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America’s
Default Mode
by Ryan McMaken
by Ryan McMaken
It’s
been known for thousands of years that the lust of the mob moves
faster than justice and reason ever will, but for what its worth,
at least some sanity peeks in here and there. Last week, top members
of the House let the CIA know that they have been making decisions
with "significant deficiencies" in intelligence and "insufficient
specific information" about Saddam’s alleged weapons of mass
destruction.
This
is hardly shocking news given what the international intelligence
community has known for a very long time, but now that even the
White House is even admitting that Saddam had nothing to do with
the terrorism of September 11th (and forget about WMD’s),
the Congress has apparently decided that it should probably say
something about it. Of course, many Americans still support
the decision to invade Iraq, possibly because Saddam was a brutal
despot. Fortunately for the numerous far more brutal despots
around the world, however, most Americans don’t know they exist.
Zimbab-what?
What
Americans do know is that when it comes to foreign policy
they should just do as they’re told and not try to ask unsettling
questions. We’ve all been taught quite well by years of Cold War
and public schooling that when it comes to National Defense, whoever’s
in charge has everything under control. All that Constitution and
republican government stuff just gets in the way. Deliberation and
debate are fine for things like welfare benefits and city politics,
but when it comes to declaring war, Americans had best leave it
up to the professionals.
For
the partisans of limitless international meddling and limitless
spending of taxpayer dollars, this is all well and good, but for
ordinary Americans, it is a truly disastrous state of mind. Alarmingly,
many Americans now operate under the assumption that unless otherwise
proven, the federal government can be assumed to be acting in the
best interests of Americans. In other words, the burden of proof
is now on the people of the United States to prove that the government
is not justified in its actions, instead of the other way
around. Apparently, having the feds justify their hundred billion
dollar pet projects to the people who pay the bills is just too
much to ask.
This
is much like the IRS functions. Once they decide that you owe them
some money, you’d better have plenty of cash just burning a hole
in your pocket, since by the time you prove that you don’t actually
owe the government your life savings, most of it will probably be
gone in legal fees anyway. Since we’re apparently so blithe about
having gov’t bureaucrats go through our personal lives and finances
with a fine toothed comb, the federal government probably figures
that we wouldn’t be any different about sending our sons and daughters
to get shot in far away lands and pay through the nose to do it.
And they would be right.
That
this attitude is completely contradictory to virtually every principle
of republican government as imagined by Americans of the 18th
and 19th centuries, should be quite obvious. Americans
who value liberty do not surrender it at the first sight of a charming
president, or a classified document, or even an armed foreign enemy.
In 1813, the great Southern conservative John Randolph of Roanoke
knew as much:
"The
people of this country, if ever they lose their liberties, will
do it by sacrificing some great principle of government to temporary
passion. There are certain great principles, which if they are
not held inviolable, at all seasons, our liberty is gone. If we
give them up, it is perfectly immaterial what is the character
of our sovereign; whether he be King or President, elective or
hereditary – it is perfectly immaterial what is his character
– we shall be slaves – it is not an elective government which
will preserve us."
Randolph
voiced these opinions during the War of 1812, a war begun after
the British had caved to American demands, but went on anyway as
delusions of imperial greatness (i.e., the conquest of Canada) drove
democratic demagogues like Henry Clay to clamor for war. In that
war, as with every American war since, American liberties were diminished
in the name of military security, taxes were raised, the currency
was devalued, and the Constitution was ignored.
Whether
in wartime or not, though, Randolph’s words are prescient, for they
illustrate that there is no defense for freedom other than vigilance
against the State. Randolph figured that this vigilance would go
right out the window as soon as some "man of the people"
came along who could convince the mob to trust him – to sacrifice
great principles to temporary passion. And of course, this is exactly
what has happened.
As
Randolph knew, it is "immaterial what is the Character of our
sovereign." Today, many Americans – even the really decent
ones prefer to just give the President a pass because he’s
supposedly a good man. This may or may not be true, but as Randolph
knew, if the people use the supposedly good character of a President
to convince themselves that the government is looking out for them,
a loss of liberty will not be far behind. Others console themselves
with the thought that no true danger to liberty can come out of
an elected government. We have elections. We have a Constitution.
Randolph knew that elections and "good men" are no protection against
the State. For only a deep suspicion of the State and of its plans
and the willingness to act on those suspicions could
save Randolph’s "great principles" of self-government, liberty,
and the rule of law."
Of
course, what those with power prefer in Americans is not a suspicion
of the government, but of the people themselves. We are told that
those who question the motives of the government are impugning the
character of the president, or aiding the terrorists, or hating
Jews, or any other litany of sins that must accompany anyone so
mad as to not simply assume that government never acts in its own
interests. In the age of democracy, we are told to trust not in
ourselves and in our ability for self-government, but in the State,
in its agents, and in its power.
The
schoolmarms tell us: Those Americans of the Republic from Jefferson
to Madison
to Randolph all feared government, but they had seen the tyranny
of a King. We have a democratically elected president, and we all
know that people who are democratically elected wish no power for
themselves. They are here to serve you.
Such
is the insidious propaganda given to our children who grow up to
believe that it is treason to question why American soldiers are
sent to kill and to die in the name of toppling a dictator who was
no threat to the United States. Such is the mindset that guides
Americans who believe that to defend the Bill of Rights is to be
a friend to terrorists. Yet, amazingly, we Americans manage to convince
ourselves that something out there is preserving liberty while we
cower in the multiplexes and strip malls distracting ourselves from
the true work at hand.
But
we are in denial. No law can make a man free who has resigned himself
to slavery. When we trust in "great men" and parchment
documents and exhortations to "trust us, we’re from the government"
we betray everything that American liberties are founded on. But
surely we are told there is no treason in that.
October
8, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is a regular columnist for LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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