What Should We Fight For? . . .

Started by redcliffsw, December 14, 2017, 06:26:16 AM

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redcliffsw

What we are witnessing in Crimea, across the Middle East, in the South China Sea, on the Korean peninsula, are nations more willing than we to sacrifice and take risks, because their interests there are far greater than ours.

What America needs is a new national consensus on what is vital to us and what is not, what we are willing to fight to defend and what we are not.

For this generation of Americans is not going to risk war, indefinitely, to sustain some Beltway elite's idea of a "rules-based new world order." After the Cold War, we entered a new world — and we need new red lines to replace the old.
-Pat Buchanan

Read on:
https://www.lewrockwell.com/2017/12/patrick-j-buchanan/what-should-we-fight-for/



redcliffsw


Pat Buchanan is like the little girl with the curl; when she was good, she was awfully good; when she was bad, she was horrid.

Here he is on foreign policy: https://www.lewrockwell.com/2017/12/patrick-j-buchanan/what-should-we-fight-for/. This is no less than magnificent. The essay is surely up to the standards of Ron Paul, Murray Rothbard and all other hard-core libertarians who consistently utilize our theory, even in this realm, unlike some beltway "libertarians."

But in sharp and stark contrast, Buchanan's views on international trade are bloody awful. He is a protectionist through and through. He never saw a tariff he didn't like (I exaggerate, but only slightly). Even Milton Friedman and Adam Smith, quasi libertarians at best, can see through this economic illiteracy of Buchanan's. Friedman, happily, has called for a US unilateral declaration of free trade with all other nations, whether or not they reciprocate. This is the only position consistent with libertarianism. I strive mightily each semester, sometimes even successfully, to inculcate my freshman students with enough economic knowledge to see through the fallacies of protectionism. Mr. Buchanan simply has no knowledge of the doctrine of comparative advantage, specialization and the division of labor.

How can Buchanan be so insightful in one area of human action, foreign policy, and yet so dreadful on another, international trade? Inquiring minds want to know. This may be one of the greatest mysteries of the modern era of political economic commentary.
-Walter Block


https://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog/like-little-girl-curl-can-pat-buchanan-good-foreign-policy-yet-bad-free-trade/


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