Re: Environmentalists rule

National Post
February 17, 2003

Letters to the Editor
Re: Lawrence Solomon’s article, “Environmentalists Rule,” Feb. 5, 2003, National Post

Lawrence Solomon is very good at describing the past. His predictions for the future are questionable. I was there with him in the 1970s questioning nuclear power – pointing to the unsustainable growth predictions for electricity and the incredible risks and costs that conservative businessmen were taking with taxpayer’s money. Unfortunately, we were right. Nuclear power has cost Ontarians $20-billion in debt. New Brunswick’s reactor cost $450-million. The federal government spent $17-billion and counting.

But as I said, his prediction for the future is wrong. Every realistic analysis of the Kyoto Protocol predicts at worst a negligible impact on Canada’s economy and there are plenty of reasons to question their bias toward the negative.

We were right in 1976 when we pasted a banner on the Bruce Reactor building that read, “Nuclear Power, Unsafe, Unnecessary and Uneconomic.” And we were right in 2002 when we said meeting the Kyoto targets will create jobs and improve air quality while protecting the climate from catastrophic change.

John Bennett, director
Atmosphere and Energy
Sierra Club of Canada, Ottawa


Mr. Solomon seems to be stuck in some kind of 1980s time warp. Let me clue him in on a few of the clearest examples of environmentalists making boo-boos in their energy forecasts.

In Sweden, which voted 23 years ago to phase out nuclear power if alternatives were available, a majority of Swedes now favour keeping nuclear power plants going, or even building new ones as electricity prices have hit record highs, according to a poll by independent pollster Sifo, published Jan. 20 of this year.

While its true that Belgium’s lower House of Parliament voted recently to close down the country’s nuclear power plants by 2025, the bill still faces a vote in the Belgian senate, expected in the coming months.

Belgium’s seven reactors provide the country with almost two-thirds of its electricity, and the move could cause an energy shortfall for decades, as no clear alternative has yet been found.

The closure will also make it impossible for Belgium to meet its commitments to reduce its greenhouse gas output under the Kyoto Protocol. A nuclear phase-out would add 20% to Belgium’s CO2 emissions, which already are on a trend higher than the ceiling foreseen under the Kyoto Protocol. In the European Union as a whole, the current use of nuclear energy avoids 312 million tonnes of CO2 per year, which is 7% of all greenhouse gases emitted in the EU or the equivalent of the CO2 emissions of some 75 million cars.

In June, Switzerland’s lower house of Parliament rejected proposals to phase out nuclear and to make new nuclear projects dependent on existence of a final high-level waste repository. Nuclear energy supplies almost 40% of the country’s electricity.

In France, the largest user of nuclear power after the United States, a report by the Economy Ministry has concluded that it sees no alternative for the time being to nuclear power as the country’s primary means of electricity production (which provides nearly 80% of the total). The report rules out replacing nuclear power with fossil fuels because it “would not allow France to meet its international commitments” to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

It’s no wonder, then, that EU Commissioner for International Market and Taxation Frits Bolkestein said on Nov. 6, 2002, in an address to the Institute of Economic Affairs in London, that nuclear is “needed more than ever” for Europe.

So how about letting people here know a little bit about what’s really going on?

Jaro Franta, P.Eng., Montreal


When Malthus, more than 150 years ago, claimed that the world’s population would soon overrun its ability to feed itself, it was farm mechanization, new crop development, and better protection of food supply with chemicals and new methods of preservation that showed that he was wrong. Surprisingly, we have some extremists trying to make these population predictions come true, by reining in present-day food progress. In parts of Africa, politicians will not allow people to eat GM food we gave them, that we have been eating for years, because Greenpeace scathingly calls it Frankenfood, and implies that it is harmful. Better to force these millions to starve to death and make a point, than to allow them to eat it and thrive?

