has not been kind to either freedom of commercial intercourse
or unrestrained individual action. The reverse has been the
case. Listen to two voices from the contemporary business
community.</p>
<p><enttype='PERSON'>Lee Iacocca</ent> believes that, "the 1980s were a time of quick
bucks, greed, and a lot of corruption . . . . [W]e've got to
work and pull this country up by its bootstrap." And Mr.
Iacocca sees an important role for government in guiding us
away from our "lustful and greedy" ways.</p>
<p><enttype='PERSON'>Steve Jobs</ent>, founder of <enttype='ORG'>Apple Computer</ent>, argues that, "getting
rid of General <enttype='PERSON'>Noriega</ent> is important, but I wish the computer
industry would get a tenth of the space on our national agenda
that he has. We have to make these issues national
priorities." Technological achievements are still possible for
<enttype='GPE'>America</ent>, he believes, through "government leadership." The
problem is that "the private sector [is] dancing to its short-run tune," while government leadership can offer us the long-term vision for intelligent decision-making.</p>
<p>Many economists no longer share <enttype='PERSON'>Adam Smith</ent>'s vision. Lester
Thurow, dean of <enttype='ORG'>the Sloan School</ent> of Management at <enttype='ORG'>MIT</ent>, says
that the <enttype='NORP'>Japanese</ent> "pick out an industry to conquer" and unless
we (read: the government) do something to stop their invasion
of <enttype='GPE'>America</ent>, "they" will own and control and "we" will work and
obey. <enttype='PERSON'>Edward Ellwood</ent>, of the <enttype='ORG'>Harvard</ent> John F. Kennedy School of
Government, insists that, "We also need to make sure everybody
has medical protection outside of the welfare state. Every
other major industrialized country has found a way to do this.
In the next ten years, we will do the same . . . . We ought to
move toward a uniform national system of child support with
payments deducted automatically by the government from the
employer."</p>
<p>For one hundred years, <enttype='PERSON'>Adam Smith</ent>'s economic system of natural
liberty has been under attack. The idea that men, left to
their own decisions, can make better choices for themselves
than a paternalistic government, and that free men interacting
with each other through voluntary exchange can produce more
wealth and prosperity than any form of government planning or
intervention, has been denied and often ridiculed.</p>
<p>At the same time, the <enttype='NORP'>Marxist</ent> view of society has permeated
the conscience of the world, including <enttype='GPE'>America</ent>. Great wealth
and financial success bear the stigma of unscrupulous behavior
and deceitful conduct. How could a person or company have
accumulated so much wealth and influence in a market unless
they have been dishonest and exploitive? Besides, why does
anyone need so much while so many in the society still have so
little?</p>
<p>The only solution to government regulation and redistribution
of wealth in 20th century <enttype='GPE'>America</ent> is an amendment to the
Constitution that recognizes and guarantees a separation of