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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dan B. who wrote (237603)3/14/2002 10:02:12 PM
From: craig crawford  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
>> I've assumed, without the Great Britian matter being within my realm of particular knowledge, that you've reported accurately <<

great britain ushered in free trade with the repeal of the corn laws in 1846. by 1870 britain wasn't even capable of feeding itself.

here:

The Campaign for the Repeal of the Corn Laws
dspace.dial.pipex.com

The protectionists - men who wanted to retain the Corn Laws - were galled by Peel's change of mind and his "treason" to the party. They felt that he had abandoned the Conservatives and should therefore resign his leadership - or at least call an election. Farmers, especially tenants, were determined to use the franchise to defend protectionism. They formed the Anti-League in 1844, led by the Dukes of Buckingham and Richmond. These men had left the Whigs and joined the Conservatives because they suspected Whig policy on the Corn Laws: this was partly responsible for the 1841 Conservative victory. Agricultural MPs were afraid of upsetting their constituents.

On 15 May 1846 the repeal of the Corn Laws was passed by a combination of Conservatives, Whigs and free traders. Only 112 Conservatives voted for it; 241 voted against it. The Bill's passage through the House of Lords probably demonstrates the military discipline which the Duke of Wellington enforced on that House for its own good.

The Campaign for the Repeal of the Corn Laws
victorianweb.org

"The repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 whereby restrictive tariffs were removed from British agriculture and the price of bread reduced, was the result of a long and widespread agitation fostered by Anti-Corn Law leagues in all parts of the country. The repeal was marked by the sale of innumerable emblems, among them crude statuettes of the Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel as well as commemorative china inscribed with words of thanksgiving." --Nicolas Bentley, The Victorian Scene: A Picture Book of the Period, 1837-1901. London: Spring Books, 1971.

Past Notes: The Anti-Corn Law League
Part I: The Anti-Corn Law League Timeline

britishhistory.about.com

The Anti-Corn Law League was a group started by Richard Cobden and John Bright, two factory owners and advocates of free trade who would later become Members of Parliament. The Corn Laws had been introduced in 1815 to prevent the import of cheap foreign corn and keep domestic prices high. This resulted in higher bread prices and much distress. The Anti-Corn Law League held many meetings and achieved much popular support. They were able to use this support to get some of their members elected as MPs to lobby the government from inside Parliament. Circumstances also ran in their favour with events such as the Irish Potato Famine putting increasing pressure on the government to reconsider their position. In 1846, the Corn Laws were repealed, and the Anti-Corn Law League was hailed as a success, although it was not without its casualties. The struggle was bitter, the Conservative Party was split, and Robert Peel was forced to resign, while the repeal did little to either save the Irish or lower corn prices.

Manchester School
("Classical Liberals")

cepa.newschool.edu

The "Manchester School" was the term British politician Benjamin Disraeli used to refer to the 19th Century free trade movement in Great Britain. The movement had its roots in the Anti-Corn Law League (ACLL) of Richard Cobden and John Bright, headquartered in Newall's Buildings in Manchester, UK.

The British Corn Laws had been strengthened in 1815 to prohibit the importation of corn (i.e. wheat) until the home price became eighty shillings a quarter. More flexible Corn Laws were instituted in 1828 with a sliding scale of import duties rather than outright prohibition. Although beneficial to landlords, the Corn Laws were detrimental to the populations in the cities, faced with higher food costs, and, consequently, industrial manufacturers, faced with higher wage bills and restricted foreign trade possibilities. The ACLL was thus set up in 1836 by Cobden and Bright and, by 1846, had successfully had them repealed by Parliament.

Since then, the general term "Manchester School" has been used to refer to radical liberalism/libertarianism in economic policy: laissez-faire, free trade, government withdrawal from the economy, and an optimistic stress on the "harmonious" effects of free enterprise capitalism. As a result, the school's nature is largely "political" rather than purely "economic". Its arguments are not necessarily couched in any particular economic theory



To: Dan B. who wrote (237603)3/14/2002 11:45:27 PM
From: craig crawford  Respond to of 769667
 
>> I do know I have good and reasonable reason to believe that freedom and free trade both work well <<

i'm all ears. would you say that free trade worked for the british empire?

