|
1. SECESSION
We recognize the right to political secession as the ultimate
expression of the freedom of association. This includes the
right to secession by political entities, private groups,
or individuals. Exercise of this right, like the exercise
of all other rights, does not remove legal and moral obligations
against violating the rights of others.
2. ENERGY
We oppose all government control of energy production, allocation,
and pricing, such as that imposed by the Public Service Commission.
All government-owned energy resources should be sold to private
ownership. We oppose all government subsidies for energy research,
development, and operation. We also oppose all government
conservation schemes through the use of taxes, subsidies,
and regulation.
3. POLLUTION
Pollution of other people's property is a violation of individual
rights. Present legal principles, particularly the unjust
and false concept of "public property," block privatization
of the use of the environment and hence block resolution of
controversies over resource use. We support the development
of an objective legal system defining property rights to air
and water. We call for a modification of the laws governing
such torts as trespass and nuisance to cover damages done
by air, water, radiation, and noise pollution. Strict liability,
not government agencies and arbitrary government standards,
should regulate pollution.
Toxic waste disposal problems have been created by government
policies that separate liability from property. Taxpayers
should not pay for toxic waste clean-ups; instead, individual
property owners, or in the case of corporations, the responsible
managers and employees, should be held strictly liable for
material damage done by their property. Claiming that one
has abandoned a piece of property does not absolve one of
the responsibility for actions one has set in motion.
4. CONSUMER PROTECTION
We support strong and effective laws against fraud and misrepresentation.
However, we oppose paternalistic regulations which impose
prices, define standards for products, dictate to consumers,
or otherwise prohibit risk-taking and free choice. We oppose
governmental promotion or imposition of the metric system.
We oppose all so-called "consumer protection" legislation
which infringes upon voluntary trade: citizens' choices should
not be limited in the name of a paternalistic protection ultimately
based on a consumer's laziness or ignorance. We call for the
abolition of the Governor's Committee on Consumer Affairs.
We advocate the repeal of all laws banning or restricting
the advertising of prices, products, or services. We specifically
oppose laws requiring an individual to buy or use so-called
"self-protection" equipment such as safety belts, air bags,
or crash helmets.
We advocate an end to compulsory fluoridation of water supplies.
There should be no laws regarding what substances (nicotine,
alcohol, hallucinogens, narcotics, Laetrile, artificial sweeteners,
vitamin supplements, or other "drugs") a person may ingest
or otherwise use.
5. EDUCATION
We advocate the complete separation of education and State.
Government schools have led to the indoctrination of children
and interfere with the free choices of parents. Government
ownership, operation, regulation, and subsidy of schools and
colleges should be ended. We call for the repeal of the guarantees
of tax-funded, government-provided education in Georgia.
As an interim measure to encourage the growth of private
schools and variety in education, including home schooling,
we support tax credits for tuition and other expenditures
related to an individual's education. We likewise favor tax
credits for child care and oppose takeover, regulation, or
subsidy of the child-care industry by any level of government.
We oppose denial of tax-exempt status to schools because
of those schools' private policies on hiring, admissions,
and student deportment. We support the repeal of all taxes
on the income or property of private schools, whether for
profit or non-profit.
We condemn compulsory education laws, which spawn prison-like
schools with many of the problems associated with prisons,
and we call for an immediate repeal of such laws; we believe
they violate the 13th Amendment prohibition of involuntary
servitude.
Until government involvement in education is ended, we support
elimination, within the governmental school system, of forced
busing and corporal punishment. We further support immediate
reduction of tax support for schools, and removal of the burden
of school taxes from those not responsible for the education
of children.
6. POPULATION
Georgians present and future are not state resources and
should not be treated as such. Nor should current or future
Georgians be considered sources of revenue. We therefore oppose
all coercive measures for population control, including the
implementation of any taxes, regulations, or subsidies which
may be designed to encourage or discourage relocation to or
from Georgia. This principle applies not only to individuals
and families, but to businesses as well. We believe that the
establishment of a truly free society and market within the
State of Georgia would be more than enough incentive to attract
desirable business and industry to the state.
