Welcome to Spy Nation
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
The
other day, I received a grim reminder of just how vulnerable my
family and I are to government predations. While picking up our
youngest daughter at nursery school, my wife let our two boys (age
seven and eight) stay in the van in the parking lot.
Just
after she got our daughter, a small, nervous man met my wife in
the hall and demanded to speak with her. The man worked for Child
Protective Services in Maryland, and he was there to point out that
it was against the law in this state to leave young children alone
in a vehicle. While my wife decided not to argue with the man or
challenge him, he made it be known with no uncertainty that he had
the power to remove our children from our home.
The
whole incident left me a bit shaken after my wife gave me an account
that evening. Our three youngest children are adopted from overseas
(one from Guatemala, two from Ethiopia), and we have spent our life
savings on those adoptions. Because my wife was not aware of a certain
state law, government agents (in the name of protecting our children,
of course) could have burst into our home unannounced, grabbed the
children, and trundled them off to foster care – thus ruining all
of our lives.
Spying
on other people in Maryland is not left to government agents. Whenever
I drop our boys off at school, I see a sign prominently posted that
encourages people to call an 800 number (in anonymity, of course)
to report "abuse." Furthermore, a directive came to us
where I teach that said we were by law required to report
any signs or claims of abuse to the "proper authorities."
This directive includes my adult students, some of whom are
in their 40s and 50s.
I
do not deny that much child abuse exists in this country, but such
state policies can lead to another kind of abuse that I believe
is more dangerous and more insidious: the abuse of individual citizens
by government employees. In the name of "protecting the children,"
government has made it easy for individuals to engage in score settling
by lying, and already has a sorry record of imprisoning innocent
people.
In
1974, Congress passed the Child Abuse Prevention Act, known as the
Mondale Act (after Walter Mondale), which promised large amounts
of federal funds to states to stop what was called an "epidemic"
of child abuse. It was not long afterwards that individuals began
to be charged with almost unbelievable crimes of sexual molestation,
especially at day care centers. From the McMartin case in Manhattan
Beach, California, to the Kelly Michaels case in New Jersey, to
the alleged "sex ring" in Wenatchee, Washington, dozens
of people were rounded up, tried in what could only be called kangaroo
courts, and sentenced to multiple life terms.
(To
prove that there is some justice in the court systems – at least
at the state level – most of those convictions have been overturned
on appeal, as appellate judges systematically pointed out that most
of the defendants did not come close to receiving fair trials, that
the prosecution coached witnesses and suborned perjury, and generally
created witch hunt conditions.)
Unfortunately,
the spirit of the Mondale Act lives on, as state officials in Maryland
are constantly urging individuals to spy on one another. This creates
an atmosphere that is hardly conducive to justice, and makes individuals
vulnerable to the whims of others. For example, if a neighbor decides
he does not like my children (or me), all it takes is an anonymous
call on the state "hotline" to turn our lives upside down.
Nor
is the "spy on your neighbor" mentality only found in
Maryland. The infamous Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program
encourages children to turn in their parents for smoking marijuana,
and state authorities have destroyed more than a few families under
this program. (The authorities don’t tell the children that they
want to put their parents in jail, just that they want to "help"
them. By the time the truth comes out, it generally is too late
and the children realize that the government has hoodwinked them.)
As
in Nazi Germany and Stalin’s U.S.S.R., the government depended upon
"vigilant" citizens to spy on others. While it may be
necessary at times for someone to report real incidents of child
abuse or neglect, what is currently going on in this country goes
way beyond the bounds of necessity. The purpose of creating "spy
nation" is not to protect children, but to make sure that everyone
is properly intimidated by government authorities.
While
my wife and I will make sure that we never leave our boys unattended
in the van again, we also understand all too well that no matter
how good a job of parenting we may do, the state may have another
agenda. Please keep in mind that a "nanny state" actually
is nothing more than a "police state." In the end, there
is no difference.
September 15, 2003
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
William
Anderson Archives
|