mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-26 15:59:29 -05:00
604 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
604 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Why Socialism Causes Pollution
|
|
|
|
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
|
|
|
|
A Reprint from
|
|
The Freeman
|
|
from the March 1992 issue
|
|
|
|
Copyright (c)1992 by The Foundation for Economic
|
|
Education, Inc. Printed in the U.S.A. Permission is
|
|
granted to reprint any article in this issue except
|
|
"The Illusion That's the Welfare State" and
|
|
"Czechoslovakia on the Hudson," provided appropriate
|
|
credit is given and two copies of the reprinted
|
|
material are sent to The Foundation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Corporations are often accused of despoiling the
|
|
environment in their quest for profit. Free enterprise
|
|
is supposedly incompatible with environmental
|
|
preservation, so that government regulation is
|
|
required.
|
|
|
|
Such thinking is the basis for current proposals to
|
|
expand environmental regulation greatly. So many new
|
|
controls have been proposed and enacted that the late
|
|
economic journalist Warren Brookes once forecast that
|
|
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could
|
|
well become "the most powerful government agency on
|
|
earth, involved in massive levels of economic, social,
|
|
scientific, and political spending and interference.''l
|
|
|
|
But if the profit motive is the primary cause of
|
|
pollution, one would not expect to find much pollution
|
|
in socialist countries, such as the former Soviet
|
|
Union, China, and in the former Communist countries of
|
|
Eastern and Central Europe. That is, in theory. In
|
|
reality exactly the opposite is true: The socialist
|
|
world suffers from the worst pollution on earth. Could
|
|
it be that free enterprise is not so incompatible with
|
|
environmental protection after all?
|
|
|
|
|
|
I. SOCIALIST POLLUTION The Soviet Union
|
|
|
|
In the Soviet Union there was a vast body of
|
|
environmental law and regulation that purportedly
|
|
protected the public interest, but these constraints
|
|
have had no perceivable benefit. The Soviet Union, like
|
|
all socialist countries, suffered from a massive
|
|
"tragedy of the commons," to borrow the term used by
|
|
biologist Garrett Hardin in his classic 1968 article.2
|
|
Where property is communally or governmentally owned
|
|
and treated as a free resource, resources will
|
|
inevitably be overused with little regard for future
|
|
consequences.
|
|
|
|
The Soviet government's imperatives for economic
|
|
growth, combined with communal ownership of virtually
|
|
all property and resources, caused tremendous
|
|
environmental damage. According to economist Marshall
|
|
Goldman, who studied and traveled extensively in the
|
|
Soviet Union, "The attitude that nature is there to be
|
|
exploited by man is the very essence of the Soviet
|
|
production ethic."3
|
|
|
|
A typical example of the environmental damage caused by
|
|
the Soviet economic system is the exploitation of the
|
|
Black Sea. To comply with five-year plans for housing
|
|
and building construction, gravel, sand, and trees
|
|
around the beaches were used for decades as
|
|
construction materials. Because there is no private
|
|
property, "no value is attached to the gravel along the
|
|
seashore. Since, in effect, it is free, the contractors
|
|
haul it away."4 This practice caused massive beach
|
|
erosion which reduced the Black Sea coast by 50 percent
|
|
between 1920 and 1960. Eventually, hotels, hospitals,
|
|
and, of all things, a military sanitarium collapsed
|
|
into the sea as the shoreline gave way. Frequent
|
|
landslides--as many as 300 per year-- have been
|
|
reported.
|
|
|
|
Water pollution is catastrophic. Effluent from a
|
|
chemical plant killed almost all the fish in the Oka
|
|
River in 1965, and similar fish kills have occurred in
|
|
the Volga, Ob, Yenesei, Ural, and Northern Dvina
|
|
rivers. Most Russian factories discharge their waste
|
|
without cleaning it at all. Mines, oil wells, and ships
|
|
freely dump waste and ballast into any available body
|
|
of water, since it is all one big (and tragic)
|
|
"commons."
|
|
|
|
Only six of the 20 main cities in Moldavia had a sewer
|
|
system by the late 1960s, and only two of those cities
|
|
made any effort to treat the sewage. Conditions are far
|
|
more primitive in the countryside.
|
|
|
|
The Aral and Caspian seas have been gradually
|
|
disappearing as large quantities of their water have
|
|
been diverted for irrigation. And since untreated
|
|
sewage flows into feeder rivers, they are also heavily
|
|
polluted.
|
|
|
|
Some Soviet authorities expressed fears that by the
|
|
turn of the century the Aral Sea will be nothing but a
|
|
salt marsh. One paper reported that because of the
|
|
rising salt content of the Aral the remaining fish will
|
|
rapidly disappear. It was recently revealed that the
|
|
Aral Sea has shrunk by about a third. Its shore line
|
|
"is arid desert and the wind blows dry deposits of salt
|
|
thousands of miles away. The infant mortality rate [in
|
|
that region] is four to five times the national
|
|
average."5
|
|
|
|
The declining water level in the Caspian Sea has been
|
|
catastrophic for its fish population as spawning areas
|
|
have turned into dry land. The sturgeon population has
|
|
been so decimated that the Soviets have experimented
|
|
with producing artificial caviar.
|
|
|
|
Hundreds of factories and refineries along the Caspian
|
|
Sea dump untreated waste into the sea, and major cities
|
|
routinely dump raw sewage. It has been estimated that
|
|
one-half of all the discharged effluent is carried in
|
|
the Volga River, which flows into the Caspian Sea. The
|
|
concentration of oil in the Volga is so great that
|
|
steamboats are equipped with signs forbidding
|
|
passengers to toss cigarettes overboard. As might be
|
|
expected, fish kills along the Volga are a "common
|
|
calamity."
|
|
|
|
Lake Baikal, which is believed to be the oldest
|
|
freshwater lake in the world, is also one of the
|
|
largest and deepest. It is five times as deep as Lake
|
|
Superior and contains twice the volume of water.
|
|
According to Marshall Goldman, it was also "the best
|
|
known example of the misuse of water resources in the
|
|
USSR."6
|
|
|
|
Factories and pulp mills have been dumping hundreds of
|
|
millions of gallons of effluent into Lake Baikal each
|
|
year for decades. As a result, animal life in the lake
|
|
has been cut by more than 50 percent over the past half
|
|
century. Untreated sewage is dumped into virtually all
|
|
tributaries to the lake.
|
|
|
|
Islands of alkaline sewage have been observed floating
|
|
on the lake, including one that was 18 miles long and
|
|
three miles wide. These "islands" have polluted the air
|
|
around the lake as well as the water in it. Thousands
|
|
of acres of forest surrounding the lake have been
|
|
denuded, causing such erosion that dust storms have
|
|
been reported. So much forest land in the Lake Baikal
|
|
region has been destroyed that some observers reported
|
|
shifting sands that link up with the Gobi Desert; there
|
|
are fears that the desert may sweep into Siberia and
|
|
destroy the lake.
|
|
|
|
In other regions the fact that no compensation has to
|
|
be paid for land that is flooded by water projects has
|
|
made it easy for government engineers to submerge large
|
|
areas of land. "As much land has been lost through
|
|
flooding and salination as has been added through
|
|
irrigation and drainage in the Soviet Union." 7
|
|
|
|
These examples of environmental degradation in the
|
|
Soviet Union are not meant to be exhaustive but to
|
|
illustrate the phenomenon of Communist pollution. As
|
|
Goldman has observed, the great pollution problems in
|
|
Russia stem from the fact that the government
|
|
determined that economic growth was to be pursued at
|
|
any cost. "Government officials in the USSR generally
|
|
have a greater willingness to sacrifice their
|
|
environment than government officials in a society with
|
|
private enterprise where there is a degree of public
|
|
accountability. There is virtually a political as well
|
|
as an economic imperative to devour idle resources in
|
|
the USSR."8
|
|
|
|
|
|
China
|
|
|
|
In China, as in Russia, putting the government in
|
|
charge of resource allocation has not had desirable
|
|
environmental consequences. Information on the state of
|
|
China's environment is not encouraging.
|
|
|
|
According to the Worldwatch Institute, more than 90
|
|
percent of the trees in the pine forests in China's
|
|
Sichuan province have died because of air pollution. In
|
|
Chungking, the biggest city in southwest China, a
|
|
4,500-acre forest has been reduced by half. Acid rain
|
|
has reportedly caused massive crop losses.
|
|
|
|
There also have been reports of waterworks and landfill
|
|
projects severely hampering fish migration. Fish
|
|
breeding was so seriously neglected that fish has
|
|
largely vanished from the national diet. Depletion of
|
|
government-owned forests has turned them into deserts,
|
|
and millions of acres of grazing and farm land have
|
|
been devastated. Over eight million acres of land in
|
|
the northern Chinese plains were made alkaline and
|
|
unproductive during the "Great Leap Forward."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Central and Eastern Europe
|
|
|
|
With Communism's collapse, word has begun to seep out
|
|
about Eastern Europe's environmental disasters.
|
|
According to the United Nations Global Environment
|
|
Monitoring Program, "pollution in that region is among
|
|
the worst on the Earth's surface."9 Jeffrey Leonard of
|
|
the World Wildlife Fund concluded that "pollution was
|
|
part and parcel of the system that molested the people
|
|
[of Eastern Europe] in their daily lives.''10 Evidence
|
|
is mounting of "an environmental nightmare," the legacy
|
|
of "decades of industrial development with little or no
|
|
environmental control.''1l
|
|
|
|
Poland. According to the Polish Academy of Sciences, "a
|
|
third of the nation's 38 million people live in areas
|
|
of ecological disaster.''l2 In the heavily
|
|
industrialized Katowice region of Poland, the people
|
|
suffer 15 percent more circulatory disease, 30 percent
|
|
more tumors, and 47 percent more respiratory disease
|
|
than other Poles. Physicians and scientists believe
|
|
pollution is a major contributor to these health
|
|
problems.
|
|
|
|
Acid rain has so corroded railroad tracks that trains
|
|
are not allowed to exceed 24 miles an hour. The air is
|
|
so polluted in Katowice that there are underground
|
|
"clinics" in uranium mines where the chronically ill
|
|
can go to breathe clean air.
|
|
|
|
Continuous pumping of water from coal mines has caused
|
|
so much land to subside that over 300,000 apartments
|
|
were destroyed as buildings collapsed. The mine sludge
|
|
has been pumped into rivers and streams along with
|
|
untreated sewage which has made 95 percent of the water
|
|
unfit for human consumption. More than 65 percent of
|
|
the nation's water is even unfit for industrial use
|
|
because it is so toxic that it would destroy heavy
|
|
metals used by industry. In Cracow, Poland's ancient
|
|
capital, acid rain "dissolved so much of the gold roof
|
|
of the 16th century Sigismund Chapel that it recently
|
|
had to be replaced.''13
|
|
|
|
Industrial dust rains down on towns, depositing
|
|
cadmium, lead, zinc, and iron. The dust is so heavy
|
|
that huge trucks drive through city streets daily
|
|
spraying water to reduce it. By some accounts eight
|
|
tons of dust fall on each square mile in and around
|
|
Cracow each year. The mayor of Cracow recently stated
|
|
that the Vistula River--the largest river in Poland--is
|
|
"nothing but a sewage canal.''14 The river has mercury
|
|
levels that are three times what researchers say is
|
|
safe, while lead levels are 25 times higher than deemed
|
|
safe.
|
|
|
|
Half of Poland's cities, including Warsaw, don't even
|
|
treat their wastes, and 41 animal species have
|
|
reportedly become extinct in Poland in recent years.
|
|
While health statistics are spotty--they were not a
|
|
priority of the Communist government--available data
|
|
are alarming. A recent study of the Katowice region
|
|
found that 21 percent of the children up to 4 years old
|
|
are sick almost constantly, while 41 percent of the
|
|
children under 6 have serious health problems.
|
|
|
|
Life expectancy for men is lower than it was 20 years
|
|
ago. In Upper Silesia, which is considered one of the
|
|
most heavily industrialized regions in the world,
|
|
circulatory disease levels are 15 percent higher than
|
|
in the general population, cancer rates are 30 percent
|
|
higher, respiratory disease is 47 percent higher, and
|
|
there has been "an appalling increase in the number of
|
|
retarded children," according to the Polish Academy of
|
|
Sciences. Although pollution cannot be blamed for all
|
|
these health problems, physicians and scientists attach
|
|
much of the blame to this source.
|
|
|
|
Czechoslovakia. In a speech given on New Year's Day of
|
|
1990, Czechoslovakian President Vaclav Havel said, "We
|
|
have laid waste to our soil and the rivers and the
|
|
forests . . . and we have the worst environment in the
|
|
whole of Europe today.''15 He was not exaggerating,
|
|
although the competition for the title of "worst
|
|
environment" is. clearly fierce. Sulfur dioxide
|
|
concentrations in Czechoslovakia are eight times higher
|
|
than in the United States, and "half the forests are
|
|
dead or dying. 16
|
|
|
|
Because of the overuse of fertilizers, farmland in some
|
|
areas of Czechoslovakia is toxic. to more than one foot
|
|
in depth. In Bohemia, in northwestern Czechoslovakia,
|
|
hills stand bare because their vegetation has died in
|
|
air so foul it can be tasted. One report describes the
|
|
Czech countryside as a place where "barren plateaus
|
|
stretch for miles, studded with the stumps and
|
|
skeletons of pine trees. Under the snow lie thousands
|
|
of acres of poisoned ground, where for centuries thick
|
|
forests had grown.''17 There is a stretch of over 350
|
|
miles where more than 300,000 acres of forest have
|
|
disappeared and the remaining trees are dying.
|
|
|
|
A thick, brown haze hangs over much of northern
|
|
Czechoslovakia for about eight months of the year.
|
|
Sometimes it takes on the sting of tear gas, according
|
|
to local officials. There are environmental laws, but
|
|
they aren't enforced. Sulfur in the air has been
|
|
reported at 20 times the permissible level. Soil in
|
|
some regions is so acidic that aluminum trapped in the
|
|
clay is released. Scientists discovered that the
|
|
aluminum has poisoned groundwater, killing tree and
|
|
plant roots and filtering into the drinking water.
|
|
|
|
Severe erosion in the decimated forests has caused
|
|
spring floods in which all the melted snow cascades
|
|
down mountainsides in a few weeks, causing further
|
|
erosion and leading to water shortages in the summer.
|
|
|
|
In its search for coal, the Communist government has
|
|
used bulldozers on such a massive scale that they have
|
|
"turned towns, farms and woodlands into coarse brown
|
|
deserts and gaping hollows.''18 Because open-pit mining
|
|
is cheaper than underground mining, and has been
|
|
practiced extensively, in some areas of Czechoslovakia
|
|
"you have total devastation of the land.''19
|
|
|
|
East Germany. The new German government has claimed
|
|
that nearly 40 percent of the East German populace
|
|
suffers ill effects from pollutants in the air. In
|
|
Leipzig, half the children are treated each year for
|
|
illnesses believed to be associated with air pollution.
|
|
|
|
Eighty percent of eastern Germany's surface waters are
|
|
classified as unsuitable for fishing, sports, or
|
|
drinking, and one out of three lakes has been declared
|
|
biologically dead because of decades of untreated
|
|
dumping of chemical waste.
|
|
|
|
Much of the East German landscape has been devastated.
|
|
Fifteen to 20 percent of its forests are dead, and
|
|
another 40 percent are said to be dying. Between 1960
|
|
and 1980 at least 70 villages were destroyed and their
|
|
inhabitants uprooted by the government, which wanted to
|
|
mine high-sulfur brown coal. The countryside is now
|
|
"pitted with moon-like craters" and "laced with the
|
|
remains of what were once spruce and pine trees,
|
|
nestled amid clouds of rancid smog."20 The air in some
|
|
cities is so polluted that residents use their car
|
|
headlights during the day, and visitors have been known
|
|
to vomit from breathing the air.
|
|
|
|
Nearly identical problems exist in Bulgaria, Hungary,
|
|
Romania, and Yugoslavia. Visiting scientists have
|
|
concluded that pollution in Central and Eastern Europe
|
|
"is more dangerous and widespread than anything they
|
|
have seen in the Western industrial nations.''21
|
|
|
|
|
|
II. UNITED STATES: PUBLIC SECTOR POLLUTION
|
|
|
|
The last refuge of those who advocate socialistic
|
|
solutions to environmental pollution is the claim that
|
|
it is the lack of democratic processes that prevents
|
|
the Communist nations from truly serving the public
|
|
interest. If this theory is correct, then the public
|
|
sector of an established democracy such as the United
|
|
States should be one of the best examples of
|
|
environmental responsibility. But U.S. government
|
|
agencies are among the most cavalier when it comes to
|
|
environmental stewardship.
|
|
|
|
There is much evidence to dispute the theory that only
|
|
private businesses pollute. In the United States, we
|
|
need look no further than our own government agencies.
|
|
These public sector institutions, such as the
|
|
Department of Defense (DOD), are among the worst
|
|
offenders. DOD now generates more than 400,000 tons of
|
|
hazardous waste a year--more than is produced by the
|
|
five largest chemical companies combined. To make
|
|
matters worse, the Environmental Protection Agency
|
|
lacks the enforcement power over the public sector that
|
|
it possesses over the private sector.
|
|
|
|
The lax situation uncovered by the General Accounting
|
|
Office (GAO) at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma is
|
|
typical of the way in which many Federal agencies
|
|
respond to the EPA's directives. "Although DOD policy
|
|
calls for the military services to . . . implement
|
|
EPA's hazardous waste management regulations, we found
|
|
that Tinker has been selling . . . waste oil, fuels,
|
|
and solvents rather than recycling," reported the
|
|
GAO.22
|
|
|
|
One of the world's most poisonous spots lies about 10
|
|
miles northeast of Denver in the Army's Rocky Mountain
|
|
Arsenal. Nerve gas, mustard shells, the anti-crop spray
|
|
TX, and incendiary devices have been dumped into pits
|
|
there over the past 40 years. Dealing with only one
|
|
"basin" of this dump cost $40 million. Six hundred
|
|
thousand cubic yards of contaminated soil and sludge
|
|
had to be scraped and entombed in a 16-acre, double-
|
|
lined waste pile.
|
|
|
|
There are plenty of other examples of Defense
|
|
Department facilities that need major cleanup. In fact,
|
|
total costs of a long-term Pentagon cleanup are hard to
|
|
get a handle on. Some officials have conceded that the
|
|
price tag could eventually exceed $20 billion.
|
|
|
|
Government-owned power plants are another example of
|
|
public-sector pollution. These plants are a large
|
|
source of sulfur dioxide emissions.
|
|
|
|
The federal government's Tennessee Valley Authority
|
|
operates 59 coal-fired power plants in the Southeast,
|
|
where it has had major legal confrontations with state
|
|
governments who want the Federal agency to comply with
|
|
state environmental regulations. The TVA has fought the
|
|
state governments for years over compliance with their
|
|
clean air standards. It won a major Supreme Court
|
|
victory when the Court ruled that, as a federal
|
|
government enterprise, it could be exempt from
|
|
environmental regulations with which private sector and
|
|
local governmental power plants must comply.
|
|
|
|
Federal agricultural policy also has been a large
|
|
source of pollution, in the past encouraging over-
|
|
utilization of land subject to erosion. Powerful farm
|
|
lobbies have protected "non-point" sources of pollution
|
|
from the heavy hand of regulation placed on other
|
|
private industries.
|
|
|
|
|
|
III. POLICY IMPLICATIONS
|
|
|
|
These examples of environmental degradation throughout
|
|
the world suggest some valuable lessons. First, it is
|
|
not free enterprise per se that causes environmental
|
|
harm; if so, the socialist world would be
|
|
environmentally pristine.
|
|
|
|
The heart of the problem lies with the failure of our
|
|
legal institutions, not the free enterprise system.
|
|
Specifically, American laws were weakened more than a
|
|
century ago by Progressive Era courts that believed
|
|
economic progress was in the public interest and should
|
|
therefore supersede individual rights.23
|
|
|
|
The English common law tradition of the protection of
|
|
private property rights--including the right to be free
|
|
from pollution--was slowly overturned. In other words,
|
|
many environmental problems are not caused by "market
|
|
failure" but by government's failure to enforce
|
|
property rights. It is a travesty of justice when
|
|
downstream residents, for example, cannot hold an
|
|
upstream polluter responsible for damaging their
|
|
properties. The common law tradition must be revived if
|
|
we are to enjoy a healthy market economy and a cleaner
|
|
environment. Potential polluters must know in advance
|
|
that they will be held responsible for their actions.
|
|
|
|
The second lesson is that the plundering of the
|
|
environment in the socialist world is a grand example
|
|
of the tragedy of the commons. Under communal property
|
|
ownership, where no one owns or is responsible for a
|
|
natural resource, the inclination is for each
|
|
individual to abuse or deplete the resource before
|
|
someone else does. Common examples of this "tragedy"
|
|
are how people litter public streets and parks much
|
|
more than their own yards; private housing is much
|
|
better maintained than public housing projects; cattle
|
|
ranchers overgraze public lands but maintain lush
|
|
pastures on their own property; the national forests
|
|
are carelessly over-logged, but private forests are
|
|
carefully managed and reforested by lumber companies
|
|
with "super trees"; and game fish are habitually
|
|
overfished in public waterways but thrive in private
|
|
lakes and streams. The tragedy of the commons is a
|
|
lesson for those who believe that further
|
|
nationalization and governmental control of natural
|
|
resources is a solution to our environmental problems.
|
|
|
|
These two pillars of free enterprise--sound liability
|
|
laws that hold people responsible for their actions and
|
|
the enforcement of private property rights--are
|
|
important stepping stones to environmental protection.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOOTNOTES
|
|
|
|
[ShareDebate International Editor's Note: this text was
|
|
received in electronic form and it was intially scanned
|
|
in via an OCR program--it appears as if some uncaught
|
|
scanning errors remain in the bibliography. Where they
|
|
remain, I have replaced the characters with a '??'. I
|
|
did not receive this file direct from The Freeman but
|
|
from someone on the Internet who was scanning in their
|
|
articles that had blanket reprint permissions attached
|
|
to them--unfortunately, I have misplaced his name.]
|
|
|
|
1. Personal interview with Warren Brookes on April
|
|
??, 1990.
|
|
|
|
2. Garrett Hardin, "The Tragedy of the Commons,"
|
|
Science, December 13, 1968, pp. 1244-45.
|
|
|
|
3. Marshall Goldman, The Spoils of Progress:
|
|
Environmental Pollution in the Soviet Union (Cambridge:
|
|
MIT Press, 1972), p. 56.
|
|
|
|
4. Ibid., p. 162.
|
|
|
|
5. Peter Gumbel, "Soviet Concerns About Pollution Danger
|
|
Are Allowed to Emerge from the Closet," The Wall Street
|
|
Journal, August 23, 1988.
|
|
|
|
6. Goldman, p. ??.
|
|
|
|
7. Ibid. p. 232.
|
|
|
|
8. Ibid. p. 188.
|
|
|
|
9. Cited in Larry Tye, "Pollution a Nightmare Behind
|
|
Iron Curtain," The Arizona Republic, February 25,1990.
|
|
|
|
10. Cited in Mike Feinsilber, "Eastern Europe Fighting
|
|
Worst Pollution in World," The Chattanooga Times,
|
|
January 17,1990.
|
|
|
|
11. Tye, op. cit.
|
|
|
|
12. Marlise Simons, "Rising Iron Curtain Exposes
|
|
Haunting Veil of Polluted Air," The New York Times,
|
|
April 8, 1990
|
|
|
|
13. Lloyd Timberlake, "Poland--The Most Polluted
|
|
Country in the World?" New Scientist, October 22, 1981,
|
|
p. 219.
|
|
|
|
14. Marlise Simmons, "A Green Party Mayor Takes on
|
|
Industrial Filth of Old Cracow," The New York Times,
|
|
March 25, 1990.
|
|
|
|
15. Feinsilber, op. cit.
|
|
|
|
16. Tye, op. cit.
|
|
|
|
17. Marlise Simons, "Pollution's Toll in Eastern
|
|
Europe: Stumps Where Great Trees Once Grew," The New
|
|
York Times, March 19, 1990.
|
|
|
|
18. Marlise Simons, "Central Europe's Grimy Coal Belt:
|
|
Progress, Yes, But at What Cost?" The New York Times,
|
|
April 1, 1990.
|
|
|
|
19. Ibid.
|
|
|
|
20. Jeffrey Gedamn, "Polluted East Germany," Christian
|
|
Science Monitor, March 16, I990.
|
|
|
|
21. Simons, "Rising Iron Curtain."
|
|
|
|
22. Comptroller General, Wastepaper Recycling: Programs
|
|
of Civil Agencies Waned During the 1980s (Washington,
|
|
D.C.: General Accounting Office, 1989), p. 13.
|
|
|
|
23. Morton J. Horwitz, The Transformation of American
|
|
Law, 1780-1860 (Cambndge: Harvard University Press,
|
|
1977).
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
Dr. DiLorenzo holds the Probasco Chair of Free
|
|
Enterprise at the University of Tennessee at
|
|
Chattanooga. This article is adapted from a larger
|
|
study published by the Center for the Study of American
|
|
Business at Washington University in St. Louis and
|
|
presented at the Mont Pelerin Society meeting in Big
|
|
Sky, Montana, August 22-26, 1991. The Freeman is the
|
|
monthly publication of The Foundation for Economic
|
|
Education, Inc., Irvington-on-Hudson, NY 10533. FEE,
|
|
established in 1946 by Leonard E. Read, is a
|
|
nonpolitical educational champion of private property,
|
|
the free market, and limited government. FEE is
|
|
classified as a 26 USC 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt
|
|
organization. Other officers of FEE's Board of Trustees
|
|
are: Gregg C. MacDonald, chairman; Lovett C. Peters,
|
|
vice chairman; Don L. Foote, treasurer.
|
|
|
|
The costs of Foundation projects and services are met
|
|
through donations. Donations are invited in any amount.
|
|
Subscriptions to The Freeman are available to any
|
|
interested person in the United States for the asking.
|
|
Additional single copies $1.00;10 or more, 50 cents
|
|
each. For foreign delivery, a donation of $20.00 a year
|
|
is required to cover direct mailing costs.
|
|
|
|
###
|
|
|