Deadbeat government in Virginia
February 12, 2003
by Stephen Baskerville, Ph.D.
In 2001, an opinion piece in this newspaper
resulted in my dismissal from a government panel in Virginia to which
I had been duly appointed. Officials made no attempt to disguise the
fact that I was removed because of the political views I expressed.
"Upon reviewing your opinions published in the June 17, 2001, [edition
of The] Washington Times, we question whether you would be able to work
effectively with other panel members," Secretary of Health and Human
Resources Louis Rossiter wrote. "I find it difficult to see how you
could effectively participate along with representatives of other groups
that very likely have different perspectives than yours."
The panel reviewed child-support guidelines.
It was required by law to include members with different perspectives.
But Mr. Rossiter said disagreement with other panel members was grounds
for dismissal. Since the other panel members all had a vested interest
in making child-support burdens as high as possible, a willingness to
increase child-support burdens effectively became a requirement for
being on the panel.
Predictably, the panel recently voted
to increase child support by an astounding 15 percent to 25 percent,
and the legislature is now considering legislation to implement that
increase. When officials rig the democratic process, they generally
have the decency to disguise it. Not when it involves child support.
After all, nothing is excessive when it is "for the children."
In this case though, it appears to be
for the grown-ups. This action will not mean more money for children,
as the government would have us believe. It will mean more money for
the government. Like every other state, Virginia receives federal payments
based on the amount of child support that passes through government
hands. Increased burdens mean increased income from federal taxpayers
to fill state coffers and subsidize divorce.
The added result of making divorce more
lucrative will be more divorce, more fatherless children, and more fathers
jailed without trial because they cannot pay impossible child support
burdens. It also means more money and power for courts, bureaucrats,
prosecutors, and attorneys.
This is why California Gov. Gray Davis
recently vetoed a bill to relieve wrongly-accused men who are ordered
to pay the state’s crushing child-support levels for children whom DNA
testing shows they did not father. He too acted for the children, though
he later admitted that not vetoing the bill would be "putting California
at risk of losing up to $40 million in federal funds."
As always, one lie necessitates another.
In defending my dismissal in the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star, Dr.
Rossiter promised that the panel would investigate questions like, "How
much does it cost to raise a child? Who has the right to determine how
the money is spent on the child?" Yet these are the very questions it
avoided.
In fact, Virginia is in open violation
of the law on precisely these questions. Section 20-108.2 of the domestic
relations code and Senate Joint Resolution 192 specifically require
the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) to "include
in its study of child support enforcement an examination of the costs
of raising children in Virginia." JLARC came back with a report saying
such a study "would cost millions" and never undertook it, though JLARC
received federal money to make this determination.
So government officials can refuse to
obey the law with the plea that it would cost too much, when it is for
precisely this that they are jailing parents without trial: failure
to obey the law – in that case capricious court orders – because they
cannot afford it.
Like most states, Virginia requires
no economist on its panel, an odd omission if the purpose is to determine
child-rearing costs. Other than my replacement, Murray Steinberg, the
panel consisted of operatives from the divorce industry, all of whom
profit from divorce and impossible child support burdens. In Virginia
the divorce industry reviews itself.
Last June, Liberty magazine documented
how the government manufactures "deadbeat dads" by seizing their children
and forcing them to pay impossible sums. In November, Crisis
magazine exposed systematic corruption endemic in the child support
industry nationwide. Now the citizens of Virginia and America can see
firsthand how the cynical power of the divorce regime feigns pity for
children while exploiting them to increase its already dangerous power.
Like Barry Koplen before him (whose
minority report formed the basis of my item in The Times), Mr. Steinberg
found the panel’s results had been rigged from the start. "The
numbers are arbitrary and capricious," he reports. The author of the
new guidelines, Dr. William Rodgers of William and Mary College, told
the panel, "If we did not like these numbers he would create a schedule
to suit." Rules that ostensibly reflect broad principles of public
policy are in fact custom-tailored to appease favored constituencies.
It might be called Groucho Marx government: "Those are my principles.
If you don’t like them, I have others."
A government spokesman told the press
I was dismissed because I "did not display an open mind." Yet I was
not the one excluding other viewpoints in order to ensure desired results.
"He should have expressed his concerns in the context of the panel and
not the press." This is the argument of censors and tyrants throughout
history: Government will determine what is fit for the public to hear.
As the Free Lance-Star editorialized, "Baskerville's key point – that
when it comes to state-dictated child-support issues the fix is in –
is only strengthened when he's sacked for making it."
Now we will see if Virginia's elected
representatives are willing to protect children or the judicial machine
that is exploiting them, and making a mockery of ethical government
in the process.
Stephen Baskerville