Some
People
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
Some
people, including our president, seem to think that once free elections
are held in Iraq, democracy will exist and everything will be just
fine and dandy from there on out.
This
rather widespread belief stems from a misunderstanding or ignorance
of our own country and its history. It isn't the elections that
have given us the country we all cherish. It is the Constitution
and the general consensus that everyone must obey it. That is the
key difference between the United States and many other countries
in the world.
As
with religion, some Americans have paid lip service to the Constitution,
professing more than practicing. There have certainly been differences
in interpretation, sometimes powerful differences. Still and all,
to a remarkable degree, the American people have maintained their
devotion to the basic charter of government.
This
allows our elections to be less than life-or-death matters. We are
comfortable in the belief that no matter who is elected, that person
will be bound by the chains of the Constitution and therefore unable
to uproot our society. On the one occasion when that was not so,
we had secession and war. The price of that war was so fearful that,
since then, Americans have been careful to keep their differences
within the bounds of debate.
This
devotion to the Constitution is a gift of our British heritage.
All the claptrap about diversity notwithstanding, the 13 Colonies
were British colonies, inhabited in overwhelming majorities by British,
Scot, Irish and Welsh people, with a smattering of Germans. For
169 years they thought of themselves as British subjects, loyal
to the king and to the unwritten British Constitution. Such matters
as common law, individual rights and limits on the government had
evolved through the centuries in those magical isles separated from
Europe by the sea.
Like
everyone else's, our culture and heritage are unique to us and the
other offspring of Great Britain Canada, Australia and New
Zealand. They cannot be transferred to other people with different
cultures and heritages of their own least of all at the point
of a gun. In our country, elections are just part of the mechanics
of government. We are simply choosing people on a temporary basis
to operate the machinery of government that they cannot change.
It
is important for us to understand that while this is our strength,
it is also fragile. We will be protected by the Constitution only
so long as the overwhelming majority of Americans insist that it
be obeyed, putting loyalty to that above loyalty to race, religion,
political faction and even the national government. I fear that
public education, caught up in the fad of diversity, is not properly
teaching new generations to respect and revere our own heritage
of liberty.
At
any rate, setting up a mechanical election will not magically transform
Iraqi society. Despite the nationalism of most Iraqis, there remain
tribal, ethnic and religious divisions that will make a unified
government that respects the rights of all difficult to achieve.
There is no tradition of loyalty to a set of abstract principles.
There is, however, a tradition of loyalty to a strong leader.
Our
own country would probably have been stillborn but for the happenstance
of a number of remarkable individual leaders. No such leaders are
yet visible in Iraq, nor is it certain that the occupation authorities
even desire such leaders to emerge.
The
British tried earlier in the 20th century to turn Iraq into a British-style
country with a constitutional monarchy, and they failed. If it is
our hope to transform Iraq into an American-style country, I believe
we will fail as well.
Iraq
is an Arab country, and whatever government emerges must be consistent
with the Arab heritage and traditions, or it will not last. As with
the human body, transplants generate their own opposition.
November
25, 2003
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2003 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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Reese Archives
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