Restoring
the Republic with Truth and Fearlessness
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
Note: I
recently attended the latest Future
of Freedom Foundation’s conference, examining the theme
of restoring
the republic. I got a chance to speak, and if you’d like
to watch and listen to any of the 24 speeches, you can order them
directly from the FFF, in DVD or CD. Robert Scheer’s speech about
how Ike was right (find more by Bob Scheer at his award winning
site Truthdig)
and my speech were both covered by C-SPAN. These talks have been
broadcast on C-SPAN 3, and if you’d like to see it again, call
or email C-SPAN!
It is a great
honor to be here, to be invited to say a few words, and to be in
the company of what is really, fundamentally the vanguard of American
freedom. If we indeed restore the Republic – in one form or another
here in the United States – it will be directly due to the people
sitting here today.
For Jacob Hornberger
to have gotten everyone in the same room – to talk seriously about
this topic – this close to Washington, DC – is remarkably visionary.
Considering the very real threat the people in this conference pose
to the political and economic status quo, it is also very courageous.
Two questions
have to be asked, and answered, before I can share the "how,"
in my view, we are restoring the republic. And in spite of what
I am about to say in the next few minutes, I usually believe in
happy endings, so hold that thought, if you will.
First we must
ask, what is, or was, the American republic?
Secondly, assuming
we can define the American republic, can it really be restored?
The outline
and definition of the American republic were put forth in clear
terms by the Articles of Confederation. In 1777, this document created
a limited and circumscribed government for the United States. The
states themselves would be independent, peaceful, and would not
conduct their own foreign policy, including the making of war. The
eighth article of confederation called for the states to voluntarily
fund the federal government, for the common defense and general
welfare, and to pay recently incurred war debts. The means for assessing
the "tax" reminds me a bit of Marx’s old ideal, "From
each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs."
But it was also fair. It is the way that churches, synagogues and
mosques informally communicate to their congregations what should
be offered for the common good. This voluntary method encourages
individual generosity, as well as thrift and accountability in the
recipient.
I’m not a constitutional
scholar. I’m not a historian. But it seems to me that the agreement
put forth in the Articles of Confederation established a classical
and workable Republic. That is, a "mixed
constitutional government which embodies civic duty, virtue, social
cohesion and where there is a high devotion, fidelity and regard
for the rule of law." One thing comes through for all types
of republican forms of government. This is the idea of partnership
– consenting, agreeable, aware and free partnerships, between large
and small states, between those people and states with very different
talents, skills, resources – but joined together for peacefulness
and profitability. The Articles put forth such a partnership, with
a presiding administrative president.
This worked
well for the vast majority of Americans, who were extremely busy
at the time. They were working hard, building farms, homes, families
and industry, and learning how to be free. They were learning how
not to be European peasants and serfs and, yes, how not to be nobles.
But some Americans existed who, like modern neoconservatives, had
a bit too much time on their hands, perhaps too much theoretical
education and not enough humility. These Americans were beholden
to grander, nobler ideas of government. They only needed a bit more
governmental power to see their ideas implemented.
These were
the Federalists. We can view the federalists as reactionaries, "those
who seek to restore conditions to those of a previous era."
They wanted the late 18th-century America to marshal
her vast resources and potential under the guidance of a much stronger
central state. These reactionaries, in many ways, wanted America
to emulate the busy central decision-making bodies that ran the
empires of Europe.
In this round,
the federalists won. The Articles were abandoned, and we got a Constitution.
The anti-federalists barely saved the republic with a slim and ultimately
weak set of restraints on central government power.
We called it
a republic. But like the transmogrified central state to which we
all would later pledge allegiance, it did not exist for free enterprise,
human partnerships, and individual liberty.
Most Americans
are taught that the Articles of Confederation failed, specifically
on issues of federal revenue shortfalls, currency controls, and
interstate trade. Our ancestors were told that a strong federal
government would solve all these problems. Who would question this
today?
