Don’t
Embrace the Beast
by
Myles Kantor
Burns
International Security Services fired Pennsylvania resident Curt
Storey in May after he refused to remove Confederate symbols from
his truck and lunch bucket. Kirk
Lyons of the Southern Legal Resource Center has sued Burns Security
on behalf of Storey, who describes himself as a "Confederate
Southern American." Seeking reinstatement, back pay, and damages,
the lawsuit contends Burns Security discriminated against Storey
on the basis of national origin. (Storey is of Southern ancestry.)
Whether
a Confederate lineage constitutes a national origin is an interesting
question, but the lawsuit against Burns Security is antithetical
to the Confederacy’s principles and those of a free society.
A
salient aspect of the Confederate States of America was its reinforcement
of decentralized governance. While the United States Constitution
included safeguards for states’ autonomy, the Confederate Constitution
further contracted central authority. Among other areas, this is
evident in the Confederacy’s impeachment and amendment processes.
(See Marshall L. DeRosa’s The
Confederate Constitution of 1861: An Inquiry into American Constitutionalism
for a comprehensive delineation.)
Section
703 (a)(1) of Title VII deems it unlawful employment practice "To
fail or refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise
to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation,
terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such
individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin."
From a textual perspective, it can be claimed that Burns Security
violated this provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act when it terminated
Storey.
From
a philosophic perspective, Title VII shouldn’t exist and Burns Security’s
termination of Storey shouldn’t be a crime. Federal nationalization
of employment policies subverts the constitutional separation of
state and federal purviews.
Furthermore,
Title VII subverts property rights by infringing upon contractual
and associational discretion. Richard Epstein observes, "The
right to exclude, and the correlative rejection of the antidiscrimination
principle…is part of the right to be left alone with the people
of one’s choice." Title VII and similar policies coerce association
and contract, assailing the bulwark of a free society.
If
Burns Security doesn’t want to employ Colombians, that should be
its right; if Burns Security doesn’t want to employ Cambodians,
that should be its right; and if Burns Security doesn’t want to
employ pro-Confederates, that should be its right. (The appropriateness
of these choices is another matter. Inappropriateness and criminality
are not synonymous.)
For
pro-Confederates to enlist a federal apparatus of multi-dimensional
usurpation to vindicate their convictions is bizarre. It’s incoherent
constitutionally and inimical to proprietary liberty. One doubts
Alexander Stephens, Albert Taylor Bledsoe, and other Southern nomocrats
would have countenanced the statist framework upon which Storey
bases his lawsuit.
Instead
of embracing the antidiscrimination Leviathan, Storey, Lyons, and
their allies should adopt Ed
Cobb’s strategy: boycott. To seek vindication from the EEOC
lends legitimacy to an illegitimate entity and undermines the inheritance
these men claim to cherish.
August
17, 2001
Myles
Kantor [send him mail]
Myles Kantor is editor of FreeEmigration.com
and co-hosts "On Liberty" on WWFE-AM 670 in Miami, Florida Sundays
from 9pm-10pm. Learn more
about "On Liberty" here.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
Myles
Kantor Archives
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