The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 17, 2018, Image 5
5A OPINION ®he £ntics gainesvilletimes.com Monday, December 17, 2018 Shannon Casas Editor in Chief | 770-718-3417 | scasas@gainesvilletimes.com Submit a letter: letters@gainesvilletimes.com The First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. America needs justice, not scandal Ours is an age of egregious excess, of tearing everything apart to set everything right and then hiding from reality when everything gets worse. So it is that we’ve got a presi dent often acting as if he is still host of a TV reality show that is, at least, high in its ratings, and a special counsel who figures the guy has to go even if that means justice has to go, too. “This is not the way our democracy works,” said Hillary Clinton in a campaign debate after Donald Trump said he might not accept the outcome of the election. “We’ve been around for 240 years. We have had free and fair elec tions. We’ve accepted the outcomes when we may not have liked them. And that is what is expected of anyone standing on a debate stage during a general election. He is denigrating — he is talking down — our democracy.” Well, we see elections contested all the time, as in the recent midterms, and democ racy is not necessarily denigrated. But suppose there’s a presidential election, no evidence of campaign wrong-doing is found and yet every other trick in the book - even felonious leaking of classified papers- is used to deny the winner his rights. Phony means to a possibly chaotic, unjus tified end is the real denigration of democ racy, especially when the fight is between the high-and-mighty and rule of law. Clinton knows where she stands, hints at running for president again, goes on money-making tours with her husband and can at least count on him to show up at the rallies. To bring the anti-Trump frenzy together in an organized attack, a special counsel was needed to investigate whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to beat Clinton. Not just anyone would do. What was needed was someone who was a friend of an important witness, had a steely, gotcha temperament and would happily spend mil lions, use discredited tactics and thereby intervene fundamentally in the rightly focused conduct of the presidency for a year and a half. And so we come to Robert Mueller. A former director of the FBI, he had dem onstrated his qualifications when some of its agents were in search of terrorists and acted without probable cause in collecting scads of personal data on private citizens. Keep your mouths shut, these folks were told, and Mueller informed Congress there had only been one or two such abuses when the real number was about 3,000. He held himself accountable. He also violated separation of powers by authorizing the search of a congressional office and refusing to return ill-gotten mate rial despite urgings from congressional leaders and the attorney general. The Russian collusion may yet take cen ter stage, but the latest, most threatening move in the Trump investigation is to let us all know that he served his campaign with hush money sent to two women who had served him sexually. The thing is, it can be a felony not to have reported the expenditures, although these sorts of errors are often pretty much ignored, as in something noted in a National Review article. The Obama 2008 campaign paid a rela tively slight penalty for $2 million worth of ‘To bring the anti-Trump frenzy together in an organized attack, a special counsel was needed to investigate whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to beat Clinton. Not just anyone would do.’ transgressions. But restraint is hardly a Mueller man tra. Through the instrument of sentencing threats, critics say he may in effect have bullied or bribed officials into deals about what they say about Trump and friends. Constitutional experts such as Alan Der- showitz also point to how he has twisted client-attorney privilege in such a way that the only privilege belongs to those wearing a prosecutorial grin. Trump has triumphed with some excel lent policies, has fought back with some ter rible ones, is losing some good people and still comes across as ignorant, irresponsible, narcissistic, vulgar and bigoted. He hardly seems prepared for the barbarians at the gate. The issue is whether democracy can stand up against denigration. Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Readers may email him at speaktojay@aol.com. DAVID HORSEY I Tribune News Service LETTER Trump has much in common with Nixon, should also resign “The hits just keep on a-coming,” is a famous line from my favorite movie “A Few Good Men.” In it Tom Cruise uses that phrase to describe the constantly deteriorating situation as he attempts to defend two Marines charged with murder. It also describes the final years of Richard Nixon’s presidency. After he won his second term in office, using ille gal slush money to ensure his victory, he saw his staff and cabinet convicted and marched off to jail because they did his bidding. For those readers who were not around at the time of the Watergate break-in, let me recommend the book “All the President’s Men” by Wood ward and Bernstein. I see many parallels between the Nixon and Trump presidency. The “hits” on Nixon were John Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrli- chman and Chuck Colson going off to jail. The “hits” on Trump are the sen tencing of his lawyer Michael Cohen last week, along with the plea deal for his friend David Pecker, which included the expose of the National Enquirer’s efforts to cover up the affair between married Trump and a Playboy model. We must not forget the other Trump associates (Michael Flynn, George Papadopoulos and Paul Manafort) who have attracted the attention of the Rob ert Mueller investigation. Some of these will serve time in jail; others will only have their reputations destroyed. The other “hits” on the Trump presidency are his inability to recruit and keep the staff in the White House and the Cabinet departments. Like rats leaving a sinking ship, no rat wishes to remain, and absolutely no one of any credibility wants to join the Trump presidency. It is unfortunate that we are trapped with Trump for president for the next two years. Our centuries old, obsolete constitution makes removing an incom petent, corrupt president almost impos sible. The Democratic Party majority in the House of Representatives could charge Trump with election crimes, but the Republican Party majority in the Senate would never go along with that. What