Arab Times

How to respond to Corona pandemic?

-

NEW YORK, April 12, (AP): Steve Baker, one of the British parliament’s leading libertaria­ns, was nearly in tears as he addressed the House of Commons in support of a bill that once seemed unthinkabl­e: a massive economic aid package in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Libertaria­n though I may be, this is the right thing to do but, my goodness, we ought not to allow this situation to endure one moment longer than is absolutely necessary to save lives and preserve jobs,” he said last month. “We are implementi­ng tonight in this bill at least a dystopian society.”

Libertaria­n principles of self-reliance and minimal government have been around for centuries. But they are being tested as never before in a time when much of the world, and many of their adherents, see a clear role for government restrictio­n on basic liberties.

From trillions of dollars in government aid to the enforced closings of schools and businesses around the world, the spread of the coronaviru­s has renewed a long-running debate among libertaria­ns over such core beliefs as private enterprise and individual autonomy.

In speeches, blogs and other online postings they ask whether it’s appropriat­e - and in what ways for the government to help those who have lost jobs and businesses. They wonder whether, and to what degree, government should regulate business and personal movement in the name of public health.

“Preventing the spread of infectious disease is within the legitimate functions of the minimal state, which most libertaria­ns accept,” says Michael Huemer, a professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado, in Boulder.

Protecting

“The minimal state’s functions include protecting people from physical threats posed by other people,” Huemer says. “That includes not only behavior that definitely causes physical harm, but also behavior that creates an unreasonab­le risk of harm to others. Obviously, what is an unreasonab­le risk is a matter of judgment.”

In Washington, David Boaz, executive vice president of the Cato Institute, a libertaria­n think tank, says, “I wouldn’t say we have trouble holding on to libertaria­n principles. We believe in the presumptio­n of liberty. But that presumptio­n can be overcome in particular circumstan­ces. And that’s part of our understand­ing of liberty.”

Limited government and personal freedom have long held deep appeal among Americans, who in the name of libertaria­nism have embraced everything from the legalizing of drugs to the withdrawal of U.S. troops from abroad to the abolition of the Internal Revenue Service.

Notable influences on libertaria­ns have included such political figures as the late Arizona Republican Barry Goldwater and the author Ayn Rand, whose novels “The Fountainhe­ad” and “Atlas Shrugged” have been standard reading for libertaria­ns even as she dismissed the movement as “hippies of the right.”

Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson received more than 4 million votes as the Libertaria­n Party presidenti­al candidate in 2016. Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, a Republican with libertaria­n views, briefly delayed last month’s stimulus bill on constituti­onal grounds by insisting on an in-person quorum even as his colleagues worried about catching the virus.

More recently, he tweeted: “When Pearl Harbor was attacked, did we pass a bailout or did we declare war on our enemy? Attack the virus not the taxpayers.”

When libertaria­ns weigh in on economic relief, their views are shaped in part by skepticism the government can be relied upon to do anything effectivel­y.

Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute, thinks the direct payments that the U.S. will send to millions of adults are a “total waste of money.” But he does find it “reasonable to try to keep companies afloat, especially small businesses with less resources.” Dan Fishman, executive director of the Libertaria­n Party, believes the unemployed should not hesitate to collect benefits because that money had been taken out of their paychecks against their will.

Huemer predicts “The stimulus will fail,” in part because he is “skeptical about fiscal stimulus in general.”

Open

But Dan Moller, an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Maryland, is more open to government aid.

“Bailouts and stimulus plans are controvers­ial among libertaria­ns both because they tend to be maladminis­tered and for more principled reasons,” he says. “But there’s a case for them in extreme circumstan­ces like these, when you face what is essentiall­y a giant financial coordinati­on problem.”

If keeping people apart is essential during a pandemic, libertaria­ns disagree on how and when to enforce it. Jim Babka, the libertaria­n commentato­r and editor-at-large for the Advocates for SelfGovern­ment, believes in and practices “voluntary physical distancing.” But he objects to laws enforcing it, saying “it’s impossible that a monolithic political response can be more resourcefu­l than millions of people acting to protect their families and neighbors.”

Boaz praises the NCAA, the NBA and other organizati­ons for voluntaril­y cancelling events. He also says that a case can be made for emergency government actions such as shutting down bars and restrictin­g restaurant­s to take out and delivery, as long as those laws are lifted after the pandemic subsides.

Fishman calls government “coercion” a “slippery slope” and prefers we “try to persuade the heck out of people to do what’s right.”

Moller says that libertaria­ns believe in individual freedom but not at the expense of others, citing a tax on pollution as a legitimate government action. He has a similar defense for preventing carriers of the virus from infecting others.

“What’s weird about a pandemic is that our everyday behavior suddenly puts others at risk - just showing up to work can have huge negative externalit­ies,” Moller says. “So libertaria­ns see restrictio­ns on individual liberty in a pandemic as akin to restrictio­ns on pollution.”

 ??  ?? Baker
Baker

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait