Friday, August 31, 2018

Libertarian calendar for August 2018

August 5
Marilyn Monroe, R.I.P.




Ayn Rand's obituary for Marilyn Monroe

Libertarians on Marilyn Monroe












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August 28
Calgary, Canada

Libertarian happy hour
Every 4th Tuesday of the month



Hello Calgary Libertarians,
Well you won't believe this but apparently our regular meetup venue is closed for a private function. It's for some kind of international association for female police officers...!
Apparently there are going to be about 500 police officers there, so even if it wasn't closed, I don't think we'd want to hang out there. Haha!
For today we'll gather a few blocks west at Pig & Duke. Their specials today are wine, pints of bavaria, and pork tacos!
Address
PIG & DUKE: 1312 – 12th Avenue SW
We always regret last minute changes like this, but hey, you gotta adapt when an army of female cops takes over your usual hangout.

Feel free to call or text me at 403.860.2212 if you have any questions or anything.


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August 30
Anaheim, CA

A Conversation on Cronyism
(American Conservative magazine)
5:30 pm
401 N Anaheim Blvd, Anaheim, California 92805

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August 30
Plano, TX


Little Pink House


at Angelika Plano — 7205 Bishop Rd, Plano, TX, United States, 75024


$12.00 General

Saturday, August 18, 2018

The revolution continues

The Quiet Exodus From Mass Schooling



Parents are fed up. As mass schooling becomes more restrictive, more standardized and more far-reaching into a child’s young life, many parents are choosing alternatives. Increasingly, these parents are reclaiming their child’s education and are refocusing learning around children, family, and community in several different ways.

With back-to-school time upon us, more than two million U.S. children will be avoiding the school bus altogether in favor of homeschooling, an educational choice that has accelerated in recent years among both liberal and conservative families. While homeschooling for religious freedom remains an important driver for many families, 2012 data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) reveal that a main reason for homeschooling is “concern about the environment of other schools.”

Beyond homeschooling, an additional two million children will be educated this fall in charter schools. According to recent U.S. Department of Education data, the number of students currently enrolled in charter schools increased from 0.9 million in 2004 to 2.7 million in 2014, while the number of children enrolled in traditional public schools declined by 0.4 million during that same period. Taxpayer-funded but administered by predominantly private educational organizations, charter schools allow parents flexibility in choosing a school that is better aligned with their expectations and their child’s needs. Charter schools are often exempt from district policies and collective bargaining agreements that can halt innovation and experimentation, allowing them more instructional and organizational freedom. Demand for charter schools often outweighs current supply, with statewide charter caps, admissions lotteries, and long waiting lists leaving many parents discouraged and angry.

As online learning technology improves and expands, more parents are choosing virtual schools for their children over traditional public schools. Data from the non-profit organization, International Association for K-12 Online Learning, find that 310,000 young people in grades kindergarten through 12th grade participated in fully online programming in 2013, up from 200,000 in 2010. In addition to homeschoolers, charter school students, and virtual learners, more than four million children will avoid a traditional district school this fall to attend a U.S. private school.

In states that advocate parental choice and actively expand education options to more families, student enrollment in traditional public schools is declining. When given real choices, parents are deciding to avoid an assigned district school in favor of alternatives.

In North Carolina, for example, the state has taken deliberate steps to expand education choice to more parents. These steps include lifting caps on the number of allowed charter schools, creating a voucher program for low-income families, offering tuition assistance for parents of children with special needs, and expanding opportunities for homeschoolers. As a result of these efforts, enrollment this year in the state’s traditional public schools declined by more than 5,000 students, while those enrolled in home-schools, charter schools, and private schools increased by almost 24,000 children.
Today, parents are glimpsing the possibilities of real education choice measures that put them back in charge of their children’s education. After decades of weakening parental empowerment, in which mass schooling has steadily consumed more of a child’s time than ever before, parents are reclaiming their essential role in guiding their children’s education.
They are also advocating for additional choice measures that make avoiding traditional public schools more feasible. With back-to-school time approaching, many families are opting-out of mass schooling and into a host of quality educational alternatives.
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[Image Credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AMontgomerySchoolbus.jpg]

This post The Quiet Exodus From Mass Schooling was originally published on Intellectual Takeout by Kerry McDonald.

Friday, August 10, 2018

Under the Big Tent - Matt Welch & Tom Woods

Democracy Dies in Darkness at The Washington Post

In a piece today at The Washington Post by Fenit Nirappli on local D.C. races, the Post erased one Libertarian candidate from the ballot, Bruce Majors, the Libertarian candidate for Delegate, replacing him with John Cheeks, and independent candidate who the Post reporter also listed in the next sentence as an Independent candidate.

