Josh Hawley Thinks the White House Can Force an Aluminum Plant To Stay Open
Should there be any limits to a president's power to centrally plan the economy? Apparently not.

In response to the news that an aluminum smelting plant in southern Missouri will soon close, Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) has asked—nay, demanded—that President Joe Biden use his powers to keep the plant open.
"I urge you to take the appropriate actions necessary to keep the smelter open, to ensure the continuity of operations, and to preserve production jobs—including by deploying the authorities of the Defense Production Act of 1950," Hawley wrote in a letter to the White House this week. "Doing so will preserve good-paying union jobs and safeguard national security."
The modern presidency has tremendous powers, of course, but this is still quite the stretch. Hawley is asking the White House to engage in central planning at an absurdly micro-level—and there is, thankfully, no law that actually allows the president to order a factory to continue producing aluminum if its owners have decided to stop.
Even so, the fact that Hawley is even making this request illustrates something important about how Republicans now view the relationship between government and business. It also says something about how the failures of protectionism will spur calls for more protectionism. And, finally, about how the phrase "national security" has become warped beyond recognition to justify further governmental intrusions into the economy.
But let's start with the Defense Production Act, which allows presidents to expedite governmental purchases of certain materials viewed as critical to national defense. Though it had been rarely used before the COVID-19 pandemic, it has recently become a favorite tool of would-be economic authoritarians on both sides of the aisle, and some lawmakers now seem to believe there are virtually no limits to how it can be used. Democrats have asked Biden to use it to promote green energy projects, and Biden has already invoked it to "accelerate domestic production" of solar panels under the questionable notion that solar panels are "essential to the national defense." Even home insulation is now the subject of a Defense Production Act order, because it is somehow critical to defending America from a foreign invasion—of cold air, one assumes, likely a nefarious plot by those shifty Canadians.
The act was also invoked during the baby formula shortage of 2022, as if a government-created problem could be solved by the White House simply demanding that more formula be brought into existence. That's how economies work, right?
It might shock Hawley and some of his colleagues to learn that the Defense Production Act is not a set of magic words that allow presidents to do whatever they'd like. In fact, all the law does is require that businesses fulfill orders from the government before other orders from private customers.
That's because it is a law meant to be used during wartime. Here's how it works: Let's say there's a war going on and the U.S. military desperately needs 10,000 widgets to ensure victory, lasting peace, and blah blah blah. The Pentagon sends a guy to the widget factory in Albuquerque to request those 10,000 widgets, but the owner of the factory says the 10,000 widgets sitting on his lot have already been purchased by his friend Bob and that the government will have to wait until the factory can produce another 10,000 widgets—so come back in two weeks.
Ah, but wait! The president just signed an order invoking the Defense Production Act for widgets, so now the guy from the Pentagon gets to cut the line. He can buy those 10,000 widgets, and Bob has to wait for the next set to come off the assembly line.
That's what the Defense Production Act allows. It can't conjure up new solar panels or additional supplies of insulation out of thin air. It doesn't allow the government to put a gun to anyone's head and force them to make baby formula or to keep an aluminum smelter running.
And that's good. Let's consider for a moment the alternative reality where Hawley apparently resides—a reality where the Defense Production Act somehow gives the sitting president the power to shape not only whole industries but to direct exactly what products are manufactured in which places. Sure, why shouldn't presidents have the authority to decide how many people are employed in which factories all across the country?
Once, I might have asked a different rhetorical question about whether conservatives would want to live in a country where the president had such immense powers over the market—but it is now increasingly apparent that many of them do. That's a seriously toxic problem in our politics right now: large portions of both major parties are committed to the idea that more central planning and a more powerful chief executive would benefit the country economically. And that's why there is so much chatter about the Defense Production Act, and why the federal government is wasting so much money on other centrally planned boondoggles.
Hawley's call for more government intervention to protect aluminum manufacturing jobs should also spur some reflection about the last major government intervention that was supposed to protect aluminum manufacturing jobs. Remember those 10 percent tariffs on imported aluminum imposed by then-President Donald Trump in 2018? That was naked protectionism, and the announced closure of this Missouri smelter seems like pretty good evidence that it failed. There's other evidence too: As Hawley points out in his letter, this is the third aluminum smelter in the U.S. to announce plans to downsize in recent months. Unfortunately, the failures of protectionism only ever seem to spur calls for more protectionism.
