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Larry Elder
Larry Elder
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Letting Rand Paul Twist in the Wind

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Libertarian Rand Paul, Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate from Kentucky, shocked many conservatives when he refused to give full-throated support for the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Act criminalized public sector racial discrimination, and struck down laws that required discrimination and segregation. But it went much further. It outlawed racial discrimination by private actors such as restaurant and hotel owners who refused to serve blacks.

National Review's Rich Lowry, for example, wrote: "[T]he Civil Rights Act was the last spasm of the Civil War. The South had frustrated the imposition of black civil rights during Reconstruction in a low-grade insurgency that successfully rumbled on into the 1960s. Black civil rights weren't going to be vindicated any time soon, absent the application of federal power again ... I'm sympathetic to libertarianism, but it sometimes has a weakness for theoretical exercises removed from reality."

This sounds like a white, guilt-ridden rationalization to justify an abandonment of principle. And it has real world, not merely "theoretical," consequences. For one thing, it encourages grievance-driven race-based identity politics — and invites special-interest legislation to protect all manner of niche groups perceived as having been "held down by The Man." It is in these waters that professional victim seekers and exploiters like the Rev. Al Sharpton, race and gender "advocacy groups," and the Democratic Party do their fishing.

Rand's critics also unintentionally expose the condescending way "compassionate conservatives" deem that blacks — still standing after slavery and Jim Crow — are in need of protection by rare "noble" whites from the bigot-infested world through which blacks are obviously incapable of navigating. Why else throw overboard the just and basic principle that private actors, short of engaging in force or fraud, should behave as they wish?

What about the pro-life pharmacist who considers it immoral to stock and sell the morning-after pill? What about the landlady who thinks homosexuality is immoral and refuses to rent to a gay couple? What if she refuses to rent to an illegal alien? What about the "morally straight" Boy Scouts organization that discriminates against an openly gay scoutmaster? What about the healthy 25-year-old who refuses to purchase health insurance?

Republicans go all deer-in-the-headlights when someone questions their colorblind bona fides. But when Nazi sympathizers want publicly to march, many conservatives correctly defend the "right." Constitutional rights extend to both saints and sinners and those in between, no matter the outrage — in this instance of Jewish Holocaust survivors over the prospect of swastika-wearing fascists parading through their neighborhood.

This is freedom 101.

It is this freedom to discriminate that enabled Black Entertainment Television founder Robert Johnson to become a billionaire through the use of race-based programming.

It is this freedom that allows the Miss Black America beauty pageant to exclude non-black applicants. It is this freedom that allows private colleges and universities to discriminate against white applicants with higher SAT scores to achieve "diversity" by helping the "underrepresented." The Congressional Black Caucus discriminates when it refuses membership to whites, as it did recently to a white Tennessee representative even though he represents a majority black district.

If National Review's Lowry owned a restaurant, would he discriminate against blacks? Does he intimately know anyone who would do so? How would he treat friends who patronized restaurants that refused blacks? Of course he wouldn't exclude. Nor would his friends or associates. Obviously none of those "noble" souls in his immediate circle would consort with racists. So why assume that some unacceptable percentage of the "unwashed masses" will act as merchant-racists — either without harmful consequences or the willingness to accept those consequences? Why do we further assume that, whatever the number of bigots, they will be capable of meaningfully affecting the day-to-day lives of blacks? If anything, these racists would have publicly outed themselves as part of the bad and the ugly.

The consequences of government coercion are more harmful than the certainty that some will use their freedom in ways that offend. Bad behavior tends to get punished in the social and business "marketplace." The Boston Red Sox, one of the last teams to hire black ballplayers, discovered fans valued winning much more than team racial homogeneity.

The well-intended, but misguided, passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — as applied to private conduct — sought to change not only whites' behavior but also their "feelings." Some blacks perceive racial hostility toward them from their local Korean grocer. But if treated with a smile and offered quality goods at fair prices, most blacks patronize the store. People expect and respond to a certain measure of respect as a customer, regardless of how the proprietors may personally "feel" about them.

Instead of defending Paul on this issue against race-card-playing leftists like MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, conservatives/Republicans/pundits panicked. How are we to get the country back on the course set by its Founders if we cannot stand with the Rand Pauls of the nation on the bedrock principle of maximum personal liberty?

Larry Elder is a syndicated radio talk show host and best-selling author. His latest book, "What's Race Got to Do with It?" is available now. To find out more about Larry Elder, visit his Web page at www.WeveGotACountryToSave.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 LAURENCE A. ELDER

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Basically, it boils down to 1) Rachel and others like her are glory-seeking opportunists and you are not. 2) Politicans are politicians, are politicians, are politicians, and tossed by every wind that blows. What else is there to say. I support Rand Paul, you and any other Constitutionalist. Good article.
Comment: #1
Posted by: David Henricks
Thu May 27, 2010 2:34 AM
Mr. Elder, you write: "What about the pro-life pharmacist who considers it immoral to stock and sell the morning-after pill?"

