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An Open Letter to the Free Society Editorial Board: Policy Changes are Necessary, Yet Insufficient

Published in Blog on January 07, 2025 by Peter Spung

Dear Audrey Grayson and the Editorial Board of Free Society from the Cato Institute,

First, let me commend you on a fine publication. Free Society is timely, topical, articulate, visually beautiful, and easily accessible and shareable online. The roots of liberty at Cato resonate strongly in Free Society, and your message of “individual liberty, limited government, free markets, and peace” resounds throughout.

As a patriot and fellow journeyer in the liberty movement, may I suggest that you consider posing this question of the authors and articles: “Is it necessary, yet insufficient?” Cato's and Free Society’s policy prescriptions are often necessary and accurate but insufficient alone to address DC's bureaucracy and spending. Additional structural limits are needed for sufficiency and sustainability. Please allow me to illustrate with two articles from the Winter 2024 edition. Cover of Free Society Winter 2024

“A Roadmap for Reform: 10 Policy Priorities for the New Congress” is a guide for sound governance. Many thanks to the authors! Slashing taxes, limiting debt, reducing federal costs, lowering health care prices, reforming Social Security, restoring sound monetary policy, reforming legal immigration, auditing government-induced guilty pleas, applying low intervention to AI, and preventing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) are excellent policy ideas. These necessary changes must be led by Congress but are insufficient alone. After future elections or changes in administrations, policy gains will be lost or overturned unless they are made permanent through structural changes via constitutional amendments.

The Article V Convention of States movement shows that the framers of our Constitution were structuralists aware of human nature's timeless attraction to power. They created structures in checks and balances to diffuse and restrain this power. Supporting liberty, individual rights, and free enterprise requires structural limits on the federal government. Constitutional amendments provide these limits, as seen in many positive historical examples -- see “The Lamp of Experience: Constitutional Amendments Work” article or this short video summary.

Despite super-majority polling support for decades among We the People, Congress has not and presumably will never limit its power through term limits or budget controls. In practice, they continually exhibit deceitful governance by passing numerous self-restricting laws, such as the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go (PAYGO) Act of 2010, the Budget Control Act of 2011, and the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, only to exceed and violate them. The kabuki theater and faux drama of debt limit brinksmanship and government shutdown threats adds insult to injury. Since Congress fails to govern responsibly, We the People, through the States,We The People are sovereign and require a COS must amend the Constitution with structural limits on the federal government as per Article V. This will make the "Roadmap for Reform"’s policy priorities sufficient and sustainable.

“Reining in the Imperial Presidency: A Plan for Repealing Harmful Executive Orders”  highlights the need for structural limits to prevent the President from bypassing Congress via Executive Orders (EOs). Cato’s EO handbook identifies and revokes EOs that undermine individual liberty, limited government, free markets, and peace. However, EOs by one President are often overturned by the next, leaving We The People with little voice. Structural amendments could limit presidential influence by requiring Congress to review and approve EOs with impacts over $100 million. These laws (in another form; EOs are mainly enforceable regulations with penalties for violations) requiring spending and appropriations are Congress’ responsibility, not the President’s.

Insanity is doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. Cato has recommended and Congress has enacted necessary policies and plans repeatedly, with insufficient results – “Necessary, Yet Insufficient”. The federal debt and unfunded liabilities grow, DC bureaucracy constantly expands, and We the People’s liberties diminish through regulation and overreach. Besides Cato’s necessary proposals, please make them sufficient: advocate for calling an Article V Convention of States to propose permanent structural limits in the Constitution via amendments. This will create a path to responsible and sane federal governance. We the People, and the growing millions in the Convention of States grassroots movement, will be forever grateful to you.

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