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Patrick
Henry: Enemy of the State
by Ryan McMaken
by Ryan McMaken
Little
is said today of Patrick Henry. He still makes it into a book on
American history here and there primarily because he was without
a doubt one of the greatest (if not the greatest) orator of his
generation, and when the American revolution became imminent in
the 1770’s he was among those who had the greatest grasp of when
the conflict would come and what it would bring.
The
episode in his life that apparently warrants mention by mainstream
historians is his speech to the House of Burgesses – which was meeting
illegally without the consent of the Crown’s governor. It was late
March 1775 before the farmers of Lexington and Concord had
had the opportunity to humiliate the most powerful army on Earth and Henry knew that a clash of arms was near. In an effort to win
support for a bill that would raise an army for Virginia and illegally
appoint officers without the consent of the Crown, Henry clamored
for the Virginia militia to take arms against the British:
"The
war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north
will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms…Let it come.
I repeat, Sir, Let it come…Is life so dear or peace so sweet,
as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid
it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but
as for me, give me liberty or give me death!"
Today,
these comments are treated as hyperbole, a mere gentleman’s exercise
in arousing legislators to action. With Henry, nothing could be
further from the truth. For as Murray Rothbard has pointed out numerous
times, the court historians of our age would have us believe that
the American revolution was no revolution at all, but merely an
unfortunate disagreement among refined compatriots. But for Patrick
Henry – and he was certainly not alone in such sentiments British
rule was nothing short of barbaric tyranny, a despotism to be ripped
from American soil no matter what the price in blood.
In
1775, Patrick Henry was not simply attempting to arouse the passions
of his fellow Virginians. He was suggesting a practical course of
action: arming the population of Virginia against the troops of
the British Crown. By late April he was making good on his own exhortations,
and following the British seizure of a cache of arms owned by the
Virginia militia, Henry himself led a militia company in a raid
on the British capturing British funds as compensation for the theft
of the arms. The governor of Virginia declared Henry an outlaw,
and he went into hiding as a champion of the Revolution.
Henry
never wavered in his support of American independence during the
eight years of the Revolution, but perhaps his most valiant effort
to preserve American liberties came with the ratification debates
over the Constitution of 1787. Henry was a defender of the Articles
of Confederation, the government formed during the waning days of
the Revolutions, and which had provided the colonies peace and international
recognition ever since.
At
the Virginia ratification debates of 1788, Patrick Henry denied
that the propaganda of the Federalists was based on anything but
scare tactics, and defied the Federalists to provide convincing
evidence that the Articles of Confederation had not provided what
the colonists had fought for in the Revolution. Indeed, Henry contended,
to adopt the new Constitution would be akin to a Revolution greater
than the one just finished, except this revolution was of
an older variety:
"Revolutions
like this have happened in almost every country in Europe: similar
examples are to be found in ancient Greece and ancient Rome:
instances of the people losing their liberty by their own carelessness
and the ambition of a few. We are cautioned…against faction
and turbulence: I acknowledge that licentiousness is dangerous,
and that it ought to be provided against: I acknowledge also
the new form of Government may effectually prevent it: Yet,
there is another thing it will as effectually do: it will oppress
and ruin the people…I am not well versed in history, but I will
submit to your recollection whether liberty has been destroyed
most often by the licentiousness of the people or by the tyranny
of rulers? I imagine, Sir, you will find the balance on the
side of tyranny."
The
real reason behind scrapping the old constitution, Henry
suspected, was really that of garnering more power for those who
had already tasted the perks of consolidated government. They hid
this behind a façade of "economic prosperity," but Patrick Henry
contended that such things were not the business of governments:
"You are not to inquire how your trade may be increased, nor how
you are to become a great and prosperous people, but how your liberties
can be secured; for liberty ought to be the end of your government."
For when government gives free men the power to secure their own
rights, economic prosperity can only follow. But when men of government
come to claiming the need to tax to increase your liberty and prosperity,
beware. After all, Henry tells us, liberty is the foundation of
prosperity, not the other way around. Nations like Great Britain
become great "not because their government is strong and energetic,"
but because "liberty is its direct end and foundation." (Fortunately,
Henry didn’t live to see the nightmarish British Empire of the 19th
century.)
