Editing Losing Freedom by Installments

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[[Category:Speeches]]
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Losing Freedom by Installments is a article that appeared in ''Qualified Contractor'' in November 1961.  The article was reprinted in ''Republican philosophy and party activism : oral history transcript / and related material, 1982-1984'' a book available on [http://www.archive.org/details/repphilosophy00morrrich Archive.org]
Losing Freedom by Installments is a article that appeared in ''Qualified Contractor'' in November 1961.  The article was reprinted in ''Republican philosophy and party activism : oral history transcript / and related material, 1982-1984'' a book available on [http://www.archive.org/details/repphilosophy00morrrich Archive.org] {[https://archive.org/details/repphilosophy00morrrich/page/n105/mode/2up page 105])
 
  
 
The content of the article follows closest with '[[Encroaching Control]]'.  In fact, the two titles mirror each other (government encroaches and takes control while the people lose freedom).  The topics of the article are the same Reagan typically covered.
 
The content of the article follows closest with '[[Encroaching Control]]'.  In fact, the two titles mirror each other (government encroaches and takes control while the people lose freedom).  The topics of the article are the same Reagan typically covered.
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Carefully, with great calculation, the [[communism|communists]] gauge their aggression slicing each new gain just thin enough so that won't say, "That isn't worth fighting for." They predict that when we reach the final slice our surrender will be voluntary because we will have been weakened from within morally, spiritually, and economically.  
 
Carefully, with great calculation, the [[communism|communists]] gauge their aggression slicing each new gain just thin enough so that won't say, "That isn't worth fighting for." They predict that when we reach the final slice our surrender will be voluntary because we will have been weakened from within morally, spiritually, and economically.  
  
They have harnessed the fear of war instead of war itself knowing that surrender at the conference table can be just as complete as surrender on the battlefield. Indeed, they probably have no intention of testing our armed might. They know, even if we don't, that ours is the greatest military power in all the world. You and I, and all free men everywhere, owe our freedom to the determination and dedication of our men in uniform who stand as the only barrier to world slavery.  
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They have harnessed the fear of war instead of war itself knowing that surrender at the conference table can be just as complete as surrender on the battlefield. Indeed, they prob ably have no intention of testing our armed might. They know, even if we don't, that ours is the greatest military power in all the world. You and I, and all free men everywhere, owe our freedom to the determination and dedication of our men in uniform who stand as the only barrier to world slavery.  
  
 
[[Nikita Khrushchev|Mr. Khrushchev]] has said that capitalism will inevitably evolve into [[communism]], but not all at once. He says there will first come an intermediate stage of [[socialism]]. Supremely confident of victory, the communists say we will give up more and more of our democratic practices under the pressure of the [[Cold War|cold war]] until one day we'll waken to find we have become so much like the enemy that the reasons for enmity will have disappeared.  
 
[[Nikita Khrushchev|Mr. Khrushchev]] has said that capitalism will inevitably evolve into [[communism]], but not all at once. He says there will first come an intermediate stage of [[socialism]]. Supremely confident of victory, the communists say we will give up more and more of our democratic practices under the pressure of the [[Cold War|cold war]] until one day we'll waken to find we have become so much like the enemy that the reasons for enmity will have disappeared.  
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An illustration of this is the legislative battle that has raged over federal aid to education. Knowing the normal desire of all of us to provide the utmost for our children, we have been told that an adequate educational program is impossible unless we turn to the federal government for subsidy. An emergency situation is described involving crowded class rooms, teachers who are underpaid and too few in number. In the face of this we learn that 99.5 per cent of our school districts have not reached their limit of bonded indebtedness. The construction of classrooms has been increasing at a faster rate than that of student enrollment in the past decade. A 41 per cent increase in student enrollment from 1950 to 1960 has been matched by a 125 per cent increase in spending at the state and local levels over the same period. According to the educationists 60,000 classrooms must be constructed every year for the next 10 years if every child is to have the opportunity of a full-day education in an adequate classroom. These people seem to have forgotten to mention the fact that we have been building an average of 70,000 classrooms a year for the last five years. A continuation of this rate, according to some informed sources, may give us a surplus of classrooms by 1970 and it is more probable that sometime in the 1960's school construction will start to decline. Nor do they tell us that it has been estimated that the post war baby boom has been passed and that in the immediate years ahead the increase in the rate of enrollment is expected to decrease.  
 
