Freedom as a Ticket for Power
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
President Bush
exploits the word freedom more than any other president.
Unfortunately, Americans are sufficiently ignorant that almost any
reference to freedom garners applause. Freedom has become
simply another word to lull listeners to whatever politicians are
pushing.
The Restraint
of Government Is the True Liberty and Freedom of the People
was a popular saying in the 1770s. But freedom is apparently
no longer any constraint on government power.
Bush has cited
freedom to justify his education policy (regardless of the quantum
leap of federal meddling with local schools), his new Medicare drug-prescription
benefit (regardless of how its red tape torments elderly Americans
or how much more financial burden is placed on taxpayers), his free
down payments for non-creditworthy homebuyers (the American Dream
Downpayment Act), and the Millennium Challenge Account (lavishing
U.S. tax dollars on obedient foreign governments).
U.S. military
power is now routinely equated with liberty. Bush recently informed
the American Legion that we have the greatest force for freedom
in the history of the world on our side, the men and women of the
United States Armed Forces. His assertion would have mortified
the Founding Fathers, who saw a standing army as the greatest threat
to liberty.
In his second
inaugural address, Bush deluged listeners with 40 mentions of freedom
and liberty. But none of these comments referred to limits on U.S.
government power. Instead, they sanctified the presidents
right to forcibly intervene abroad wherever he believes necessary.
In a speech at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in June 2005, he mentioned
freedom and liberty more than 20 times to justify the U.S. occupation
of Iraq.
Bush declared
in July 2003 that because of U.S. action in Iraq, people are going
to find out the words freedom and America
are synonymous. Freedom, Iraqi-style, means giving the U.S.
military the right to incarcerate entire towns in barbed wire and
the right to lock up thousands of people without charges. The Bush
administration responded to outrage over leaked torture photos in
2004 by christening Camp Liberty, a new tent compound
for Iraqi detainees next to Abu Ghraib. But the petty details of
U.S. action in Iraq are irrelevant to the transcendent goal he perennially
proclaims.
Bush drenches
his war on terrorism with freedom rhetoric. In his Oval Office address
on the night of September 11, 2001, he declared, America was
targeted for attack because were the brightest beacon for
freedom and opportunity in the world. The administration never
offered evidence to back up this claim. He pronounced authoritatively
on the motives of the attackers even before the FBI and CIA knew
their identities.
Bushs
concept of freedom hinges on omnipotent government as the savior
of freedom. Attorney General John Ashcroft titled his 2003 tour
to defend the USA PATRIOT Act, Securing Our Liberty: How America
Is Winning the War on Terror. Securing liberty
is the same pabulum recently recited by administration officials
to justify the National Security Agencys warrantless roundup
of Americans phone calls.
Respect
for individual rights is the bulwark of freedom. But in order to
vanquish terrorism, Bush claims the right to destroy all rights
by using the enemy combatant label. Justice Antonin
Scalia rightly noted in a Supreme Court dissent, The very
core of liberty secured by our Anglo-Saxon system of separated powers
has been freedom from indefinite imprisonment at the will of the
Executive. Yet this aspect of liberty is now an unaffordable
luxury, at least according to the prevailing wisdom in the West
Wing. Instead, freedom is simply whatever the president commands
since he is the supreme defender of freedom.
The
administration is defining freedom down. Freedom is becoming little
more than the warm glow people are supposed to feel when government
promises to protect them. The more ignorant people become about
the reality of freedom, the easier it is for rulers to con them
into submission.
Americans cannot
afford to confuse presidential supremacy with individual freedom.
Bushs lofty words and presumed good intentions are no substitute
for inviolable constitutional rights. Rather than stirring patriotic
pride, Bushs mentions of freedom should set off Americans
warning bells.
March
28, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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