The Majority of Americans Say Political Correctness Has Silenced Free Speech

Nearly three-fourths (71%) of Americans believe political correctness has silenced important discussions our society needs to have, and 58% of Americans believe the political climate prevents them from sharing their own political beliefs…

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A solid majority of Americans (59%) think people should be allowed to express unpopular opinions in public, even those deeply offensive to others. On the other hand, 40% think government should prevent hate speech. Despite this, Americans are willing to censor, regulate, or punish a wide variety of speech and expression they personally find offensive:

  • 51% of staunch liberals say it’s “morally acceptable” to punch Nazis.
  • 53% of Republicans favor stripping U.S. citizenship from people who burn the American flag.
  • 51% of Democrats support a law that requires Americans use transgender people’s preferred gender pronouns.
  • 65% of Republicans say NFL players should be fired if they refuse to stand for the anthem.
  • 58% of Democrats say employers should punish employees for offensive Facebook posts.
  • 47% of Republicans favor bans on building new mosques.

Americans also can’t agree what speech is hateful, offensive, or simply a political opinion:

  • 59% of liberals say it’s hate speech to say transgender people have a mental disorder; only 17% of conservatives agree.
  • 39% of conservatives believe it’s hate speech to say the police are racist; only 17% of liberals agree.
  • 80% of liberals say it’s hateful or offensive to say illegal immigrants should be deported; only 36% of conservatives agree.
  • 87% of liberals say it’s hateful or offensive to say women shouldn’t fight in military combat roles, while 47% of conservatives agree.
  • 90% of liberals say it’s hateful or offensive to say homosexuality is a sin, while 47% of conservatives agree.

Censoring offensive speech is difficult, because what is deeply offensive to one person may simply be a political opinion to another. If we silence speech that any number of people find offensive, we will shut down a wide variety of important political debates.

Learn more…

Happy Birthday Thomas Jefferson!

Today marks the 274th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth…

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One of the most well-known founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson was the principal author of the Declaration of Independence, in addition to serving as the second Vice President and third President of the United States. 

The Declaration of Independence is one of the greatest and most influential political documents of all time. Although often understood as a  mere declaration of intention to sever political ties with Britain, it is, in fact, a carefully crafted argument justifying that intention. The Founders offered a careful set of arguments for armed revolution, a course that was not undertaken lightly, with full awareness of the consequences.  Each signatory knew that he was signing his own death warrant in the event of failure.

In drafting the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson expressed a sophisticated, radical vision of liberty with awesome grace and eloquence. He affirmed that all people are entitled to liberty, regardless what laws might say. If laws don’t protect liberty, he declared, then the laws are illegitimate, and people should rebel. While Jefferson didn’t originate this idea, he put it in a way that set afire the imagination of people around the world. Moreover, he articulated a doctrine for strictly limiting the power of government, the most dangerous threat to liberty everywhere.

The ideas of liberty he promoted continue to form the basis of the American cultural heritage today.

Jefferson was among the most learned men of his time. With his gifted pen and meticulous script, Jefferson drafted more reports, resolutions, legislation and related official documents than any other Founding Father. Jefferson set a new, individualist standard for virtue: that what counted most was the way individuals conducted their private lives, their contribution to civil society rather than politics.

Though Jefferson had personal failings — in the case of slavery, a monstrous one — Jefferson’s accomplishments and philosophy of liberty must be recognized for their monumental importance.

The most enduring legacy of the American Revolution is the attempt to establish a system of individual liberty and limited government governed by law—a system consistent with the nature of human beings as moral agents with inalienable rights. That effort has been an inspiration to lovers of liberty all around the globe.

Learn more….

President Trump’s First Meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping Offers A Key Opportunity to Re-negotiate Economic Relationship

U.S.-China trade relations and North Korea’s unconventional weapons program are expected to be he main focus of this week's highly-anticipated first meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping…

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As China’s economic power has increased, so has criticism of its market-distorting economic practices. The U.S. government has brought international trade complaints against China and used unilateral actions and threats, but U.S. businesses are unsatisfied with the results.

