New
Prospects for Liberty
by
Ryan McMaken
Pundits
and journalists like the melodramatic. They never miss an opportunity
to point out the "loss of innocence" that some new atrocity
has brought on America. There are two kinds of lost innocence, though.
There is the kind that elevates government, and there is the kind
that lays bare the incompetence and the capriciousness of the state.
According
to the government-loving elites, events like Pearl Harbor are laudable
because they allegedly make Americans aware of the crucial need
for government. For example, I was recently at a conference where
I heard a gang of college professors say (with a distinct air of
self-satisfaction) that the events of September 11th
have shown government-hating Americans the need for government after-all.
Naturally, these kinds of people are the same people who bemoan
the legacy of "loss of innocence" events like Watergate
because they make the corruption of the federal government obvious
for everyone to see.
The
big question that we still have regarding the events of September
11th is whether or not those events will be a "loss
of innocence" of the Pearl Harbor variety or of the Watergate
variety. I had little hope for the latter kind at first, but for
various reasons, the prospects seem to be improving.
First,
this war is not
going well. Bush started off by vowing not to send cruise missiles
to hit camels in the "butt", but after weeks of bombing,
the American military appears to have done just that. It has
managed to kill enough civilians to upset our extremely shaky alliances
in Asia, though. Not a good start.
Second,
only the greatest ignorance (or wishful thinking) on the part of
Americans can convince us that Airline safety has improved or that
the INS has done anything that amounts to more than a drop in the
bucket as far as keeping track of foreign nationals inside the United
States. My mother who is a flight attendant, relies on sheer luck
that she won’t end up on a hijacked plane. It is abundantly clear
to all who know the business that the current "precautions"
being taken by the FAA are totally for show. I am quite sure, however,
that all law-abiding people have been made as defenseless as humanly
possible.
Third,
the American empire has been exposed as inadequate to protect the
lives of Americans. With soldiers in a hundred-plus nations, and
fancy-shmancy smart bombs flying around willy-nilly, the government
can’t seem to keep moderately intelligent third-world nationals
from flying jumbo jets into skyscrapers.
It
is hoped by the court intellectuals that these events will somehow
translate into a revival of love and respect for the federal government.
I have no doubt that for a while, the revival of nationalism will
endure. Things will look fairly peachy until Saudi Arabia kicks
us off the peninsulas (as they are currently debating) and hostilities
break out between Pakistan and India (as the Indians are currently
debating) and more Americans civilians are killed in some terrorist
plot which I won’t even pretend to anticipate. We’ll also send in
American ground troops to capture a bunch of strategically unimportant
towns in Afghanistan. (News Flash: This isn’t the 17th
century. Capturing a capital city doesn’t end wars anymore.) Then
what? Nothing except more terrorism.
Ironically,
the National Review crowd appears to be unwittingly accelerating
the delegitimization of government. They have encouraged everything
from a newly invigorated colonialism to unilateral "screw-the-international-community"
style retaliation. Colin Powell has made valiant efforts to keep
the entire world from reviling the United States government,
but his efforts may come up short.
If
the plans of the war party and their neo-conservative allies are
to declare war on all the world, they will have to do so against
the will of the American people. Americans have made it clear that
all they want is for the terrorism to stop. They don’t want to remake
the world in America’s image. If the war on terrorism continues
in its current vein, Americans will find themselves sorely disappointed
as well as grief stricken for more Americans who are sure to die
on and off the battlefield. In times like this, one might wonder
how the British felt when their global empire failed to keep the
Nazis from lobbing V-2 missiles into London on a daily basis. The
question must inevitably be: what good is empire?
And
certainly, this must be the question that Americans will eventually
ask themselves. What good is our massive military spread thin across
five continents? What good is the starvation of Iraqi children?
It didn’t help us on September 11th. It doesn’t assure
me that my mother’s next flight out of Newark won’t be a non-stop
flight to the Empire State Building.
Murray
Rothbard wrote that the proper disposition for the libertarian is
one of short-term pessimism and long-term optimism. He also noted
that timing is an ever important factor in a successful libertarian
movement. While short-term pessimism may or may not be in order,
it is certainly important that all Americans who genuinely love
liberty will not resign themselves to failure, but will speak the
truth. The innocence lost on September 11th can be one
that affirms government or one that exposes its corruption. If we
allow it to further prop up the state, only more madness can result.
If
the modern philosophy of American worldwide moralism and intervention
fails, American civilization must have a philosophy to replace it.
Supporters of peace and freedom must have the optimism and the timing
to supply such a new philosophy: the philosophy of liberty.
October
19, 2001
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is a public relations man in Denver, Colorado. You can visit his
Rocky Mountain news site at WesternMercury.com.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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