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Tettleton's Chew (0 DX)
18 Dec 11 UTC
George Will at it again. Brilliant!
In 1927, the corrupt politicians of Washington state created a monopoly of ferry rights on Lake Chelan to a company owned by cronies. Today a pair of brothers have a case challenging this monopoly and Will writes brilliantly about it. If you European and not American don't waste your time.
Tettleton's Chew (0 DX)
18 Dec 11 UTC
In 1927, seven years before the board game was created, Washington state decided to play monopoly. It gave a private interest the exclusive right to operate a ferry on 55-mile-long Lake Chelan in the northern Cascade Mountains. It apparently will defend this folly until Judgment Day, when state officials will get an earful from the Creator who — we have Jefferson’s word for this — endowed everyone, including Jim and Cliff Courtney, with the rights to liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

The Courtney brothers’ happiness would be enlarged if they could operate a competing ferry. But 84 years ago Washington state asserted a principle much favored by all of America’s governments:It may parcel out certain economic liberties sparingly and only to those who can prove to government that their exercise of their liberty will satisfy some government-concocted criteria.
That principle lacks constitutional warrant and repudiates the nation’s foundational philosophy. Hence the national importance of the Courtney brothers’ litigation, which asks courts to correct judicial mistakes of 1873 and 1938.

The brothers live in Stehekin, on the lake’s northern tip, and provide recreational services to people who manage to get there from Chelan, on the lake’s southeast end. But people can generally get to Stehekin only by plane or boat. And during the summer season, when the boat schedule is most convenient, the two boats operated by the state-conferred monopoly make only one trip a day in each direction, and both depart at the same time in the same direction.

But before the Courtney brothers can give travelers a better choice, they must receive from the state a “certificate of public convenience and necessity.” The burden is on them to prove that the current monopolist’s service is not “reasonable and adequate.” At least four would-be competitors tried and failed to get such a certificate; the most recent attempt generated a 515-page transcript.
How did America reach the point where aspiring entrepreneurs, seeking to improve their lot by improving other people’s choices, must approach government on bended knee to beg it to confer upon them a right — the right to compete? How did America stray from its foundational principle that government exists to protect preexisting rights, not to apportion such rights as it creates and chooses to bestow? Read on.

The Courtney brothers are represented by the Institute for Justice, which battles government infringements of individuals’ liberties — particularly economic liberties. In an 1873 decision, the Supreme Court (divided 5 to 4) defined Americans’ “privileges or immunities” — the 14th Amendment’s language meaning rights — narrowly. The court recognized only a few rights, mostly essential to national citizenship and not including economic liberty.

In 1938, the court bowed to the progressive desire to empower government to allocate wealth and opportunity. The court decided — without citing a supportive constitutional text, there being none — that economic liberty should be assigned a status markedly inferior to that of “fundamental” liberties. This spurious dichotomy jettisoned America’s natural rights tradition reflected in the Ninth Amendment’s protection of unenumerated rights “retained by the people.”

The Courtneys’ litigation is a little lever that could move the entire nation back toward the Founders’ vision. It will do so if it advances the presumption of liberty. This, says Georgetown University law professor Randy Barnett, is the principle that the government must be required to justify its restrictions on liberty, rather than requiring citizens to prove that the liberty they wish to exercise is somehow “fundamental” and therefore not an optional gift from government.

The Courtneys deserve judicial engagement where judges actively judge in defense of economic liberty. This means active enforcement of the principle that neither Congress nor the states are entitled to determine the limits of their powers. The Constitution made this determination before the mistakes of 1873 and 1938.
Washington state’s creation of the ferry monopoly is what governments have increasingly done since courts misconstrued the Constitution in a way that licenses governments to dispense particular economic favors by restricting general economic liberty. It is now routine for government to have transactions with rent-seekers — private interests who want public power used to confer advantages on them, or disadvantages on competitors.

This case from a remote region of Washington state explains much about a Washington 2,200 miles away. Start with a misbegotten constitutional principle that denigrates economic liberty as less than fundamental, and thus licenses government to ration such liberty. You end with the pandemic rent-seeking that defines the nation’s capital.
Jacob (2466 D)
18 Dec 11 UTC
Nice article.
Tettleton's Chew (0 DX)
20 Dec 11 UTC
Hopefully the Courtneys will win their case.


3 replies
Putin33 (111 D)
19 Dec 11 UTC
Theocratic Tyrant Vaclav Havel Dead
http://www.countercurrents.org/parenti191211.htm

9 replies
Open
Niakan (192 D)
20 Dec 11 UTC
Why are there bad players in the world?
Rant to follow:
60 replies
Open
Diplomat33 (243 D(B))
18 Dec 11 UTC
Does this site work on Blackberry?
Just curious.
18 replies
Open
Yonni (136 D(S))
20 Dec 11 UTC
24-7 gives me the tingles
Just watched the episode one of Flyers-Rangers and, man, is it ever good?
2 replies
Open
dubjamaica (0 DX)
20 Dec 11 UTC
Live Game
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=75335 5min turn JOIN
1 reply
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
16 Dec 11 UTC
A Message from the Mods
1) Please join me in congratulating FK on his promotion to Admin
2) I have drafted a set of guidelines containing every possible scenario I could think of. It is being reviewed by the rest of the mod team now. Although Mods will still have autonomy, it will serve as an official reference for us, so we can do a better job at making consistent decisions.
75 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
19 Dec 11 UTC
Predict the future of Nationalism.
It may be useful to look at the history of Nationalism...
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/405644/nationalism

