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Commentary: The economic realities could be greater than the virus
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Commentary: The economic realities could be greater than the virus

Transforming American freedom

Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel once famously stated, "Never let a good crisis go to waste."

As of today, the total U.S cases of the coronavirus nears 66,000 with total number of deaths at almost 1,000. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has lost over 35% of its value from its mid-February zenith of nearly 30,000 points. March 9, Black Monday, was the single greatest point loss in U.S. market history when the index fell 2,013.76 points.

Political actors are now exploiting this crisis to transform American freedom.

Senate Republicans attempted to pass a $1.8 trillion package as a lifeline to save the country from complete economic collapse. It fell short of the 60 votes necessary to pass. Alternatively, House and Senate Democrats wasted no time with a separate proposal that highlighted a radical new vision for America.

House Majority Whip James Clyburn said last week, "This was a tremendous opportunity to restructure things to fit our vision."

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi looked for an opportunity to give more collective bargaining power to unions, expand wind and solar tax credits, and create new fuel emission standards that would all but promise to destroy the airline industry it was seeking to aid.

These provisions were not economic, but ideological. No different than the kind of provisions the Green New Deal was seeking to employ that would not only ensure the decline of the American economy but, more importantly, American freedom.

COVID-19, which originated in China's Wuhan province and was covered up by the Chinese Communist Party with the help of the World Health Organization, has had devastating effects on human life and the economy all around the world.

The 15-day quarantine in America has already cost trillions in market capital, but long-term it threatens to do more than that to American freedom if a balanced approach to fighting the virus cannot be reached.

Can you really save American lives by destroying the American economy?

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick made headlines on Tucker Carlson's show this week by suggesting that as a senior citizen he would be willing to put his own life at risk in the coronavirus pandemic, if it would mean "keeping the America that America loves for your children and grandchildren," adding, "I'm all in."

No doubt the consequences of economic shutdown means more to Patrick than a mere financial sacrifice, he is talking about liberty itself. The freedom and way of life enjoyed by Americans today would be significantly altered if the economy underwent a collapse.

President Trump said at a White House press briefing, "Our country wasn't built to be shut down," adding, "America will again and soon be open for business."

The great economic Nobel laureate Milton Friedman taught us that free markets and economic freedom are "a necessary condition for political freedom." This is literally what defines the American experiment and why economics isn't just about money, and certainly not greed.

Economics is about the human dignity, flourishing, individual liberty, and the freedom to choose.

The political reality of the United States is based on the economic miracles of an elaborate system of cooperation and collaboration in private, free markets. Destroy the market economy and you don't just inhibit a free peoples' ability to earn money, you place significant constraints on their freedom, opportunity, and voluntarism.

Furthermore, you leave an unchecked federal bureaucracy with unrestricted, coercive power to violate freedom and the precepts of God-given rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. A well-meaning, government bureaucracy cannot do better in the long-term than what God-fearing, freedom-loving people can achieve through self-interest, voluntarism, and cooperation.

This is the American experiment at its finest. A mobilized economy can do more to rapidly deploy life-saving tools, medicines, and instruments of war against a virus than it can in waiting. World War II was won on European battlefields and Asian-Pacific waters not only as a result brave-fighting man, but because of unparalleled supply chains, distribution, and production. In three short years the American domestic economy produced 27 aircraft carriers, 1,200 naval vessels, 300,000 aircraft, and 86,000 tanks and was catapulted out of the Great Depression.

Right now, President Trump understands this fact. He is responding to this challenge by marshaling the resources of the private sector to shore up our domestic production and distribution of a vast quantity of medical supplies, testing kits, and the anti-malarial drug, hydroxychloroquine. He understands that dependence on China to both tell the truth and supply critical infrastructure in a moment of crisis was a mistake not of his making.

Whatever decision is made over the next several days, this is one of the greatest tests of the president and the nation in our lifetime. It is deserving of our deepest prayers, unconditional support, and unmitigated action.

Make no mistake, America will survive the coronavirus, but we cannot expect freedom to prosper or persevere if we destroy the conditions upon which it has thrived for over 200 years.

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Ryan Helfenbein

Ryan Helfenbein

Vice President of Communications and Public Engagement at Liberty University and Executive Director of the Falkirk Center for Faith & Liberty