As the Post motto reads:  Democracy Dies in Darkness!

Update:  8 hours after the article was published, the Post fixed it when it was brought to their attention:


"I walked out of one closet, into another one" #WalkAway

Friday, August 3, 2018

The Libertarian Case for the Wall

A shorter version of this was published yesterday at The Federalist.

President Trump's campaign proposal for "The Wall" is front and center again, as he considers a government shutdown if it is not funded.  In the same week he takes to Twitter to challenge Charles and David Koch, who announce that they will fund some Democrats (not Libertarians?) challenging President Trump on policies like immigration or tariffs.

"Progressives" have been calling for unrestricted immigration, for abolishing ICE,  and for granting voting rights to illegal immigrants.  "Open borders" advocates decry opponents as racist.  Advocates of open borders on the Left - whose derangement in the face of Trump lead them to declare they will now "fight dirty" -  desire to import voters who will displace American voters who have recently taken over 1,000 offices away from the Democrats.

But there are others who are more rational and less anti-American: the libertarian - and usually Koch-funded - advocates of open borders.

Milton and Rose Friedman
It's not that you cannot easily find a libertarian who will accuse you of bigotry when you repeat Milton Friedman's observation that it is untenable to have both totally free immigration and a welfare state, since the impoverished billions of the world would simply move to the wealthiest countries they could enter and consume everything its citizens managed to produce.  You can also easily find libertarians who will assert, oddly one would think for a libertarian, that U.S. citizens deserve to be subjected to competition from illegal immigrants for jobs, education, and housing, and forced to pay taxes to fund both the relocation of and social services for immigrants, because the U.S. government or foreign policy establishment made their countries of origin violent and inhospitable.

But the major libertarian advocates of open borders - George Mason University economist Bryan Caplan, CATO Institute policy analyst Alex Nowrasteh, and Reason Foundation policy analyst Shikha Sood Dalmia - tend to "go high" when making their case(s), at least as compared to Democrat Party flaks arguing for amnesty, abolishing ICE, etc.  Their goal is a world with free immigration for all,  where every individual is, as libertarians wish to have it, the owner of his or her own body, life, time, and work, and may work where she wishes, go to school where he likes, support or not whichever union, church, or business she prefers, move to whatever state or city he chooses, and live in whatever country she desires.  (Though they rarely argue for or are concerned with reciprocity, where a U.S. citizen could easily move to or work in other countries.)  These libertarians would like to have the immigration policy the United States had in 1776.  "Progressive" open borders advocates often quote the poem of socialist Emma Lazarus that was added to the Statue of Liberty, about how America accepts the tired , the poor, and the huddled masses of the world.  Libertarians look to the actual Statue, and view freedom of movement as part of individual freedom, and not primarily a social service benefit for refugees from poverty and war.

Shikha Sood Dalmia
Besides the moral case - that all individuals have a right to freedom of movement - the libertarians also of course make the free market argument about the gains of (international) trade.  Just as allowing U.S. companies to import cheap Canadian lumber without tariffs allows U.S. consumers to have cheaper furniture and housing, and may even create more U.S. jobs in producing furniture, in construction, in making paper products, etc. than are lost in American lumber yards, allowing the U.S. economy to "import" cheap labor from south of the border allows at least some Americans to have cheaper landscaping, gardening, chicken processing, cleaning, and construction, and might create more jobs - say in managing or accounting at Perdue - in the businesses that use this cheap labor than the low wage American jobs lost.  Ms. Dalmia in a 2012 survey of policy studies reported that economists' estimates of the increase in U.S. GDP produced by immigrant labor was between $6 billion and $22 billion.  And Dalmia quotes Professor Caplan on how immigrant labor overall increases or has no effect on American wages, though it does specifically lower the wages of less skilled and less educated American workers.

Alex Nowrasteh
The fact that immigrant labor impacts different Americans differently illustrates the granularity of the impact immigration has in the economy.  In her survey Dalmia claims immigrants tend to move to states that do not have extensive welfare programs, minimizing the impact of immigrants on the taxpayer.  One could easily rephrase this, and ask a question about how libertarians (including Libertarians) can appeal to voters:  Why should working and middle class people in rural counties, the people who gave their Electoral College votes to Donald Trump and not Hillary Clinton (or Gary Johnson), be happy to vote for people supporting unrestricted immigration or amnesty for illegal immigrants, when these Americans have worked their whole lives to pay off mortgages to own a middle class home, a home which is now subjected to property taxes to pay for the day care (or warehousing) of illegal immigrant children (and the American born children of illegal immigrants), which is necessary for those immigrant workers to be able to take jobs in the local chicken processing plant?

