CORRUPTION AND PROSPERITY
What is the single most important determinate as to whether a country is rich or poor? It is not the level of government spending, taxation, regulation or monetary stability — even though those factors are very important. It is the rule of law, whereby the rules are known and fair, equally applied to all, and where corruption is not tolerated.
The end of great countries and empires was most often caused by internal decay, not by foreign enemies — ancient Greece and Rome being prime examples. History’s lesson is:
When the rule of law is lost, even great nations disintegrate.
Today, only those who are willfully ignorant fail to recognize that parts of the Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department, as well as other government agencies, have not only become partisan but also deeply corrupt.
When evidence is destroyed after having been subpoenaed by appropriate congressional committees and private organizations under the Freedom of Information Act, and no action is taken to punish those responsible, it becomes the very definition of corruption.
There are many other examples, but what is disturbing is the extent to which so many journalists have gone to cover up and defend inexcusable behavior.










