Antipathy to Militarism
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
The Third Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution provides that no Soldier shall, in
time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of
the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed
by law.
Obviously,
the Third Amendment has little relevance today. But what is relevant
for us today is the mindset that underlay the passage of that amendment
a mindset of deep antipathy toward militarism and standing
armies. Our ancestors fierce opposition to a powerful military
force was consistent with their overall philosophy that guided the
formation of the Constitution and the passage of the Bill of Rights.
While the
Framers understood the need for a federal government, what concerned
them was the possibility that such a government would become a worse
menace than no government at all. Their recent experience with the
British government which of course had been their government
and against which they had taken up arms had reinforced what
they had learned through their study of history: that the biggest
threat to the freedom and well-being of a people was their own government.
Thus, after
several years operating under the Articles of Confederation, the
challenge the Framers faced was how to bring a federal government
into existence that would be sufficiently powerful to protect their
rights and liberties but that would not also become omnipotent and
tyrannical.
Their solution
was the Constitution, a document that would call the federal government
into existence but limit its powers to those expressly enumerated
in the document itself. Thus, a close examination of the Constitution
shows that the powers of the U.S. government originate in it. The
idea was that if a power wasnt enumerated, federal officials
were precluded from exercising it.
Even that,
however, was not good enough for our American ancestors. They wanted
an express restriction on the abridgement of what had become historically
recognized as fundamental and inherent rights of the people. In
other words, they wanted what could be considered an express insurance
policy for the protection of their rights. While government officials
could not lawfully exercise powers that were not enumerated in the
Constitution, the Bill of Rights would make the point even more
emphatically that federal officials had no authority to abridge
the fundamental rights of the people.
The Constitution
provided other measures to protect against the rise of omnipotent
and tyrannical government. One was the division of government into
three separate branches, with the aim of establishing a system of
checks and balances that would prevent the rise of powerful
centralized government. Another was the Second Amendment, which
ensured that the people would retain the means of resisting tyranny
or even violently overthrowing a tyrannical government should the
need arise.
Given their
view that the federal government they were bringing into existence
constituted the biggest threat to their freedom and well-being,
constantly on the minds of our ancestors was the primary means by
which governments had historically subjected their people to tyranny
through the use of the governments military forces.
That is the primary reason for the deep antipathy that the Founders
had for an enormous standing military force in their midst. They
understood fully that if such a force existed, their own government
would possess the primary means by which governments have always
imposed tyranny on their own people.
Using armies
for tyranny
Historically,
governments had misused standing armies in two ways, both of which
ultimately subjected the citizenry to tyranny. One was to engage
in faraway wars, which inevitably entailed enormous expenditures,
enabling the government to place ever-increasing tax burdens on
the people. Such wars also inevitably entailed patriotic
calls for blind allegiance to the government so long as the war
was being waged. Consider, for example, the immortal words of James
Madison, who is commonly referred to as the father of the
Constitution:
Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to
be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every
other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and
taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments
for bringing the many under the domination of the few. In war, too,
the discretionary power of the Executive is extended; its influence
in dealing out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and
all the means of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing
the force, of the people.... [There is also an] inequality of fortunes,
and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and
... degeneracy of manners and of morals.... No nation could preserve
its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.
The second
way to use a standing army to impose tyranny was the direct one
the use of troops to establish order and obedience among
the citizenry. Ordinarily, if a government has no huge standing
army at its disposal, many people will choose to violate immoral
laws that always come with a tyrannical regime; that is, they engage
in what is commonly known as civil disobedience
the disobedience to immoral laws. But as the Chinese people discovered
at Tiananmen Square, when the government has a standing army to
enforce its will, civil disobedience becomes much more problematic.
Consider again
the words of Madison:
A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not
long be safe companions to liberty. The means of defence agst. foreign
danger, have been always the instruments of tyranny at home. Among
the Romans it was a standing maxim to excite a war, whenever a revolt
was apprehended. Throughout all Europe, the armies kept up under
the pretext of defending, have enslaved the people.
The idea is
that governments use their armies to produce the enemies, then scare
the people with cries that the barbarians are at the gates, and
then claim that war is necessary to put down the barbarians. With
all this, needless to say, comes increased governmental power over
the people.
Sound familiar?
The Founding
Fathers
Here is how
Henry St. George Tucker put it in Blackstones 1768 Commentaries
on the Laws of England:
Wherever standing armies are kept up, and when the right of the
people to keep and bear arms is, under any color or pretext whatsoever,
prohibited, liberty, if not already annihilated, is on the brink
of destruction.
Virginian
Patrick Henry pointed out the difficulty associated with violent
resistance to tyranny when a standing army is enforcing the orders
of the government:
A standing army we shall have, also, to execute the execrable commands
of tyranny; and how are you to punish them? Will you order them
to be punished? Who shall obey these orders? Will your mace-bearer
be a match for a disciplined regiment?
When the Commonwealth
of Virginia ratified the Constitution in 1788, its concern over
standing armies mirrored that of Patrick Henry:
... that standing armies in time of peace are dangerous to liberty,
and therefore ought to be avoided, as far as the circumstances and
protection of the community will admit; and that in all cases the
military should be under strict subordination to and governed by
the civil power.
Virginias
concern was expressed by North Carolina, which stated in its Declaration
of Rights in 1776,
that the people have a Right to bear Arms for the Defence of the
State, and as Standing Armies in Time of Peace are dangerous to
Liberty, they ought not to be kept up, and that the military should
be kept under strict Subordination to, and governed by the Civil
Power.