Well, let’s
see: The federal revenue demands are fully and righteously met each
year, with excess monies
bountifully returned to the people. We certainly have no domestic
or international concerns with our currency, a lovely paper dollar
that – to paraphrase Humpty Dumpty in Lewis Carroll’s 1871 Through
the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There – is worth
exactly what the U.S. government bureaucrats say it is worth.
And lastly,
interstate trade is so much better off as a result of a strong federal
government. Everyone knows that, right? Well, the Cato Institute
did a study
back in 1987, examining the pervasive administrative restrictions
regulating all aspects of commodities and services exchanged between
American states. These administrative barriers are considered rent-seeking,
and these behaviors have steadily proliferated over the past 200
years. Furthermore, adjudicating interstate trade restrictions has
been the primary focus of the Supreme Court throughout its existence.
This internal trade protectionism costs a lot of money, matching
dollar for dollar the cost of trade protectionism at the national
level. The authors of Cato’s 1987 study concluded that these costs
are exactly what the Commerce Clause of the Constitution was designed
to prevent. Twenty years ago, Cato called for this aspect of the
Constitution to be repaired.
Naturally,
it was not. Today, with the rise of the internet as a new marketplace,
states are even more interested in manipulating and restricting
interstate trade, not less.
To answer the
first question, we did have a radically fresh republic under the
Articles. But with the constitution, we received a new roadmap,
one that in the mind of Jefferson and others, would not stand beyond
a generation or so. With the discard of the Articles, and the independent
libertarian thinking that was their underpinning, this country would
be placed on a path to a place noted for its lack of civic duty,
virtue, and social cohesion. A place where politicians balance their
cravenness with arrogance, and are wholly contemptuous of the rule
of law. In other words, it would bring us to Washington, D.C. today.
The second
question is about the possibility of restoring the American republic.
Just as the federalists argued in the 1780’s, many today argue that
it would be impossible – and inadvisable – to recreate or rejuvenate
a Confederation form of government – that original style of American
self-government. But would it really be folly to have a country
of our size and wealth to embody real freedom? Would it really be
folly to establish a strictly legitimate and strictly limited federal
state? Would it really be folly to restore the style of justice
that existed before the establishment of a Supreme Court?
It is possible
that a loose confederacy of variously governed states may actually
be the best match for the 21st century – with our instantaneous
global communications, our extensive and productive communities
enhanced and supplemented by extensive and rich virtual networks.
Even as libertarians and others rightfully rue the leviathan, we
live in a world where – in real terms – we are today better equipped
and more capable of decentralized self-government than at any previous
time in human history.
Today, in the
United States, unlimited information is instantly available to old
and young, to the formally educated and the illiterate, to the fact
finder and the politician, the entrepreneur, the scientist, the
worker, and the business mogul. This wonderful 21st century
may be exactly what the anti-federalists envisioned.
I am often
reminded of the famous quote from the 1992 movie remake of the Last
of the Mohicans. A Loyalist commander asks, "And who
empowered these colonials to pass judgment on England's policies,
and to come and go without so much as a "by your leave"? Cora Munro
answers, "They do not live their lives 'by your leave'! They
hack it out of the wilderness with their own two hands, bearing
their children along the way!"
Mostly due
to modern technologies, we have today outstanding decentralization,
mobility, unleashed human creativity, and if we need it, anonymity.
We have the wilderness. We have, or can get, what we need to live
our lives, and control our destinies. We can "hack" out
our own lives. We may be taught to live our lives at the direction,
and by the permission, of government, but in fact, we don’t have
to.
The business
world has streamlined. Businesses have energetically embraced continuous
learning, instant information, and constant competition. They have
decentralized, as they have focused simultaneously on both the individual
worker and individual customer. But our government presumes no competition,
ignores or denies the availability of instant and rich information,
and the truth behind it. Our government resists continuous learning,
and resents such learning by its subjects. The American government,
for all it reinvention and customer service mantras, remains antiquated,
slow, third rate in everything it does. This is true even where
it spends most of its time and resources. Iraq and Afghanistan stand
as bloody testaments to this abject mediocrity. In contrast to the
world of business and invention, the U.S. government is becoming
more intensely stupid, more remarkably incompetent, and more of
a problem for all that suffer it.