An illustration of this is the legislative battle that has raged over federal aid to education. Knowing the normal desire of all of us to provide the utmost for our children, we have been told that an adequate educational program is impossible unless we turn to the federal government for subsidy. An emergency situation is described involving crowded class rooms, teachers who are underpaid and too few in number. In the face of this we learn that 99.5 per cent of our school districts have not reached their limit of bonded indebtedness. The construction of classrooms has been increasing at a faster rate than that of student enrollment in the past decade. A 41 per cent increase in student enrollment from 1950 to 1960 has been matched by a 125 per cent increase in spending at the state and local levels over the same period. According to the educationists 60,000 classrooms must be constructed every year for the next 10 years if every child is to have the opportunity of a full-day education in an adequate classroom. These people seem to have forgotten to mention the fact that we have been building an average of 70,000 classrooms a year for the last five years. A continuation of this rate, according to some informed sources, may give us a surplus of classrooms by 1970 and it is more probable that sometime in the 1960's school construction will start to decline. Nor do they tell us that it has been estimated that the post war baby boom has been passed and that in the immediate years ahead the increase in the rate of enrollment is expected to decrease.  
  
Teachers have been underpaid, but we are making progress without federal aid. In these first several years the average salary of teachers has risen from $3100 to $5200 a year for generally nine months of work. Little evidence has been introduced which indicates a need exists for federal aid. The professional educationists lobby (one of the biggest spenders in Washington) denies federal control plays any part in their plans, but in truth, a federal school system is the entire basis for the school aid plan. The foot in the door was the [[National Defense Education Act of 1958]]. Graham Barden, the former chairman of the House Education & Labor Committee, reportedly said that the purpose of the current $2.5 billion federal aid bill is to centralize power over the school system here in Washington so that it will be easier to apply concentrated pressure.  
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Teachers have been underpaid, but we are making progress without federal aid. In these first several years the average salary of teachers has risen from S3 100 to $5200 a year for generally nine months of work. Little evidence has been introduced which indicates a need exists for federal aid. The professional educationists lobby (one of the biggest spenders in Washington) denies federal control plays any part in their plans, but in truth, a federal school system is the entire basis for the school aid plan. The foot in the door was the [[National Defense Education Act of 1958]]. Graham Barden, the former chairman of the House Education & Labor Committee, reportedly said that the purpose of the current $2.5 billion federal aid bill is to centralize power over the school system here in Washington so that it will be easier to apply concentrated pressure.  
  
Twenty-seven years ago the government assured the farmer that subsidy didn't mean control. Then a farmer named [[United States v Haley|Haley]] discovered he could be fined $4000 for raising wheat on his own land and feeding it to his own cattle. The fine was up held by the Supreme Court with a single sentence ruling that said, in effect, that an agency of the Federal Government has the right to tell a citizen what he can grow on his own land for his own use. Thus the Court practically cancelled out the 4th Amendment to the Constitution our protection against search and seizure. If federal farm agents think a farmer is violating a regulation - not a law, mind you, but a regulation of a bureau - they pronounce the farmer guilty and impose a fine without even a formal hearing, let alone a trial by jury. If the fine is not paid, they can seize property.  
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Twenty-seven years ago the government assured the farmer that subsidy didn't mean control. Then a farmer named [[United States V. Haley|Haley]] discovered he could be fined $4000 for raising wheat on his own land and feeding it to his own cattle. The fine was up held by the Supreme Court with a single sentence ruling that said, in effect, that an agency of the Federal Government has the right to tell a citizen what he can grow on his own land for his own use. Thus the Court practically cancelled out the 4th Amendment to the Constitution our protection against search and seizure. If federal farm agents think a farmer is violating a regulation - not a law, mind you, but a regulation of a bureau - they pronounce the farmer guilty and impose a fine without even a formal hearing, let alone a trial by jury. If the fine is not paid, they can seize property.  
  
 
The farm program's reason for being is the control of overproduction. Billions are spent to store surplus farm products, and additional billions are spent to reclaim desert land and put it into production. The government will pay you not to plant and it will also pay you to fertilize your land so as to increase the crop yield. Last year the government lost 4.5 million acres of corn land. The government paid $150 million to keep it from being planted, and now it develops that the 4.5 million acres don't even exist, according to Senator John Williams of Delaware.  
 
The farm program's reason for being is the control of overproduction. Billions are spent to store surplus farm products, and additional billions are spent to reclaim desert land and put it into production. The government will pay you not to plant and it will also pay you to fertilize your land so as to increase the crop yield. Last year the government lost 4.5 million acres of corn land. The government paid $150 million to keep it from being planted, and now it develops that the 4.5 million acres don't even exist, according to Senator John Williams of Delaware.  
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In the last 10 years, 127 million Americans have acquired some form of medical or hospital insurance. Seventy per cent of our people are so protected, including 2/3rds of our senior citizens. At the present rate of increase, it is estimated that 90 per cent of the population will be covered by 1970.  
 
