[Video] Rand Paul on The Daily Show w/ Jon Stewart 10/03/12

I would have thought Rand could avoid the same wardrobe blunder that he did with Letterman. P.S. I think Stewart scored on a few punches and actually won on points for the average main stream viewer.
 
The Regulatory State’s Collateral Damage
http://blog.independent.org/2012/10/05/the-regulatory-states-collateral-damage/

Jon Stewart, although a comedian, probably remains my favorite liberal TV journalist—maybe my favorite TV journalist overall. He often takes civil liberties seriously and is at least somewhat skeptical about government-corporate shenanigans, which is more than we get almost anywhere else. Yet here Stewart shows his colors as an ideologue blind to the perils of the left-liberal side of the police state.

Rand Paul gives an example of a man thrown into a federal cage because the EPA absurdly declared his own property was a wetland. Stewart responds that he could just as well have written a book on the successes of government or the failures of business. OK. But if someone came on his show with a book about corporate malfeasance in the finance sector, would Stewart complain that she could have just as easily have written a book about all the successful loans that allow productive business to flourish? No. Because Stewart recognizes that abuse should be exposed—including certain government abuses—even if there are other aspects to the story.

Stewart notes that the person imprisoned due to EPA regulations got his day in court, although Paul correctly responds that the EPA has twisted justice in these courts and also that jurors are imperfect, and have been known to sentence innocent people to death. Stewart isn’t phased.

Paul points out that federal agents are overarmed and that people have been busted over raw milk. Stewart jokes about being lactose intolerant, apparently not taking seriously how completely disgusting it is that anyone would have to spend even a second in a jail cell over milk. He also points out that we need these bureuacrats to be armed—what if someone on a farm turns out to be a drug dealer? So here we see someone who is correctly critical about the drug war justifying armed raids of farms because. . . there might be a drug dealer there? Really?

When Paul points out that the Department of Education has armed enforcers, Stewart jokes about the state of our schools. Now I know he is a comedian, but these jokes clearly evince a failure to grasp the severity of the regulatory state’s violence against the peaceful and harmless.
[...]
Although they could be much more vigilant, progressives often recognize that police and prosecutors commit serious abuses against human rights. Yet they make this bizarre exception for the regulatory state. Yet there is no sharp distinction to be drawn. It is incoherent to oppose the DEA’s raids of people’s homes to find recreational drugs if you support the FDA’s raids of people’s homes to find experimental medicines. It is inconsistent to favor strong due process protections in burglary cases but tolerate the IRS’s standards of evidence that are totally skewed in favor of the state. It is intellectually bankrupt to complain that innocents are jailed for victimless crimes or because of tainted trials, but not extend the exact same concern to those incarcerated because of overzealous environmental or health code edicts and bureaucratic errors.
[...]
The state is an engine of legal violence. The regulatory state, even more than the welfare state, represents the left-liberal’s hypocritical confusion over civil liberties. If you recognize that the criminal justice system’s handling of real crimes like rape and theft can result in intolerable injustices that require constant attention and exposure, you should also recognize that the regulatory system’s approach to pollution, fraud, and other property offenses deserves the same unwavering skepticism. If you recognize that the police state has grown to combat victimless behavior, making prisoners of people who have hurt no one, you should acknowledge the same truth about the regulatory iron fist, which in the name of fairness, public health, and ecological sustainability has crushed the liberties and lives of good people just as surely as traditional law enforcement has in the name of stamping out drugs and vice.

Standing up for the little guy against those with far more power means taking seriously the regulatory state’s destructiveness, inequity, and massive injustice. People are rotting in prison over milk, confusion concerning red tape, and small construction projects in their backyards. This isn’t a time to tweak the system. These injustices are massive and the destroyed human lives very real. The whole apparatus of regulatory power needs to be rethought. Paul wants to disarm these bureaucrats and rein in the alphabet soup of federal mini-governments known as regulatory agencies. Given the lives they’re destroying, this seems to me like a moderate first step.
 
On the contrary, after every single section of his book, he has a chapter titled, "How can we solve the problem?" In which he discusses legislation that he has already submitted. His big argument is that much of the regulations and laws being used to impose tyranny are not actually laws passed by the congress; but made up rules by the executive branch and he makes the argument to reign them in by limiting them to only do exactly what congress tells them to do.

http://www.amazon.com/Government-Bu...keywords=government+bullies#reader_1455522759

This is the key point. If every federal regulation had to be approved by Congress - how many would be padded? In the next election the opponent then gets to put out an ad that says Congressman X voted to allow the EPA to take citizen Z's home, fine him $100,000 and put him in prison for 10 years, for planting a garden in his backyard.

See what happens today when you show up at a town hall and ask your Representative about why they don't get federal regulations under control and watch the weasel I don't approve of what they are doing and they were appointed by the other party response.

I'm left with we put your party in control to stop this, and you guys could have passed a law that every federal regulation requires approval from Congress. Why don't you do that?
 
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