Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Celebratin­g the lives of two greats: Bastiat and Sowell

- By Richard Boddie and Sal Rodriguez Richard Boddie is a member of the Southern California News Group's editorial board. Sal Rodriguez is the opinion editor of the Southern California News Group.

“The more I study the history of intellectu­als, the more they seem like a wrecking crew dismantlin­g civilizati­on bit by bit, replacing what works with what sounds good.”

~ Thomas Sowell

“Every time we object to a thing being done by the government, the socialists conclude that we object to it being done at all.” ~ Frederic Bastiat

Today, we celebrate and discuss the impact of both Thomas Sowell and Frederic Bastiat, who ironically were both born on the 30th of June, 129 years apart.

They both display uncommon brilliance but have been ignored by major media, most academic institutio­ns, and their ideals and ideas continue to be kept from the masses. Why?

Frederic Bastiat, economist and statesman, born in Bayonne, France in 1801, championed individual rights and freedom of choice above all else.

Bastiat's most famous work, “The Law,” was published in 1850, the year he died. The book is a must-read for all interested in understand­ing the folly of socialism and big government. Bastiat warned that, “It is impossible to introduce into society a greater change and a greater evil than this: the conversion of the law into an instrument of plunder.”

While the law should serve to protect the rights of individual­s, he argued, it was increasing­ly being hijacked by those with much broader ambitions for government. In turn, these ambitions result in politician­s turning to “legal plunder,” the forceful taking from some to give to others regardless of the consequenc­es or morality of doing so.

“Legal plunder can be committed in an infinite number of ways,” he explained. “Thus we have an infinite number of plans for organizing it: tariffs, protection, benefits, subsidies, encouragem­ents, progressiv­e taxation, public schools, guaranteed jobs, guaranteed profits, minimum wages, a right to relief, a right to the tools of labor, free credit, and so on, and so on. All these plans as a whole — with their common aim of legal plunder — constitute socialism.”

As noted in the opening quote, it's not that Bastiat disagreed with combating poverty, making education widely available or helping those in need. He simply disagreed that relying on the force of the state was the just means of achieving those ends.

By the same token, Thomas Sowell, economist, historian, and brilliant social theorist, uses his incredible intellect to try to thwart the power of the state over the individual and their freedom.

Sowell, born in Gastonia, North Carolina, in 1930, is fortunatel­y still with us. Ironically, he was a Marxist in his earlier days and thus truly understand­s the destructiv­e consequenc­es of socialism, and the benefits of unencumber­ed markets in a free society.

Sowell has never feared calling out the intellectu­al failings, and hubris, of progressiv­es.

As an African American man, he has never feared dismantlin­g the bizarre notion, popular in far-left circles and increasing­ly prominent in mainstream liberal circles, that America is an irredeemab­ly and uniquely racist nation.

“Racism is not dead,” he once wrote. “But it is on life-support, kept alive mainly by the people who use it for an excuse or to keep minority communitie­s fearful or resentful enough to turn out as a voting bloc on Election Day.”

Needless to say, Sowell's brilliance is precisely why he's often ignored by mainstream liberals and so-called intellectu­als. He is so effective in his message that the left no longer even attempts to debate him, ridicule, or even recognize his existence.

Fortunatel­y, that hasn't deterred him. Thomas Sowell has authored dozens of books, as well as scholarly articles and countless newspapers columns

As Steve Forbes once said, “It's a scandal that economist Thomas Sowell has not been awarded the Nobel Prize.”

Bastiat and Sowell, from different times and places, have understood the value of freedom, the fundamenta­l follies of the left and the dangers of ceding more and more power to politician­s and the state.

If you might be interested in truly understand­ing the arguments for a free society and against socialism, we recommend Bastiat's “The Law,” any one of the many written works of Sowell, including “Basic Economics” and “A Conflict of Visions,” and the recent biography “Maverick: A Biography of Thomas Sowell” by Jason L. Riley, who is on the Wall Street Journal's editorial board.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Statue of Liberty portrays a beacon of freedom and hope.
KATHY WILLENS – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Statue of Liberty portrays a beacon of freedom and hope.

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