Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Plan Cheyenne - WTE Commentaries: "PlanCheyenne"


 

Part One: The Meaning Of Private Property

 

By Bradley Harrington

 

“The right to life is the source of all rights - and the right to property is their only implementation. Without property rights, no other rights are possible.”  - Ayn Rand, “Man’s Rights,” 1963 -

 

As most of us are aware by now, both Cheyenne’s Governing Body and the Laramie County Commission have signed off on “PlanCheyenne” (“a community-driven plan that charts our course for the future,” www.plancheyenne.org).

 

But those sign-offs were not without protest, sometimes by hundreds of Cheyenne-area residents, and to say that those protests were a bit on the contentious side would be the reserved way to describe events. Protests that led to several amendments, with the Laramie County version in particular.

 

By and large, though, it’s a done deal - and the violations of private property rights contained in PlanCheyenne are immune from correction for the next five years.

 

Before it is possible to intelligently analyze those violations, however - or to project a better solution to “community planning” that contains no such flaws - a bit of history needs to come first, to provide the proper context for such considerations.

 

500 years ago, Europe was ruled by various kings, lords and vassals, and these rulers disposed of the lives and possessions of the peasants residing in their fiefs as they saw fit.

 

The “common man” was utterly unable, both politically and ideologically, to resist the onslaught of such feudalistic schemes. He got what was handed to him whether he liked it or not, and his opinion was not sought prior to such disposal. He was a land-holder not a land-owner.

 

But new winds were beginning to blow across the continent, fueled by the intellectual hurricanes of the Reformation and the Renaissance - and it wasn’t much longer after that before a great many people began to challenge those norms.

 

And the greatest of those, by far, was the English philosopher John Locke - who, by 1689, in his “Second Treatise of Government,” was declaring that “government has no other end but the preservation of property.” Imagine that; this guy actually thought the rule of “society” should be subordinated to moral law!

 

Locke’s ideas, in turn, blew like wildfire throughout an England torn asunder by repeated civil wars - and, more importantly, to England’s colonial offspring as well, the future United States of America.

 

And it was here that Locke’s ideas, as practiced and supported by Founding Fathers such as Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison and Thomas Paine, took root - and to say that such ideas blasted the rule of kings sky-high would not be an understatement, as witness the series of tumultuous events that led to 1776.

 

The new wind had arrived: The “Divine Right of Kings” was no more, and the future lay in freedom, capitalism, private property - and the resulting Industrial Revolution.

 

And as Americans soon discovered, two key offshoots of private property quickly established themselves:

 

(1) Individually, private property guaranteed and served as the foundation for all the freedoms Americans came to enjoy. For the first time in human history, a man could order a would-be dictator off his property and have it backed by the legal system - provided he gave the same respect to the property of others he demanded for himself.

 

(2) Socially, the free interplay of private property rights began functioning as the objective arbiter and political means of resolving disputes and conflicts among individuals. We became a nation of “laws and not of men,” where “might” was replaced with “right.” In the political arena, for those who wished to expend the efforts to earn and acquire it, men had become property-owners, not merely property-holders.

 

And the result? Our forebears carved the most moral and magnificent civilization in history out of a wilderness. Private property rights, both individually and socially, worked. But the core and essence of private property rights is that they are absolute - they cannot be legally tampered with by one man with a gun or a million men with votes.

 

But, alas, it did not last, for American institutions were not without their inconsistencies in regard to such absolutism (both slavery and the so-called constitutional “right” to regulate interstate commerce come to mind).

 

Consequently, by the late 1800s and early 1900s, such inconsistencies had deepened to the point where “Progressivism” and other forms of collectivism had taken serious hold, thus spawning a whole new “civilized” outlook on the way society should be organizing itself. Such outlooks led directly to the idea of government-mandated “community planning” - and that idea, in turn, has led us to “PlanCheyenne.”

 

So - just what IS the plan, what is wrong with it and what needs to supplant it? More on that in Part Two...

 

Bradley Harrington is a computer technician and a writer who lives in Cheyenne, Wyoming; he can be reached at brad@bradandbarbie.com.

