We Have A Crisis: Pass A Law
Problem solved. Robert Higgs looks at how the U.S. got into the ocean-shipping business and all the money that was wasted. The basic idea took shape in the midst of a “crisis”. The outbreak of World War I hampered trans-oceanic shipping and this had a large impact on trade. The solution? A government program to address the issue. To make ships, operate government run shipping lines and regulate and control shipping rates. President Wilson on the crisis,
The idea in the proposal is not that the government should permanently embark in these things, but that it should do the immediate and necessary thing…
Gee sounds like he could be talking about our current financial crisis. And consider that the U.S. government is still, to this day, heavily involved in the ocean-shipping business.
- We Have A Crisis: Pass A Law
- Somali Pirates Take Five Ships in 48 Hours
- Amazon Screws Prime Customers?
- Dealing With Somali Piracy (Updated)
- American Ship Seized by Somali Pirates (Updated)
- A Conversation With a Banker
- Financial Crisis Boosting Dollar?
- Chinese Ships Join Pirate Hunt
- Did Men Cause Financial Crisis?
- OTB Latenight – Sarah McLachlan
- Hacked Climate Scientists Emails Reveal Truth
- Obama, the Recession, and Polls
- Giuliani Running for Senate, Not Governor
- OTB Latenight – The Jesus & Mary Chain
- Fox Fake Crowd Videos
- Congress to Investigate Fake Districts
- Douthat Blogging Again
- Medical Backtracking
- Did Texas Ban Marriage?
- Caption Contest Winners
- Jules Crittenden linked with The Last Debate
Sorry, Dave... that's a step-removed too far.
The USG doesn't 'do' shipping. It regulates it. As most ships accessing US ports are not American ships, that's probably a good thing, to some extent anyway.
The only ships the USG owns are those marked by USCG or USN insignia, as well as a few NOAA or similar crafts.