We oppose government actions that either compel or prohibit
abortion, sterilization, or any other forms of birth control.
Specifically, we condemn the vicious practice of forced sterilization
of welfare recipients or of mentally retarded or "genetically
defective" individuals.
We regard the tragedies caused by unplanned, unwanted pregnancies
to be aggravated, if not created, by government policies of
censorship, restriction, regulation, and prohibition. Therefore,
we call for the repeal of all laws that restrict anyone from
engaging in voluntary exchanges of goods, services, or information
regarding human sexuality, reproduction, birth control, or
related medical or biological technologies.
We equally oppose government laws and policies that restrict
the opportunity to choose alternatives to abortion.
We support an end to all subsidies for childbearing built
into our present laws, including welfare plans and the provision
of tax-supported services for children. We urge the elimination
of special tax burdens on single people and couples with few
or no children.
7. TRANSPORTATION
Government interference in transportation is characterized
by monopolistic restriction, corruption, and gross inefficiency.
We therefore call for the dissolution of all government agencies
concerned with transportation, and the transfer of their legitimate
functions to competitive private firms. We call for the return
of all railroads within the State of Georgia to private ownership,
and for privatization of airports and public roads.
As interim measures, we advocate an immediate end to government
regulation of private transit organizations and to governmental
favors to the transportation industry. In particular, we support
the immediate repeal of all laws restricting transit competition
such as the granting of taxicab and bus monopolies and the
prohibition of private jitney services. We urge immediate
deregulation of the trucking industry. Likewise, we advocate
the immediate repeal of speed limits. We call for immediate
and complete cessation of government funding of MARTA and
other mass transit systems; the assets of these systems should
be sold to private ownership as soon as possible, where they
should be allowed to thrive or perish as dictated by the demands
of the free market.
8. POVERTY AND UNEMPLOYMENT
Government fiscal and monetary measures that artificially
foster business expansion guarantee an eventual increase in
unemployment rather than curtailing it. We call for the immediate
cessation of such policies as well as any governmental attempts
to affect employment levels.
We support repeal of all laws that impede the ability of
any person to find employment, such as minimum wage laws,
so-called "protective" labor legislation for women and children,
and governmental restrictions on the establishment of private
day-care centers. We deplore government-fostered forced retirement,
which robs the elderly of the right to work.
We seek the elimination of occupational licensure, which
prevents human beings from working in whatever trade they
wish. We call for the abolition of all state and local government
agencies that restrict entry into any profession, such as
education and law, or regulate its practice. No worker should
be legally penalized for lack of certification, and no consumer
should be legally restrained from hiring unlicensed individuals.
We oppose all government welfare, relief projects, and "aid
to the poor" programs. All these government programs are invasive
of privacy, paternalistic, demeaning, and inefficient. The
proper source of help for such persons is the voluntary efforts
of private groups and individuals.
To speed the time when governmental programs are replaced
by effective private institutions we advocate dollar-for-dollar
tax credits for all charitable contributions.
9. PUBLIC AND PRIVATE HEALTH
We favor restoring a free market health care system. The
bureaucratic, top-down system called "managed competition"
inevitably will lead to lower quality health care that is
less available, as we have seen in Canada. Government imposed
rules eliminate the free choices of individuals in the market
and replace them with a political scramble by special interests
seeking health dollars.
Therefore we advocate the complete separation of medicine
and State. We seek the elimination of all government restrictions
on the right of individuals to pursue alternative forms of
health care. Individuals should be free to contract at a mutually
agreed upon rate with practitioners of their choice for all
health care services. We oppose any government infringement
upon the practitioner-patient relationship through regulatory
agencies or contracted review organizations. We condemn the
use of anti-trust laws to prosecute medical practitioners
criminally.
We oppose any form of compulsory health insurance, including
employer-provided health insurance benefits required by the
government.