While there have been some successes, the limits of the current approach to making China’s economy more market-oriented may have been reached, as there are gaps in the existing international trade rules, and unilateral demands are of limited value against a powerful trading partner with its own domestic politics to contend with. 

President Trump has made numerous statements regarding his goal of “reshaping” U.S. trade policy. Last week, Trump tweeted that his upcoming meeting with Xi will be a “very difficult one” because of “massive trade deficits.” On Friday, Trump signed two executive orders aimed at addressing the causes of U.S. trade deficits.

But, in the current political climate, an overly aggressive approach runs the risk of a serious U.S.-China trade war, which would cause great harm to both sides

But there is another option….

This meeting could present a good opportunity for both leaders to discuss these core economic and security issues on trade and North Korea before they further strain U.S.-China relations.

If the United States wants to promote the liberalization of Chinese trade and investment policy, it needs to engage with China in a more positive way.

Rather than attempt to drive a counterproductive wedge between the two countries through harsh rhetoric, the Xi-Trump meeting should be taken up as a good opportunity to start building a “constructive partnership” between the United States and China.

While there has been trade tension between the United States and China in recent years, and to some extent it will surely continue, their interests are often complementary rather than conflicting, and it is in the interest of both countries to maintain a close economic relationship.

It would be great if the Trump administration would realize that trade threats and trade wars will only do both sides harm, and put the U.S.-China relationship on a positive path. If they do not, and the current model of tension, litigation, and threats continues, the task of negotiating with China will simply be passed on to some future administration.

Learn more…

Immigrants Make America Better

The overriding impact of immigrants is to strengthen and enrich American culture, increase the total output of the economy, and raise the standard of living of American citizens…

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Immigrants are advantageous to the United States for several reasons:

  1.  Since they are willing to take a chance in a new land, they are self-selected on the basis on motivation, risk taking, work ethic, and other attributes beneficial to a nation.
  2. They tend to come to the United States during their prime working years (the average age is 28), and they contribute to the workforce and make huge net contributions to old-age entitlement programs, primarily Social Security.
  3. Immigrants tend to fill niches in the labor market where demand is highest relative to supply, complementing rather than directly competing with American workers.
  4. Many immigrants arrive with extremely high skill levels, and virtually all, regardless of skill level, bring a strong desire to work.
  5. Their children tend to reach high levels of achievement in American schools and in society at large.

Read Cato’s research on immigration…

Here’s How Congress & the Administration Can Make Us All More Free….

The Cato Handbook sets the standard in Washington for reducing the power of the federal government and expanding freedom…

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The Cato Institute is pleased to announce the release of the 2017 edition of the Cato Handbook for Policymakers.

Fidelity to our founding principles of respect for civil liberties and limited government may be easy when times are easy. The true test of our faith in those principles comes when we are beset by assaults from without and economic turmoil within, when public anxiety may temporarily make it seem expedient to put those principles aside.

The new Cato Handbook for Policymakers outlines practical steps Congress and the administration could take to expand freedom and limit government.

Newly updated for the 115th Congress, each of the Handbook’s 80 chapters offers analysis and a list of major policy recommendations for Congressional staff interested in promoting liberty, free markets, and peace across a wide array of policy areas.

This 8th edition lays out a framework for reform in areas ranging from international trade policy to federal tax reform, health care to agricultural policy, and many more. 

Explore our policy recommendations…

This Day in History: Celebrating 96 Years of Women’s Suffrage

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96 years ago today, on August 18, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified. 

The amendment—which marked the culmination of the U.S. women’s suffrage movement—prohibited any United States citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex.

“The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.

Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.”

— Nineteenth Amendment, U.S. Constitution

What a perfect time to remember not just the crucial role women played in launching the libertarian movement, but the role that women with libertarian values have played in advancing women’s rights.

