| The key cause of corruption: too much government By  Steven Greenhut | Orange County Register
 PUBLISHED: February 11, 2023 at 8:06 a.m. | UPDATED: February 11, 2023 at 8:07 a.m.
 
 SACRAMENTO  – Whenever some astounding corruption scandal explodes onto the front  pages, the public is aghast and policymakers cobble together new reforms  that promise to keep such outrages from occurring again. Occasionally,  prosecutors (who are sometimes  corrupt themselves) file charges. Soon enough, however, we learn about new abuses – or some other scandal grabs the headlines.
 
 Unfortunately, tamping down corruption is like rooting out wasteful  spending in the federal budget. There is no line item titled “waste,”  but instead it’s baked into a government that has amassed a  $31.5-trillion  debt. Likewise, corruption is inherent in a system where officials dole out public money and regulate almost everything we do.
 
 What is corruption? Transparency.org  defines  it as “the abuse of entrusted power for private gain.” As the website’s  name suggests, transparency is a time-tested antidote. But let’s not  kid ourselves. Corruption is a fundamental part of humanity. As far back  as Genesis, its author discussed it: “And God looked upon the earth,  and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon  the earth.”
 
 It’s crucial to recognize people can never be made incorruptible. We  can, however, design governmental systems filled with checks and  balances that limit the temptations. I often roll my eyes at  progressives who look at our history and find glaring imperfections, or  point to imperfect or corrupt behavior from some  historical luminary and use it to undermine the nation’s founding.
 
 Good luck finding any human who passes the perfection test. But the central takeaway is that our founding built  structures  that limit any official’s unchecked power through a series of  independent and divided bodies. It guaranteed rights that applied –  theoretically, but with obvious glaring exceptions – to the  least-powerful individuals. We have a president, not a king.
 
 A new public-opinion survey  published  by Cambridge University Press found that “a wide range of the American  people, of all political stripes, seek leaders who are fundamentally  anti-democratic.” Large percentages said they want leaders who will  protect them “by any means necessary.” If that’s an accurate  representation, then we’re in for a long period of growing corruption.
 
 The  most corrupt nations  are, of course, those where dictators, politburos, bureaucrats and  security officials can do as they please – and where lowly citizens lack  the right to free speech or due process. Our current government may be a  far cry from the one the founders designed, but it attempts to limit  government power, which is the main source of corruption.
 
 The  Declaration of Independence  was a jeremiad against corruption: The King “has made judges dependent  on his will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and  payment of their salaries. He has erected a multitude of new offices,  and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people, and eat out  their substance.” The king’s minions used their power to enrich  themselves, just as modern-day police departments use asset forfeiture  to seize people’s cars and cash without convicting them of any crime.
 
 Recently some conservatives, who traditionally strived to conserve  the nation’s founding principles, have been tempted by authoritarian  promises. Some national conservatives disdain the idea of a “neutral”  political system that limits the size of government, but instead seek  power to run the table on their opponents. Some have made  pilgrimages to authoritarian Hungary.
 
 That’s probably a rather small (albeit creepy) contingent. But modern  progressives,  who loudly decry our nation’s past and present injustices, seem intent  on shifting even more power from individuals to government agents in an  ever-expanding orbit of bureaucracy and regulation (e.g., single-payer  healthcare and bans on anything that “threatens” the climate).
 
 Early 20th century progressives such as  California Gov. Hiram Johnson,  the creator of our system of direct democracy, wanted to create the  tools to fight against corrupt railroad robber barons. Despite the  good-government rhetoric, progressives built a  regulatory state  that empowered “experts” to re-order society in the name of the “public  good.” By giving government so much power, they increased opportunities  for the misuse of power. Individuals may be inherently corrupt, but so  are the individuals given vast powers over others.
 
 ocregister.com
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