You Don’t Own Me: Freedom, Responsibility, and the Lies of Collectivism
2nd April 2026
Politicians tax what we earn, regulate what we build and often decide what we can do with our bodies and our money.
I like to think I own myself. But politicians increasingly act as if they do.
“People should not have power over other people’s lives,” says Timothy Sandefur, author of the book “You Don’t Own Me.”
In my latest video, Sandefur challenges the attitude that “freedom belongs to the government and it can parcel it out to us.”
He starts with building permits.
“A building permit really says, you’re not allowed to build on your own property until the government gives you permission. And you have to pay for that permission. The government has essentially confiscated your land and sells it back to you in exchange for more rights.”
Such government control makes it harder to build anything.
“The Empire State Building,” Sandefur reminds me, “was built in a single year. Now it’s unimaginable that you could accomplish a project like that, or even just the paperwork, within a year.”
So vast sums of money are wasted. Take high-speed rail for example. Somehow, California has spent 16 years and $14 billion without laying down a single mile of high-speed track.
“How much would Californians have done with that colossal amount of money?” Sandefur asks.