Dr. John Snow, in London in the 1850s, suggested that sewage-laden drinking water caused the regular and devastating outbreaks of cholera in London. When the water supply was changed, the disease was much reduced, to everyone’s benefit. Now we have some environmentalists who object to keeping the modern water supply free of pathogens through chlorination. Thousands died recently in Peru in a resurgence of cholera, when the politicians were temporarily influenced by Greenpeace’s misguided and ignorant attempts to ban chlorine.

We got where we are today despite the best efforts of many environmental extremists to stall us, especially over the last 40 years. Such activists do not feed nations; do not provide needed energy to society; do not provide health care or health services to anyone; but they excel at obstruction, emotional misinformation; and factual distortion. If they ever achieve their socially destructive goals we would all very soon find ourselves living in birds nests and rabbit holes, as President Reagan pointed out.

It is knowledge, openness to new ideas, wealth and technology that defeat the ignorance, superstition, fear-mongering, deception and dishonesty of environmental extremists, every time. Eventually.

Environmental issues are rarely if ever identified or even solved by environmentalists. Most do not even know that the biggest human and environmental problems are ignorance and poverty, just as always, or they would be out labouring in the Third World instead of pulling childishly pathetic stunts for the cameras while hiding behind masks. They strive to block the technology that can, and does solve most real problems, while they drain us of the wealth to continue such progress. And therein lies the even bigger tragedy. Only wealthy and advanced societies can afford to support the environmental movement or can afford to address valid social issues. Extremists sidetrack us with what they emotionally try to persuade us to believe are more important issues, and try to drain away our resources from other social programs.

John K. Sutherland, Fredericton

Read Lawrence Solomon’s article, “Environmentalists Rule”

Posted in Energy | Leave a comment

A clean slate for Iraq

James Surowiecki
The New Yorker
February 12, 2003

In February, 1895, Cuban nationalists seeking independence from Spain took to the hills and started a campaign of guerrilla warfare. When initial efforts to put down the rebellion failed, the Spanish military relocated hundreds of thousands of Cuban farmers into fortified concentration camps, where they soon fell prey to hunger and disease. In the United States, publicity about the camps fanned hostility toward the Spanish and, eventually, inspired calls for U.S. intervention in Cuba (where, not coincidentally, America had important economic and strategic interests). War began in the spring of 1898, and a few months later the Spanish Empire was gone.The end of the war presented a new dilemma. Cuba had a mountain of foreign debt, and during the peace negotiations Spain insisted that the Cubans were responsible for all of it. The logic was perverse; much of that debt had been run up by the colonial authorities in their effort to crush the Cuban struggle for independence. But international law seemed to be on Spain’s side. Debt, the Spanish argued, was attached to a territory, not to a regime. The money had been borrowed by Cuba, and Cuba, or the occupying Americans, had to pay it back. The regime might have changed, but the debt remained.

The U.S. rejected that argument. The Cuban people had had no say in the decision to borrow the money, and it had been spent in ways that damaged them. Therefore, Cuba should owe nothing. In the end, the new republic repudiated its debts and started over with a clean slate.

Before long, the Iraqi people will likely face a similar dilemma. In 1979, when Saddam Hussein took power, Iraq – thanks to the oil boom of the seventies – had a foreign surplus of about thirty-five billion dollars. A decade later, after the war with Iran, it had a foreign debt of some fifty billion dollars. And today, after more war and a dozen years of missed interest payments, the country owes, by many estimates, more than a hundred billion dollars. Its creditors, which include Kuwait, Bulgaria, and the Korean conglomerate Hyundai, are already jockeying for position to be repaid after the war.

Iraq has no hope of ever repaying its debts. Its annual gross domestic product is a mere thirty billion dollars, and even if this war does relatively little damage to the country’s infrastructure it will take years – and tens of billions of dollars – to repair the damage that Saddam has done to the Iraqi economy. Presumably, the U.S. and others will invest heavily in reconstruction. But, if Iraq is to become stable and prosperous, it needs to spend public dollars on public goods (health, education, roads), not on debt payments to creditors who willingly lent money to Saddam.