We oppose any Georgia area planning boards whose stated purpose
is to consolidate health services or avoid their duplication,
for their ultimate effect is to limit availability and choice
of health services. We support the removal of all government
barriers to medical advertising, including prohibition of
publication of doctors' fees and drug prices. We further support
the elimination of laws requiring prescriptions for the dispensing
of medicines and other health-related items.
We condemn efforts by government to impose a medical orthodoxy
on society. Until such time as the tyrannical and futile drug
prohibition is repealed, we advocate immediate reclassification
of all drugs, particularly marijuana and heroin, to make them
available for medicinal use.
We oppose the prohibition of home births and discouragement
of privately funded women's clinics. We call for the repeal
of all laws that restrict the practice of lay midwifery or
that permit harassment of lay midwives and home birth practitioners.
We also call for the repeal of all medical licensing laws,
which have raised medical costs while creating a government-imposed
monopoly of doctors and hospitals.
Since a person's body is his or her own property, we favor
repeal of the existing prohibition on the commercial sale
and purchase of body parts.
We favor the deregulation of the health insurance industry,
and oppose government-imposed limits on its use of genetic
and other screening and testing methods. We oppose laws that
limit the freedom of contract of patients and health care
professionals, and laws regulating the supply of legal aid
on a contingency fee basis. We also oppose subsidy of malpractice
insurance through public funds. We call for the repeal of
laws forcing health care professionals to render medical services
in emergencies or other situations.
We recognize that AIDS is a dread disease of wide concern.
But some governmental proposals to combat it present a threat
to individual liberty and encourage the spread of the disease.
We oppose all government-mandated AIDS testing. We are opposed
to restrictions which make it difficult for individuals to
secure treatment for this disease. We also call for the decriminalization
of hypodermic syringes, especially since sharing needles is
now a major means of transmission of the disease. We oppose
state intervention into the private medical records of individuals.
We are opposed to efforts by the government to restrict the
dissemination of AIDS education material.
We condemn attempts at the state or local level to cripple
the advance of science by governmental restriction of research.
We oppose subsidies to, or restrictions of, medical education.
We call for an end to government policies compelling individuals
to submit to medical experiments, treatment, and testing.
We condemn compulsory hospitalization, compulsory vaccination,
and compulsory fluoridation. As interim measures, we advocate
dollar-for-dollar tax credits to any individual or group providing
health care services to the needy or paying for such services.
Tax credits should also be made available for private grants
to medical education and medical research.
Because all individuals should have full responsibility and
control of their own lives, we support the right of all persons
-- including the terminally or hopelessly ill -- to end their
lives. We support the use of living wills and durable medical
powers of attorney. In the absence of such wills and the ability
for the individual to choose (e.g. coma) the matter should
be decided by such person or persons as the individual may
have clearly preferred, with whatever guidance they may desire.
In keeping with the principle of non-coercion, no individual
shall be forced either to continue or terminate life sustaining
care. This right does not entitle individuals to force medical
professionals or others to assist them in ending their lives
or in continuing life support.
Because existing tax policy has dampened price competition
and consumer cost-consciousness in the medical industry, we
would provide not only tax breaks for employer-provided health
plans (whose value is not currently taxed as income), but
also individual tax credits so that families can choose their
own health plans.
10. RESOURCE USE
Resource management is properly the responsibility and right
of the legitimate owners of land, water, and other natural
resources. We oppose government control of resource use through
eminent domain, zoning laws, building codes, rent control,
regional planning, urban renewal, or purchase of development
rights with tax money. Such regulations and programs violate
property rights, discriminate against minorities, create housing
shortages, and tend to cause higher rents.
We advocate the establishment of an efficient and just system
of private water rights, applied to all bodies of water, surface
and underground. Such a system should be built upon a doctrine
of first claim and use. The allocation of water should be
governed by unrestricted competition and unregulated prices.
All government restrictions upon private use or voluntary
transfer of water rights or similar despotic controls can
only aggravate the mis-application of water.
We also advocate the privatization of government and quasi-government
water supply systems. The construction of government dams
and other water projects should cease, and existing government
water projects should be transferred to private ownership.
We also favor the abolition of all local water districts and
their power to tax. Only the complete separation of water
and the State will prevent future water crises.
We call for the homesteading or other just transfer to private
ownership of lands held by the State of Georgia. Forced surface-mining
of privately homesteaded lands in which the government has
reserved surface mining right to itself is a violation of
the property rights of the present landholders. We recognize
the legitimacy of resource planning by means of private, voluntary
covenants. We oppose creation of new government parks or wilderness
and recreation areas. Such parks and areas that already exist,
including Stone Mountain Park, should be transferred to non-government
ownership. Pending such just transfer, their operating costs
should be borne by their users rather than by taxpayers.
11. AGRICULTURE
America's free market in agriculture, the system that feeds
much of the world, has been plowed under by government intervention.
Government subsidies, regulation, and taxes have encouraged
the centralization of agricultural business. Government export
policies hold American farmers hostage to the political whims
of changing administrations. Government embargoes on grain
sales and other obstacles to free trade have frustrated the
development of free and stable trade relationships between
peoples of the world.
We advocate the reversal of government policies so that farmers
and consumers alike can be free from the meddling and counterproductive
measures of the government -- free to grow, sell, and buy what
they want, in the quantity they want, when they want. Four steps
can be taken immediately:
- abolition of the Georgia Department of Agriculture;
- elimination of all government farm programs, including
price supports, direct subsidies, and all regulation on
agricultural production;
- deregulation of the transportation industry; and
- ending government involvement in agricultural pest control.
A policy of pest control whereby private individuals or
corporations bear full responsibility for damages they inflict
on their neighbors should be implemented.
12. CIVIL SERVICE
We propose the abolition of the Civil Service system, which
entrenches a permanent and growing bureaucracy. We recognize
that the Civil Service is inherently a system of concealed
patronage. We therefore recommend return to the Jeffersonian
principle of rotation in office.
13. ELECTION LAWS
We call for an end to government control of political parties,
consistent with First Amendment rights to freedom of association
and freedom of expression. As private, voluntary groups, political
parties should be allowed to establish their own rules for
nomination procedures, primaries, and conventions.
Elections at all levels should be in the control of those
who wish to participate in or support them voluntarily. We
therefore call for an end to any tax-financed subsidies to
candidates or parties, and the repeal of all laws which restrict
voluntary financing of election campaigns.
The Georgia legislature has established prohibitively restrictive
laws which in effect exclude alternative candidates and parties
from their rightful place on election ballots. Such laws wrongfully
deny ballot access to political candidates and groups, and
further deny the voters their right to consider all legitimate
alternatives. We hold that no state has an interest to protect
in this area except for the fair and efficient conduct of
elections.
The Australian ballot system, introduced into the United
States in the late nineteenth century, is an abridgement of
freedom of expression and of voting rights. Under it, the
names of all the officially approved candidates are printed
in a single government sponsored format and the voter indicates
his or her choice by marking it or by writing in an approved
but unlisted candidate's name. We should return to the previous
electoral system where there was no official ballot or candidate
approval at all, and therefore no state or federal restriction
of access to a "single ballot." Instead, voters submitted
their own choices and had the option of using "tickets" or
cards printed by candidates or political parties.
We oppose any system of voting that does not provide for
a clear method by which individual votes and vote totals may
be fully and independently verified after the conclusion of
an election. Specifically, we call for the replacement of
Georgia's current electronic voting system, which cannot be
fully and fairly audited.
In order to grant voters a full range of choice in state
and local elections, we propose the addition of the alternative
"None of the above is acceptable" to all ballots. We further
propose that in the event that "none of the above is acceptable"
receives a plurality of votes in any election, a new election
should be held within 60 days, with the stipulation that none
of the rejected candidates from the first election may participate
in the second. |