The Basic Flaw
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
The basic
flaw in the neoconservative ideology is that democracy cannot be
imposed on other people at the point of a gun.
Furthermore,
if neoconservatives came from an American tradition rather than
a Trotskyite tradition, they would understand that America itself
is not a democracy. Benjamin Franklin emerged from the Constitutional
Convention and a lady asked him, "Well, Mr. Franklin, what
kind of government have you given us?" He did not say democracy.
He replied, "Madam, we have given you a republic if
you can keep it."
A republic
and a democracy are two different animals. A democracy, which can
actually work only in a very small country, allows citizens to vote
on every issue. A republic allows citizens to elect representatives,
who then use their own judgment to decide issues. If the citizens
disagree with the representatives' decisions, they can replace them
at the next election.
Furthermore,
mere elections are not what define America's unique form of freedom.
Today, practically every country in the world has elections, most
of dubious validity. What most countries lack is a commitment on
the part of their individual citizens to the concept of human rights,
which cannot be legitimately abrogated by government.
For us, that
concept took centuries of thought and conflicts to mature. It began
at Runnymede when some barons presented a British king with demands
that became known as the Magna Carta. It placed limits on the king's
powers and defined certain rights not only for the aristocracy but
for the common folk, too. And the barons were there with their swords
to make sure the king understood that it was not negotiable.
A great deal
of blood was shed and words written and spoken before the concept
matured. Today it's found mainly in what in politically incorrect
days were called the Anglo-Saxon countries the United Kingdom,
Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand. Our form of
freedom is a gift from our English-speaking ancestors. In other
parts of the world, government went off in different directions,
even those we consider more or less free. But their concept of freedom
is not the same as ours.
Ours is best
summed up in the Declaration of Independence. All men are given
unalienable rights by God. The sole purpose of government is to
protect those rights. When a government instead abuses those rights,
then the people have the right and the duty to overthrow it and
create a new government.
Some Americans
today are so stupid and/or ignorant of their country's history that
if you asked them if people have the right to overthrow a government,
they would reply in the negative. I had a professor who asked that
question, and in a class of more than 30 students, only four of
us said "Yes."
For God's
sake, if you're going to claim to be an American, at least read
the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Federalist
Papers. A good history of England and America certainly wouldn't
hurt.
Our
concepts of a free society are as foreign to the Arabs (and the
rest of the non-Anglo-Saxon world) as Arabic and Chinese are to
us. If Allah wills, they might evolve their own version of a more
or less free society, but it will not be like ours. And they darn
sure are not going to accept anything imposed on them at the point
of a gun by "infidels."
George W.
Bush is dead-wrong to believe he's been anointed by God to spread
democracy. He was merely barely elected to serve the people of the
United States in accordance with our Constitution. Even that appears
to be more than he can handle. But if he tries to lead a crusade
against the Muslim world, he will meet the same fate as the earlier
Crusaders defeat and disgrace.
August
26, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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