So then, is
it possible to restore the republic, to go back to a former model
or perhaps create a new model of an American republic? Yes, it is.
Governments are made of people, and people ultimately shape, or
abandon, their governments.
I don’t know
what form a restored republic would take. How small could Washington,
D.C. get, and what would it take to shrink it down? When the small
government republicans to whom Reagan gave voice and imagination
(although little else) got to Congress, they found that instead
of shrinking government, all they could do is make it even more
massive. We now recognize that’s all they truly wanted to do. Bob
Higgs has written extensively on the process by which this occurs.
The nature of the state is to grow, to cultivate events and activities
that ensure its continued growth, and to grow even more, even as
it strangles and starves its erstwhile host.
And yet, as
Lew Rockwell has written
most eloquently, the miracle of freedom is that even as our
own government has grown beyond all expectations, the level of free
enterprise and productivity, the inventiveness and exuberance of
mankind has outpaced that government growth by leaps and bounds.
Thus, I believe
America was once a republic, can be again, albeit in various forms.
How might we get there? First of all, I don’t exactly know. But
here are several ways to consider.
One way would
be to do as the federalists did 230 years ago. They believed that
the confederation had failed. They convened, ostensibly to restore
the confederation, and make it better. Then, by dark of night, these
leaders threw away the Articles and started fresh, with a new document,
a more executive presidency, a different Congress and the Supreme
Court. Absent the mild restraint offered by the first ten amendments,
these leaders had created a nascent European kingdom, complete with
an adoring court and agreeable jesters.
I think it
is clearer and clearer each decade, and each day, that the Constitution
has failed to give us a republic. Or as Ben Franklin suggested,
maybe it did, but we failed to keep it. Certainly, the constitution
as a document has failed to deliver government that "embodies
civic duty, virtue, social cohesion and where there is a high devotion,
fidelity and regard for the rule of law."
The idea of
an organized revolutionary change, formulated through meetings of
wealthy, powerful men – a new constitutional convention perhaps
– may at first glance, seem somewhat absurd. Yet, when you think
about it – this is exactly how our government operates every day
of the week, in every administration. We speak of a neoconservative
hijack. We bemoan the long-term directions for our national and
international policies put forth by the "establishment."
In fact – from the beginning, the making of national policy has
been done – and is always done – through secretive conventions of
wealthy, elitist, and well-placed men.
This is also
how our nation decides to go to war, as George Tenet’s new memoirs
and his recent interviews confirm. A decision to invade and occupy
Iraq was made, in secret and unaccountably, by powerful people who
are themselves unaccountable to either government agencies, the
law, the facts, or the people of the United States. And as George
W. Bush himself noted a few years ago, "Maybe somebody needs
to explain to me why they say something, but I don't feel like I
owe anybody an explanation." Miraculously, George captured
the failure of the Republic in one easy-to-understand sentence.
Could a new
kind of constitutional convention, for a new republic, be organized
by freedom lovers, or classical liberals, or libertarians? Just
as the federalists locked the doors and changed the agenda, so might
we. Ah, to have the power to do just that – and to save the world.
But we don’t
have that power, nor should we want it. As Lord Acton observed,
that kind of centralized power is never what it seems.
Another way
to restore the republic is more painful and more cruel, and not
just to government bureaucrats and the subsidy-dependent population.
This way requires nothing more of us than to simply stand aside
and watch as the American experiment collapses. To do nothing as
republic turns to democracy and then to tyranny. If we survive that
last horrific phase with sanity and health intact, we can promote
ideas and republican forms of self-government for whatever remains.
We could find ourselves in a New Athens, meeting with our neighbors
to decide everything. Or we could find ourselves on a New Crete,
obeying natural law and honoring moderation in all things, or perhaps
in a militaristic oligarchy called New Sparta. Or we could find
ourselves slaves and helots, without a hope in the world.
A front-page
headline a few weeks ago read, "Americans feeling low."
Burdened by an inability to live as we desire, to produce and to
benefit from that production as we want, and beaten down by taxes,
regulation, and inflation, many Americans already feel like slaves
and helots in a tyranny beyond their control.