Finally, let's address the idea that American national security is somehow weakened by the closure of a single aluminum plant that employs 400 people. In some ways, this is the crux of Hawley's argument for the federal government to get involved. In that letter to the White House, he wrote that "the impending shutdown of the smelter will also materially degrade our defense posture, as the Department of Defense has deemed aluminum a strategic material of interest."
It's true that the United States does not produce enough aluminum to meet its annual demand, which is why we imported 5.9 million metric tons of it in 2022. But here's the good news: there is plenty of aluminum available on the global market—and there would be more if the Biden administration lifted those tariffs. In 2022, more than 41 percent of the aluminum imported to the U.S. came from Canada and Mexico, hardly places that are likely to cut off trade in the event of a war. South Korea and Australia, also close U.S. allies, are the fastest-growing suppliers of aluminum to the United States.
It is, of course, unfortunate that the closing of this aluminum smelter means about 400 workers will be out of a job. Hopefully, they will quickly find others. Tragic as it might be in the short term, this is the sort of thing that happens all the time in healthy economic systems, where resources (including labor) are constantly in flux.
The idea that the closure of a single aluminum plant is a national security crisis that should require the direct intervention of the White House is, frankly, insane. By demanding that Biden get involved, Hawley is suggesting that there should be effectively no limits to a president's power to intervene in the economy—exactly the sort of unchecked expansion of executive power that Republicans used to understand would be dangerous and counterproductive.
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No, you idiot.
It shows Hawley's views, not Republicans in general. Why stop at Republicans? Why not bring in Democrats too, or Reasonoids?
Idiot.
Always look at the author just after you read the headline.
It may add as much as 10 hours a week to your life.
(even if just skip to the comments like most of us)
Heh, yeah, but some write so stupidly that you don't have to read far before finding out how stupid they are.
Butt some write so stupidly that you'd think that HAWLEY IS A DEMOCRAT!!! Hello, Hawley-from-Hell is "Team R" Tribalist from Hell!!! Study UP on who belongs to WHICH Sacred Tribe, ye Would-be-Sacred Tribalist!!!
Here's twat ye wrote:
"It shows Hawley‘s views, not Republicans in general. Why stop at Republicans? Why not bring in Democrats too, or Reasonoids?"
Um... Treading gingerly now, we are... Why not bring the Lizard People in out of the cold ass well? And... Because Hawley (AND His Member!) are both... MEMBERS OF THE RETHUGGLICAN CHURCH?!?!? Are ye saying, perhaps, that Hawley is a RINO? Who gets to say WHO is a RINO, how, and why?
(All who disagree with MEEEE, on ANY tiny detail, are RINOS and LEFT-TITS!!!!)
(Ass for me, I say, left-tits, right-tits, ass long ass they are shapely and lack entirely TOO many tattoos, are equally suckable and fuckable!)
If it weren't destroying the ability of the republic to keep functioning, it'd actually be funny about how much overlap there is between the actual positions of so many of the people in this country who think they oppose each other.
Or is that tribalism about the only remaining thing which is preventing the authoritarians from unifying and completely discarding the Constitution?
How many "resistance" Dems who think that the Feds should more or less just use the DPA to take over the economy altogether (or "progressives" who want a command economy by whatever means will get us there) wouldn't actually listen to enough of anything Hawley has to say to realize he's actually an ally on one of their primary "issues"?
Stories that seek to spur indignation and "high dudgeon", like this one and a number of other articles on Reason more often than not fail to mention pertinent details, and usually omit more background and detail than they include. If you don't want the government to "help" you run your business, don't take their gifts, don't lobby for tax deductions for the purchase of your products, don't ask them for favors (like tariffs on foreign competitors), and to the degree practical in your line of business don't do business with them in any manner or fashion.
That having been said, I'm sure the government, as spoken for by some cabinet secretary or senator, and justified by some economist, can explain why any enterprise (that provides employment and pays taxes) should continue to produce units that cost $1.00/unit to produce and then sell them at 75¢/unit, and try "to make it up" on volume. Otherwise, those greedy capitalists may be trying to make a - gasp, choke - profit!!
It is known that Republicans are all individuals while Democrats are a monolithic conspiracy. We can't make any inferences about Republicans by what (some/many/most/all) of them do but the same is not true of Democrats.