I suppose it is also useful to note how nations educate their young about nationalism...
10 replies
Open
Niakan (192 D)
09 Dec 11 UTC
Face-to-face Diplomacy in NYC
The website told me to write a four-line summary because my post was too big :oops: I'm organizing a Face-to-Face game in New York City, with the hopes to eventually create a "proper" F2F community! Pitch follows.
19 replies
Open
youradhere (1345 D)
19 Dec 11 UTC
Simply a Replacement for Simply Diplomacy
http://www.webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=74369#gamePanel

England is in good position, two builds coming. I would strongly recommend joining.
0 replies
Open
noiseunit (853 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
How do you define metagaming?
I am curious to know a clear and definite description of metagaming and at what point does playing with friends become a violation.
39 replies
Open
Baskineli (100 D(B))
19 Dec 11 UTC
Hosting a game at my home
I want to host a game at my home with my friends, showing webdiplomacy map on TV screen and using it as move validator. Is there a way to enter orders for all of my friends, using only one user? Some sort of 'game super-user'?
8 replies
Open
Maniac (189 D(B))
17 Dec 11 UTC
Maniac Invitational for GR 200-300 Players
Any of these players or others with GR 200-300 fancy a game?
The Czech, Diplomat33, mr.crispy, Spell of Wheels, Countess Tillian, JECE, Yellowjacket, Ursa, WhiteSammy and dD_ShockTrooper

21 replies
Open
Jamiet99uk (898 D)
19 Dec 11 UTC
Interrobang
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interrobang

Let's discuss‽
7 replies
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
17 Dec 11 UTC
Rail Baron
Anyone else play this game?
Playing with a bunch of people now; probably the best non-war board game I've played.
17 replies
Open
Pepijn (212 D(S))
08 Dec 11 UTC
EOG - SoW Summer 2011 Game 2
48 replies
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
17 Dec 11 UTC
Ron Paul is officially an idiot...
I just watched him tell Jay Leno he is against seatbelt laws. His argument that people have a right to do with their own body is all fine and good, but seatlbelts keep the driver behind the wheel and in better copntrol of their car, therbye protecting the lives of others. He has just proven he is an idiot that can't be put in power.
114 replies
Open
MadMarx (36299 D(G))
13 Dec 11 UTC
MadMarx ABI-VII EoG's
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=70171
56 replies
Open
johnnyw (100 D)
19 Dec 11 UTC
Fast game?
want a fun game look up fast paced game for fun
0 replies
Open
dep5greg (644 D)
18 Dec 11 UTC
Best Alliance in the Game?
What is the best alliance in the game? France-England? A western triple? Juggernaut? Austria-Russia-Turkey? what is the best one?
32 replies
Open
Baskineli (100 D(B))
18 Dec 11 UTC
Railroad Tycoon
I remember this awesome game, and the amount of time I've "burnt" on it. Is there a more modern version of it, or something close to it?
4 replies
Open
stratagos (3269 D(S))
25 Nov 11 UTC
School of War Winter 2011
Since the original thread is several hundred posts long, consider this the kickoff for SoW Winter 2011
106 replies
Open
Ernst_Brenner (782 D)
18 Dec 11 UTC
Misorders?
Anyone else experiencing odd misorders in more than one game?
4 replies
Open
redhouse1938 (429 D)
16 Dec 11 UTC
H. Kissinger's Associates
Invitation follows.
15 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
Everyone's Holiday Reading? (Suggestions?)
Well, it's the Holidays--sorry, it's "CHRISTMAS TIME," for all those "War on Christmas" folks--and I know we have a lot of avid readers on the site...and I just finished the two novels I had left over from my semester's worth of free reading ("The Brothers Karamazov," which was decent but 200 pages too long, and "Tess of the D'urbervilles," which was good, if not a tad anti-climactic) and I was wondering--what's everyone reading? Suggestions?
16 replies
Open
Sebass (114 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
POST LIVE GAMES HERE
A list of new games, closer to the top of the forum
13 replies
Open
taos (281 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
jugernaut
can someone please exlpain jugernaut
i cant really understand how it works and why it is such a strong aliance
the times i tried to do it didnt really work
the rest of the players unite against it and i cant see the advatage
14 replies
Open
SpeakerToAliens (147 D(S))
17 Dec 11 UTC
Craziest man in the world!
I just had to share this. It's awesome.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFQc7VRJowk&sns=fb
His comment "Well, I came extremely close on that one!" is somewhat of an understatement.
8 replies
Open
Sebass (114 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
LIVE GAMES HERE
Need more people for an Anc. Med Gunboat
1 reply
Open
Jacob (2466 D)
17 Dec 11 UTC
Want to try the Ancient Med variant
I haven't played it so I set up a game here: gameID=74927

WTA anon 2-day phases 200 pt buy-in
3 replies
Open
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