Monday, August 4, 2008

He Spoke His Mind

Alexander Solzhenitsyn died Sunday in his Motherland of Russia. He achieved acclaim for his vivid depictions of a harsh life in the Soviet prisons and exile in the hinterlands. He wrote from experience, having been banished for speaking his mind against a the totalitarian system that had taken control of his beloved nation.

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich was already in my Shelfari collection, included in what I call my personal "Library of a Free Man". I have now added Gulag Archipelago to my "Plan to Read" list.

Solzhenitsyn was no friend of capitalism, but he deplored authoritarianism and the communism from which it sprung even more. In a society ruled by fear he spoke his mind - the censors, secret police, and political puppet masters be damned. For that we praise him today.

Rest in Peace, Alexander Isayevich.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
(c) Economist

Russians mourn dissident hero Solzhenitsyn

An Icon of His Age

A profile in courage

Friday, August 1, 2008

We Know What's Best for You

This post from Alex at Marginal Revolution was so nicely put together that I decided to just put the whole thing here.



The Los Angeles council has just passed on ordinance banning new fast food restaurants in a poor section of South/Central LA. William Saletan calls it Food Apartheid and writes:
We're not talking anymore about preaching diet and exercise, disclosing calorie counts, or restricting sodas in schools. We're talking about banning the sale of food to adults....It's true that food options in low-income neighborhoods are, on average, worse than the options in wealthier neighborhoods. But restricting options in low-income neighborhoods is a disturbingly paternalistic way of solving the problem.

Milton Friedman once said:
I don't think the state has any more right to tell me what what to put in my mouth than it has to tell me what can come out of my mouth.

Friedman was talking about drug prohibition but today the target could just as easily be food prohibition.

Hat tip on the Friedman quote to Don Boudreaux at Cafe Hayek.



Once again, Friedman was right. I don't know about you, but I don't need any government paper-pusher telling me what I can choose to eat where. These politicians are not here to help, they want control over you. Never forget that.