The Right Thing
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
"It was
just the right thing to do." That's a phrase one hears fairly
often these days. It's usually said in explanation (or justification)
for something someone has already done. Trouble is, the phrase "right
thing to do" begs this question: What exactly is the right
thing to do?
If all 300
million of us agreed as to what exactly are the right things to
do, we'd have blissful unity in our beloved country for the first
time since the founding of the Jamestown colony. That will never
happen, though. As with pacifism, achieving perfect unity is like
expecting a wolf to become a vegetarian.
Granted, a
few people may not know what ought to be done, but the rest of us
Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, Jewish, atheist, Democrat, Republican,
conservative, liberal, libertarian and whatever all have
our own ideas as to what is the right thing to do. And so it has
always been. The meetings of the Continental Congress and the Constitutional
Convention were not love-ins. There were plenty of intense disagreements
and hot arguments.
A free society
promises many things, but uniformity of opinion is not one of them.
Uniformity is a specialty of dictatorships. When Joe Stalin was
alive, everybody who wanted to stay alive publicly agreed with him.
The same was true of Saddam Hussein. Tacitus said of the Romans
that they make a desert and call it peace. Dictators scare the bejeebers
out of their people and call it agreement.
All we Americans
have to do is learn to disagree in a civil manner. That's not easy
for some folks. Some people can barely open their mouths or put
pen to paper or keyboard to bytes without insults, bad names and
bad words pouring forth. In extreme cases, it's like experiencing
a broken sewer pipe. It's too bad, because some of these people
might have some good points to make if they didn't drown all their
thoughts in vitriol.
The intention
is often to intimidate those who disagree with them. Nobody who
claims to be an American should ever allow himself to be intimidated
by anybody for any reason. To forfeit the right of free speech out
of fear should be unacceptable in the United States. A million or
more Americans didn't give their lives so Americans could become
sheep. It is especially shameful to be a sheep in America, because
nothing bad is going to happen to you for speaking out. You may
be slandered or questioned, but you won't be tortured, shot or imprisoned.
How'd you
like to be standing in a long line before God on Judgment Day hearing
the stories of people who confronted evil and paid for it with their
lives? And all the time knowing that when your turn comes, you'll
have to say, "Well, I never spoke out against the wrongs or
injustices I saw in my country because I was afraid somebody would
call me a bad name or not invite me to tea."
People
who live in a free society but don't avail themselves of their freedom
are like people dying of thirst while standing in a pool of sweet
water. You are free. You have unalienable rights. Use them. If you
don't use them, you might as well not have them. They exist only
in use. Even dictatorships will let you babble on about trivial
matters such as sports and entertainment.
But the men
who pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to
the concepts of freedom expressed in the Declaration of Independence
were not taking those risks so people could gossip about inconsequential
matters. They did not write the First Amendment for the benefit
of pornographers and nude dancers or dirty-mouthed comics. The First
Amendment is there to ensure a free discussion of political and
other ideas that are important to establishing a civil society,
and to pursue truth.
July
16, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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