Even if the Iraqi people could afford to pay back Saddam’s debts, it’s hard to see why they should. Most of the money that Iraq borrowed in the past twenty years went either to Saddam’s military misadventures in Iran and Kuwait or to his internal security apparatus. Asking the Iraqi people to assume Saddam’s debts is rather like telling a man who has been shot in the head that he has to pay for the bullet.

Oddly, though, that’s pretty much what international custom seems to require. Lenders and borrowers still believe that debt belongs to a state, not to a regime. As a result, only a handful of countries have ever repudiated their debts. Even when tyrannical regimes have been deposed – Somoza in Nicaragua, Mobutu in Zaire, the apartheid system in South Africa – their successors have dutifully, if reluctantly, assumed their debts.

It might be time to change all that and consider an old idea that has recently been resurrected: the doctrine of odious debts. First articulated in the twenties by a former tsarist minister named Alexander Sack, the doctrine holds that a country is not responsible for debts incurred by a “despotic regime” and used for purposes “contrary to the interests of the nation.” Both criteria have to be met for the debt to be considered odious. (In other words, profligate Argentina couldn’t repudiate its debt, because it’s a democracy.) The idea is that when the despot falls his debt disappears with him. The Harvard economists Michael Kremer and Seema Jayachandran have proposed the creation of an international institution that would have the authority to declare a regime “odious.” Such a system would likely persuade lenders to avoid tyrants, as they would no longer expect to be repaid.

Western governments and bankers have long been intolerant of the odious-debt excuse; they’d prefer not to be in the business of judging whether a regime is illegitimate. They also like to get paid back. And no one wants countries to renege every time a general stages a coup. Still, even the hardest-nosed Western lenders now understand that burying new regimes under old debt is no way to encourage the spread of capitalism and democracy. In the early nineties, Poland had half its debt cancelled when it agreed to institute market reforms. More recently, a major

I. M.F. and World Bank initiative eliminated a significant portion of Third World debt, much of which is, if not odious, then at least really dislikable.

A post-Saddam regime could certainly cut a similar deal with its creditors, but that would still stick Iraq with a substantial burden of debt. Perhaps Saddam’s successors should turn theory into practice and, when the time comes, repudiate the debts that Saddam incurred to stock his arsenal and maintain his power. That would vastly improve Iraq’s economic prospects, and establish a worthy precedent: lend to tyrants, and you will get stiffed. The U.S., at least, is unlikely to object – two of Iraq’s biggest creditors are Russia and France.

Posted in Nation states, Political reforms | Leave a comment

Responses to Fidel Batista!

National Post
February 3, 2003

Re: Lawrence Solomon’s article, “Fidel Batista!” published in the Jan. 25, 2003, issue of the National Post

Thank you, Lawrence Solomon, for confirming my suspicions that tales of pre-Revolution misery in Cuba were largely exaggerated.

On a recent visit to Havana, I couldn’t help but notice the physical evidence of a once-thriving middle-class. Mid-century suburbs filled with tract upon tract of modest suburban homes ring the city. Despite years of neglect and sloppy conversion into multi-family rooming houses, they wouldn’t look at all out of place in 1950s Don Mills or any other Canadian suburb. These reminders of the corruption of the Batista era are far more desirable places to live than the newer Soviet-inspired blocks that blight the urban landscape.

Raymond Girard, Montreal


I am shocked at the Financial Post’s insistence on discrediting Cuba.

The United States did not liberate Cuba from “oppressive Spanish occupation.” The Cubans were fighting and gaining their independence by themselves when the United States decided to intervene in order to replace the Spanish occupation with their own. Soon after the so-called liberation, the Platt Amendment was placed in the Cuban Constitution, in 1901, giving the United States the right to intervene for any reason and establishing a U.S. military base at Guantanamo. The United States militarily intervened in Cuba in 1906, 1912 and 1917. The military base is still in Cuban territory now.

Education is one of Cuba’s major success stories after 1959. The suggestion that student registration at primary schools now is lower is simply wrong. Cuba has a growing aging population, thanks to an extended life expectancy of over 75 years and a low birth rate (about 12 per 1,000 population). Therefore the overall proportion of school-age children has decreased over time. This is true in Canada as well. When the student registration is correctly measured relative to the total number of children of primary school age, the picture is totally reversed and Cuba fares an impressive 98% proportion of school registrations. The same applies for higher education.

