Re: WaPo to be sold to Bezos. Now we know why Sir Warren stepped down from the board
Sometimes I think this myth of a hands-off government of yore is overblown.
The first congress did several things that people may find contentious. They regulated and licensed all behavior and trade involving Indians. They set forth requirements for state militia's and the President's power to take them over at will. They set forth remarkably specific taxes on goods. They set forth complicated and moralizing laws surrounding the storage and sale of liquor. They set forth a central bank. They took land from the states by law to create the District of Columbia. They set forth complicated intellectual property restrictions surrounding books and maps. They undertook a huge infrastructure spending plan on borrowed money to build a national system of lighthouses, buoys, and other marine navigation aids. They established an immigration and naturalization system. They created an even more expensive infrastructure program in the United States postal system, and spent borrowed money on a nation-wide network of post roads. They established a lengthy code of criminal violations and penalties including public whippings.
And this is just a small sample from the first 2 years. I'm afraid you'll find that an age of super-simple, non-interfering, non-moralizing government never truly existed. And don't even get me started on 18th century state law and local ordinance. It gets even crazier. In many ways the government is more hands off today than it was in the past. Hell, in 1920 they passed a constitutional amendment banning alcohol. I think it's a mistake to assume that a smaller government is a less intrusive one, or that people in the past were kinder or simpler or more likely to leave you alone than people today.
Originally posted by vinoveri
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The first congress did several things that people may find contentious. They regulated and licensed all behavior and trade involving Indians. They set forth requirements for state militia's and the President's power to take them over at will. They set forth remarkably specific taxes on goods. They set forth complicated and moralizing laws surrounding the storage and sale of liquor. They set forth a central bank. They took land from the states by law to create the District of Columbia. They set forth complicated intellectual property restrictions surrounding books and maps. They undertook a huge infrastructure spending plan on borrowed money to build a national system of lighthouses, buoys, and other marine navigation aids. They established an immigration and naturalization system. They created an even more expensive infrastructure program in the United States postal system, and spent borrowed money on a nation-wide network of post roads. They established a lengthy code of criminal violations and penalties including public whippings.
And this is just a small sample from the first 2 years. I'm afraid you'll find that an age of super-simple, non-interfering, non-moralizing government never truly existed. And don't even get me started on 18th century state law and local ordinance. It gets even crazier. In many ways the government is more hands off today than it was in the past. Hell, in 1920 they passed a constitutional amendment banning alcohol. I think it's a mistake to assume that a smaller government is a less intrusive one, or that people in the past were kinder or simpler or more likely to leave you alone than people today.
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