But I think
we are not helots and slaves, not yet. And that American government
that seems so overwhelming and tyrannical, so powerful, is actually
as weak here at home as it is in Iraq and Afghanistan. There is
another way we can restore the republic. We don’t have to wait.
We don’t have to organize or enter into an armed revolution, and
we don’t even have to formally design a plan of attack. It won’t
be easy, but on the other hand, it won’t be difficult! We are doing
it now.
I want to share
something that jumped out at me, again from a recent newspaper article.
An 86-year-old Belgian schoolteacher was recognized by Israel for
saving 300 children from the Nazis. In 1942, Andree Geulen-Herscovici,
witnessed a Gestapo raid on the school. She then joined an underground
rescue organization, and for more than two years, she quietly worked
with other likeminded people to save these Jewish children from
an evil state that would have seen their lives destroyed.
During the
ceremony, she said, "What I did was merely my duty. Disobeying
the laws of the time was just the normal thing to do."
This would
be the first step in restoring a republic – which is after all,
simply government by the people – and we are those people. Our government’s
authority is fundamentally constrained by us. By how we choose to
submit to its orders, by how completely we embrace its narrative,
by how easily we are convinced of its often-perverted logic.
America has
a long and vibrant history of ignoring government mandates in favor
of justice and harmony and righteousness. I think this is due, in
part, to our Christian heritage where one humbly renders under Caesar
his, but unto God, Hers.
I was just
checking to see if you were still listening!
Seriously,
the idea that men (and women) can choose their path, and that goodness
and mercy are not owned or even understood by the state, are powerful
foundations of republicanism.
The American
immigration debate provides a way to think about the current generation
of Andree Herscovicis. In some border states, churches are creating
a kind of underground railroad for mothers and fathers about to
be separated from their U.S. born children due to our government’s
interest in being seen as tough on illegal immigration. At the same
time and in the same places, we have the Minutemen, who voluntarily
patrol private and public property along the southern border, raising
awareness of laws that the US government has made, but for whatever
reason, refuses to enforce.
The Minutemen
and the safe haven churches disagree on each other’s mission. But
because they represent people acting without government mandate,
they are held in equally high contempt by the US government.
What does this
have to do with a restored Republic? Here we have simple, principled
people, who recognize their government is wrong or unwise on this
issue or that. Then simply, often secretly, they take positive action
to do the right thing. Usually, they don’t act alone, and they don’t
have to. That’s the funny thing about righteous ideas – they have
a vibrancy and shine we don’t find in government legislation or
leadership.
We all can’t
run underground railroads or guard the borders in such a direct
and immediate way. But more of us can speak out – and I don’t mean
in front of large groups or at rallies, not that there is anything
wrong with that. We can speak out in ways that matter in our own
lives and livelihoods. When we have extremely bad federal policy,
we see people in every generation doing just that.
The Pentagon
Papers were released in early 1971 by Daniel Ellsburg (incidentally,
with the help of his friend Tony Russo). These 7,000 pages of incriminating
government information, given to a media willing, at that time,
to do its job, were instrumental in eventually ending the American
part of the carnage in Vietnam. Ellsberg’s life was made a living
hell, his professional reputation ruined, and he and Tony were charged
with espionage, theft, and conspiracy.
Think about
the more current example of the Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo whistleblowers.
Because of their courage, the whole country knows what we did and
are still doing in our international prison camps to innocent and
uncharged people. Former Army Staff Sergeant Samuel Provance was
instrumental in exposing the torture that was going on in Abu Ghraib.
As a result of his efforts,
he writes,
The Army
then demoted me, suspended my Top Secret clearance, and threatened
me with ten years in a military prison if I asked for a court
martial. I was even given a gag order.
Former General
Janis Karpinski experienced much the same treatment. So did Army
Reserve Specialist Joe Darby and Marine Staff Sergeant Jim Massey.
Telling the truth about government abuses and illegalities saves
lives, but it can be a real career-killer.
Think about
Navy Lt. Commander Matthew Diaz, a modern echo of Daniel Ellsberg.