Finally, Mr. Solomon refers to the fact that Americans cannot travel to Cuba “due to U.S. government regulations.” However, there is no reference in the article to more damaging U.S. government regulations such as the Torricelli law, the Helms-Burton law and the virtual blockade of Cuba for over 40 years that not only prevent Americans from trading with Cuba but try to force other countries not to trade with Cuba. I doubt Canada could survive such a situation with minimal human suffering.

Nino Pagliccia, Vancouver


Imagine that in 1960 the United States had imposed a crippling economic blockade on Canada, and then imagine a visitor to Canada in 2003 writing about the country’s current economic situation without mentioning this blockade or the fact that it violated international law and was regularly condemned by over 95% of UN members.

Well, such an economic blockade is the real, not hypothetical, situation with regard to Cuba and the United States. And Canada is one of the 95%+ of nations which regularly condemn the U.S. blockade. And yet these crucial facts about Cuba’s economy are never once mentioned in Mr. Solomon’s latest diatribe against Cuba.

On the political front, his analysis of current Cuban democracy in comparison to the Batista government it replaced is even more distorted. For example, he never explains how the Cuban government is now able to mobilize millions in support of its policies, whereas the only thing Batista could mobilize was the U.S.-subsidized Cuban army to violently put down protests and strikes and to terrorize the vast majority of the Cuban population.

Marvin Glass, co-chair, Canadian Network on Cuba


Having just read Cuba: ‘An Equitable Society in an Ocean of Inequality’? (Letters, Jan. 27), I am left with one conclusion: Cuba is a nation of healthy slaves.

Keith Read, Chilliwack, B.C.

Read the article ‘Fidel Batista!’

Posted in Culture, Regulation | Leave a comment

The 2002/2003 Alberta electoral boundaries commission

Final Report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta

February 1, 2003

Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries and Names for Alberta.

Click here to view webpage with article

Posted in Cities, Regulation | Leave a comment

Property rights: The key to freedom, prosperity and equality

February 1, 2003

Lorne Gunter

Without property rights – full, robust and free from state interference – we will never be truly free. And while we might be the same, we will never be equal, either. Nor will be prosperous for long.

 

The right to own and enjoy property is the most basic human right.

Governments in the Western world now act as though the right to own property is all that’s important. But being free to own property doesn’t mean much if you aren’t also free to enjoy it – to use it – pretty much as you see fit.

The right to own and enjoy property is the fulcrum on which all other rights balance. And it is not merely some American ideal; it’s as Canadian as the maple leaf and hockey.

But don’t property rights apply only to the rich? If we build our political system around property rights only the wealthy will be free, right?

Two things: First, it is your right to own property, not just your ownership of property that makes you free. Frankly, the notion that only those who already own property benefit from property rights is Marxist. Merely in order to preserve your right to own property at some point in the future, government must restrain itself in the present. The right to own property is as much about potential ownership as actual ownership.

Second, our socialist age has far too narrow an understanding of property. You likely already own far more property than you know. Property is not just land and buildings. It’s your ideas, your body, even your ability to earn a living using your ideas and your labour – all of them are your property.

However, not only is our concept of property too narrow, distorted and Marxist, so too is our understanding of freedom. If you think you can only be free if the state guarantees equality of outcome for all, then this whole speech will be lost on you.

Rather than equality of outcome, the best any state can do is work towards equality of opportunity. Life’s not fair – or at least not equal – and it never can be. Therefore it’s futile, even self-destructive for a state to attempt to achieve equality of outcome. Indeed, since equality of outcome is an entirely abnormal condition, it can only even be attempted through coercion and force. So striving for equality of outcome is by its very nature destructive of freedom.

