Do As You’re Told!
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
Having
received a scanner for Christmas, I have been busy transforming
old photos and slides into digital files. It is great fun, because
it means rummaging through pictures taken decades ago. Some of them
are priceless.
One
of my favorites is shown here. The people in the photograph are
my wife, two of my children, and my parents. We were at the St.
Louis Zoo on a beautiful but chilly winter day, probably about twenty-five
years, or more, ago. Strolling past the shuttered Snow-Cone stand,
we noted the sign, which you may be able to read for yourself, perhaps,
if you can enlarge the photo. It says, "Please form a line
for better service." So we formed the line shown.
But
there was no service, better or otherwise. We waited patiently,
but no one came to assist us. After a while we drifted off, disillusioned.
Well,
OK, we did it for a joke. In fact, we did it especially so that
I could take the picture. It was one of those moments of simultaneous
silliness: "Hey! See the sign? We better line up!" But
although I’d forgotten about the picture, I often thought of the
message: people do what they’re told.
Is
lining up for better service, because a sign says so, any sillier
than stopping your car because a sign says so? Common sense indicates
that you approach an intersection with care, and certainly stop
if traffic warrants. But to stop at three in the morning, with no
other car in sight, is about as reasonable as our standing in line
at a shuttered Snow-Cone stand in winter, because a sign indicated
we should. You are there, at the intersection. Are you to set aside
your own judgment of the situation as it actually exists, in favor
of a blanket rule made by some legislature that had never been aware
of the existence of the intersection?
Well,
traffic "laws" aren’t particularly important, except for
the revenue they raise. But we do what we’re told with regard to
much more important matters. We meekly provide a picture ID at the
airline check-in, although there may be no law actually requiring
it. Presented with a tax form, we obediently complete it, and send
it, with a check, to the government, simply because we’re expected
to do so. On the assumption that we’re required, we may pay hundreds
of thousands of dollars without once asking to see some law making
us liable. If you do ask, expect a run around that will make your
head spin. The message from the bureaucracy is clear: don’t bother
us with questions, just do as you’re told.
Certainly
society runs smoother when everyone doesn’t challenge everything!
Unquestioning obedience makes military leadership possible, and
parenthood survivable. And for the obedient, conformity makes it
easier to get through life without causing waves. Without a doubt,
however, tyranny thrives because of such human traits. Rulers know
that if they demand something often enough, and loud enough, most
people will obey, even if there is nothing behind the demand except
bluster. And those who don’t will find themselves oppressed not
only by the rulers so much as by their fellows: "Hey, I did
it, what makes you think you’re better than me?" The rulers
will bank on that attitude, too.
It’s
a dangerous situation when those in power realize that, although
they can make "laws" to justify whatever they want to
do, it’s not really necessary. Laws, after all, are simply their
wishes, arrived at after a certain procedure, and written down,
which, in some mysterious way, makes them binding upon us. Invoke
national security (never individual security!!), the environment,
the economy, education, etc., and just issue "guidelines."
Most will obey. A few may not, some claiming a right to "due
process of law," when given an order by officials. What troublemakers!
Don’t they know that the same organization that makes the laws,
through one of its branches, has other branches that administer,
enforce, and adjudicate them? Just assume that what you’re told
to do is required, and do it, without making yourself obnoxious.
Much of our society is based upon assumptions, many of them untrue,
but so what?
For
the curmudgeons among us: do you think you’d get better service
if you formed a line and waited? Don’t waste your time. We tried
that. Just walk away.
March
7, 2005
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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