His truth-telling was on a topic, that three years into the Iraq
war and the so-called war on terror, the media was finally ready
to use. Commander Diaz, a lawyer posted for six months in Guantanamo,
Cuba, spent a few minutes at his government computer on a Sunday
night in January 2005. He printed off a list of 550 detainees, including
their nationalities, and other information. He sent this information
in the mail to an organization that was, at the time, unsuccessfully
suing the federal government for this information. For releasing
the names of uncharged and unrepresented detainees held by United
States government at Gitmo, Diaz was charged with failing to obey
a lawful regulation, conduct unbecoming an officer, and wrongfully
transmitting classified information. His
courts-martial began a few weeks ago and needless to say, his
career as a military lawyer is over.
In government
service, telling the truth is a rare luxury. It is never the norm.
There is always a price paid by the honorable people who follow
their conscience and upbringing. Most government employees follow
a "Don’t ask, don’t tell" policy. For every concern about
dishonesty and unconstitutional behavior I had in my final tour
in the Office of the Secretary of Defense in 2002 and 2003, I heard
men and women of insightfulness and patriotism voice twice as many
complaints. So where are all these people?
They are preserving
their careers. And this is done for many reasons, but mainly because
they choose to put their lives above the lives of people they don’t
know and will never meet. And such self-interest is not only understandable,
it is fundamental to freedom.
But when this
self-interest is exercised within the fraudulent economy of government
employees and beneficiaries, it becomes the key to tyranny.
Here’s how
it works. George Tenet has recently told us all in effect that "I
would have liked to prevent the slaughter of innocent people, ours
and theirs. But no one would listen to me anyway, so what would
be the point?" Another rube of tyranny is Congressman Dick
Durbin
recently came clean about 2002 and 2003:
"The
information we had in the intelligence committee was not the
same information being given to the American people. I couldn’t
believe it…" "I was angry about it. [But] frankly,
I couldn’t do much about it because, in the intelligence committee,
we are sworn to secrecy. We can’t walk outside the door and
say the statement made yesterday by the White House is in direct
contradiction to classified information that is being given
to this Congress."
Well, at least
he was "angry" about it.
George Tenet
and Dick Durbin are typical of literally thousands of people in
all parts of the Pentagon, and in the State Department, in the Department
of Energy, in the mainstream media, and in the rest of the US Congress
and its extensive staff. Few if any stood up with information, in
time, that could have saved lives and prevent a major war and the
destruction of a country.
The sad thing
is – all of these "Don’t ask, don’t tell" folks actually
thought the only country being destroyed by their inaction was Iraq.
Was it a law
or regulation that reined them in? Fear of retribution? No other
possible way of making a living? I think not. I’ve given it some
thought, and from my own experience, the only thing stopping folks
from speaking the truth – when it would do some good – is a cherished
personal belief that they have no right to do so. Like ancient Greek
slaves, they are not separate in race or creed, in form or intelligence
from their masters, or any other citizen. Then as now, the masters
encourage submission, and these employees willingly agree to be
enslaved.
In retrospect,
what possible harm would have been caused if Durbin or Tenet, or
Colin Powell had freely acted on the information they had? Think
about it! No harm at all, only good, and they would have had their
honor and their legacies intact.
If government
bureaucrats and political appointees were only robots obeying laws
1, 2 and 3 – we would not have had this illegal war in Iraq! These
laws, paraphrased…. First, do no harm through action or inaction,
obey orders only if they do no harm through action or inaction,
and protect oneself if possible, only if still obeying laws 1 and
2!
Perhaps a few
simple rules for individual behavior would be far more useful in
restoring the republic than grand governmental models, and long,
detailed constitutions that few understand or care about.
Beyond doing
the right thing, and speaking the truth early and often, with a
confident disregard for the immediate consequences, is there anything
else we can do to restore the republic, to contain or destroy the
leviathan?