Republicans are individuals to the extent that altruist Nuremburg crowds saluting Hitler and Jesus were individuals. Christian National Socialists do indeed hate nonmystical socialists and humanists alike. Their death camps and genocide eloquently attest to that. What they and Soviet socialists blank out is the possibility of NOT robbing, threatening, enslaving and killing people. Mystical mercantilists and communists are versions of the Holy Inquisition and Ottoman jihadists from 5 centuries back. Ayn Rand offered the non-altruist alternative to all that in 1946.
Democrats have much more of a hive mind than republicans.
Why stop at Republicans? Why not bring in Democrats too, or Reasonoids?
Because Republicans are supposed to be the ones standing up to Democrats who demand these things, not the ones demanding them. Republicans used to stand for something. Now they stand for someone.
So you give Democrats a pass.
Good to know.
You're the one giving Republicans a pass. They used to stand for something. Now you point to people like me and say "When did Democrats stand for that!"
They never did numbskull! That's why I don't support them!
Bzzzt!
Pfffbbbt!
Do they charge you for drips of Trump's ball-sweat, or do they give it out for free?
Republicans are evil. That's why they fervently believe in protectionism and collectivism.
RINO'S are evil because they act just like Democrats.
Hawley is a RINO, AND he is evil, yes!!! He is a Marxist-collectivist; A BIG believer in Government Almighty CUNT-ROLLING the means of production!!! Every sperm and iota of production belongs to Hawley and Government Almighty; ALL HAIL!!!
No moron, YOU are the collectivist. What a stupid thing to say, even for you.
"Because Republicans are supposed to be the ones standing up to Democrats"
You're right and Hawley is an embarrassment to the GOP.
But it's still Hawley doing this, not "Republicans" as a monolith. A Republican governor vetoed a line item in the budget giving the plant an $8.5 million loan. So maybe it's not all Republicans who have this distorted view.
Trump transubstantiated under the drooling baptism by a gaggle of televangelists feeling Him up. Thenceforth, the girl-bullying war on race suicide plus prohibition of everything except alcohol and tobacco became Job One. Jabba the Hutt had an expression for such wastes of skin.
Ironically, that someone was actually a Democrat for 90% of his adult life. As were a great many of the deep-MAGA "domestic terrorists" and "deplorables" in a significant number of States.
When the Dems abandoned the "working class heroes" for tech billionaires and identitarian box-checking, it really opened the door to the majority of public-assistance recipients who took repeated calls to "check your privelege" as "you don't have to go home, but you can't stay here"
Well than he should be expelled from the party for being a communist. If they allow him to stay then they are openly allowing a communist to besmirch their "good" name. Because what Josh is advocating for is the government seizing the means of production.
That's nice. By your standards, every single politician is some kind of communist.
No just the ones that advocate the government taking control of the means of production - you know what Josh Hawley just did. It is the definition put forth by Engle and Marx.
The rest are just assholes.
You do understand income taxes, property taxes, all those taxes, every single one, robs the means of production.
Or are you one of those who changes definitions to suit your desired results?
Wow, that line of reasoning makes progressives look like geniuses.
We aren't talking, taxes like every government the world over collects, throughout all recorded history. We are talking about the federal government taking direct operational control of a factory. You know the kind of thing leaders from Lenin to Chavez would do.
You mean like that stupid National Defense Act does, allowing the US government to mandate mask production and whatever else it wants?
No, you probably don't. You ought to, to be consistent, but then you'd be admitting that either the US government is Marxist, or that controlling the means of production is not the same as owning the means of production.
"...controlling the means of production is not the same as owning the means of production."
If I control the means of production of YOUR bread, or I OWN said production, AND, ass a result thereof, disfavored trouble-makers such ass Á ÀSS ÄẞÇ ÃÞÇĐ ÂÞ¢ĐÆ ǍB€ÐËF ẢHF just go right ahead and STARVE to death, for lack of bread... TWAT in the Sacred Name of Government Almighty DIFFERENCE does shit make?
I think the looters are squabbling over Stalin's party owning the factories versus the Hitler-Jesus party being hired by Bayer, Krupp, Farben, Hoescht et alii to protect them from competitors muscling in on their territory. The NSDAP was a thing before I.G. Farben, and its platform hadn't changed since 1920. To communists this was selfish royalist Czarism as usual. Each looter faction today is about the same as in 1914 or 1931, with American prohibionists goading them into war, then leaping in to recover loaned assets.
We are talking about the federal government taking direct operational control of a factory. You know the kind of thing leaders from Lenin to Chavez would do.
