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On
Resistance
When
the three top dogs of the U.S. global empire went to Ohio University,
hoping to explain why we needed to drop bombs on Iraq, they were
met with fierce resistance. This event, broadcast worldwide, caused
the Clinton administration to rethink its bombs-away strategy. A
war was averted and untold numbers of lives were saved.
The
resistance in Ohio took three forms:
Tacit: the arena was only half full, a signal that Americans
don't automatically show up when government convenes a meeting.
There's a reason despots insist on a full house: it creates the
illusion of mass obedience. In the same way, a partially empty house
suggests a lack of consensus and even disobedience.
Active:
200 protestors disoriented the empire's spokesmen and brought them
down to a human level. This also sends an important signal. In Washington,
these people may have roses thrown at their feet, but in the real
America, they are treated as agents of the state and enemies of
our liberty.
Intellectual:
This was the most effective resistance tactic used that night. Many
of the people who went to the microphone to ask questions were surprisingly
articulate and well-informed about foreign policy. They cited cases
of moral hypocrisy, demanded answers on specific matters relating
to the politics of the Persian Gulf region, and applied the lessons
of history. Their questions were met with evasions and lies.
This
three-pronged attack left Clinton administration officials in a
daze. They couldn't believe that they, the masters of the world's
"indispensable" government, were being challenged at all, especially
by average citizens whose only role is to pay up, and shut up.
The
Clinton administration governs by poll, and the polls said people
would support an attack on Iraq. Where was this resistance coming
from? Unbeknownst to the Clinton administration, our times have
raised up a hard core of citizens determined to resist the encroachment
of government in a host of crucial areas, including warfare, gun
control, taxes, Internet freedom, home schooling, land rights, and
religious rights. This frustrates the designs of the power elites
to envelop all aspects of our lives in their welfare-warfare state.
Does
this resistance movement have a moral right to exist? Of course,
and the politically astute Clinton praised (with clenched teeth)
the Ohio resistors for expressing their opinion. But he wasn't serious.
Government by its very nature hates resistance, and schemes to get
unquestioning obedience to all its dictates.
But
what if those dictates are unjust? Are they to be agreed to merely
because they come from a government? The usual response is that
we can only express political dissatisfaction at the ballot box.
Hillary, for example, calls any criticism of her husband an effort
to "overturn the results of the 1996 election"-as if a phonied-up
plebiscite confers immunity from oversight.
Democracy
no longer means self rule or self government, since neither law
nor the threat of secession provides a limit to tyranny. Democracy
now means menacing and violating the rights of individuals, families,
communities, and businesses to be left alone. Bill Gates startled
Washington by refusing to submit to Justice Department orders that
he make Microsoft technology conform to his competitors' demands.
What's more, he told government judges and lawyers that they didn't
know what they were talking about, and demanded the freedom to innovate
according to the consumers' not the government's-wishes.
Not
every act of resistance needs to be public. The explosive growth
of the Internet economy is due not only to the convenience of the
medium; it is a means of avoiding oppressive sales taxes. The key
to its growth is the unwillingness to obey the terms government
establishes for us. The same is true of the American sport of tax
revolt. Resistance must take many forms if liberty is to have a
future. It reminds the holders of power that they cannot expect
unquestioning obedience, that they are not exempt from the demands
of justice, and that they cannot ride roughshod over people's lives
and property. With every act of resistance comes the message: the
state is not a god; my allegiance is conditional.
If
the Clinton administration doesn't like resistance, it should consider
Mises's warning: Do not make the dissenting citizen feel that "his
only choice is either to perish or to destroy the machinery of the
state."
FURTHER
READING: Etienne De La Boetie, The
Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude
(Black Rose Press, 1998 [1550]); Murray N. Rothbard, Economic
Thought Before Adam Smith (Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar,
1995), pp.167-74; Ludwig von Mises, Liberalism
(Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y.:FEE, 1985), p. 59.
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