I think there
is one more thing we can all do – and this is at once the most difficult
and yet, also the easiest. We must separate ourselves from this
non-republican government. If you cannot live your values and do
your government job at the same time, leave the job. If you wish
to pay fewer taxes, then find a way to pay fewer taxes, and keep
more of your own earnings. This may mean earning less rather than
more, living well rather than high on the hog. It means turning
away from government service, and from the seduction of so-called
government benefits of education, welfare, government lotteries
and even government booze and drugs. If you must interface with
government, do so as a master, not a slave, and encourage everyone
you know to do the same. When opportunities to parent come along
– when we see opportunities to provide guidance, wisdom, reflection
and assistance to others– we must guide and assist with the underlying
goal of restoring the republic.
The Census
Bureau will count us again in 2010. It is already complaining that
people live in strange household combinations, with many addresses,
or none, with many phone numbers or the 15% with only a cell phone
number. Even with its record-shattering budget for 2010, the Census
Bureau doubts they’ll know much more about the public part of the
Republic than they know now. As technology allows government to
be more intrusive, it also allows individuals to become ever more
nimble, anonymous, and flexible – at least if we are not willingly
cultivating our own slavery.
Not cultivating
our own slavery. It is possible, and we are increasingly seeing
evidence this phenomenon, even in Washington. George W. Bush, facing
a disastrously failed campaign of occupation in Iraq, asked for
a so-called War Czar. Many private phone calls were made, in hopes
of getting a volunteer front man for America’s micromanagement of
neocolonialism. Not a soul would sign up to serve the President.
A few weeks ago,
an active duty three-star general agreed to be tasked, meaning only
that he hasn’t quit yet.
Many of the
Bush Cheney national security team have become casualties of investigations,
criminal trials, personal scandals and less publicly, their loss
of faith in the king. We
hear that Cheney himself was recently overruled by a four-star
admiral on strategies for a hot war with Iran. Bureaucrats and cowards
like to say – if I quit, some other yes man will rise up to take
my place. This is true, up to a point. But the power of government
is inversely proportional to the number of people saying simply,
"No thanks." It is happening as we speak.
A quiet refusal
to take orders, a refusal to "serve" the government, is
not just for generals and admirals. In an age of expensive higher
education, ROTC scholarships are going unfilled. Recruiters work
overtime to bring in fewer and fewer young people. American mothers
and fathers – whether evangelical or agnostic, Republican or Democrat
– are telling their children to wait before signing up for the military
– to stop and think before throwing their life into the empty, soul-destroying
bloody gristmill of imperialism.
They may not
use these words, but the sentiments are the same. Like the sheep
Americans are often accused of being, they are beginning to sense
that their children are the targets of a hungry government wolf.
Do I have any
more substantial ideas for restoring the republic – beyond doing
the right thing, speaking out against tyranny, and living our lives
by no one’s leave, as free men? It is possible, that in doing these
things, we could be charged and imprisoned as are many of our military
truth-tellers. We could be vilified and maligned. In living our
lives as free men, we may risk temporary difficulties from our shaking,
tremulous, fearful government. But, if we live free, we will have
a republic – even if it may seem to be, at times, a republic of
one.
A revolution
or a collapse, some cosmic act that rips Washington, DC from its
moorings and sends it swirling off into the Atlantic – each of these
would be exciting, no doubt. But to passively wait a month, a year,
or a lifetime for what may happen in the larger human organization
is not a productive way to live.
We are already
restoring the Republic – if we live, work and play as if we have
one. We restore the republic by living free.
Those here
today are already doing this – our example, our existence in many
ways, restores the Republic, every minute of every day. Earlier
I mentioned the Lewis Carroll story Through the Looking Glass,
referring to words that mean whatever we say they mean. In this
context, Humpty Dumpty goes on. The question, he says, "is
which is to be master that's all."
Let us be outraged
when our republican freedoms are infringed upon. Let us be righteously
angry when some government entity presumes that we are the slave
in the relationship. Let us be that nobility to whom the king genuflects,
and of whom he is afraid. If we live free – even as we hack that
life out of a political wilderness – we will restore the republic,
and usher in the next big thing – a peaceful, honorable, and enviable
Republic that we will be proud to call home.
June
6, 2007
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
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Copyright ©
2007 Karen Kwiatkowski
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