DId you read the article or Hawley's statement? No such assertion is made. Only the demand that the smelter be saved in pretty much the same manner environmentalists demand windmills be built and EVs be subsidized, except several orders of magnitude smaller.
You can't expel people from parties just because they believe wacko stuff that in no way resembles your basic platform. Republicans know this better than most.
Expel Hawley-from-Hell from the Hell Party, or not... Either way, I don't give a shit!
HOWEVER, please do NOT vote for this Big Fat Stinking ASSHOLE of an imitation human being, and give him Government Almighty powers over ANYONE! Not even over anyone's dog, fleas, dog-fleas, or intestinal parasites, either!!!
I wouldn't vote for his string-pulling PARTY, nor the other looters fighting for a place at the same coercive trough. I'd look for something diferent and better.
It doesn’t allow the government to put a gun to anyone’s head and force them to make baby formula or to keep an aluminum smelter running.
Did Hawley call for a gun to be pointed at anyone’s head? If he didn’t why would you say this except to reinforce the narrative of “force” you put forth in the beginning?
I don’t like Hawley any more than the next guy but it’s pretty plain that he’s demanding money be thrown at Missouri Jobs the way money is thrown at immigrants and Ukrainians and Israelis and student loan debt holders and people who can’t afford medical insurance and banks who can’t maintain their cash on hand to debt ratios… to suggest that he’s forcing people to work and then, with a dishonest backhand, invoking “guns to heads” just, once again, demonstrates how retardedly deranged Reason is when it comes to even modestly bad ideas when Republicans have them but are between polite and virtually silent when Democrats do even worse an order of magnitude, or three, larger in terms of people, dollars, *and* years.
Reason Magazine doesn’t give Eric Boehm a license to fellate horses, even performatively or if he truly enjoys it, and, yet, here we are.
All government action is force. The gun comes out when you don't comply. So yes, guns to heads is exactly what government does when it demands things.
RE: All government action is force.
>>>>
The Forced Birth GQP agrees.
Most Americans would say:
The Power of the State is LIMITED.
NO Woman should be forced by LAW to:
* give birth
* get pregnant
* get an abortion
* remain pregnant
* carry a dead fetus till ‘birth’
So then a valid way of comparing bowf sidez on this issue would be to measure the number and caliber of the guns... because when one side has a homemade rubber band gun pointed at my head, and the other has a nuclear warhead hanging over my head, held by a single strand of N95 mask fibre, then I think we have a more accurate picture that describes the relativistic danger to my life and liberty by one party vs the other.
Ah, but you don't know if the rubber gun to your head is real or if the holders of nukes are bluffing.
And neither Butthead Hawley nor Uncle Joe have any damn business making Aluminum plant owners into rightless slaves!
Thjs is not hard and requires no notes to check except The Thirteenth Amendment.
I fail to see the downside of Josh Hawley putting a gun to Joe Biden's head to make him give a loan to a regional smelter.
Sure it's a bit disruptive to our rather contemporary social order but I think on the whole, unless you're a solid Team DNC shill, pistols at dawn over the loan(s, handouts, debt forgiveness, etc., etc.) between the two of them is a more than square deal.
See paragraph 5.
To be fair, he didn’t claim this was all Republicans’ view, or even some Republicans’ view, or actually any Republican’s view other than Hawley’s. As for Democrats, we already know they love to interfere in the economy.
I don’t believe the comment excludes democrats. The article is about a Republican and yes it is only top of the iceberg for Republicans AND Democrats.
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on both sides of the aisle
BOAF SIDEZ!
Come on. They did it first, and that makes it ok.
Except nobody here is saying it's okay. You're making up sh*t again.
With Republicans like Hawley, who needs Democrats?
Even without him, nobody.
To answer this question honestly, I would say anyone who wants to dramatically slow the size, scope and speed of spending by the federal government would pick Hawley over your garden variety Democrat in a minute.
One is a slow death by heart disease, the other one is pouring gasoline on me and pulling out a lighter.
Hawley is both an Economic Authoritarian and a Theocratic Authoritarian on social issues, so the choice for your proposed methods of dying needs to be "None Of The Above"...at least for we Citizen-Victims anyway.
*Checks the sharpness of the blades and the fuel tank for the woodchipper.*
Government doesn’t create jobs, save jobs or produce anything. It’s an election year and we will continue to be tortured by politicians bad takes for votes.
Government takes, borrows, and prints money, then spreads it all around.
It's the money fairy.
