There are really only two paths a country can take after a
terrorist attack. It can vow to fight back, as the United States
did after 9/11. Or it can surrender, give in to terrorist demands
and hope the threat goes away. That's what Spain did after the
March 2004 train bombings in Madrid.
Wisely, Tony Blair has taken the high road. The British prime
minister responded to the July 7 bombings in London with defiance,
warning the terrorists that Britain would never bow before them,
but would instead carry on the fight.
"We are united in our determination that our country will not be
defeated by such terror but will defeat it and emerge from this
horror with our values, our way of life, our tolerance and respect
for others undiminished," Blair told Parliament.
His words echoed President Bush's message to Congress on Sept. 20,
2001: "We are a country awakened to danger and called to defend
freedom. Our grief has turned to anger, and anger to resolution.
Whether we bring our enemies to justice, or bring justice to our
enemies, justice will be done."
Bush and Blair have formed a formidable foreign policy partnership,
and by working together our two countries are helping make the
world safer. Of course, some in Britain claim Blair is a follower,
simply taking his lead from Bush. But that's not true. In fact, on
some issues, Blair is way out in front, and we in the United States
ought to follow his lead.
For example, in a May 26 speech at University College in London
Blair sensibly noted, "We cannot guarantee a risk-free life."
That's good to hear from a world leader in an era when too many
seem to expect government to protect us from all harm.
In his speech, Blair called for a "sensible debate about risk in
public policymaking." Otherwise, he said, the British will continue
down the road toward an over-regulated life, and the result will be
"a plethora of rules, guidelines, responses to 'scandals' of one
nature or another that ends up having utterly perverse
consequences."
We in the United States are well aware of the dangers of
over-regulation. Consider Sarbanes-Oxley. That law, thrown together
after Enron imploded, was supposed to protect American investors.
Instead, it will end up costing us billions.
For example, a survey of some 217 companies showed they'll pay an
average of $4.36 million to comply with the new accounting
standards, far more than the $3.14 million they'd expected to pay,
according to Financial Executives International. And the bill will
only get bigger.
An e-mail security company estimates businesses will shell out more
than $4 billion to archive e-mail (as required under
Sarbanes-Oxley) in 2009. This cost will be passed on to
shareholders and customers, so we'll all pay for the "protection"
the new law is supposed to provide.
In his speech, Blair couldn't resist tweaking the U.S. "There is a
delicious irony in this [that] illustrates the unintended
consequences of regulation. Sarbanes-Oxley has provided a bonanza
for accountants and auditors, the very professions thought to be at
fault in the original scandals," he noted.
To make sure Britain doesn't eventually pass its own
Sarbanes-Oxley, Blair laid out simple guidelines. "Instead of the
'something must be done' cry that goes up every time there is a
problem or a 'scandal,'" he says, "we will reflect first and
regulate only after reflection."
Even more critically, Blair says he wants to start to roll back the
regulatory state, especially in the European Union. Until the end
of the year, Britain will be in the rotating presidency of the EU,
so Blair should be in a position to act. He says he'll work to make
sure cost assessments are finished before any new regulations are
put into place, and that he'll speak with business leaders before
changing any regulations.
"We also need a far more rational, balanced and intelligent
debate," he says, sensibly. "Not every 'scandal' requires a
regulatory response." Unfortunately, that approach hasn't yet
reached across the pond.
Back on Labor Day 2003, President George W. Bush announced, "We
have a responsibility that when somebody hurts, government has got
to move." But it's knee-jerk movement that breeds over-regulation
and the government's over-involvement in our lives -- even though,
as Blair puts it, "government cannot eliminate all risk."
Hopefully, the prime minister has started a debate that will
resonate not only in his country, but in the United States as well.
We already have plenty of rules. We need more common sense.
Americans and Brits are smart enough to think for ourselves, and
strong enough to survive. We'll fight off terrorists and, with a
little common sense, survive the dangers of over-regulation,
too.
Ed
Feulner is president of the Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in Investor's Business Daily