In honor of this historic day, here are a few of our favorite articles, videos, and podcasts on women & liberty:

  • Libertarians and the Struggle for Women’s Rights 
    • “A libertarian must necessarily be a feminist, in the sense of being an advocate of equality under the law for all men and women, though unfortunately many contemporary feminists are far from being libertarians.”
  • Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
    • “Mary Wollstonecraft…is increasingly acknowledged as one of the most influential thinkers on women’s rights…Although not consistently libertarian, she was consistently in favor of equal legal rights for men and women, and she operated within a generally classical liberal framework.”
  • Rights and Responsibilities of Women
    • “When human beings are regarded as moral beings, sex, instead of being enthroned upon the summit, administering upon rights and responsibilities, sinks into insignificance and nothingness.”
  • Frederick Douglass on the Rights of Women
    • “A self-taught escaped slave, statesman, and leader of the American abolitionist movement, Frederick Douglass is best known for his speeches and autobiographies, in which he stressed the universal equality of all humans. While Douglass is well-known for his support for the abolition of slavery, he is less known for his outspoken support of the women’s liberation movement.”
  • How is Libertarian Feminism Different from Other Feminisms?
    • “Some libertarians are not aware of the differences between libertarian feminism and other kinds of feminism. They even criticize libertarian feminists just for being feminist without any knowledge of what libertarian feminism or even feminism itself stands for…Those libertarians…have not done their homework. When libertarian feminists say they want liberty for all women and men, they really mean it.”
  • What Does Libertarian Feminism Look Like?
    • “What does libertarian feminism look like? How does libertarianism appeal to women?…How can issues that affect women be approached from a libertarian perspective? It seems that there are more women among younger generations of libertarians. Is there an explanation for this?”
  • Libertarian Feminism: An Honorable Tradition
    • “Contrary to what some may think, the first feminist activists were not socialists, they were individualists and libertarians.”

The United States of Freedom

Freedom in the 50 States, published by the Cato Institute, finds New Hampshire is the freest state, while New York ranks by far the least free in the nation.

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Which state is the freest? Which state is the least? Which one has the most lightly taxed and regulated economy? Which states protect personal freedoms the best? The worst? How free is your state?

The newly published 2016 edition of Freedom in the 50 States is one of the most comprehensive and definitive sources on how public polices in each American state impact an individual’s economic, social, and personal freedoms. Study authors William P. Ruger and Jason Sorens have gathered data on more than 230 variables to measure freedom now and in the past.

“While the federal government has become more intrusive and inefficient over the last two decades, individual states are providing Americans with a little-recognized renaissance of policy innovation,” argue Ruger and Sorens. “If we want to save our freedom and restore good government, it is to the states that we must look and not to the federal government.”

Freedom in the 50 States examines state and local government intervention across a wide range of policy categories—from taxation to debt, from eminent domain laws to occupational licensing, and from drug policy to educational choice.

Between 2006 and year-end 2014, the latest available data, Ruger and Sorens find the average state has seen dramatic increases in economic freedom, after the effects of the federally mandated Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are parsed out. This has largely been the result of states cutting spending during the financial crisis, with some states going even further and cutting taxes simultaneously.

Conservative states tend to do better on economic freedom overall, although not always by a huge margin. On personal freedom, the results are less clear cut. Progressive states have done better on marriage freedom, cannabis laws, and incarceration. But conservative states gain points on personal freedom too when it comes to gun rights, educational freedom, and smoking on private property.

States that have lower freedom rankings tend to be less economically prosperous. They tend to have higher rates of corruption and more lobbyists seeking government rents. Lower labor-market and regulatory freedom typically discourages business investment and raises the cost of living, which then can scare off Americans from other states looking to relocate for work.

There is strong evidence that states with more freedom attract more residents. The authors find a solid relationship between a lighter fiscal impact of government and net immigration, though evidence also suggests that regulatory and personal freedom play a role in attracting residents. For example, New York, the least free state, suffered the second-worst net out-migration of any state, 7.5 percent of its 2001 population. Conversely, Texas, Florida, and North Carolina, who rank among the top 20 in overall fiscal policy, have drawn nearly four million residents from the rest of the country from 2001-2014.

