By Lawrence W. Reed
January 25, 2013
It's a good bet that no matter where you are on the political
spectrum-liberal, conservative, libertarian or something else-you want
men and women in government to be honest, humble, fair, wise,
independent, responsible, incorruptible, mindful of the future and
respectful of others.
But you may be holding profoundly contradictory views without
realizing it. This is the bottom line: The bigger government gets, the
less likely it will attract men and women who possess those traits we
all say we want.
Have you noticed how mean and nasty campaigns for high office have
become? Lies and distortions are common political fare these days. Why
would a genuinely good person subject himself to the ugliness of it all?
Increasingly, genuinely good people don't bother, so we are left all
too often with dirtbags and demagogues in government. Unless you enjoy
rolling in the mud with the hogs, you stay on the other side of the
fence.
There are reasons for this disturbing situation and they have to do
with the nature of power. Lord Acton famously stated more than a century
ago that "Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." He
nailed it, though I would add a corollary of my own: "Power attracts the
corrupt."
If you've supported the monstrous expansion of the federal government
in recent decades, or if you've got a laundry list of things you want
it to do because you think it's not yet big enough, then don't blow
smoke about clean and honest politics. You're part of the problem. Big
government, by its very nature, is dirty and dishonest. That's the kind
of people it attracts and that's what concentrated power is always
about.
America's Founders had lots of reasons for wanting to keep government
small, reasons the government schools rarely teach these days. One of
those reasons was that they knew the wisdom of Lord Acton's warning a
century before he wrote it. It would be inconceivable to our Founders
that good and honest people could ever stay good and honest if they're
swiping and redistributing four trillion dollars every year and
regulating almost every corner of life. That kind of power can make a
sinner from a saint in no time.
Think ahead to what all this means in the future if the federal
government continues to grow unchecked. Some day when it controls 50 or
60 or 70 percent of national income, it'll be stuffed full of arrogant,
manipulative, slick-talking but low-character types. They will not be
people who are wise enough to realize that they're not smart enough to
run everybody else's life. Then when we realize we've put some of the
worst among us in charge of a gargantuan machine, it'll be too late.
Power attracts bad people and bad people don't go away quietly.
Big government equals bad government. Don't fool yourself into thinking otherwise.