The Environment
Drowned by the State
When one thinks of "death by government," either those killed by armed members of the state or the millions who have perished in the vast gulags and prisons run by governmental agents usually come to mind. However, government has demonstrated far more creativity in eliminating people than just by shooting or starving them to death. It also has successfully drowned them while destroying property to the tune of billions of dollars. Here are a couple of horror stories.
Earth Day Group Think
Contrary to the propaganda, the EPA has done little or nothing to improve the quality of life and much to diminish it.
The MTBE Flap
In a fine case study of interventionism, regulators finally give in and reversed their previous mandates that led to an environmental mess.
Regulation Begets Regulation
Once again, the federal government is scrambling to make good on its own past mistakes. And private industries are facing massive costs, and potentially massive lawsuits, because of their attempt to keep up with federal regulators' changing whims. The controversy over Methyl tert-Butyl Ether (MTBE) shows once again that government's heavy-handed approach to environmental problems guarantees not solutions, but a continuing mess for which government will again posit itself as a solution-a clear example of Ludwig von Mises's theory of intervention.
Government Land Grab
Garet Garrett wrote in 1932, "Mass delusions are not rare. They salt the human story." Indeed, mass delusions are no more apparent than in the realm of public policy and especially in the faith people have in their government to carry out functions designed to promote the public good. How else to describe the persistent belief that government is a good steward of resources of any kind?
Hurricane Economics
Do natural disasters really produce a boost in production? (Column by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.)
Government’s Great Flood
The Mississippi River Basin is the largest river basin in the world, and stretches from New York to Idaho and from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. In the course of American history, the river often flooded, but not until 1927 had so many people been killed and left homeless and never had such a large land area been covered by water. It was the greatest flood in history, but this fact is not as well known: government caused it.
Fatalities of Kyoto
How a treaty could lead to the loss of life. (Analysis by adjunct scholar Roy Cordato.)