A Constitution of Contradictory Rights

Defeats in French and Dutch referenda have put the proposed EU Constitution in serious trouble. However, in the resulting political tumult, amazingly little is being said about the Constitution itself. That is unfortunate, since that is the source of the most essential problem--promising what cannot be delivered. In some ways, the EU Constitution parallels America’s, defending rights such as freedom of religion and freedom of expression.

SEC Chief Quit As His Own Accounting Errors Were Exposed

SEC chairman William Donaldson resigned his post only days after two highly embarassing scandals were revealed at the agency that enforces the nation’s accounting rules. The Government Accountability Office conducted an audit of the agency and found three material weaknesses in its internal controls. The weaknesses related to its recording of fines and restitution via settlements with companies, its preparation of financial statements and the security of its data.

Repudiate the Iraqi Debt!

Repudiating public debts incurred by states is entirely libertarian, as argued by Murray Rothbard. Yet even international law recognizes a more limited version of this notion, in the doctrine of Odious Debt developed by Alexander Sack, a professor of law in Paris and former minister in the Tsarist government. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks repudiated Russia’s debts indiscriminately.

Arthur Andersen Decision Means Nothing, Says ex-Prosecutor

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed into law after the Andersen case was filed, gives the feds the powers they improperly used against Andersen. “in real terms, the opinion likely won’t change much in the way business does business in the post-Enron era. “If you’re a corporate defendant, you still have to make a deal with [New York Attorney General] Eliot Spitzer or the Justice Dept.,” says Stephen Ryan, a partner at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips and a former assistant U.S. attorney.

Walt Whitman, Libertarian

Yesterday was the anniversary of Walt Whitman’s birth in 1819. It is celebrated because to many, he was America’s foremost poet, whose Leaves of Grass had a farther-reaching impact than any other book of American poetry. Despite his extensive career as a journalist, Whitman’s poetry attracts all the attention. That is unfortunate, given that his early efforts in journalism have been said to “foreshadow the later, enduring writings of the poet.”

Bush-Style Privatization: More and More Problems

In a previous article, I argued that Bush’s original proposal to reform Social Security—in which up to one-third of a worker’s (and his employer’s) “contributions” would be channeled into the stock market, but no one’s current benefits would be cut and other taxes would not be raised—would not increase investment or lower interest rates one iota, contrary to the claims of the plan’s proponents.