In the News and on the front page

January 30, 2010
filed under: On the News

Fight­ing Grass­roots Tyranny and Help­ing
Entre­pre­neur­ship Flourish

By Chip Mellor

In the after­math of a great for­est fire, small green shoots appear as the for­est begins to regen­er­ate.  Some of those shoots will even­tu­ally become tow­er­ing trees.  In the after­math of a reces­sion, entre­pre­neurs cre­ate new busi­nesses that are the green shoots of eco­nomic recovery.

Today, despite the con­tin­u­ing eco­nomic chal­lenges, there are many entre­pre­neurs valiantly try­ing to estab­lish and grow new busi­nesses.  As if the eco­nomic chal­lenges were not enough, today’s entrepreneurs—particularly those of mod­est means—face an increas­ing array of laws and reg­u­la­tions that fore­close entry into many fields or sti­fle growth.  Many of these laws come in the form of licens­ing and per­mit­ting require­ments.  Indeed, today more than 30 per­cent of the Amer­i­can work­force needs a gov­ern­ment license to work.  All too often, the con­di­tions imposed by such laws are arbi­trary or protectionist.

Through IJ’s Cam­paign for Eco­nomic Lib­erty, made pos­si­ble through con­tri­bu­tions to meet a chal­lenge grant from Robert W. Wil­son, we will strike down these arbi­trary laws and enable entre­pre­neurs to pro­vide the counter-narrative to calls for increased gov­ern­ment man­age­ment of the econ­omy.  This issue of Lib­erty & Law fea­tures three excit­ing eco­nomic lib­erty cases we recently launched.  In each you will find the story of hard­work­ing peo­ple whose dreams of a bet­ter life are being uncon­sti­tu­tion­ally denied by gov­ern­ment.  (See sto­ries on pages 2, 6 and 7.)  With­out IJ, these indi­vid­u­als have lit­tle chance of suc­cess.  But an IJ vic­tory for each will not only unleash their indi­vid­ual poten­tial, it will also set prece­dent for many oth­ers afflicted by grass­roots tyranny.

We will file more eco­nomic lib­erty cases in the com­ing months and, as we do, we will ele­vate the cause of eco­nomic lib­erty to national promi­nence, cre­at­ing the con­sti­tu­tional cli­mate in which the green shoots of entre­pre­neur­ship will flourish.

Chip Mel­lor is IJ’s pres­i­dent and gen­eral counsel.

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