -- Then contradict
    Now you're cornered; I think you're licked!
    For, no one paying, I insist,
    Means that government cannot exist!

    This is what I meant before!
    Theory's theory; nothing more
    The theory may appear sublime,
    Yet not in practice worth a dime!"

    I answered, "Wait! I'm not so sure
    But what your glee is premature
    I didn't say it's 'either-or' --
    (As far as I recall) --
    That it's government by taxes,
    Or no government at all!"

    "Well," said Jack, "I'm in a daze!
    We either tax -- or no one pays!
    Next thing you'll be telling me
    Is government perhaps could be
    Finanaced VOLUNTARILY!"

    "That's right!" said I
    Said Jack, "Oh my!
    I'll bet you cannot name me one
    Way by which it might be done
    Name ONE way that it could be
    Funded voluntarily!"

    "How about lottery?" said I
    Said Jack, "I think I'm gonna cry!"

    I said, "I've given you your one
    By BETTER ways it might be done
    Not by tax, but in a way
    By which most would CHOOSE to pay!

    But, I'll pursue this point no more
    It's not the point I'm aiming for
    "For, even if I did agree
    That such notions were in vain,
    It would make no difference
    My point would still remain:

    Taxes mean coercion --
    Seizing property by might!
    While this may seem 'expedient' --
    It doesn't make it right!

    "Such coercion means injustice
    To condone it here and there
    Simply paves the way for those
    Who'd have it EVERYWHERE!

    "So, I'll insist a tax is wrong --
    Expedient or not!
    And I'll suggest we think instead
    Of CUTTING WHAT WE'VE GOT!"

    "Well," said Jack
    "I'm still in doubt
    It sounds to me a bit far out
    What's more -- as far as I can see --
    Which system we have probably
    Makes no difference -- not to me"

    I started then to answer when
    Fate smiled, and lent a hand
    Jack spied the evening paper
    On the corner, in the stand

    "Taxes up again," it read
    "Up AGAIN!" Jack cried
    "This is really much too much!
    They take us for a ride!

    "We subsidize the farmer!
    We subsidize the train!
    We subsidize the TVA!
    We subsidize the plane!
    We subsidize each bungler In a million different ways
    We subsidize each dog-gone thing,
    Except the guy who pays!"

    I tried to make a comment here
    That seemed quite appropos,
    But Jack was hollering so loud
    I had to let it go!

    "Laissez faire?" he cried out,
    "I just don't know, I guess,
    How THAT system might work out --
    BUT THIS ONE'S SURE A MESS!"

    The End


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