A War of Words

May 31, 2007 / by JOEZsREPUBLICANPAGE



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It has long been recognized that those on the political left are more articulate than their opponents. The words they choose for the things they are for or against make it easy to decide whether to be for or against those things.

Are you for or against "social justice"? A no-brainer. Who is going to be for injustice?



The Supreme Court in a group photograph, Friday, March 3, 2006. Seated in the front row, from left to right are: Associate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts, Associate Justice Antonin Scalia, and Associate Justice David Souter. Standing, from left to right, in the top row, are: Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Associate Justice Samuel Alito Jr. On Wednesday, April 18, 2007, the Supreme Court upheld the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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What about "a living wage"? Who wants people not to have enough money to live on?

Then there is "affordable housing" and "affordable health care." Who would want people to be unable to afford to put a roof over their heads or unable to go to a doctor when they are sick?

In real life, the devil is in the details. But the whole point of political rhetoric is to make it unnecessary for you to have to go into the specifics before taking sides.

You don't need to know any economics to be in favor of "a living wage" or "affordable housing." In fact, the less economics you know, the more you can believe in such things.

Conservatives, on the other hand, have a gift for phrasing things in terms that are unlikely to arouse most people's interest, much less their support.

Do words like "property rights," "the market" or "judicial restraint" make your emotions surge and your heart beat faster?

There are serious reasons to be greatly concerned about all these things. But you have to have a lot more facts and more understanding of history, economics, and law before you see why.

An issue can be enormously important and well within most people's understanding. Yet the way words are used can determine whether people are aroused or bored.

One of those issues is what legal scholars call "takings." There is a masterful book with that title by Professor Richard Epstein of the University of Chicago Law School.

But if you are in a bookstore and see a book with the title "Takings" on its cover, are you more likely to stop in your tracks and eagerly snatch it off the shelf or to yawn and keep walking?

Takings are not a complex idea. But it needs explaining.

Let's suppose you live in a $400,000 house.

If, on a Wednesday afternoon, the government announces that it is planning to "redevelop" the area where your home is located -- that is, demolish the area so that something else can be built there -- by Thursday morning, your $400,000 house could become a $200,000 house.

The market reacts very quickly in anticipation of future events.

Several years later, when the government actually gets around to demolishing the area, they may offer you $200,000 for your property -- or perhaps $150,000, if they use an appraiser who knows that he is more likely to get more business from the government if his estimates are on the low side rather than the high side.

In either case, you are out at least a couple of hundred grand. Has the government "taken" that much from you, without paying you the full compensation for your property, as required by the Constitution of the United States?

Such theoretical questions were made vividly real, and people were vividly outraged, when the Supreme Court in 2005 declared that governments at all levels had the power to seize private property, not only for such government activities as building reservoirs or highways, but also for turning the property over to private developers to build shopping malls, casinos, or whatever.

The Constitution says that government can take private property for "public use" if it compensates the owner. The Supreme Court changed that to mean that the government could take private property just to turn over to others, so long as they called it a "public purpose" like "redevelopment."

Politicians are experts at rhetoric, especially if that is all that is needed to justify seizing your home and turning it over to someone else who will build something that pays more taxes.

All hell broke out, once people now understood that the issue called "takings" was about politicians being able to seize their property, virtually at will, for someone else's benefit. But it was a liberal court decision, not the words of conservatives, which created that understanding.


Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of Basic Economics: A Citizen's Guide to the Economy.

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Very well put ,Dr. Sowell however most of the elite liberal commie ,Terrorist loving democrats will never admit that you are right !

10 comments on A War of Words

  • psycho60s said 1 years ago
    There have been many cases in the past few years where private property has been taken and handed over to developers just as described above. It could happen to anyone at any time.
  • JOEZsREPUBLICANPAGE said 1 years ago
    [SAD][MAD] Makes a person wonder if the greedy officials will get reelected , seems a lot of people have short memories , and keep putting the same thief's back in office ,because they did not take my property and the heck with those rich folks on the other side of the street [THUMBDOWN][THUMBDOWN][THUMBDOWN][THUMBDOWN]
  • dnadna said 1 years ago
    I don't know what I would disagree with you about, I do agree that liberals are more articulate. [WINK]

    I grew up in a house that was on a proposed freeway build (1 of 3 proposed routes). my parents house value plummeted when the announcement was made from around 350K to 195K for 10 years while the studied the different routes and crunched data everyone in the area's property value was held prisoner. I remember moving the aerial Survey X's when I was a kid to screw with the data (to this day I still wonder if it made any difference). Anyways 10 years later after the announcement they decided to widen and upgrade the existing highway clearing my parents house of the "imminent domain" threat nearly over night my parents property value shot through the roof. When I was a kid I could understand that highways need to be built, and lakes filled. However today the fact that the government can come in and turn your house over to developer for demolition for profit makes me sick and reeks of conservative NEO-CON policy.

    Good Post

    Cheers
    Dan
  • JOEZsREPUBLICANPAGE said 1 years ago
    [SMILE] I knew we could find something to agree on , AMERICA was and is founded on "Personal property rights it makes no difference if you are democrat or republican no one has to right to take your belongings without "JUST" compensation , I am not sure about agreeing on liberals being more "articulate" I believe disengenuious or deceitful would be more accurate [OHMY][LOL][THUMBUP][THUMBUP]
  • centurion said 1 years ago
    Which neocon justices were responsible for Kelo?
  • whereabouts said 1 years ago
    That ruling in 2005 was Kelo -vs- The City of New London and WHAT a load of crap that ruling was! Illinois, my state, adopted it's own laws to counter the takings clause. Basically, if a village does condemn property and it is NOT for public use (parks, mass transit, etc.) and it is for private enterprise as was the case in Kelo -vs- The City of New London, the village will lose funding and will will not be entitled to grant monies.

    I've wanted to see legislation enacted in my state that would require more than just payment for condemned properties, 1.5 times more than it's full market value as determined by 3 appraisals and market analysis from 3 experience real estate professionals.
  • JOEZsREPUBLICANPAGE said 1 years ago
    [MAD][OHMY] If the people in this country do not stand up and protest what happens to their neighbors they will be next [OHMY][MAD][SAD][SAD][SAD][SAD][SAD]
  • psycho60s said 1 years ago
    The greedy officials do indeed seem to keep right on getting elected over and over. I fear we are losing our country and what it used to stand for very quickly.
  • JOEZsREPUBLICANPAGE said 1 years ago
    [OHMY][MAD] What is that old saying "They came for the catholics and I said nothing,, they came for the protestants and I said nothing , they came for the jews , and I said nothing , and there was no one left to say anything when they came for ME "[MAD][MAD][SAD][SAD][SAD] thats the slippery slope we are on now [MAD][SAD][MAD][SAD][MAD][SAD]
  • whereabouts said 1 years ago
    We are losing...STRIKE that. We are "giving away" our American rights.[THUMBDOWN]

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