>> I do know that you've not presented a depth of information concerning Great Britian that would suffice for me(certainly)- or I think for any aware and unbiased observer- to draw a hard and fast conclusion on the matter. I'm simply feeling confident that matters other than tariffs, and not mentioned by you, come into play when considering the fate of G.B then. <<

i just presented the evidence in my prior post to you. here is some more evidence.

this article is interesting because it is pro-free trade, yet i think it backfires and actually serves the protectionist argument even better. like i said, free trade is a liberal, utopian fantasy dream concocted in the minds of economists and intellectuals who don't have a clue about how human nature and the real world works.

Free Trade, Peace, and Goodwill Among Nations: The Sesquicentennial of the Triumph of Free Trade
fff.org

Under such a system, [Adam] Smith argued,

every man, as long as he does not violate the laws of justice, is left perfectly free to pursue his own interest his own way, and to bring both his industry and capital into competition with those of any other man, or order of men. . . . The sovereign is completely discharged from a duty . . . of which no human wisdom or knowledge could ever be sufficient; the duty of superintending the industry of private people, and of directing it towards employments most suitable to the interest of society.


people always seem to forget or gloss over the part where adam smith said "as long as he does not violate the laws of justice"

freedom only works with moral self-restraint. enron didn't exercise moral restraint, and therefore violated the laws of justice. they are a perfect example of why there is a need for regulation in our economy. the point i have been trying to drive home is that this lack of moral restraint doesn't just exist within our own borders and companies. it is inherent in mankind itself, and so you have foreign countries and foreign companies who "violate the laws of justice". this is the exploitation of labor, the environment, and unfair business practices such as dumping below the cost of production that i have spoken of.

free trade proponents on this thread and elsewhere attempt to make the ridiculous argument that the reason american industry is being gutted to the bone and driven out of business must be due to inefficiencies. hogwash. why do you think we have laws here in america which seek to prevent predatory business practices such as dumping and price collusion? because without these regulations financially stronger companies would undercut or collude with other businesses to drive their smaller competitors out of business. this is anti-competitive and it's why we have laws against that sort of thing.

the trouble with the free "traitors" is that they can't seem to grasp the simple concept that these same sort of unfair business practices occur on a global scale. foreign countries/companies engage in their own protectionist measures against the united states and i don't hear anyone here complaining about that. all i hear is the utterly naive point of view that somehow our industries just aren't as efficient or competitive.

the sad part is that it's not just foreign competitors that "violate the laws of justice". it is happening within our own country, exemplified by large multinational corporations who betray their country in various ways. of course i have already detailed one way. they extort american workers with wage and benefit concessions by threatening to pack up and ship out to countries where they can pay people slave labor wages. this is immoral and unpatriotic. it betrays our country by showing no allegiance to hard working blue collar americans and it also exploits other human beings who don't enjoy the benefits of living in a free society like we do.

now we come to the part where the article concedes that this is a utopian fantasy

In spite of the eloquence and rigor with which Adam Smith demonstrated the harm and futility of the mercantilist forms of planning and regulation in his day, he despaired that economic freedom would never be triumphant.

"To expect, indeed, that the freedom of trade should ever be entirely restored to Great Britain," he said, "is as absurd as to expect that an Oceana or Utopia should ever be established in it. Not only the prejudices of the public, but what is much more unconquerable, the private interests of many individuals irresistibly oppose it."


even though adam smith warned that true free trade wasn't achievable, further on in the article the author tries to lure us right back into this utopian fantasy world.

From the beginning, in making his case for free trade, Richard Cobden saw the breaking down of trade barriers as a powerful avenue for depoliticizing human relationships. By privatizing all market transactions between individuals of different countries, he said, free trade would assist in removing many of the causes of war. "As little intercourse as possible between Governments," Cobden declared, "as much connection as possible between the nations of the world." To emphasize this, the slogan of the Anti-Corn Law League became "Free Trade, Peace and Good-Will Among Nations."

history proved this view to be utterly naive and foolhardy. britain practiced what these wide-eyed, dreamer economists recommended and look what happened. they were practically starved into submission and needed us to bail them out in both world wars. how exactly did free trade lead to peace? the twentieth century was one of the bloodiest in history. with all this movement in the direction of free trade since the end of world war two, are nations any less hostile and has war been averted? go ask either bush if buying oil from countries in the middle east averted war. of course not, war will always be with us. you don't just lay down your weapons whether they be military or economic weapons--and then just hope everybody will play nice.

but later on in the article what do these radical liberal utopians advocate? just that!