In the last 10 years, 127 million Americans have acquired some form of medical or hospital insurance. Seventy per cent of our people are so protected, including 2/3rds of our senior citizens. At the present rate of increase, it is estimated that 90 per cent of the population will be covered by 1970.  
  
As nearly as we can determine, the problem involves less than 10 per cent of the elderly who would not be able to finance needed medical care. To this end, the 86th Congress adopted the [[Kerr-Mills Bill]] to provide federal funds to the states. Without waiting for this to be put into effect, the advocates of the insurance measure claim the only answer to the problem is compulsory government health insurance for all, regardless of need. Never mind if the individual is already insured, has an ample in come or possesses great wealth. Perhaps there is a clue to their (rue purpose in remarks made by now Ex-Congressman [[Aime Forand|Forand]] who has said, that if we could only break through and get our foot inside the door, then we could expand the program after that. Like an echo comes a pamphlet from the Socialist party entitled. "[[The Case for Socialized Medicine]]." It says:  
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As nearly as we can determine, the problem involves less than 10 per cent of the elderly who would not be able to finance needed medical care. To this end, the 86th Congress adopted the [[Kerr-Mills bill]] to provide federal funds to the states. Without waiting for this to be put into effect, the advocates of the insurance measure claim the only answer to the problem is compulsory government health insurance for all, regardless of need. Never mind if the individual is already insured, has an ample in come or possesses great wealth. Perhaps there is a clue to their (rue purpose in remarks made by now Ex-Congressman [[Aime Forand|Forand]] who has said, that if we could only break through and get our foot inside the door, then we could expand the program after that. Like an echo comes a pamphlet from the Socialist party entitled. "[[The Case for Socialized Medicine]]." It says:  
  
 
"We can do everything possible to encourage federal intervention, the financing of medical costs on a bit by bit basis, and we can work to direct such intervention, so that if it isn't socialized medicine proper, at least it paves the way for socialized medicine."  
 
"We can do everything possible to encourage federal intervention, the financing of medical costs on a bit by bit basis, and we can work to direct such intervention, so that if it isn't socialized medicine proper, at least it paves the way for socialized medicine."  
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All of this vast government complex has been created by a tax system which refuses to recognize any limitations on its right to confiscate the earnings of its citizens.  
 
All of this vast government complex has been created by a tax system which refuses to recognize any limitations on its right to confiscate the earnings of its citizens.  
  
No nation in its history has survived a tax burden that reached a third of the national income. Today the tax collectors take 33 cents out of every dollar earned and of that 33 cents, 23 cents goes to the Federal government, leaving 10 cents for the state, county and local community. It is no wonder we turn to the federal government for aid. but wouldn't it make more sense to leave that money in the local community to begin with instead of running it through that [[Puzzle Palace on the Potomac]], only to have it returned minus a carrying charge?  
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No nation in its history has survived a tax burden that reached a third of the national income. Today the tax collectors take 33 cents out of every dollar earned and of that 33 cents, 23 cents goes to the Federal government, leaving 10 cents for the state, county and local community. It is no wonder we turn to the federal government for aid. but wouldn't it make more sense to leave that money in the local community to begin with instead of running it through that [[Puzzle palace on the Potomac]], only to have it returned minus a carrying charge?  
  
 
Early in our history we were warned that the farther the spending was removed from the source of taxation, the less restraint there would be in its spending. Today, shocking figures prove the truth of this. When you contribute to your local charities, you must give $1.10 for every $1 that is to be spent in good works. County welfare sees an increase in this overhead to where $1.23 must be raised for every $1 actually spent on welfare. At the state level it takes $1.49 and the federal government must raise $2.10 for every dollar it will spend on the recipients of federal welfare a $1.10 overhead for each $1.  
 
Early in our history we were warned that the farther the spending was removed from the source of taxation, the less restraint there would be in its spending. Today, shocking figures prove the truth of this. When you contribute to your local charities, you must give $1.10 for every $1 that is to be spent in good works. County welfare sees an increase in this overhead to where $1.23 must be raised for every $1 actually spent on welfare. At the state level it takes $1.49 and the federal government must raise $2.10 for every dollar it will spend on the recipients of federal welfare a $1.10 overhead for each $1.  

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