The Pennsylvania
Convention repeated that principle:
... as standing armies in time of peace are dangerous to liberty,
they ought not to be kept up; and that the military shall be kept
under strict subordination to and be governed by the civil power.
The U.S. State
Departments own website describes the convictions of the Founding
Fathers regarding standing armies:
Wrenching memories of the Old World lingered in the 13 original
English colonies along the eastern seaboard of North America, giving
rise to deep opposition to the maintenance of a standing army in
time of peace. All too often the standing armies of Europe were
regarded as, at best, a rationale for imposing high taxes, and,
at worst, a means to control the civilian population and extort
its wealth.
In fact, as
Roy G. Weatherup pointed out in his excellent article, Standing
Armies and Armed Citizens: A Historical Analysis of the Second Amendment,
the abuses of their governments standing army was one of the
primary reasons that the British colonists took up arms against
that army in 1776:
[The Declaration of Independence] listed the colonists grievances,
including the presence of standing armies, subordination of civil
to military power, use of foreign mercenary soldiers, quartering
of troops, and the use of the royal prerogative to suspend laws
and charters. All of these legal actions resulted from reliance
on standing armies in place of the militia.
Moreover,
as William S. Fields and David T. Hardy point out in their excellent
article, The
Third Amendment and the Issue of the Maintenance of Standing Armies:
A Legal History, the deep antipathy that the Founders
had toward standing armies followed a long tradition among the British
people of opposing the standing armies of their king:
The experience of the early Middle Ages had instilled in the English
people a deep aversion to the professional army, which they came
to associate with oppressive taxes, and physical abuses of their
persons and property (and corresponding fondness for their traditional
institution the militia). This development was to have a profound
effect on the development of civil rights in both England and the
American colonies.... During the seventeenth century, problems associated
with the involuntary quartering of soldiers and the maintenance
of standing armies became crucial issues propelling the English
nation toward civil war.
Did the antipathy
against standing armies mean that our ancestors were pacifists?
On the contrary! After all, dont forget that they had only
recently won a violent war against their own government and its
enormous and powerful standing army.
In their minds,
the military bedrock of a free society lay not in an enormous standing
army but rather in the concept of the citizen-soldier the
person in ordinary life in civil society who is well-armed and well-trained
in the use of weapons and who is always ready in times of deepest
peril to come to the aid of his country but only to defend
against invasion and not to go overseas to wage wars of aggression
or wars of liberation. As John Quincy Adams put it in
his July 4, 1821, address to Congress, America does not go
abroad, in search of monsters to destroy.
U.S. foreign
policy
Are the ideas
and principles of the Founding Fathers relevant today? They couldnt
be more relevant. Many decades ago, President Dwight Eisenhower
warned us about the growing power of the military-industrial complex
in American life. Unfortunately, the American people failed to heed
his warning. The result has been an ever-growing military cancer
that is bringing death, ruin, shame, and economic disaster to our
nation just as our Founding Fathers said it would.
More and more
people are finally recognizing that the anger and hatred that foreigners
have for the United States is rooted in morally bankrupt, deadly,
and destructive foreign policies policies that have been
enforced by Americas enormous standing military force. The
resulting blow-back in terms of terrorist attacks, such as those
on the World Trade Center in 1993 and 2001, have been used as the
excuse for waging more wars thousands of miles away, and those wars
have produced even more anger and hatred, with the concomitant threat
of even more terrorist counter-responses. All that, in turn, has
provided the excuse for more foreign interventions, ever-increasing
military budgets, consolidation of power, increasing taxes, and
massive infringements on the civil liberties of the American people.
It is not
a coincidence that the presidents indefinite detention and
punishment of American citizens for suspected terrorist crimes without
according them due process, habeas corpus, right to counsel, jury
trials, freedom of speech, or other fundamental rights guaranteed
by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights are being enforced by
the standing army that our ancestors warned us against. And make
no mistake about it: Given orders of their commander in chief, especially
in a national security crisis, to establish order
in America, U.S. soldiers will do the same thing that soldiers throughout
history have done they will obey the orders given to them.
Just ask the survivors of the massacre at the Branch Davidian compound
at Waco or the victims of rape and sex abuse at Abu Graib prison
in Iraq or Jose Padilla, an American citizen who is currently in
Pentagon custody, where he has been denied due process, habeas corpus,
and other rights accorded by the U.S. Constitution.
In determining
the future direction of our nation, the choice is clear: Do we continue
down the road of empire, standing armies, foreign wars and occupations,
and sanctions and embargoes, along with the taxes, regulations,
and loss of liberty that inevitably come with them? Do we continue
a foreign policy, enforced by the U.S. military, that engenders
ever-increasing anger and hatred among the people of the world,
which then engenders violent blowback against Americans,
which is in turn used to justify more of the same policies?
Or do we change
direction and move our nation in the direction of the vision of
our Founding Fathers toward liberty and the restoration of
a republic to our nation toward a society in which the government
is limited to protecting the nation from invasion and barred from
invading or attacking foreign nations a world in which the
United States is once again the model society for freedom, prosperity,
peace, and harmony a nation in which the Statue of Liberty
once again becomes a shining beacon for those striving to escape
the tyranny and oppression of their own governments?
December
6, 2004
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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