Foreign Aid, Freedom, and Myanmar

Laurence Vance at the Mises institute has an excellent post on the immorality of forced government-to-government foreign aid – with a focus on the tragedy in Myanmar.

Here’s an excerpt:

The US government has no business providing disaster relief to Myanmar, food relief to poor countries, or humanitarian aid of any kind. The purpose of government is supposed to be to protect the lives, liberties, and properties of the people who form it. The fact that all governments eventually deviate from their stated purpose is irrelevant. And besides, there is a calculation problem here. How much aid should the US government provide? What type of aid should be given? What strings, if any, should be attached to the aid supplied? How long should aid be maintained?

Even worse is the use of the military to provide foreign-aid services. The purpose of the military is to defend the country from attack or invasion, not to deliver food and spread good will and cheer. Yes, it would be better if the US military delivered bread and butter instead of bombs and bullets, but that is not the issue.

There was a time in this country when it was recognized to be improper for the federal government to provide humanitarian relief even within the United States. President Grover Cleveland vetoed a bill in 1887 that would have provided seed for farmers in drought-stricken Texas. In his veto message, he wrote that aid from Washington only “encourages the expectation of paternal care on the part of the Government and weakens the sturdiness of our national character.” The Texas farmers ended up getting ten times as much in private assistance as they would have received from Uncle Sam.

Read more here

In principle, Vance is right on the mark. Constitutionally, of course, none of this spending is authorized. The US Constitution was written under what is referred to as “positive grant.” In short, what this means is that the federal government is authorized to engage in only those activities specifically authorized by the Constitution. Positive = authorized activities. Grant = specifically listed.

Just to make sure this principle was legally codified, the Tenth Amendment was included:

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

There is no authorization to pay for relief in Myanmar. There is no authorization to prop up dictators in places like Pakistan with your money. There is no authorization to spend your money on “military assistance” for other countries. There is no authorization to funnel money through the CIA to support regime changes. The Constitution was written in plain English – there is nothing there which authorizes the federal government to take your money and give it to foreign governments. For any reason.

But don’t take my word for it. Try reading the Constitution to see if you can find authorization to engage in such activities for yourself.

Enjoyed This Post?

We cannot succeed without your help, as we will never accept government grants or handouts. Please help us by investing in the Constitution and freedom today!

Enjoyed This Post?

, , , , ,

2 comments
david
david

I am afraid that the big government people will always win.
That has been the trend.
Cleveland vetoes welfare to farmers….. 1887.…
Well, now days there is not one democrat and most republicans that will not vote for it. They will vote farm welfare every time it comes on the floor of Congress.

Democrats and most republicans will vote to send aid to countries to fight drugs.
3 DEA agents were killed in Afghanistan..
The federal Government has unlimited power !
Not granted by the Constitution but by the votes in Congress

There are no checks and balances because Judges feel if an elected Congress makes a bill that is Unconstitutional that it should not be challenged because the people voted for this congress and the people are behind it. This is most true in the Drug laws.
Even the declaration of war can be side stepped and given to the President “the power to declare war “

James K Polk , was outraged when congress wanted money to build the Panama Cannel…
Well we now have a Panama Cannel… Unconstitutional yes but it’s there!
So Big government is an American addiction…

Christina
Christina

As a fairly new student of American history, your Tenth Amendment page catches my eye, and I will be back. It looks like I could learn alot here
Laurence Vance's post certainly seems to be the seed truth. Yet a harsh one. If I was a victim of any disaster, I'm sure I would be supremely grateful for reliief, regardless of where it came from, or whether or not it violated the senders' national Constitution.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] to Constitutional Governance. And of course foreign aid is NOT allowed in the Constitution. The Tenth Amendment Center writes: “The US Constitution was written under what is referred to as “positive grant.” [...]