would be best for the country would be for Trump to get the Mueller group to accept his resignation from the presidency, along with a guilty plea to conspiracy with a foreign govern ment and a guilty plea to conspiracy to commit election fraud, in return for a promise of no jail time for him or his immediate family members. It would truly be the best thing for our democracy. Trump could later write the book “The Art of the Plea Deal.” Howard Stacy Gainesville A Libertarians Christmas shopping list Struggling to find gifts to get for loved ones? How about a book? I just made a video about some books that shaped my thinking. First, Friedrich Hayek’s “Road to Serfdom” recounts how government trying to centrally plan an economy often leads to tyranny. Government shouldn’t inter vene, wrote Hayek, because a free market, like a school of fish or a flock of birds, creates a spontane ous order. No central planner will allocate resources as efficiently as individuals do themselves. For arguing that, Hayek was ridiculed. But years later, even defenders of socialism conceded that he was right. With “democratic socialism” newly popu lar and celebrities like Jim Carrey saying, “We have to say yes to socialism — to the word and everything!” today is a great time to give “Road to Serfdom” to your socialist friends. If only they’d read it... Of course, “Road to Serfdom” is writ ten in old-fashioned language that some people find tough going. A simpler, more America-focused book from which to learn about economics is Thomas Sowell’s “Basic Economics.” Sowell writes in plain English, without graphs or equations. Not only will Sowell educate your socialist friends, he’ll show Donald Trump fans why free trade is good. Two even easier-to-read introductions to economics and free market philosophy are the cartoon-filled “Libertarianism for Beginners” by Todd Seavey and “Give Me a Break,” written by an ignorant anti-business reporter (me) who finally discov ered the benefits of markets. But promoting those would be self-serving (Todd helps me write this column) so I won’t even mention those fine books. I’ll move on. Prefer fiction? How about “Animal Farm” for the animals in your family? George Orwell describes how farm animals revolt against an abusive human master — only to end up ruled by new tyrants, the pigs. “Animal Farm” was meant to be an allegory for the Russian revolution turning into Soviet tyranny, but it could just as eas ily apply to today’s America if populists get their way. Another fun read is Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged.” It’s long — more than a thou sand pages — but easy reading because the novel pulls you along, describing how cul tural bias against capitalism and love of big government grows. Rand depicts creeping government oppression so convincingly that it feels like she’s describing America today. Rand argues that government isn’t just inefficient; it’s evil because it violates prop erty rights and tells people how to live their lives. Government is like a looter or burglar, she wrote. Today’s media, by contrast, call capital ists looters and burglars. Years ago, the media called the most successful of them “robber barons.” A book by Burton W. Folsom, “Myth of the Robber Barons,” debunks those myths. It explains that capitalists such as John D. Rockefeller and Cornelius Vanderbilt were neither robbers nor barons. They were not born rich, and they did not get rich by rob bing people. They got rich by creating better things. Rockefeller lowered the price of kero sene so much that it allowed poor people to read at night. He probably even “saved the whales.” That’s because once Rockefeller made oil cheap, killing whales to get whale oil was no longer profitable. Bet your kids won’t learn that in environmental studies class. “Robber baron” Cornelius Vanderbilt didn’t rob people. He made steamship travel faster and cheaper. It was jealous com petitors who called him a “robber baron” because he charged lower prices than they did. The ignorant media picked up the term, and it stuck. Finally, another great introduction to freedom is the book “Free to Choose,” in which Milton and Rose Friedman explain how limiting government creates prosperity. Friedman reportedly joked that if you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years there’d be a shortage of sand. In the TV series accompanying “Free to Choose” he argued, “We somehow or other have to find a way to prevent government from continuing to grow and continuing to take over more and more control over our lives.” Well, we’ve failed at that! But at Stossel TV, we won’t quit trying. Those books should help. I hope my columns help a little bit, too. Happy holidays! John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” —% A _JL JOHN STOSSEL www.johnstossel.com Site SStnes Founded Jan. 26,1947 345 Green St., Gainesville, GA 30501 gainesvilletimes.com EDITORIAL BOARD General Manager Editor in Chief Norman Baggs Shannon Casas Submit a letter Send letters to the editor by email to letters@gainesvilletimes.com. Include your full name, hometown and phone number. Letters should be limited to 500 words or less on one issue of public interest and may be edited for content and length. Letters not the work of the person submitting them, those from other sources or third-party sites or those involving personal, business or legal disputes may be rejected. Submissions are limited to one per month. Submitted items may be published in print, electronic or other forms. Letters, columns and cartoons express the opinions of the authors and not of The Times. Your government officials U.S. government President Donald Thimp, The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20500, 202-456-1111, 202-456-1414, fax, 202-456-2461; www.whitehouse.gov Sen. Johnny Isakson, 131 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510, 202-224-3643, fax, 202- 228-0724; One Overton Park, 3625 Cumberland Blvd., Suite 970, Atlanta 30339, 770-661-0999, fax, 770-661- 0768; isakson.senate.gov Sen. David Perdue, 383 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510, 202-224-3521, fax 202-228- 1031; 3280 Peachtree Road NE Suite 2640, Atlanta 30303, 404-865-0087, fax 404-865-0311; perdue.senate.gov. U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, 1504 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515, 202-225-9893; 210 Washington St. NW, Suite 202, Gainesville 30501, 770-297-3388; dougcollins.house.gov Georgia state government Gov. Nathan Deal, 203 State Capitol, Atlanta 30334; 404-656-1776; www. gov.georgia.gov