...And so long as that $ is suppose to represent human labors/resources/value it's the plantation owner of slaves.
Well said.
Total Ukraine War Funds: $18.2B
Total Student Loan Debt Erased: $34.3B
Total EV grants and credits (Federal): $16.8B
$14*M* reopened the smelter and kept it afloat for 5 yrs., a measly billion should keep it going for the next 350, or so.
Didn’t the DOD “discover” an extra $800M on it’s books that it could give to Ukraine?
Fuckin' fake ass fiscal hawk Republicans like Josh Hawley, asking the President to spend a few million dollars on working class Americans just the same way any budget-retarded democrat would.
There used to be a difference.
But according to Boehm, Hawley is the worst thing ever. All that other stuff gets a pass. Same with that piece of shit Sarcasmic.
...
No, what it shows is that Trump and his supporters now so dominate the GOP that others will take an absurd stance like this to grab some of the spotlight away from him. It does not reflect the ideas of Republicans generally.
Trump imposed tariffs and Trump invoked the Defense Production Act. Thus, it does indeed reflect the ideas of Republicans generally.
Republicans at large didn't approve of Trump initiating the Defense Production Act nor him supporting the Cares Act or the Bump-stock ban.
The biggest thing you leftards self-project is your own tribalist mentality.
I have seen this before a plant threatens to close and local politicians want the government to step in to save the facility and the jobs. The problem is it is never a permanent solution and the same economic problem the plant has will be back in a few years and maybe even worse. The taxpayers get the bill, and the workers get a few years before they face the same problem. Rather than saving the plant, Josh Hawley should be looking to where the Missouri economy is strong and how he can assist the aluminium plant workers in transition to a stronger sector.
The problem in this case is actually that the new (since 2018) ownership group are under a consent decree with the state of Missouri to fix a bunch of stuff at their plant to help make it cleaner and emit less pollution.
The legislature of the state of Missouri decided to give them a loan / subsidy to cover the costs and then some.
Then, some people questioned the legality of such a maneuver, so the governor (line-item) vetoed it from the spending bill.
Most recently, the company blamed the closure next week on the unusually cold snap of weather we had last week. Even though they had previously discussed it with regulators a couple months ago. To get around the WARN act requirements.
Clear as mud?
Wow... So close...
"Rather than saving the plant, Josh Hawley should be" ... lobbying to dismantle the "save the planet" environmentalist religious mob actively trying to shut-down all plants.
It is more likely those people living close to the plant want it in compliance of environmental regulations. Maybe what we need is for more people who oppose environmental regulations to buy houses near non-compliant plants. Show the world that they are not afraid of breathing or drinking carcinogens.
What kind a person buys a house next to something they are afraid of? Someone who thinks their ocd impulses and ‘guns’ (gov-guns) favors can run off all their neighbors so they can take-over the world?
Maybe they should learn how to get what they want in life without using ‘guns’ against their neighbors like any non-criminal adult.
This 'socialist' attitude is exactly what I speak of when I say "environmentalist religious mob actively trying to shut-down all plants." If someone is so mentally psychotic about what everyone else is supposedly doing to harm them then they should be the one's living out in the woods like a hermit.
No one lives nearby.
The should learn to code?
If Josh Hawley wants to prop it up, the best result is likely a fire that burns it to the ground.
I’m almost certain that Aluminum smelters aren’t made of flammable materials.
Something you wouldn’t know from living inside of your Pinky and The Brain rat cage and getting your flourishing cape caught in the running wheel, Klinger!
The plant appears to be closing because it doesn't have the money to comply with EPA standards, standards that outsourced plants won't come close to meeting.
So gripes about "centrally planning" don't fly since that's exactly what's going on in the other direction. If the Federal Government interferes with this market in a negative fashion, can you really blame them for asking to interfere in its favor as well?
Every time an American company fails to compete with foreign companies in a particular industry, it's worth asking why and if our Federal and State governments have made it impossible for the company to do so.
Teedy Roosevelt/Bert Hoover/BushBush prohibitionists seek to make production and trade illegal for Jesus and the Splendid Blonde Race. William Jennings Bryan/Gore/Bernie saboteurs seek to make production and trade illegal for Marx, Lenin, Edward Bellamy, Howells and Mao. Each claims the other is "not really" altruistic, which to them is the Grail of Grails. Lucky for them there's a sucker born every ten seconds. Too bad for them there's a Libertarian Party just turned fifty.
