Antelope Valley Press

Government, freedom and the usual candidate promises

- John Stossel Commentary John Stossel is the former host of “Stossel” on Fox News.

Last week, presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. asked me to moderate what he called “The Real Debate.”

Kennedy was angry with CNN because it wouldn’t let him join its Trump-Biden debate.

His people persuaded Elon Musk to carry his Real Debate on Twitter. They asked me to give RFK Jr. the same questions, with the same time limits.

I agreed, hoping to hear some good new ideas.

I didn’t.

As you know, Joe Biden slept, and Donald Trump lied. Well, OK, Biden lied at least nine times, too, even by CNN’s count. Kennedy was better. But not much.

He did acknowledg­e that our government’s deficit spending binge is horrible. He said he’d cut military spending. He criticized unscientif­ic COVID lockdowns and said nice words about school choice.

But he, too, dodged questions, blathered on past time limits and pushed big government nonsense like, “Every million dollars we spend on child care creates 22 jobs.” Give me a break. Independen­ce Day is this week.

As presidenti­al candidates promise to subsidize flying cars (Trump), free community college tuition (Biden) and “affordable” housing via 3% government-backed bonds (Kennedy), I think about how bewildered and horrified The Founding Fathers would be by such promises.

On the Fourth of July almost 250 years ago, they signed the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, marking the birth of our nation.

They did not want life dominated by politician­s. They wanted a society made up of free individual­s. They believed every human being has “unalienabl­e rights” to life, liberty and (justly acquired) property.

The blueprints created by the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on gradually created the freest and most prosperous nation in the history of the world.

Before 1776, people thought there was a “divine right” of kings and nobles to rule over them.

America succeeded because the founders rejected that belief.

In the Virginia Declaratio­n of Rights, George Mason wrote, “All power is vested in, and consequent­ly derived from, the people.”

By contrast, Kennedy and Biden make promises that resemble the United Nations’ “Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.” UN bureaucrat­s say every person deserves “holidays with pay ... clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services.”

The founders made it clear that government­s should be limited. They didn’t think we had a claim on our neighbor’s money. We shouldn’t try to force them to pay for our food, clothing, housing, prescripti­on drugs, college tuition …

They believe you have the right to be left alone to pursue happiness as you see fit.

For a while, the US government stayed modest. Politician­s mostly let citizens decide our own paths, choose where to live, what jobs to take and what to say.

There were a small number of “public servants.” But they weren’t our bosses.

Patrick Henry declared: “The governing persons are the servants of the people.”

Yet now there are 23 million government employees. Some think they are in charge of everything.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, pushing her Green New Deal, declared herself “the boss.”

The Biden administra­tion wants to decide what kind of car you should drive.

During the pandemic, politician­s ordered people to stay home, schools to shut down and businesses to close.

Then, as often happens in “Big Government World,” people harmed by government edicts ask politician­s to compensate them.

After government­s banned Fourth of July fireworks, the American Pyrotechni­cs Associatio­n requested “relief in the next Senate COVID package to address the unique and specific costs to this industry,” reported the NYT. “The industry hopes Congress will earmark $175 million for it in another stimulus bill.”

Today the politicall­y connected routinely lobby passionate­ly to get bigger chunks of your money.

For some of you, the last straw was when the administra­tion demanded you inject a chemical into your body.

When some resisted vaccinatio­ns, Biden warned, “Our patience is wearing thin.”

His patience? Who does he think he is? My father? My king?

At least Kennedy doesn’t say things like that. But he does say absurd things. In a few weeks I’ll release my sitdown interview with him, and you can decide for yourself whether he’s a good candidate.

This Fourth of July, remember Milton Friedman’s question: “How can we keep the government we create from becoming a Frankenste­in that will destroy the very freedom we establish it to protect?”

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