The
Case for Independence
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
DIGG THIS
On July 4th
libertarians celebrate the rejection of empire. Politicians more
likely see it as the US government’s birthday. If they’re right,
we should think it a tragic commemoration indeed.
No, I see the
Fourth as an independence celebration to which our government has
no rightful claim. Seventeen seventy-six was, after all, five years
before they ratified the Articles of Confederation and a full eleven
years before the Constitution was completed. As our national mythos
goes, it was on this day that America declared its separation from
the British state. This is a day to remember liberation, disunion,
the idea that a house divided might be more civil, peaceful and
secure than one kept together by force.
In light of
this heritage and Jefferson’s wonderful declaration, I believe we
should consider the possible benefits were the American people to
reclaim the spirit of 1776 and apply its principles to the present
day. I believe we should contemplate the possibility that what Americans
and foreigners need is independence from the empire.
The American
colonists had been particularly irked by the British government’s
hypocrisy regarding the liberal tradition. The British prided themselves
on having a liberal and enlightened political culture, complete
with checks and balances, due process and the like. But they did
not grant such privileges and immunities to their colonial subjects.
They preached freedom and toleration but practiced international
despotism. Edmund Burke, one of the most consistent proponents of
liberty in Britain, decried this colonial hypocrisy as an enormous
scandal.
Today, the
US empire is everything the British empire was: It claims the banner
of constitutional justice at home, it feigns interest in freedom
abroad, it poses as the embodiment of liberty itself. But it treats
those in its clutches, especially those in its remote grasp, as
dispensable means to an imperial end. It slaughters civilians with
no regard for the number. It enforces martial law in its exploits
abroad. It is the champion and vindicator, not of foreign liberty,
but of theocracies and socialist states everywhere. In the course
of its reign, it has laid waste to millions of lives.
George W. Bush
is a far greater tyrant than King George ever was. He claims the
right to seize anyone in all the world – his designated battlefield
in the war on terror – and deprive him of liberty or life without
anything approaching due process, without a right to an attorney,
without habeas corpus. Under recent presidents and especially today’s,
the US has become just what John Quincy Adams warned it might: The
Dictatress of the World.
The world’s
people deserve their independence. Perhaps it would be fitting to
start with the British. Liberate them from the Bush foreign policy
that only a minority of them approve. Wartime coalitions without
representation are tyranny! They should be the first satellite freed,
as a poetic gesture of honest friendship. The Brits didn’t release
America without a fight, but perhaps they can be let go in peace.
Of course,
Iraq and Afghanistan must be freed immediately. Is it not an embarrassment
for Americans to celebrate the day with fireworks and barbecues
yet think nothing of the perversity of it all, given what is happening
in the Muslim world? US interference with Middle Eastern independence
has been nothing but a repudiation of July-4th principles, at least
since 1953 when the CIA overthrew Iranian democracy and installed
a torturing inflationist monster. The US support, betrayals and
overthrows of Arab and Muslim regimes have typically been incoherent,
contradictory, and nakedly unjust. Such intervention has not protected
but has rather endangered American lives and freedoms. The entangling
alliance between the United States and Israel, which compromises
the safety of both populations, must also end.
Then there
are the other imperial holdings. There’s Old Europe, which should
stop being bullied every time they don’t want to go to war for America.
Just because Americans were dragged into World War II doesn’t mean
the French should be dragged into the next installment, with presumed
allegiance to Old Glory until the end of time. Bring GI Joe home
from Germany, where he has absurdly been stationed for six decades,
presumably in wait for Hitler’s resurrection, or the threats presented
by the Soviet Union, always an economic invalid and now nearly two-decades
defunct.
Then there’s
New Europe, which should be freed from undue US government influence.
Stop bribing their leaders and see how loyal their people really
are to the Bush-Cheney enterprise. It is high time the US stop playing
elections to its advantage.
In Japan and
Korea, American troops have long been the cause of much agitation
and no visible good. Bring them home. Mao has long been dead, so
it’s time the US government stopped pretending it’s all that’s keeping
imaginary dominoes from falling all over Asia. Free trade with Asians
would be good as well. Much of the original US imperial interest
in Asia was commercial in nature, although now America’s protectionists
fear Asia becoming capitalist and rich. It’s clear, however, that
trade benefits both sides to the transaction, and empire only gets
in the way.
Latin Americans’
self-determination declines whenever the US reinterprets the arrogant
Monroe doctrine to award itself the keys to the capital city of
yet another Spanish-speaking nation. Policy in the region has been
brazenly colonial at least since the US imposed the Platt Amendment
on the Cubans and stole Guantanamo Bay. The US should stop pretending
it has always owned the Western Hemisphere, stop poisoning crops,
stop staging coups and stop strong-arming Mexico and other countries
into maintaining a draconian drug war.
US meddling
in Africa also tends toward disaster, as Somalia and Sudan have
shown. Extend to the African peoples total free trade and friendship,
which is the best America can do to help them join the developing
world. We should resist the internationalist temptation to redeploy
into the continent with humanitarian bombs and altruistic bellicosity,
as if in anticipation of a Joseph Conrad novel with a happy ending.
Australia,
Canada (and every other country) should also get their independence,
at last, from the US. No more global regulatory arm-twisting, manipulative
foreign aid, threats or empty promises.
As for the
American people, we should consider independence, too. For starters,
half our income is taxed away and we have the biggest prison population
on the planet. American government is much worse for American liberty
than the British empire was, to an almost obscene degree.
Open up Common
Sense and notice the radical insights about being governed from
afar. There is simply no sense or justice in the same central state
ruling everybody from Hawaii to Virginia, from Arizona to Vermont.
The American Republic was a half-decent experiment, as far as such
political experiments go, but it didn’t guarantee liberty even when
the American population was 2% the size it is today.
American freedom
and international peace will always be a mirage so long as the beast
in Washington, DC, lords it over everyone on earth. There have always
been Americans who saw no limits to the US government’s power, but
let us once and for all tell these Hamiltonians and Wilsonians that
we are sick of their crazed expansions and invasions and want some
peace and freedom for a change.
Americans make
particularly terrible imperialists. We are a people who prefer privacy
and liberty in our own lives. We are a people with independence
and rebellion in our national heritage. Ours is thus an even more
hypocritical empire than that of the British. It’s long past time
Americans stopped trampling across the globe as conquerors. As long
as we pursue such conquests, we ourselves will remain conquered,
shackled by our own chains. Edmund Burke’s rebuke of his nation’s
imperial policy and his defense of American independence apply today
as never before.
Our government,
the biggest in human history, is the greatest threat to our freedom,
drain on our wealth, and fomenter of international conflict. We
cannot keep empire if we want liberty. We cannot be free if we seek
to boss all of mankind around. To have the freedom that Jefferson
described, we must let go of our foreign satellites and allow our
compatriots and international brothers and sisters the freedom we
want for ourselves.
Is such independence
possible? Absolutely. Empires crumble. In 1775, few thought the
Americans would soon be their own nation. The British empire suffered
from pretensions to eternal life. The US empire may in some ways
be unique, but it is no more permanent than any other. In stark
contrast, the principles of human nature declared to the world from
a small Philadelphia gathering 231years ago were true then, years
before the US empire was born, and will remain true long after the
US empire collapses.
July
4, 2007
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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