They should work at a pharmacy that doesn't stock the morning-after pill or open their own pharmacy and refuse to sell it. However, instead of encouraging pro-life pharmacists to exercise their freedom and choose to not work for companies that sell the morning-after pill, groups such as Pharmacists for Life propose laws that allow the convictions of one particular set of employees to overrule the business decisions of the owner.

Karen Bauer, the president of Pharmacists for Life, was not arrested or fined by the government for refusing to fill a birth control prescription; she was not stripped of her freedom; she was FIRED BY HER EMPLOYER because she refused to abide by her employer's decision to sell a legal drug.

Mr. Elder, you further write: "What about the healthy 25-year-old who refuses to purchase health insurance?"

Lets say that the healthy 25 year old without insurance is out for a jog, listening to his iPod. Since he has the iPod volume up and was distracted by the cute blonde on the other side of the street, he fails to notice an oncoming car while crossing the street (and the "Don't Walk" sign) and BAM! now he needs emergency care at the local hospital. But, since the 25 year old did not purchase at least major medical coverage, the hospital will likely have to write off much of the cost of the his treatment. This is because the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), which was signed into law in 1986, imposes a duty to treat patients with emergency medical conditions on hospitals. Now, the hospital has the pay the paramedics who brought the 25 year old to the ER, the attending that assessed his condition, the surgeons that repaired his internal hemorrhaging, and the nurses that assisted them. But, the $500 in the 25 year old's savings account isn't going to cover that. So, the hospital passes the cost on to the patients (and their insurance companies) that can pay.

If society is going to guarantee the 25 year old will receive emergency medical treatment, what is wrong with requiring him to carry some minimum level of major medical coverage? If the 25 year old should have the "freedom" to refuse to purchase insurance, shouldn't the hospital also be "free" to refuse to treat him if he can't pay?
Comment: #2
Posted by: B. Dunne
Thu May 27, 2010 10:44 AM
B. Dunne writes "...the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), which was signed into law in 1986, imposes a duty to treat patients with emergency medical conditions on hospitals. Now, the hospital has the pay the paramedics who brought the 25 year old to the ER, the attending that assessed his condition, the surgeons that repaired his internal hemorrhaging, and the nurses that assisted them. But, the $500 in the 25 year old's savings account isn't going to cover that. So, the hospital passes the cost on to the patients (and their insurance companies) that can pay..." This is precisely why government interference in the private lives of the citizens is wrong. Forcing me (and others) to pay for someone else's poor choices promotes more poor choices. That 25 year old chose to pursue his "happiness" his way and should reap the consequences. But, I am denied my pursuit of happiness by being forced to pay. Do you get it, yet?
Comment: #3
Posted by: David Henricks
Thu May 27, 2010 3:56 PM
Re: David Henricks: I understand your argument, but the consequences of what you propose have been rejected. Through our elected representatives, we as a society have decided that it is unacceptable for someone to be brought to an ER with life-threatening injuries and then wheeled back out to the street and left to bleed to death on the curb because of an inability to pay.
Comment: #4
Posted by: B. Dunne
Thu May 27, 2010 10:30 PM
Re: B. Dunne
The problem with EMTALA is that hospitals are required to treat ALL persons who present at the emergency room with "medical problems", whether those problems be a headache, sore throat, or a problem with anxiety. Although the car accident victim who is bleeding to death, or the heart attack victim who needs immediate care are certainly not rarities in an ER, it is the other, non-critical medical problems that are bankrupting our health care system. Many people (incuding those who are eligible for Medicaid, but who are either too lazy or too disinterested to sign up to receive the benefits) use the ER as a doctor's office, knowing that they will be treated and will not have to pay. Illegal immigrants learn how to work the sytem before they ever cross the border, and they constitute a huge segment of the healthcare costs our border states have to shoulder. When EMTALA was passed, few envisioned it becoming an open invitation for the nation's emergency rooms to serve as bandaid pushers for everyone with a scratch. It's like so many things in America: good hearted "humanitarians" push for legislation to help those who truly need a helpiing hands in times of acute crisis. Instead, ne'er do wells learn to play the system, and the whole nation suffers. Mr. Elder is right--most things take care of themselves if the government just stays out of it. Not likely to happen...
Comment: #5
Posted by: mary fisher
Fri May 28, 2010 7:40 PM
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