May
the Future Redeem Our Cause
by Joshua Katz
by
Joshua Katz
DIGG THIS
There are
three ways to remain sane in an insane world. You can believe that
you are free, a path entirely blocked to anyone who is paying attention.
You can believe that you will someday be free; this remains a possibility,
but as various forces close in, it seems less and less likely. Unlike
the world faced by victims of previous tyrannies, we have no United
States to escape to. Finally, you can believe that men someday will
be free, that there will come a time once again when men will be
permitted to think.
It is this
last hope that I cling to. In the future, I believe that men will
understand the futility of anyone putting their hope and faith in
the power of armed masters to control them. There will come a time,
perhaps shortly, perhaps not so shortly, when men will not be controlled
by others but will live for themselves. There will never be a utopia,
but there will be a time when crimes and attacks are dealt with
harshly as the crimes that they are, not accepted as the price of
civilization. Civilized men do not kill those who don’t conform,
so such attacks cannot be the price of civilization; they have nothing
at all to do with civilization.
What will
these men think of us, assuming that our small portion of history
remains available to their historians? If they study our times,
how will they judge us, the last generation to live, for a time,
in a world where free thought was permitted? No, we never enjoyed
the levels of freedom that they will enjoy, but nonetheless, we
did live some time before the renewal of tyranny. We lived in a
world where we owned property, thought what we wished, and expressed
ourselves freely. We lived in a world with LewRockwell.com, in a
world where HR1955 was unthinkable.
Will they
accept our excuse that the machinery had been set in motion long
before we arrived on the scene? We will plead, our voices coming
through loud and clear on the pages of their books, that powerful
men did this, that we had no choice, no way to stop it, that special
interests, AIPAC, and the neocons are to blame. What we say will
be true, but will it absolve us? The first future generation to
breathe free will have fought for it, will have worked hard to educate
themselves, preparing the world for freedom, to push aside the tyrants
and reclaim their world. Will they find it in themselves to forgive
us, who let this great prize slip our hands?
Perhaps
there is nothing we can do to repair their judgment of us. Certainly
we will not save our freedom. HR1955, when it passes the Senate
and is signed, will be only the last step of a long process to destroy
men’s minds. The mind was previously numbed through public schooling,
through the introduction of Prussian teaching methods, by the tremendous
addition of sugar, MSG, and soy to our diets, by the pushing onto
us all of psychoactive, mind-destroying medications, and through
the ceaseless stream of propaganda from that hideous box in our
living rooms. HR1955 is aimed at only that small, small minority
that survived the previous attacks on the mind. If all else fails,
it allows violence to be used to silence those whose minds still
operate. This will be the last straw, the last hope for freedom
in our lifetimes.
Not only
have we not stopped it, but we the people have practically begged
for the coming of this time. Didn’t the people wail and beg for
their protectors in Washington to disarm the population, and attack
the integrity of those who resisted, calling them names, attacking
them as terrorists, or worse? Those who asked the government to
disarm their neighbors will find their neighbors unable to protect
them. Didn’t the people ask Washington to provide something for
nothing, to give out handouts in the name of compassion? Didn’t
they know full well that nothing comes from nothing, that those
handouts came at the expense of robbing their neighbors? Those who
called for their neighbors to be robbed to provide for them will
find their neighbors unwilling to save them now. Didn’t the people
break themselves into small interest groups, each one demanding
protection from the others? Those who hated their neighbors without
cause will find now that this petty bickering unleashed upon them
a far worse danger than those with dark skin or long last names
could ever produce. Didn’t the people empower the government to
bomb and kill innocent people around the world, or at least remain
silent when this was done in their names? Those who allowed their
tax money to be used to bomb foreign nations will find foreign nations
unwilling to intervene to protect them, or to offer refuge and asylum,
when this force is turned on them.
Yet, can
we assist the men of the future? Can we make their task easier,
when it comes time for them to perform it? We can, by doing what
men have done countless times in the past, often at great personal
cost – by being the Remnant, keeping hope alive, and carrying through
the generations the message, the idea of freedom. What we must not
do is make future men begin again from scratch – we must ensure
that we pass on to them the philosophy of freedom. We need to make
sure that when their time comes, they will have access to Rothbard,
to Mises, to Jefferson, Franklin, and Madison, to Rand, yes, to
Rand, to Lew Rockwell, to Nock, Ron Paul, and Mencken. This work
is being done in large part by the Mises Institute and by the Foundation
for Economic Education. But each of us can play a role in it as
well – great works do not interpret and explain themselves. We can
ensure that we pass on to those younger than us the ideas in these
books, as well as the books themselves. We must instill in those
to whom we entrust these ideas a fervent desire to see to it that
someday in the future the ideas become reality, and make them understand
that it is their responsibility to pass on the message, just as
we have passed it to them. By doing so, we keep the remnant alive.
If they speak
of us, the men of the future will look and, I expect, wonder just
what we thought we were doing when, standing just on the brink of
tyranny, we threw ourselves and our energy into a political campaign,
thinking it could make a difference. These men will understand the
failings of democracy, and will wonder what difference we thought
a political campaign could make. They will understand, with a wisdom
born of distance, that the campaigning matters not when one party
controls the counting of the votes. Perhaps they will even know
the name Diebold, most likely as an expression of scorn, a name
directed at those who behave in an unfair, aggressive way. But this
in no way means that we are wrong to throw ourselves and our hopes
into the Ron Paul campaign – we must act in a way that makes sense
to us, with our worldview, our understanding, not some hypothetical
future understanding which has yet to dawn on us.