Payoffs from China. And other hostile entities? At least where Biden is concerned.
"the fact that Hawley is even making this request illustrates something important about how Republicans now view the relationship between government and business."
Yes, it shows that Reason has utterly failed in its mission and the entire editorial staff should walk out in shame.
The US elects authoritarian Democrats because the vast, vast majority of Democrats are convinced that they need Authorities- experts and elites- to tell the population what to say, think and do. Likewise, the US elects Protectionist-Populist Republicans because the vast, vast majority of them think it is good when their leaders intervene (wrongheadedly) to counteract the terrible policies of the Authoritarians.
In 2016, when Trump was ascending, Reason had an opportunity to truly focus on liberty and fiscal sanity- to make the case for Republicans to return to fiscal conservatism. Instead, Reason made a choice- multiple articles in 2016 discussed the dichotomy of the "Globalists" vs the "Nationalists". Reason- not NYT, or National Review- Reason decided that you had to pick sides. Over the coming years, Reason repeatedly sided with the globalist tribe, excusing its slide towards authoritarianism even as they obsessed themselves with getting clicks from Trump's latest tweets.
Maybe instead of another sneering hot take at individuals, insisting Hawley is wrong (which he is), Reason ought to spend some time trying to advocate for what's right- liberty and free markets.
Before they can do that, they will need to exercise demons like Boehm who see it as more important to snipe at folks like Hawley for their grandstanding, instead of tackling the root of the problem: convincing a bunch of conservatives that protectionist policies are bad for them.
Reason will continue to be irrelevant until it's editorial staff understands that defeating people like Trump and Hawley requires convincing their electors to abandon them. That doesn't happen with this sneering condescension. It doesn't happen when Reason posts articles explaining why we should ally with globalist elites. It happens when Reason decides those conservative voters are worth engaging.
Or what?
Are you going to stop commenting?
"Or what?"
Or...Reason will continue to be irrelevant. Can you not read?
And trash like Obvious will continue to spew leftist bullshit.
Your moniker is inaccurate.
You seem upset. I suggest suicide as a solution.
Why doesn't Hawley just offer to buy it and operate it himself if he gives a fuck?
Excellent question! I worked at an aluminum extrusion plant and would've quit the minute a looter like Hee-Hawley took it over. The politician is the spirit of Starnesville, the leper's bell of the approaching looter.
You should really show Hawley who’s boss and kill yourself. Livestream it!
HaHaHa... Biden and the left are the very party lobbying to shut-down USA Aluminum manufacturing to 'save' the weather (Whatever that is suppose to mean). You just as well be asking Hitler for Individual Liberty and Justice.
Unless that Aluminum is going to smelter under the sun (solar) I wouldn't count on anything from the left but more mandates that will ensure it's destruction.
Of course Hawley can demand it stay open. Aluminum is green if it is made in a plant.
That "the law doesn't permit it" hasn't stopped Biden with student loan forgiveness, it hasn't stopped Biden from refusing to control the borders (north and south), and it won't stop him from this exercise in lawlessness.
Equating essential aluminum smelting with windmills and house insulation is a strawman argument. Claiming that there is no problem because 41 percent of imported aluminum comes from Canada and Mexico leaves out the majority 59 percent and where it comes from. As we are now seeing with the rare earth bottleneck and computer chip production relying on foreign sources of an important product or an industrial process like smelting then importing the resulting product can be catastrophic to the nation in event of a crisis. Has everyone forgotten the Oil Embargo of the early 70's already?
Antisemitism is a grave threat to national security.
And that's not to mention the children.
Trump: Literally worse than Hitler.
Ron DeSantis: Literally worse than Trump.
Josh Hawley: Literally worse than Ron DeSantis.
Elon Musk: Literally worse than Josh Hawley.
If only there was a word to concisely describe an economic system where government allows private businesses to exist, but dictates how they operate, controlling wages, etc.
Oh wait, there is one!
Fascism
"As an economic system, fascism is socialism with a capitalist veneer...Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a society’s economic processes through direct state operation of the means of production, fascism sought that control indirectly, through domination of nominally private owners. Where socialism nationalized property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by requiring owners to use their property in the “national interest”—that is, as the autocratic authority conceived it. [Econlib]
Interesting choice. Criticize someone trying to maintain industrial capability when the current administration is arbitrarily banning future exports of natural gas needed by our allies, driving them further into dependence on Russia.
Neither should happen, but I know which violation of free markets I prefer.