The study grades all fifty U.S. states on three dimensions—fiscal policy, regulatory policy, and personal freedom.

The fiscal policy dimension consists of five variables: (a) state tax revenues, (b) local tax revenues, © government employment, (d) government subsidies, and (e) government debt, each of which earns a significant weight because of its importance. The tax and debt variables are measured for each fiscal year, whereas the employment and subsidies variables come from different sources and are available for the calendar year. The authors separate state and local taxation and assign different weights to each.

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The regulatory policy dimension includes categories for land-use freedom and environmental policy, health insurance freedom, labor-market freedom, occupational freedom, lawsuit freedom, cable and telecommunications freedom, and miscellaneous regulations that do not fit under another category. 

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The personal freedom versus paternalism dimension consists of the following categories: (a) incarceration and arrests for victimless crimes, (b) marriage freedom, © educational freedom, (d) gun rights, (e) alcohol freedom, (f) cannabis freedom, (g) gaming freedom, (h) asset forfeiture, (i) tobacco freedom, (j) travel freedom, (k) campaign finance freedom, and (l) other mala prohibita and miscellaneous civil liberties. Weighting these categories was a challenge because the observable financial impacts of these policies do not often include the full harms to victims.

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In addition to the study being available as a free download, over 230 policy variables and their sources are available on a specially designed companion website that enables policymakers, concerned citizens, scholars, and others, to create customized indices of freedom, or download data for their own individual analyses.

Freedom in the 50 States is an essential work for anyone interested in state policy and in advancing a better understanding of a free society.

How free is your state? Dig into the data, then tweet what you find with #FreeStates.

libertarianismdotorg:
“ 273 years ago, a great Founding Father and defender of liberty was born. Happy birthday, Thomas Jefferson!
A Sophisticated, Radical Vision: A Biography of Thomas Jefferson – http://bit.ly/20CdSOS
”
Happy birthday to Thomas...

libertarianismdotorg:

273 years ago, a great Founding Father and defender of liberty was born. Happy birthday, Thomas Jefferson!

A Sophisticated, Radical Vision: A Biography of Thomas Jefferson – http://bit.ly/20CdSOS

Happy birthday to Thomas Jefferson!

President Obama Announces SCOTUS Nominee

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Just minutes ago, President Obama officially nominated Merrick Garland, chief judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, to the Supreme Court. 

While Chief Judge Garland is assuredly a liberal vote on the most controversial, culture-war issues, he’s just as surely the most moderate Democratic-leaning jurist under consideration on cases that fly under the radar.  

Merrick Garland is the safest, least ideological nominee President Obama could have made, which means that the president wants to put pressure on Senate Republicans more than he wants to energize his base,” writes Ilya Shapiro, Editor-in-chief of the Cato Supreme Court Review. "But in this hazy, crazy, bizarre election year, this Supreme Court seat should remain vacant until the American people can decide whether they want to swing the balance of the Supreme Court, possibly for decades.”

Justice Antonin Scalia, who passed away earlier this year, was one of four conservatives on the Court. When joined by Justice Anthony Kennedy, Scalia formed a majority crucial for enforcing the First and Second Amendments, federalism, the separation of powers, and other constitutional protections for individual liberty.

If he’s replaced by a progressive or “moderate” jurist, there will likely be no further check on the sorts of executive abuses that have only increased under a president who thinks that when Congress doesn’t act on his priorities, he somehow gets the authority to enact them regardless.

That’s a legacy that will last a long time…and span many presidencies. 

Learn more… 

The Candidacy of Donald Trump

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Originally posted by washingtonpost

Donald Trump shot to the top of Republican presidential polls on the strength of his celebrity and his hard-edged talk, and with his early primary victories, now appears firmly entrenched as the Republican frontrunner. The businessman has been long on rhetorical soundbites, but short on actual policy plans. Cato scholars try to sort it out.