By Nathan Barton
When do you give up? When do you say it is all too much, and it is time to just stop.
Most (or many) libertarians have a phrase for it: “Going Galt.” Most readers will know this, but a brief explanation doesn’t hurt. It is a phrase from Ayn Rand’s classic “Atlas Shrugged” and it explains what Galt, Mulligan, Reardon, and many others, incredibly wealthy types and just ordinary hard-working business owners and technicians and train engineers did in the course of the story. They dropped their tools, locked the doors on their businesses, stop investing their money and time and sweat into new things – providing the goods and services that their community depended on.
Because they got tired of the parasites.
Are we seeing that today?
I am in contact with a wide range of people scattered over a dozen states from coast to coast, but especially in the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains. It seems as if I hear from one or another almost daily about how conditions are getting worse. People tell me about the growing power and corruption of local officials: not just elected County Commissioners or Councilors, but civil service appointees and employees. And of the similar growing incompetence, not just of government employees but of private businesses’ employees, especially those providing utilities and other essential services. Sometimes the stories are of coworkers, supervisors, and subordinates. Continue reading
Classic
By Nathan Barton
The current fad is cyberbullying. But there is still a lot of the regular kind, all over the Fifty States. Bullying is wrong, no? It is, when it involves “children” (which include teens under 18), illegal: it is “child abuse,” and even parents can be found guilty of it.
Unless, of course, the bully is the government, or someone else using government. Then, it is apparently part of the society and culture and government.
This case has all the classic symptoms of both government-stupidity and child abuse. According to The Free Thought Project, the City of Gardendale, Alabama is taking action against teens who mow grass and don’t have a $110 business license, after a local businessman filed a complaint against his competitors. (TFTP is reposting a video news article from ABC 33/40, a local station.)
The legal action is being used as a hammer by some “private entity” who uses the government (local, in this case) as a tool of aggression against someone he doesn’t like. He figures he can beat up, indirectly, on a powerless teen. And the city agrees that it will use its “police powers” to go after nonconforming teens who don’t cough up the money or stop competing. Continue reading →