|
Four
More Years
by Ryan McMaken
by Ryan McMaken
As
the presidential election draws near, Bush’s challengers will begin
to ask the American people the now politically essential question:
"Are you better off today than you were four years ago?"
Of course, that question is always only applied to economic matters
since the idea of being "better off" as something akin
to being "more free" was banished from the mind of average
Americans a very long time ago, but if we were to imagine a hypothetical
world where most Americans were actually worried about freedoms
other than the freedom to produce porn films and carve statues of
excrement with taxpayer money, would we conclude that we are better
off than four years ago?
The
answer is no, of course, and if anything, the endless assault on
American liberties has accelerated in recent years, and all with
the blessing of the same Americans who decried the utter contempt
with which the Clinton White House held the Bill of Rights. To claim
that the Bush White House has any less contempt for the same liberties
that Clinton trampled on so thoroughly would be laughable at best,
and would probably be engaging in the kind of doublespeak that leftists
long used to defend Clinton. For instance, giving the current president
a pass on his super-sized government meddling programs just because
he professes to be from "the heartland" or a "good
Christian" or for "the American way" is no different
than excusing Clinton from the fact that he treats women like garbage
simply because he claims to like feminists. We should judge the
tree by its fruit, and the fruit of the Bush administration has
been more of the same government-run-amok that flowered under the
Clinton administration.
Prior
to the 2000 presidential election, in a column entitled "Dreading
Republican Rule," Lew Rockwell mused that the Republicans
would probably manage to spend more money, extinguish more American
liberties, and kill more foreigners than Clinton had managed to
do in his time of merry misrule. And we most certainly have not
been disappointed. Did anyone seriously think that the Bush administration
would actually repeal any of the police-state laws that Clinton
so fearlessly built up? None of the Clinton Administration’s assaults
on financial privacy like the incessant federal strong-arming of
banks to spy on their customers for the Feds have been undone, and
indeed have only been strengthened. Nor has there been any ire expressed
for Clinton’s "Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement
Act" which did no less than produce a 1,000-fold increase in
federal wire-tapping capability. At the time, this was denounced
by every Republican willing to bear the label "conservative"
as a costly and insidious plan, but now that a Republican is in
the White House, it apparently doesn’t look like such a bad idea
after all.
The
"War on Terrorism" certainly provided a ready excuse for
Republican caving on matters of American privacy and freedom. As
James Bovard points out in his recent book, Terrorism
and Tyranny though, the Feds don’t know what to do with
the endless amounts of spy data they already collect. On the day
of the terrorist attacks of 2001, The FBI already possessed considerable
information on the terrorists and the plans used to carry out the
attacks. Yet the information was useless since it was in a warehouse
with spy data on thousands of other Americans, resident aliens,
and terrorist groups. Oops. Clearly the American thing to
do is have the FBI collect more information and then trust
that someone will receive divine inspiration regarding which box
to look in before the next terrorist attack.
Clinton’s
rationale for trampling liberty was always some touchy-feely leftish
rationale like protecting people from evil corporations or stamping
out racism, but the fact that now, the latest assault on American
society is being waged under the guise of being "conservative" or
"right-wing" is immaterial. Its outcome and its ultimate motivations
are indistinguishable from its "liberal" or "left-wing" versions.
The ultimate outcome is always more power for government, and new
and inventive ways to abuse that power.
The
reasons for rationalizing the power grab may vary. The forces of
terrorism or racism or religious extremism, or any other bogeyman
you can come up with are always available as convenient scare tactics.
During the 1990’s, the enemy was right-wing militias, the religious
right, and the crime "crisis," all of which were promoted
with ceaseless vigor by both Republican and Democrat administrations
alike. George Bush père could barely contain his contempt
for Christian conservatives (indistinguishable in his mind from
people like Timothy McVeigh), and while having cynically joined
the NRA only several years earlier, renounced his membership after
certain gun-owning Americans dared question the violent tactics
increasingly employed by federal law-enforcement agents who, armed
with thousands of pages of new federal laws, were busy fighting
the "chaos" that the Feds alleged existed in America’s
neighborhoods. Later, Bill Clinton gave us the 1996 anti-terrorism
act in response to the Oklahoma City bombing, and after insinuating
that all conservatives are terrorists deep down, set the FBI and
CIA loose on middle-America to weed out the traitors.
Today,
as predicted, the Bush administration has gleefully embraced the
Clinton administration’s attacks on the Constitution in the name
of fighting terrorism, but has hardly let up with its own plans
to save the American people from themselves. Bush’s pal John Ashcroft
has tried heartily to give us Total Information Awareness, the PATRIOT
ACT, and the wonderful TIPS (Terrorism Information and Prevention
System) program that would have encouraged everybody to spy on everybody
else. Unlike Clinton however, Bush and Co. haven’t stopped at merely
declaring all members of a certain ideological group terrorists.
As Ashcroft has famously made clear, they’ve gone one step further
and declared that everyone who opposes them is a terrorist.
And
once again, it is the keepers of the federal bureaucracy who benefit,
with the only change being that a different group of Americans is
applauding the tyranny this time around. If Bush goes down next
November, those who act appalled by government abuse and those who
cheer it will merely switch places; there will be some new victims
of power abused and some new beneficiaries of largesse, but the
federal juggernaut will roll merrily on.
October
22, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is a regular columnist for LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Ryan
McMaken Archives
|