Libertarian responses to this question have been deficient.  On social media, rank and file libertarians tend to argue that immigrants, even illegal immigrants, pay taxes too, even if just through their rent to their property tax paying landlords.  The average annual per child cost of an American public school is $12,000, though it can be as high as $29,000 in Washington, D.C., New York City, and other jurisdictions.  The idea that many immigrants - especially illegal immigrants, living crowded into low value, low tax assessment properties - pay anything like $12,000 annually in property (or other) taxes per child they warehouse in the local public school, as they must in order to be able to take a job, is prima facie ridiculous.  (Rank and file libertarians often go further into absurdity, arguing that many Americans never pay enough in taxes to cover the cost of the public schooling of their children - Dalmia says middle class people probably don't pay enough to cover the cost of three children so enrolled - so that if one opposes unrestricted immigration one must also believe in deporting underperforming Americans.)  Slightly over one fourth of the children in the United States are now either immigrants or the children of immigrants.  Since the total expenditures on public schooling in the U.S. is almost $700 billion, one fourth of this cost is far greater than the GDP gains cited by Ms. Dalmia, and also greater than the $50 billion price she cites for building and maintaining a wall on the U.S. Mexican border.  (It is also greater than the $104 billion spent on food stamps, the $46 billion spent section 8 and other housing programs, or the $30 billion spent on Aid to Families with Dependent Children (and related programs) for all American residents, citizen or non-citizen.)

Of course immigrants also use other taxpayer funded social services, but public education for all children residing in the U.S. is mandatory.  (In 18th and 19th century America, with open borders immigration policies libertarians favor, immigrant children were not legally excluded from the labor market or mandated a taxpayer supported public education.)  The libertarian CATO Institute regularly publishes on the welfare costs of immigrants, but in this area above all others its studies seem deeply flawed, claiming that immigrants use fewer social services than do native born Americans, a claim made in some cases by excluding public education from the accounting, or by including entitlements like Social Security and Medicare.  One CATO analyst, Daniel Griswold, makes a hand-waving argument that government spending on educating immigrant children is acceptable, since it pays for itself in their future productivity.  Besides not sounding very libertarian - the government centrally planning investment in (human) capital - Griswold assumes that the billions spent educating immigrant children and making them more productive would not increase productivity as much or more if they were instead used to provide American children with smaller class sizes or after school programs, or with capital investments in more advanced tools at their future jobs, etc.

A better libertarian immigration policy would do what libertarians are supposed to believe in:  protecting Americans from being subjected to force and fraud, to robbery and expropriation.  The United States is currently a welfare state.  Anyone in the United States who is a net tax consumer activates the government apparatus that has a gun aimed at and a jail cell (or a lien, fines, interest and penalties) waiting for every American who is a net tax payer.  The fact that we already have a population in which roughly half of American citizens are net tax consumers does not in any way justify imposing even more exploitation of individuals who are net tax payers by importing in tens or hundreds of millions of unskilled and impoverished people; indeed it makes it even more necessary to protect American taxpayers from more people exploiting them.  (If churches, synagogues, mosques or other voluntary associations want to pay for refugees, immigrants, or would-be migrants, either here or abroad, that is fine.)

In practice this has some similarities with "merit based" immigration proposals, but without the government deciding which professions, educational credentials, etc. are desirable.  Nor would this immigration policy have the federal government assigning quotas to countries, deciding what ratio of software developers from India, petroleum engineers from Nigeria, or wealthy investors from China should be given green cards.   Instead one would simply not be given a green card or a path to citizenship unless one's wealth and/or income insured that you would be paying at least as much in taxes as any social service expenditures you and your children trigger.  And people given any temporary guest worker Visas would not be allowed to bring their children with them; only childless immigrants or those who have family who can keep their children in their home countries would be given temporary Visas.

Libertarians will of course object that in denying a Honduran family the freedom to cross the U.S.-Mexican border you are limiting their freedom.  But in allowing them in you are forcing an American citizen to work to produce tens of thousands of dollars to pay for their childrens' schooling and other social services for their family.  What morality - and what electoral strategy - prioritizes the right of of a Honduran (who has already escaped violence in her homeland by fleeing to Mexico) to cross the U.S.-Mexican border, over the right of an American not to be subjected to forced labor to feed, house, and cloth that Honduran and her family?  This is a question libertarian open borders advocates in any political party cannot answer.