However, if the state works toward equality of opportunity for everyone, then it makes everyone equally free. Not equally rich, or equally endowed with material goods – cars, yachts, summer homes, winter vacations – but equally free to pursue life to the maximum of their potential. Admittedly, there will never be perfect equality of opportunity, but striving for it is preferable to striving for equality of outcome.

“But I can’t be free unless I have the same amount of “stuff” as rich people, otherwise luck or what family you were born into or connections or fancy education will give rich people an unfair advance over me.” If that’s your attitude, then you are guilty of class envy; you are not possessed of some more-enlightened, morally superior understanding of equality.

Government cannot make life fair or equal. At best, it can remove the most egregious impediments others impose on your ability to achieve your full potential. It might also ensure it imposes no egregious impediments of its own on your freedoms, but that’s probably too much to ask.

But when you insist government prove how equal everyone is by taking income and goods from richer people and giving them to you, it is clear the government has not made the richer person freer. But it hasn’t made you freer, either, no matter how much new “stuff” you’ve been given.

Freedom is non-transferable.

You cannot lighten your yoke by making someone else’s yoke heavier. You cannot appropriate a portion of someone else’s freedom for yourself. Each of us has been endowed by nature with an equal measure of freedom, thus another’s freedom is neither ours to take or give.

If the state plays Robin Hood, robbing from the rich to give to the poor (or increasingly to the middle class), it certainly hasn’t made the rich freer. They cannot even be said to be freer in a general sense because somehow society as a whole has been made freer by being made “fairer.” There is no such thing as collective freedom. Individuals have freedom; groups have only power – if my group has more numbers or more influence than your group, we can force you and yours to do as we wish. That’s not freedom, it’s politics.

During his brief absence from elected office in the mid-1990s, I had occasion to interview Joe Clark during a book tour. Before asking him questions about his book, I said, “Mr. Clark, tell me something, please. You were the constitutional affairs minister during the drafting of the Charlottetown accord. In the preamble to the accord, you and the other authors sought to enshrine both individual and group rights. It’s often argued the two are mutually exclusive; a constitution may protect one or the other, but not both. So I’ve always wanted to know, how did you and the others propose to reconcile the two?”

Clark replied, “Hmm, no one’s ever wondered about that before.”

A senior cabinet minister – a former prime minister – plus 10 premiers met off and on for nearly a year to debate what shape our nation should take for decades into the future. Each of them was backed up by some of the brightest bureaucratic and academic minds in the country and the provinces, and yet not one of them understood the intellectual dichotomy they were fabricating.

Anyway, you cannot be made freer by making someone else less rich, you can only be made richer. He, however, can be made both poorer and less free by your actions.

But just how Canadian are property rights?

Very.

In 1999, the Manitoba Court of Appeal ruled that Prairie farmers could be compelled to sell their grain to the Canadian Wheat Board. Even though it was their grain, the fruit of their labour, the product of their investment and risk, it was not their property once harvested, because, according to the court, “The right to ‘enjoyment of property’ is not a constitutionally protected, fundamental part of Canadian society.”

How utterly ridiculous and wrong. The court’s ruling was – as was Mr. Clark’s answer – an example of how far the misunderstanding of property rights extends into the Canadian establishment. Even senior jurists don’t understand it.

Canada’s constitutional history did not begin with patriation and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982. It didn’t even begin with the BNA Act of 1867. It extends back nearly 800 years to the Magna Carta, in which the right to own private property was already considered an “ancient” right.

Why then was the right to own property not explicitly enumerated in the BNA Act (now the Constitution Act, 1982)? Certainly not because it was all along the dream of the Fathers of Confederation to establish a kinder, gentler, collectivist nation in the northern half of North America.

The general reason was naivety.

There is no inherent suspicion of government in the Canadian constitution, as there is in the United States constitution. Indeed, our nation is founded on the principle of POGG – peace, order and good government. The U.S. constitution seeks instead to preserve life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. But the origins of that difference are easy to understand: The Americans fought a war of independence from government; our Fathers were the heirs of government – British constitutional and parliamentary democracy. Thankfully, since George III, that democratic tradition had evolved a further century further. The monarch had lost most of his last remaining absolute powers; something near universal suffrage for men, regardless of their class had been achieved; and responsible government was entering its early maturity.

