Tuesday, May 10, 2005

The Return of Liberty



The word "Liberty" has been out of favor in the world for far too long. Thank you, Mikheil Saakashvili, for resurrecting it!

From The Intellectual Activist Daily:

Today's Wall Street Journal, at http://tinyurl.com/bd367, provides a good profile of Georgia's "Rose Revolution" and the 37-year-old, Columbia-University-educated Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. But nothing is as eloquent as Saakashvili's own op-ed in today's Washington Post, in which he calls for a new Yalta conference to promote the spread of liberty in the former Soviet republics--and beyond.

http://tinyurl.com/dq28n

"Time for a Return to Yalta," Mikheil Saakashvili, Washington Post, May 10

"For 60 years the word 'Yalta' has meant betrayal and abandonment. The diplomatic accord reached between Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States in that sleepy Black Sea resort relegated millions of people to a ruthless tyranny.... Now it is our turn to contribute to the completion of a Europe that is whole, free, and at peace. After recent discussions with presidents Traian Basescu of Romania and Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine, I believe that it is time for a new Yalta Conference, a voluntary association of new European democracies with three central goals. First, we must work together to support the consolidation of democracy in our own countries.... Second, we must extend the reach of liberty in the Black Sea region and throughout wider Europe.... The new Yalta Conference will press for liberty in Belarus through increased travel restrictions on government officials, expanded financial and material support to the opposition, and enhanced training for civic society in the methods of peaceful protest that helped free the people of Georgia and Ukraine. Third, we seek to expand the frontiers of freedom far beyond the Black Sea. Our message to the oppressors and their subjects is unequivocal: Free peoples cannot rest while tyranny thrives. Just as we benefit from the blessings of liberty, we have a duty to those who remain beyond its reach. In Zimbabwe, Cuba, Burma and elsewhere, millions live under cruel tyrants. Too many governments and international organizations appear willing to sacrifice freedom for what they mistakenly believe will be stability. We know that only the consent of the governed brings stability. And we know that if the world's democracies make liberty the priority of their policy, the days of the dictators are numbered."


Wednesday, May 04, 2005

Would privatizing Social Security undermine the Religious Right?



In today's TIA Daily, Ed Thompson writes, in a letter on 'progressive indexing':
It's not that the left doesn't want Social Security cuts for the poor; it's that they want them to *be* poor.

Altruism, the idea that individuals do not have the right to live solely for their own sake, presupposes poverty--real or imagined. Without poverty, the altruists are out of business.
The relationship between altruism and the Left has been clear to me for some time. The idea of privatizing Social Security is something that is being put forward by the Right. However, if alleviating poverty would undercut the altruist justification for religious morality, then I can understand why support for privatizing Social Security has been so tepid on the Right.

Indeed, the Religious Right has been more than just tepid. It has shown a willingness to be openly antagonistic over the issue: they have already attempted to hold Social Security hostage to force the President to give more support to a constitutional ban on Gay marriage.

Perhaps they do understand that the more prosperity there is, the less attractive their morality looks.

Once again, this confirms for me the hypocrisy of the Religious Right, who pay lip service to free market economics while preaching altruism. All their talk of free markets is merely a cover for their true goal, which is religious dictatorship.