More importantly,
however much they may ridicule us for this campaign, they will also
be indebted to us for it in ways they likely will not imagine. The
campaign is the largest movement for liberty in modern United States
history – and, as I predicted 2 years ago, it came from the revitalized
Austrian economics movement. It is injecting new life into that
movement, and spreading it further and wider than it has been spread
before. The mainstream is fighting hard, but is unable to completely
stop the discussions from arising – people everywhere are now talking
about the Federal Reserve, gold, and the free market. Regardless
of what happens politically, this is guaranteed to increase the
size of the remnant as we head into the coming dark age. Not only
that, but it is consolidating the remnant. Spread far and wide,
out of contact with one another, the disenfranchised the world over
are coming together, pulled in by the magnet of the Ron Paul campaign.
Austrians, run-of-the-mill libertarians, and the punk teenager with
a nameless anger and distrust of "the man" are all united
in the Ron Paul campaign. College students are waking up to the
missing ingredient in their view of the world – to the fact that
corporations do not carry guns, but governments do, and the evil
done by corporations is done by first gaining the ear of government.
You see, the middle-class family scared and angry at the loss of
their savings through inflation, the loss of their son in Iraq,
and the loss of their jobs through overregulation – this is part
of the remnant too, but they never would have guessed that they
were until now. This family is not well read in the literature of
freedom, doesn’t know a von Mises from a hole in the wall, and never
would dream that they have anything in common with an anarchist
philosopher – but they support Ron Paul, the politician who seems
to have appeared out of nowhere and burst onto the national scene
just to speak for them, to voice their concerns, to say what no
politician has said before. So, if he’s part of the remnant, that’s
good enough for them – if his books quote Mises, by golly, there
might be something there.
So, widely
disparate worldviews, sharing only a distrust of centralized power,
are being drawn together, being shown that they really aren’t all
that different because they agree on the primary, most central issue
for any political theory – just who will get to shoot whom, and
why?
To the men
who live in a time far from now, who breathe free and think what
thoughts they please, who control their minds and remain free in
their minds, we say, we are sorry. We are sorry for what you have
had to endure to reclaim what we lost. We, the last people before
you to know freedom, can never apologize enough to you for what
we have done. We allowed them to build around us a network of social
control, each beam built under cover of a different excuse. This
beam only attacks junkies, who are worthless, this beam protects
you from poverty, this beam from terrorism – but we should have
seen through it, we should have known better. What did we think
would happen when corporations promised more in defined benefit
pensions than they could hope to collect from the future economy?
Did we not think the response would be the growth of an industry
designed to sicken us, to lower our lifespan? When corporations
moved into defense, what did we expect? We should have stopped it,
but we didn’t. We made you work hard to regain what should have
been your birthright. We, your great-great-great grandparents, let
you down. We embraced our momentary desires, and sold your world
for our short-term pleasure. How can we ever repay you for what
we have done? You know better than we do what horrific sacrifices
have been made, how the generations between have suffered, how hard
you worked to restore freedom to this land. You know of the friends
you lost, friends we caused you to lose before their time. The debt
we owe to you cannot be repaid.
To you, we
leave all that we have of value – the memory of freedom, the work
done by those who came before us, who were better than us. We could
not hold onto the most precious gift the world bestows on those
who are worthy of it, but we did manage to hold onto the memory
of how to regain it. Read it, cherish it as we should have. Read
the books that we will pass onto you, listen to the ideas that we
will explain to our children, and that will then make their ways
to you. We have placed upon you the burden to reclaim liberty, but
also the roadmap, the directions on how to do so, and the instructions
on what to do next, what a free society will look like, and how
to rebuild an economy. You will concentrate on the task that history
has assigned to you, since you will not be charged to build the
study of economics from the first brick, nor will you need to rediscover
the principles of epistemology, of metaphysics, or of economic methodology
– these all will be passed onto you as developed bodies of knowledge,
to which you will need only add a gloss. For all that we did wrong,
we at least knew enough to keep those ideas through whatever may
have befallen us, and to get them into your strong hands. Be better
than us, be stronger than us, be vigilant in the ways we were not.
We failed you – do not fail your children and descendants in the
same way. We passed onto you a world that was worse than the one
we received – pass to your children a world that is far better than
the one you were given. We ask you, humbly, to redeem our error,
and perhaps, to forgive us.
November
12, 2007
Joshua
Katz, NREMT-P [send him mail],
is the newest member of the mathematics faculty at the Oxford Academy,
Westbrook, Connecticut. He has studied philosophy of mind, logic,
and epistemology of economics from an Austrian perspective, and
is a former graduate student in philosophy at Texas A&M, as well
as holding a bachelor's degree in mathematics. He still holds the
title of Chief of EMS for the Town of Hempstead Department of Parks
and Recreation, and will return to full-time service there in the
summer. He enjoys a glass of port and a wedge of Brie, but has discontinued
this practice on a regular basis, due to the sugar content of the
port.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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