The Fathers of Confederation believed though, erroneously, that government was self-limiting because government was the purview of gentlemen and one gentlemen would never presume to intrude on another gentlemen’s property, money, family or private pleasures

The specific reason for the omission of property protection is more complicated.

It’s not as though the Victorians placed no value on the preservation of private property. Queen Victoria herself, the last truly Imperial British monarch, declined to enter any private home, even the cottage of her humblest subject, unless the owner invited her in. She understood his home was his castle.

And property is mentioned half a dozen times in the BNA Act. It’s just isn’t concentrated in a single clause that assures Canadians the right to own and enjoy it. Why?

For one thing, the Fathers all understood the unwritten constitutional heritage which Canadians were inheriting, namely the English constitution, which, while never formally codified was nonetheless powerful. As I’ll explain in a minute, the English constitution held that the right to private property as one of three absolute rights. The Fathers knew this. The judges and politicians of the day knew it; the scholars and philosophers, too. It was obvious to anyone who cared to look, why write it down?

Sir John A. Macdonald also wanted an enumerated right to property left out because – if you can believe this – he thought its omission would better preserve the right. The BNA Act already gave the provinces exclusive jurisdiction over the laws and regulations governing property. Macdonald feared a single property-rights clause would leave the provinces with too much power to grant and take property rights. Better to weave the right throughout the document so Ottawa might still play a role. The federal government, he reasoned, would be a superior guarantor of property rights.

Besides the Senate was originally designed as a propertarian institution. To be appointed, one had to possess a considerable amount of private property. Macdonald and the other Fathers thought that such a body of wealthy landholders would never permit property rights to be trammelled. Of course, the Senate never performed that function. It quickly became a repository for party bagmen who did what their appointers told them, whether or not it impinged on their own property rights

Yet even if the Fathers of Confederation understood basic English constitutional rights and Common Law better than their modern day counterparts – better certainly than the Manitoba Court of Appeal – they were naïve about the benevolence of government, or how government would mutate into the modern monstrosity it has become.

But the authors of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms had no such excuse. Why didn’t they insert a property rights clause in 1981? After all, Pierre Trudeau claimed from the time he retired until the day he died that his goal for the Charter was the preservation of individual liberties against the encroachment of the state.

Well, of course, the Charter was never really intended as a citizens’ shield against the abuses of absolute power. It was only ever about empowering the state, about making it the gatekeeper for politically correct rights, about granting it the authority to reengineer society, to coerce the so-called majority to act as the state wishes in the name of progress for favoured minorities.

In this “great” document, the Charter, which its authors and fans still insist is the great guardian of the individual against the tyranny of the state, property rights were left out – even though they are the fundamental human right – because provincial governments in Saskatchewan, Quebec, Prince Edward Island and elsewhere feared such a clause would limit their ability to nationalize businesses and expropriate land. D’uh.

In an interview for Volume 11 of the book series Alberta in the 20th Century, former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed said only Manitoba was keen on property rights. That province’s premier, Sterling Lyon, proposed their inclusion in the Charter. But, fearing the loss their power, other provinces balked and, in Lougheed’s words, “this was a very short, 10-minute bargaining session.” Property rights were on and off the table in under a dozen minutes.

Despite the insignificance placed on property by modern Canadian decision-makers, Canadians actually do have a strong tradition of legal protection for private property. William Blackstone, an 18th Century legal scholar, wrote “Commentaries on the Laws of England,” which remains the nearest thing Britain has to a constitution. In it, Blackstone enumerates three absolute rights that are each subjects by nature: Personal security, including protection against arbitrary search and seizure, and against cruel and unusual punishment, and including the absolute right to self-defence. He argued that a free Englishman had the right to kill anyone found on his property uninvited after dark, even an agent of the King, since it was impossible to know reliably the intent of such an intruder and because one could end up dead if he delayed long enough to ascertain whether the trespasser meant him harm.

