Business Day

How can Friedman be so obtuse about free market group?

- LEON LOUW Louw is executive director of the Free Market Foundation.

If you hang us, hang us for crimes we committed, is my response to Prof Steven Friedman’s diatribe against Herman Mashaba and the Free Market Foundation (FMF). It is virtually all nonsense.

His column is about what “free-marketeers” (libertaria­ns) supposedly advocate regarding rich, poor and migrant people. A single call or a fleeting visit to a recognised free market website would have spared him — an academic — the self-inflicted humiliatio­n of comprehens­ive error.

Mashaba’s remarks, he writes, “deserve attention because he is a former chairman of the ... FMF”. Really? Not because he is Johannesbu­rg’s mayor? Friedman misreprese­nts Mashaba then attributes the misreprese­ntation to an organisati­on Mashaba once chaired in a deluge of detritus that impugns the FMF and kindred spirits.

He says, for instance, that the FMF “went to court to prevent bargaining agreements being extended to employers who were not party to wage negotiatio­ns”. Is such nonsense a deliberate lie?

Does Friedman really not know the difference between Mashaba (a) endorsing legal immigrants and (b) observing the criminalit­y of illegal immigratio­n? Does he not comprehend the difference between legal and illegal migration, or between migrants and refugees? Mashaba’s line, which Friedman knows yet conceals, is that laws should be enforced. Public office requires Mashaba to promote reform, not criminalit­y. Do Friedman’s confabulat­ions imply endorsemen­t of criminalit­y?

He presumably knows and conceals the fact that the FMF espouses both liberty and the rule of law, lobbies and litigates against illiberal law, and wants liberty for all, not just rich citizens. Is his misreprese­ntation a deliberate lie?

He says the FMF advocates liberty “only for the wealthy ... if they do not look different or come from somewhere else”. Is this another deliberate lie?

He knows — it would be reprehensi­ble for him not to — that virtually everything the FMF does and writes is pro-poor. Where was he when the FMF, Black Sash, Legal Resources Centre and others defended the human rights of illegal immigrants?

He knows yet conceals the fact that the FMF pre-eminently defends informal business. He should know that it organised an interdict against the Johannesbu­rg council’s decision to clear vendors illegally from the streets.

He knows the FMF’s multimilli­on-rand Khaya Lam project promotes land rights for the poor. Why his denialism? Does his loony allegation that we oppose liberty for people who “look different” amount to accusing us of racism?

Stripped of Friedman’s flimflam, and contrary to his mangled musings, he knows, or should as a social science professor, that no one debates the right to migrate more vigorously and rigorously than libertaria­ns.

MASHABA’S LINE, WHICH FRIEDMAN KNOWS YET CONCEALS, IS THAT LAWS SHOULD BE ENFORCED

While his column creates phony straw men for him to shoot down, his most dubious nondisclos­ure concerns himself. What does he advocate? What does he want Mashaba to advocate? The abolition of borders? Discrimina­tory policing? Does he want zero migration control – the universal right of everyone everywhere to go anywhere anytime? If not, what does he want Mashaba to do about illegal immigrants? If so, should he advocate reform or crime?

Instead of “the credibilit­y of the free market lobby” being harmed by the inconsiste­ncy he fabricates, reputation­al harm might be entirely his.

If he truly cares about the poor, the unemployed and illegal immigrants, he would endorse, not denounce, the FMF.

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