In
addition, Henry was not one to rely on parchment barriers to keep
the grasping hand of the state at bay. To believe that mere laws,
created by men, could keep a mighty government at bay is a delusion
a fool’s game of wishful thinking. Just as he had prophesized
before the beginning of the Revolution, liberty would never be preserved
by anything but force:
"Guard
with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone
who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve
it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you
are inevitably ruined…The Honorable Gentleman who presides told
us, that to prevent abuses in our government, we will assemble
in Convention, recall our delegated powers, and punish our servants
for abusing the trust reposed to them. Oh, Sir, we should have
fine times indeed, if to punish tyrants, it were only necessary
to assemble the people! Your arms wherewith you could defend
yourselves are gone…Did you ever read of any revolution in any
nation, brought about by the punishment of those in power, inflicted
by those who had no power at all? A standing army we shall have
also, to execute the execrable commands of tyranny: And how
are you to punish them? Will you order them to be punished?
Who shall obey these orders?
Henry
knew there was but one means to preserving liberty: a de jure
and de facto separation of power between the independent
states and an American Union. Anything less was mere imagination.
A Congressman here and a Senator there does nothing to preserve
liberty. For where the force resides, there also will the power
be. The states will merely be reduced to bureaucratic districts
of the consolidated government.
Looking
back across the centuries, it is difficult to contend that Henry
was wrong. He had boycotted the Constitutional Convention of 1787
because, as he so eloquently put it, "I smell a rat" and
suspected the worst: that the independent colonies that had thrived
for over a century were to be herded under one consolidated government,
a vast government apparatus founded not on liberty, but on the bureaucratic
dreams of monarchists and mercantilists like Alexander Hamilton.
In
his final stand against the new order, Patrick Henry presented his
audience with a choice – a choice between empire and liberty:
"If
we admit this consolidated government, it will be because we
like a great splendid one. Some way or other we must be a great
and mighty empire; we must have an army, a navy, and a number
of things: When the American spirit was in its youth, the language
of America was different: Liberty, Sir, was then the primary
object…But now, Sir, the American spirit, assisted by the ropes
and chains of consolidation, is about to convert this country
to a powerful and mighty empire."
And
quite an empire it has become. Today, as Americans, half our incomes
are taxed away to that consolidated government; we send our sons
to die toppling dictators armed and financed by those same taxes;
we bleat like sheep for protection from each other and every foreign
bogeyman near and far, and we call it liberty!
And
for most Americans today, Patrick Henry is no doubt seen as a hopeless
romantic, an impractical partisan of an imperfect ideology. He should
have compromised and joined the Convention, we are told. His vision
for America is in the dustbin of history. A fine man for a revolution
perhaps, but of little use for our civilized government of today.
Such are the rationalizations we now must resort to.
Patrick
Henry may have failed to prevent the destruction of the free states
of 18th century America, but he speaks to us across the
centuries. Henry provides us with an eloquent example of those men
of principle who put liberty first and were not afraid to fight
for it. Today, as we beg for scraps at government’s table, perhaps
we could learn a little something about courage and liberty from
Mr. Henry.
Unlike
Henry, we have bought the lie that government made us rich, and
that government can keep us that way. We have accepted the farce
that an armed and independent people means nothing in the face of
great dangers in far away lands. Indeed, these are the same lies
spouted in Henry’s time. As Patrick Henry knew, Federalists, the
ideological great-grandfathers of our own tax-happy centralizers,
built everything on fear. Fear of economic decay, fear of foreign
enemies, and fear of disunity. For a civilized and free people,
the answers to such fears could no more be found in the hands of
government in 1788 as today. Indeed, for Henry, it is those
hands that are the only true threat to liberty.
"Fear
is the passion of slaves" Henry tells us, for an armed and
confident people are sure of their liberties, and not afraid to
demand them. But we live in a country ruled by fear. Fear of terrorists,
or criminals, or punishment by the state. How then, can we conclude
anything other than that we are ourselves slaves? It would appear
that we can not, and Patrick Henry would no doubt agree.
December
2, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is a regular columnist for LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Ryan
McMaken Archives
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