Blackstone also claimed personal liberty as an absolute right – which incorporates freedom of movement, action, speech and thought – and the right to own and enjoy private property.

To protect these three absolute rights, Blackstone argued that English law had developed five auxiliary rights: a parliament that was free to set its own agenda, to decide for itself when it sat and rose, and which controlled spending and taxes; limits on the prerogatives of the King, due process of law, the right to petition the King or the courts for redress from grievances one has suffered, and the right to bear arms, for protection from one’s own government as much as from foreign armies.

Yes the right to keep and bear arms is a Canadian tradition, too. But that’s a talk for another day.

Blackstone did admit the absolute rights – personal security, personal liberty and private property – were subject to regulation by King and parliament through due process of law. But he quickly added such limits would have to be imposed very rarely and as lightly as possible, or the rights they limited would become meaningless. It would be wrong, Blackstone explained, to expropriate land in the name of the common good, say for a road, since the ultimate common good was “the protection of every individual’s private rights.”

But the title of this speech is Property Rights: The Key to Freedom, Prosperity AND Equality. We, done freedom. But how do property rights make western nations richer and their citizens more equal?

I have come across no better description of how property rights make the West rich than Hernando de Soto’s The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. De Soto, a Peruvian economist, sent teams of researchers to a host of countries to determine why industrial nations are wealthy and Third World nations are not. He and his associates concluded the differences are the result not of racism. They are not some hangover from colonialism. Nor the result of greed or of the First World using its superior technology and knowledge to take advantage of the Third. The differences arise from the lack of secure property rights in underdeveloped nations.

Where it is next-to-impossible to secure title to one’s home, business, ideas or investments, it will be difficult to secure mortgages, working capital and shareholders

To understand just how ingrained property rights are in the West, think of a home-shopping channel and one of those beautiful lapis lazuli horses with a clock in its belly that it has so often tempted you with. One night you can resist no longer. You call, tell the operator who is standing by of your wish to buy the item, she takes your credit card number, uses her computer to get authorization and – presto – that exquisite timepiece is yours.

The shopping channel has offered it, you have accepted their offer by agreeing to their price, and you have given consideration through your credit card payment. In a matter of seconds, with no more effort than it takes to order a pizza, you have executed a binding contract that instantly gives you an ownership interest in a clock your children and grandchildren can appreciate for generations to come. Even if the shopping channel goes under before your fine clock can be shipped, your credit card receipt proves it’s yours. You can sue for its delivery and no court – with the possible exception of the Manitoba Court of Appeal – would refuse to recognize that that clock is your property.

Remember, this rather complex property transfer occurred in a matter of seconds.

Now consider that in Lima, registering the title to a home involves 207 separate steps, which is a snap compared to opening a business legally. A team of de Soto’s researchers “spent six hours a day at it and finally registered the business – 289 days later.” The cost for registering this one-worker garment-making shop was more than $1,200 US, the equivalent of 31-months pay for that lone worker. It’s small wonder that most Peruvian entrepreneurs choose to operate their businesses illegally when doing it properly takes 10 months and consumers nearly three years wages that could be paid to a worker whose labours would generate income for the entrepreneurs.

In the Philippines, registering a home can take 25 years and require 53 visits to public and private agencies. In Egypt, at least 10% of homes are illegal because getting a permit to build one legally can now take up to 14 years.

De Soto, surprisingly, found that Haitians, the poorest residents in the Western hemisphere, had assets and savings the equivalent of 50 years of foreign aid, they just had no way of using those assets and savings as collateral to build up the capital needed to make them wealthy. According to de Soto “They hold their assets in defective forms” as “dead capital.”

Far from property rights not being “a fundamental part of Canadian society,” they are in fact so integral, so accepted, so culturally engrained, we don’t give their importance a second thought, which is why we are at risk of losing the very rights that make us free and prosperous.

But how do they make us equal?

I want to give two examples rather briefly – segregation and smoking.