Furthermore, Cobden and the Anti-Corn Law League made the case for unilateral free trade. "We came to the conclusion that the less we attempted to persuade foreigners to adopt our trade principles, the better," Cobden explained in later years, "for we discovered so much suspicion of the motives of England, that it was lending an argument to the protectionists abroad to incite the popular feeling against the free-traders. . . . To take away this pretense, we avowed our total indifference whether other nations became free-traders or not; but we should abolish Protection for our own selves, and leave other countries to take whatever course they liked best."

does this not sound just like the radicals on the left that are always preaching unilateral disarmament? if we just get rid of all our nukes, we could all just commune together in harmony and unity and we could sit and sing songs with john lennon about how the world could live as one.

Within three years — by 1849 — not only were the Corn Laws gone, but so were the remaining Navigation Acts carried over from the 18th century that had required goods being imported into Britain to be carried on British ships. From then on, both goods and merchant vessels from any land could arrive in Great Britain "as free as air and water," as Henry Parnell had wished it to be in 1830.

One hundred and fifty years ago — on June 25, 1846 — Great Britain became the first country in the world to institute a unilateral policy of free trade. For the rest of the 19th century — indeed, until the dark forces of collectivism enveloped Europe during World War I — the British Empire was open to all the world for the free movement of men, money, and goods. Its economic success served as a bright, principled example to the rest of the globe, many of whose member countries followed the British lead in establishing, if not complete free trade, at least regimes of much greater freedom of trade and commerce.


give me a break! the united states didn't follow britain's lead--we were protectionist and that is how we ascended to superpower status on par with the british empire. germany built their empire with protectionism and almost destroyed unilaterally free trading britain.

The triumph of free trade in 1846 in Great Britain was one of the shining jewels in the crowning achievements of 19th-century classical liberalism
Nevertheless, the victory of 1846 demonstrates that an uncompromising, principled belief in the freedom of man can triumph and change the course of human events.


if that is not utopian and naive--i don't know what else to call it. this intellectually inspired nonsense proved to be an abject failure and helped to bring down the british empire. that's why we should be wary of letting intellectual economists run a country.

free "traitors" need a cold dose of reality about how their flawed liberal ideology is detrimental to the survival of any great nation state.

great britain is living proof of that.



To: Dan B. who wrote (237603)3/15/2002 12:18:11 AM
From: craig crawford  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
>> I said he believed in the sort of tariffs that our founding fathers in fact instituted from our beginnings. <<

hey, it's amazing that i can get anyone on this thread to even admit that they are in favor of limited tariffs. at least that's a start.

>> If you didn't know it, those were very limited(well, because free trade was a conservative principle, even back then <<

i think i have already debunked the claim that free trade was a conservative principle. the reasons tariffs were limited at the founding was because:

1) they were an effective source of revenue
2) government was small (which i also advocate)
3) there were excise taxes which also brought in revenues

if the only argument you have with me is that we should return to the original founding with very limited government and judicious use of limited tariffs--show me where to sign up. anything is better than the slave tax we are subject to today where government picks our pockets.

>>Re: "there is a slight problem. we conduct trade with countries where the people are not free. now do you see why it might not be so fair?"

That was once a wonderment to me too, until I understood the complexity of what actually occurs. So in short, No. Having looked into this matter in detail, I am convinced that even if we are the only country not employing tariffs, we- and to a lesser extent even the countries with the tariffs- will be better off. <<

this is what was argued in the article in my previous post. did that policy work well for britain? unilateral free trade?

>> Essentially, I believe if one country institutes a tariff against another, both countries are harmed <<

but countries use protectionist measures against the unites states all the time. why do they do it if it is so harmful to everyone involved? we are just supposed to sit there while countries engage in predatory business practices against our industry?

>> I believe too, and consistently, mind you, that if the the other country responds with a retaliatory tariff in an attempt to level the playing field again, then that retaliatory tariff only adds to the harm. Hence, the best response to a tariff being leveled against us, is in fact NO response save a request, for everyone's sake, that the initial tariff be ended immediately. To attempt to retaliate only harms us more in the long run. <<

my aren't we naive. we'll play fair while everyone takes advantage of us. this is the same line of reasoning that believes we shouldn't defend our citizens after terrorists murder thousands of our countrymen. we wouldn't want to escalate matters and actually piss off the terrorists. better to sit there and take it.

