LET'S FIGHT BACK

LET'S FIGHT BACK
GOD BLESS AMERICA

Monday, March 27, 2017

We the People

the AZEL

PERSPECTIVE

Commentary on Cuba's Future, U.S. Foreign Policy & Individual Freedoms - Issue 67
 


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The constitutions of Latin American countries, almost without exception, begin with a sentence exalting the nation-state or highlighting the patriarchal role of the elected representatives. “We the representatives of the people of Costa Rica…, The Congress of the Republic of Venezuela…, The Constituent Congress (of Peru) invoking God Almighty…, The sovereign nation and its government (of the Dominican Republic)…We the deputies (of Honduras)…Bolivia, free, independent, sovereign…,The Panamanian Nation.., The Oriental Republic of Uruguay is the political association…”
Generally, the constitutions then go on to mandate, in insufferable paternalistic detail, what values the citizenry and the State ought to uphold. For example, Article 8 of the Bolivian constitution dictates that “Each person has the following fundamental duties: (b) To work… in socially useful activities. (c) To attend at least primary school, (e) To assist, feed, and educate his/her children…and to assist ones parents when they are sick… (g) To cooperate with the State and the community…” All laudable aspirations, but do we need to be ordered to do this by the constitution?
 
Article 4 of the Nicaraguan Constitution charges the State with “promoting and guaranteeing advances in the social character to assure the common good…” The Paraguayan constitution, in article 6, asserts that “the quality of life will be promoted by the State with plans and policies that recognize conditional factors…” Peru, in article 2 (6), wants to insure that “information services…do not provide information that affect personal or familiar intimacy.” And Ecuador requires the State to plan the national development, to eradicate poverty…so as to have access to the good life.
 
In vivid contrast, the United States Constitution-the shortest written constitution- not only begins by vesting all power in “We the people,” but proceeds immediately to set the limitations of government and to guarantee personal freedoms in the first seven articles and in the Bill of Rights. It is this great American experiment in freedom, as Alexis de Tocqueville called it, that we celebrate each Fourth of July with fireworks, parades, barbecues, fairs, and picnics.
 
Explicitly and implicitly the Latin American statist governing mindset is that power must rest, not with the uninformed people, but with the enlightened representatives who arrogantly believe they know what is best for the people.  This variety of epistemic paternalism holds that our individual decision making capabilities are subject to errors that impair our wellbeing and thus, for our own good, we must rely on government to exercise power over our decision making.
 
This infantilizes us since, as individual adults, we are the best judges of what it means for our lives to go well.  Moreover, we usually make better choices than those who endeavor to choose for us via one size fits all government programs.
 
Indeed we make mistakes, but even those are often instructive and improve our future decision-making.  Public officials, even if principled and public-spirited, make mistakes as well. In the end, our errors may be less damaging than those made by public officials.  Governmental paternalism makes our lives go worse if only because when we are denied freedom of choice we experience a loss in wellbeing.
 
The inability of even close friends and family to know what we would like is neatly captured by Joel Waldfogel in his book “Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn’t Buy Presents for the Holidays.” No matter how hard we try to find the right gifts for our loved ones, we are likely to fail and end up giving presents that the recipients would not buy for themselves. Research shows that when choices are not made by the ultimate consumers, gift recipients would not have paid anything close to what we paid - on average only twenty-five percent of our purchase prices. Government, ineptly attempting to choose for us, destroys value.
 
Latin American governments would do well to stop their  paternalist, statist ways and adopt John Stuart Mill’s Harm Principle that “…the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or mental, is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or forebear because it will be better for him to do so, because it will make him happier, because, in the opinion of others , to do so would be wise, or even right…”
 
We the people know what is in our best interest.

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This article was originally published in English in the PanAm Post and in Spanish in El Nuevo Herald.
 
José Azel, Ph.D.
José Azel left Cuba in 1961 as a 13 year-old political exile in what has been dubbed Operation Pedro Pan - the largest unaccompanied child refugee movement in the history of the Western Hemisphere.  

He is currently dedicated to the in-depth analyses of Cuba's economic, social and political state, with a keen interest in post-Castro-Cuba strategies as a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS) at the University of Miami and has published extensively on Cuba related topics.

In 2012 and 2015, Dr. Azel testified in the U.S. Congress on U.S.-Cuba Policy, and U.S. National Security.  He is a frequent speaker and commentator on these and related topics on local, national and international media.  He holds undergraduate and masters degrees in business administration and a Ph.D. in International Affairs from the University of Miami. 

Dr. Azel is author of Mañana in Cuba: The Legacy of Castroism and Transitional Challenges for Cuba, published in March 2010 and of Pedazos y Vacios, a collection of poems he wrote as a young exile in the 1960's.

José along with his wife Lily are avid skiers and adventure travelers.  In recent years they have climbed Grand Teton in Wyoming, trekked Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and Machu Pichu in Peru.  They have also hiked in Tibet and in the Himalayas to Mt. Everest Base Camp.

They cycled St. James Way (
El Camino de Santiago de Compostela) and cycled alongside the Danube from Germany to Hungary. They have scuba dived in the Bay Islands off the Honduran coast. 

Their adventurers are normally dedicated to raise funds for causes that are dear to them. 
Watch Joe & Lily summit Kilimanjaro.

Books by Dr. José Azel
Mañana in Cuba is a comprehensive analysis of contemporary Cuba with an incisive perspective of the Cuban frame of mind and its relevancy for Cuba's future.
Buy now

 
Pedazos y Vacíos is a collection of poems written in by Dr. Azel in his youth. Poems are in Spanish.
Buy now
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