Racial bigotry is ugly. But I maintain that far from ending segregation faster, government action actually kept African-Americans in the U.S. South down longer. Property rights, properly understood and applied, would have ended segregation sooner.

It must be remembered that blacks were kept from eating at lunch counters and riding in the fronts of buses by local and state laws – by government actions – not only by the prejudices of individual citizens. When Washington moved to force desegregation, it sent federal marshals and the National Guard against public institutions and state governments – public schools in Arkansas, public universities in Alabama and public transit in Mississippi – not against individuals.

It is reasonable to assume that in the absence of laws forbidding the equal seating of blacks, some entrepreneurs would have had integrated lunch counters years earlier. Admittedly, it would have first been those entrepreneurs nearest black neighbourhoods and shanty towns. Those on the fringes of such ghettos, where there was some spill-over business from African-Americans and where fewer whites would have been troubled by integration, would have followed. Finally, those in mostly white districts would have switched, at a much slower pace.

By protecting the right of individual restaurateurs to use their own property as they saw fit, southern governments would have created a system wherein individuals were free to decide with whom they wished to do business and to associate, or not. Segregation wouldn’t have been total or swift, but it would have been free and consensual.

It’s true there would be some segregated businesses to this day under a property rights system, and as such modern liberals could never tolerate it – they are completely totalitarian in their quest for universal tolerance. But there is no compelling intellectual reason why we should be made by government to permit men in our clubs, or whites in our restaurants or women on our own, private golf courses.

The public square is very different. Where public institutions are involved there is no compelling intellectual reason to tolerate segregation. The state must show no favour based on immutable human characteristics.

It is also true that segregation was held in place by more than local and state laws. It was also preserved by social coercion and intimidation, most often by the Ku Klux Klan and similarly clandestine organizations. Let’s face it, a lot of Southern whites were horrible bigots.

But again, if governments had understood their proper role, they would have defended property rights against such coercive bigotry. One of the most critical functions of government in a free society is to preserve the right to property and contract. If thugs, murderers, and vandals were destroying property and intimidating property owners, then the state should have interceded on behalf of property rights and the right of property owners to serve whomever they pleased.

It’s the same role the state should play today vis-à-vis gay rights, feminism, hate crimes, and so on.

And vis-à-vis so-called public smoking.

As I said earlier, we have far too narrow an understanding of property these days. But we also have far too narrow an understanding of what constitutes “private,” too, as can seen in the dispute over smoking in “public” and secondhand smoke

A restaurant is not a public place. Nor for that matter is a movie theatre or a shopping mall. No privately owned place becomes public just because the public is invited in, since the decision to enter ultimately remains a private one. Also, the ownership remains private, the legal responsibility for injury or loss there remains private, and so on.

If you want to enter a private business in which smoking is permitted, the choice is yours. You have the freedom to enter or not. You do not have, however, the right to demand that the government dictate conditions inside be made to your liking just, so there are no adverse consequences to your entry decision.

The same is true of workers. They may choose to work, or not, at smoky establishments, but they have no inalienable right to work at any place they please, and thus no “right” to demand their place of work be smoke-free so they are not exposed to the allegedly harmful effects of secondhand smoke.

Too often we think we cannot be free unless someone else, through the state, is compelled to shield us from the consequences of our choices and actions. Sorry, that’s not freedom, it’s a sort of licentious dependency – dependence on someone else to take the fall, pay the price or bear the burden, so we may do as we please.

Property rights can be boiled down to a simple lesson from our youth – don’t touch other people’s stuff. And that includes not only their homes and cars, but their incomes, their ideas, their families, businesses, schools, ranches, etc.

Without property rights – full, robust and free from state interference – we will never be truly free. And while we might be the same, we will never be equal, either. Nor will be prosperous for long.


Lorne Gunter
Columnist, Edmonton Journal
Editorial Board Member, National Post
tele: (780) 916-0719
fax: (780) 481-4735
e-mail:lgunter@shaw.ca
132 Quesnell Cres NW
Edmonton AB T5R 5P2

Posted in Cities, Regulation | Leave a comment