Fight the Slavers
by
William Norman Grigg
by William Norman Grigg
DIGG THIS
John
Edwards
may have performed an unintended service for the Ron Paul presidential
campaign.
First,
he has decided to position himself as an anti-war candidate, a move
that attests to the political potency of that issue.
Second, Edwards
has endorsed the proposal to re-institute slavery in the form of
conscription, for both military and non-military purposes. This
exposes him as a consummate fraud and opportunist, a fact that will
throw Dr. Paul's authentic anti-war convictions into sharp relief.
Edwards has also handed the Paul campaign a nearly ideal unifying
element to build a youth movement that could – I'm not saying that
it will, but that it could – redefine the 2008 electoral landscape.
Through the
simple and repeated act of telling the unadorned truth about the
impact and consequences of Washington's imperial foreign policy,
Rep. Paul ignited the blogosphere, infuriated the gatekeepers of
the Bu'ushist cult, and provoked astonished approval from those
parts of the voting public who want to be treated as adults. His
message, digested to its essence, is that our rulers have led our
nation into disrepute and impending bankruptcy by bullying the rest
of the world – and that this must stop immediately if we are to
have any prospect of avoiding outright dictatorship and penury.
Rarely, if
ever, has a national political figure of any stature called attention
so forcefully to the inescapable connection between an imperial
foreign policy abroad, and the constriction of liberty at home.
And the fashion in which Dr. Paul has done so – speaking the truth
in language devoid of cant or other rhetorical artifacts, retaining
his composure and avuncular dignity amid the theatrical faux outrage
of Establishment lickspittles (yeah, I'm talking to you, Hannity)
and aspiring dictators (yo, that's you, Rudy) – has elevated his
message above Republican primary politics: He has achieved trans-partisan
status by speaking about freedom as the “common ground.”
I suspect that
Dr. Paul's success in capturing the public imagination through an
anti-imperialist campaign influenced John Edwards to re-brand
himself as an anti-Iraq War candidate. But there is nothing
principled about Edwards' current position: It would have taken
a measure of courage to oppose the war clearly and forcefully in
March 2003, as Ron Paul did.
Every other
presidential aspirant on either side of the narrow Donkey/Pachyderm
divide is a collectivist of some variety – from militarist nationalists
like John McCain and Tom Tancredo to technocratic corporatists like
Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton. John Edwards is trying to get some
of that post-New Deal-labor movement-popular front Mojo going for
him by opposing the war and calling for enactment of the eighth
plank of the Communist Manifesto, which dictates a “universal liability
of all to serve” as the State ordains.
“One of the
things we ought to be thinking about is some level of mandatory
service to our country, so that everybody in America – not just
the poor kids who get sent to war – are serving this country,” Edwards
said Sunday (May 20) during a stop in Neene, New Hampshire.
“We have people from all walks of life in America who are serving,
including Reservists and National Guard. What we want to do is to
have all Americans to have a chance to serve their country.”

Hey,
don't think of it as a death sentence think of it as a
"chance to serve your country" (in your case, as the main course).
I am constantly
amazed by the unctuous dishonesty with which collectivists describe
servitude as an “opportunity.” The words “mandatory” and “opportunity”
are blood enemies. Those who force them into an unnatural marriage
remind me of a story I came across years ago in a book entitled Showa:
The Age of Hirohito.
As the Pacific
War was grinding down, a Japanese commander summoned a squadron
of fighter pilots and told them that they had received an opportunity
to die for the Emperor in Kamikaze attacks. Each of them was handed
two ballots and ordered to choose the one that best described his
attitude regarding that opportunity; one ballot read “willing,”
the other “very willing.”

The fearful
summons: The State steals a young man's future.
Such is always
the case when the State and those running it, out of their boundless
generosity and magnanimity, extend to the rest of us an “opportunity”
to surrender our time, property, and lives in the State's service.
Our “privilege” in this transaction is to submit with docility –
nay, with happy gratitude – to whatever imposition our rulers see
fit to inflict on us, including the surrender of our lives in their
service.
This is emphatically
not the same thing as serving our country. Every individual who
provides any useful service, whether as a volunteer, an employee,
or a businessman, is serving our country. Collectivists believe
that coercion is the magic ingredient that makes State-imposed “service”
morally superior to private industriousness. They have the sovereign
right to luxuriate in their delusions. Should they seek to inflict
them on my family, they will do so at their mortal peril.
I
am utterly and completely serious.
Conscription
is chattel slavery of the most pernicious variety. It is intrinsically
immoral and entirely unconstitutional. The Bible records that when
apostate Israel sought a king, the prophet Samuel offered a
detailed warning of the tyranny and corruption the monarchy would
bring in its train; the very first curse
he mentioned was conscription.
Conscripts
were employed in King George III's war against the American colonies,
along with enlistees and mercenaries. On one occasion, writes Stanley
Weintraub in his splendid book Iron
Tears: America's Battle for Freedom, Britain's Quagmire, 11751783,
“A group of hungry [British] soldiers on short rations were shot
while foraging for potatoes in an open field, and [General Sir John]
Burgoyne warned, `The life of the soldier is the property of the
king' – and that any Redcoat caught venturing beyond British lines
would be `instantly hanged.'”
"The life of
the soldier is the property of the king." Or president. Or dictator.
Such is the
nature of conscription, which is why it has no place in any society
that claims to be free.
In defending
the Lincoln regime's imposition of conscription during the War Between
the States, the New York Times published a house editorial on July
13, 1863 that digested the case for the draft to one simple proposition”
“[O]ur national authority has the right under the Constitution,
to every dollar and every right arm in the country for its protection....”
(Emphasis added) As I've pointed out before, this makes obvious
the fact that through conscription, the subjects exist to protect
the government, rather than the government existing to protect citizens.
Bernard Baruch,
Woodrow Wilson's commissar for war production, was similarly blunt
in his description of the WWI-era
“war socialism” system for which conscription provided a foundation:
“Every man’s
life is at the call of the nation and so must be every man’s property.
We are living today in a highly organized state of socialism. The
state is all; the individual is of importance only as he contributes
to the welfare of the state. His property is his only as the state
does not need it. He must hold his life and possessions at the call
of the state.”
Edwards wants
to remove U.S. Troops from Iraq, while designing a “strategic plan”
to deal with the genocidal inter-communal war that has been made
inevitable by US intervention. This would require a large permanent
US presence in the region, and almost certainly mean involvement
in military conflicts beyond Iraq. This, in turn, will mean expanding
the ranks of the military through involuntary servitude, with civilian
“service” being treated as a concomitant civic responsibility.
Assuming that
Muslim radicals hate us for our freedom, the Edwards approach would
solve that problem by extinguishing freedom.
Ron Paul's
approach is much better: End the war, bring the troops home, resume
the practice of genuinely even-handed diplomacy abroad, and reduce
the size and expense of domestic government by several orders of
magnitude. Opposition to conscription is an obvious and indispensable
element of that program, and one that would capture the attention
of freedom-focused young people.
Ron Paul's
anti-imperialist campaign has already gone viral. Imagine how his
campaign would expand and prosper if he mounted a youth appeal focusing
on a promise not to let the State steal their future through conscription.
Copyright
© 2007 William Norman Grigg
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