Monday, August 2, 2010

Mitchell's Law Strikes Again

David Ignatius has a thoroughly boring and utterly predictable establishment left-wing column in the Washington post, but it is a perfect illustration of my maxim that "Bad government policy begets bad government policy." In this case, Ignatius wants to expand gun control in response to the foolhardy drug war. Neither effort will succeed, at least if either society wants even a smidgen of individual liberty, but statists never seen to worry about such niceties. If one of their policies leads to a mess, that's just an excuse for more bad policy.

Mexico is reeling from a drug-cartel insurgency that is armed mainly with weapons acquired in the United States... Naming a new ATF chief to lead the fight against illegal weapons would be a small symbolic step. But it would signal to Mexicans and Arizonans alike that the administration is mobilizing to deal with these problems -- and is willing to take some political heat in the process. ..."The absence of a chief has hamstrung ATF's ability to aggressively target gun trafficking rings or corrupt firearms dealers and has demoralized its agents," Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, wrote in a June 10 letter to Obama. ...The prevailing political wisdom in America, to which the Obama administration evidently subscribes, is that it's folly to challenge the gun lobby. When Mexico's President Felipe Calderón addressed a joint session of Congress in May, he all but pleaded with lawmakers to help stop the flow of assault weapons. His call to action produced little more than a shrug of the shoulders in Washington.
By the way, several of you have been ribbing me for calling this phenomenon Mitchell's Law when great economists like Mises have written about this pattern. But I'm not saying that I invented the concept. I'm just trying to popularize it, much as I gave the name "Rahn Curve" to the theory about a growth-maximizing level of government. In effect, I'm trying to mimic Art Laffer. Art will freely tell anyone he meets that the concept behind the Laffer Curve existed for centuries. But he turned in into a curve and brought it to the attention of the world.

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