>> Now, say what you will, but if you haven't looked at the quite serious arguments long coming from with-in conservative thought, in particular, that explain why the above happens, you haven't lived and certainly won't be able to refute them to anyone who knows them. <<

geez! liberalism--not conservatism, has done a real good job brainwashing people. let's not retaliate, let's try appeasement. well history is replete with examples where appeasement only results in further incentive for aggression. this is no different in economics any more than it is in war.



To: Dan B. who wrote (237603)3/15/2002 4:18:51 AM
From: craig crawford  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Will free trade ruin America, too?
worldnetdaily.com

In "The Collapse of British Power," historian Corelli Barnett savages the men and dogmas that brought his nation down.

In 1914, he writes, Britons believed theirs was the most powerful, productive, self-sufficient nation on earth. But already the rot was deep, as a free-trade cancer had eaten away at its vitals:

British industry had ... changed its character from an army of conquest, mobile, flexible and bold, into a defensive army pegged out in fixed positions, passively trying to defend what it had won in the past. The fire of creative purpose flickered low in the blackened grate of the British industrial regions.

Nor was British agriculture less decrepit. It was the German submarine which reminded the British government after 1914 that the price of cheap food from overseas under the policy of free trade had been the ruin of British farms and the terrifying vulnerability of the British population to starvation by blockade.

Britain never recovered from its 50-year addiction to free trade. Now, America has succumbed to the disease Teddy Roosevelt called the "pernicious" dogma of free trade. To see what it is doing to us, as the mandarins of this cargo cult meet in Doha, Qatar, look at the record.

From 1900 to 1970, America ran a trade surplus every year. Since 1970, the United States has run 30 straight trade deficits. Last year's trade deficit in manufactures was $323 billion, the merchandise trade deficit $450 billion – near 5 percent of the gross domestic product. No nation has sustained trade deficits like this without a collapse of its currency and an end of its supremacy.

As our economy sinks slowly beneath the waves, U.S. industry is already in Davy Jones' locker. U.S. manufacturing has fallen for 12 months. A fourth of our industrial plant is idle. A million manufacturing jobs have vanished since the Florida recount. We are down to 17 million manufacturing jobs, the smallest share of the U.S. labor force in 150 years.

Consider our once-mighty steel and textile industries. Though the U.S. steel industry has invested $60 billion in 20 years in new plants and equipment, raised its productivity 174 percent and laid off 350,000 workers, 25 U.S. steel producers have had to file for bankruptcy since 1997.

Why? In a word, imports. Since 1991, steel imports have risen from 16 million tons to 38 million tons. Foreign steel is being dumped on us by nations we bailed out like Brazil, Russia, Indonesia and South Korea, and nations we have defended, like Japan.
When the global economy revives, these regimes want their steel industry to be alive and ours to be dead. Meanwhile, the U.S. government mumbles its comforting mantra, "Mustn't interfere with free trade."

The U.S. textile industry has been even more devastated. In the three years before North American Free Trade Agreement, the United States lost 2,000 jobs in textiles and 33,000 in apparel. In the seven years since NAFTA, America has lost 227,000 jobs in textiles and 434,000 jobs in apparel.

"Who cares if those dead-end jobs go to Mexico?" is the mocking taunt of think-tank scribblers, whose upholstered chairs are paid for by global corporations, whose party line they faithfully parrot. Well, those 671,000 laid-off workers care. For the apparel jobs they lost paid 23 percent more, and the textile jobs 59 percent more than the retail sales jobs they and their wives now probably have.

What has free trade done for American workers? According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, zero: The U.S. real median wage is today the same as it was when Nixon resigned.

This does not bother The Economist magazine, founded in 1843 to promote free trade, that simpering parson at the assisted suicide of the British nation. "Displaced rich-country workers" who lose out from trade, says The Economist, "are plainly worse off than they were before ... many, perhaps most, of those who find alternative work will be paid less than they were before." Unfortunately, it is American workers, not Economist editors, who pay the price.

Barnett traces free trade's roots to "liberalism," a doctrine that "demolished the traditional concept of the nation-state as a collective organism, a community, and asserted instead the primacy of the individual. According to liberal thinking, a nation was no more than so many human atoms who happened to live under the same set of laws."

This liberalism now enthralls the Republican Party and drives the agenda in Qatar. The delegates at Doha first feared anarchists, now they fear terrorists. One day, they will have more to fear from the patriots of the countries they are betraying.