pull down to refresh

These are dark days for liberalism. I mean full, across-the-board, laissez-faire free-market, classical liberalism, otherwise known as libertarianism. While some budget-cutting and bureaucracy slimming will probably go through, those steps, though necessary to advance toward liberalism, are not sufficient.
What’s conspicuously missing from the regime’s activities is a ringing and unmistakable endorsement of full individual liberty, which requires a free-market economy. The imagined dichotomy between economic liberty and personal liberty is a snare and a delusion. What’s more personal than how one makes and spends his money? Ominously, we’ve heard no such endorsement of liberty from the regime.
The cuts in government now being touted might increase liberty, even if unintended; then again, it might not. It depends on how the regime deploys the power and personnel left in place. All signs point to a regime run by a man who sees the theoretically private sector as merely an extension of his domain. A truly liberal program would combine the dramatic shrinking of government with comprehensive deregulation and other market-freeing measures so that private firms could provide the legitimate services that the government ostensibly provides now. For example, eliminating Medicaid would be paired with a radical freeing of the medical market, which would expand services and lower prices. (Admittedly, much deregulation, such as abolishing licensing, would have to occur at the state level.)
This article is basically about what Mises wrote considering the power of free markets to make people more content and less miserable. The author criticizes Trump for not implementing deregulation of the markets as he is trying to cut the government to a proper size. Without the free market cutting the state down to size does not generate the prosperity that Trump is advertising to the people of the US. Liberalism in the classical style is still not being considered as a course of action, unfortunately.