 

********************

 

March 25, 2014

 

Part Two: Planners Plan While Property Owners Weep

 

By Bradley Harrington

 


“What is prudence in the conduct of every private family can scarce be folly in that of a great kingdom.” - Adam Smith, “The Wealth of Nations,” 1776 -


 

In Part One, we engaged in a (very) brief analysis of the evolution of private property rights, the manner in which they function completely or not at all, and the fashion in which they were superseded by the idea of “community planning” in general - and the idea of PlanCheyenne in particular.

 

So: Just what IS the plan, what is wrong with it and what needs to supplant it?

 

PlanCheyenne, according to its website at www.plancheyenne.org, is “a community-driven plan that charts our course for the future.” Well, who could possibly object to a plan? What, do us reactionaries opposed to PlanCheyenne believe that we shouldn’t even have a plan?

 

Right from the gate, therefore, the issue is being foisted upon us as a question of Planning vs. No Planning. This is a false alternative - and, if not challenged as such, the planners will win every time, because it’s obvious to everyone that man by his nature is a being of long-term range and goals and needs a plan in order to properly move forward.

 

The true issue, however, is not whether we need a plan - but who it is that’s to do the planning. Will it be property owners with a vested interest in the rational use and disposal of their property - or local-county-state-federal bureaucrats who have no interest beyond the next funding cycle or election?

 

- And bureaucrats, it needs to be mentioned, who are doing their “planning” through the spending of enormous levels of federal dollars - and who openly admit that their purpose in doing so lies in acquiring even more federal dollars. “FREE” federal dollars, as I’ve heard mentioned more times than I care to count.

 

And that, right there, is the first problem with PlanCheyenne and the one that involves the greatest abrogation of property rights - because those federal dollars, far from being “FREE,” are only made possible by a previous act of theft on the grandest scale, through confiscatory taxation.

 

Which raises two questions:

 

(1) Are we to believe that we are so poor, as a community, that we need to rely upon the rights-destroying  federal machine in order to fund our own infrastructure? That we must steal money from someone else just to survive and function?

 

(2) And what kind of independence do we have, in such a case? By accepting that federal loot, have we not obliterated our own autonomy as a community and become beholden to our federal masters?

 

But the hits don’t stop there, for specific issues with PlanCheyenne present themselves on the property-rights level as well - such as plans that get drawn by planners who see no problem with merrily drawing South Cheyenne feeder roads right through people’s kitchens and living rooms.

 

And if you don’t think the planners won’t even blink at seizing property as they “deem necessary” through eminent domain in order to achieve their goals, then you must have been on Mars when the City of Cheyenne chose to steal a large chunk of the Hollywood Video’s parking lot in order to construct the Pershing Roundabout.

 

And that’s the second big problem with PlanCheyenne: That “community-driven” plans operate in complete disregard to the property rights of the rightful owners of the properties in question.

 

In that sense, with thanks to the collectivistic notion of “community planning,” the planners have become the new feudalists, where your opinions or permissions are no longer sought or required for your property’s use and disposal. Once again, just like in Europe in days of old, you have become a land-holder not a land-owner. And down that path lies the destruction of your freedom, since it is property rights that make that freedom possible.

 

So: In order to protect those freedoms from federal assault, PlanCheyenne needs to be scrapped and the feds need to be sent packing. There’s always “free” cheese in a mousetrap.

 

If some kind of confiscatory tax structure is truly necessary in order to fund community infrastructure projects (which it isn’t, but that’s not going to change anytime soon) - let it be through taxes collected on the local level. That would at least allow us to maintain our community autonomy.

 

And, once the federal rubble is cleared out of the way, we’re free to engage in true planning, i.e., planning where the property owners and developers sit down with each other and negotiate the best courses of future action that respect the property rights of everybody.

 

Now that’s a plan we could all live with.

 

Bradley Harrington is a computer technician and a writer who lives in Cheyenne, Wyoming; he can be reached at brad@bradandbarbie.com.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment