by Arlos » Tue Jan 22, 2008 11:42 am
Yeah, but who is going to hold Big Industry to environmental standards if the EPA doesn't exist?
Sure, California (for example) will have strict laws, but funny that, air and water pollution don't stop at state borders. What happens if, say, Missouri is convinced by big business and big Agriculture to repeal water cleanliness laws, and dumps thousands of tons of waste, including deadly pesticides into the Missouri? You think that waste is going to not pass down to the Mississippi, and pollute every single state downstream? Yet if there's no national agency controlling that, what can those downstream states do to stop what Missouri did?
What happens to worker safety concerns if OSHA no longer exists? What's to stop, say, Big Coal from buying the West Virginia legislature and legalizing 12 year old coal miners again, while outlawing unions, so we end up back like it was in the late-1800s/early-1900s? Just because buying influence by special interests and big corporations at the national level won't be wroth as much won't change anything, since they'll just turn around and buy equivalent interests at the state level. You won't change anything but the location of the purchases.
No, while I like some of Paul's stances, this world has become far too complicated and interconnected to just throw everything back to the states. There's now far far far too much that one state can do that impacts large numbers of other ones which was NOT the case 200-300 years ago. If you tried to go BACK to that now, inter-state conflicts would ultimately end up completely balkanizing this country, and we'd split into fragments, the same way, say, Yugoslavia did after Marshall Tito died.
In any case, you might recall something called the Civil War, which pretty thoroughly settled the question of whether or not states should be allowed to do whatever they damn well please, or whether the centralized federal government should be in charge. As a historian said about the outcome of that war: "Before the Civil War, the proper way to talk about the United States was to say 'The United States are'. Afterward, it became 'The United States IS'." Sorry, but I don't want to turn back 150 years of history and go back to being 'are'.
-Arlos