But What About the Children?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Christopher
Ratte, professor in the department of classics at the University
of Michigan, was recently turned into a jailbird and had his son
taken away from him, all in the name of protecting the child from
the father. He had taken his 7-year-old son to a baseball game in
Detroit and ordered him lemonade. What was served up was a "Mike’s
Hard Lemonade," which his son prepared to drink. Suddenly security
arrived.
"You know this
is an alcoholic beverage?" the security guard asked.
"You have got
to be kidding," responded the professor. And before the professor
could examine the bottle, the guard snatched it away, and the boy
was taken to the hospital where no traces of alcohol were found
in him. The boy was then promptly put in foster care. It was two
days before the mother, a professor of architecture, was allowed
to take him home, and a full week before the father was allowed
to come back into the home again.
The case provides
a remarkable look at the workings of bureaucracy. The Detroit Free
Press interviewed all the people involved. It turns out that no
one was happy about what happened, but the gears of the bureaucracy
ground away, ruining peoples' lives for no good reason.
The cop on
duty thought it was a mistake, but his supervisor was insisting
that he act. When Child Protective Services came to take the child
away into their cruel foster care, the police objected. But CPS
was just doing its duty. It had no choice but to take the child
since the police had requested a court order – also triggered by
events – to remove the child. Observers who know the system say
that the only surprising aspect to this case is that child was returned
so quickly. Had the couple been poor, uneducated, and unconnected,
the case might still be tied up in the courts.
The lesson
many people draw from this is that social workers are being given
too much authority, that governments need to be reformed so that
they do not take extreme measures too hastily, that cops need to
use good sense before busting up families, etc. The problem is that
all of these reforms ultimately depend on the state to use its discretionary
power judiciously.
The real issue
concerns the locus of control. Does it belong to the family or the
state? When there is a dispute, to whom does the presumption of
innocence belong? It is not enough to say: here is a bad family
environment, so of course the state should control the outcome.
When it comes to the power of the state over the family, there is
no such thing as a judicious use. The state has every reason to
invent reasons to destroy families and all other independent centers
of authority and the families themselves have no choice but to
crawl and beg.
State campaigns
for the welfare of children have always been a major justification
for the expansion of leviathan. This is the primary basis for the
war on drugs, which has robbed us of so many civil liberties. It
is the basis for the nationalization of education that is taking
place, administration by administration, in the name of preventing
any child from being left behind. If the internet is ever regulated
in the US the way it is in China and parts of Europe, it will be
in the name of protecting the children. Indeed, it is possible to
erect a totalitarian state in the name of helping the children.
So it was in
Texas, when the state swept in to remove 437 children from their
mothers. The police were responding to a call claiming abuse, but
there was no other basis for this incredible action than the desire
to crush a religion completely. The state decided the dissident
church shouldn't exist, and so it claimed all power in the interest
of the children. The state could count on sympathy from mainstream
American culture, which rightly disapproves of polygamy and underage
marriages. And that is precisely why the group separated themselves
completely from the rest of the culture. See if you can watch
this video of mothers speaking out against the action and not
conclude that the case for the invasion was at best ambiguous.
Should people
be free to set up cults, to live undisturbed to practice their religion,
to deviate from mainstream ethical codes? Certainly if we believe
in freedom, people should be able to do this. In fact, the group
was already under a great deal of pressure to reform from the outside
and inside, with former members of the group reporting despotic
control by the leader and many men who had been excommunicated putting
pressure on those inside to leave. We don't know whether the entire
matter – if indeed abuse was taking place – might have been handled
in this way, because the state intervened to impose the cruelest
possible solution: namely, taking children from their mothers' arms
and putting them in the hands of government social workers.
In the name
of protecting children, the state already runs a huge program with
government officials posing as teenagers seeking sex and arresting
those who fall for the scam. By itself, this is very strange, with
government becoming a source for the very problem that government
is trying to correct. Meanwhile, a Feb-March 2008 report from the
American
Psychologist reports that the fears about internet predation
are wildly exaggerated and do not reflect the facts. This is hardly
a surprise, since the state has incentive to exaggerate the pathologies
of society as a means of getting a clawhold over every independent
sector.
The goal of
the state is to find some practice that is universally reviled and
pose as the one and only way of expunging it from society. The best
example today is child pornography, a grim and ghastly industry
that every decent person would like to see eradicated from the earth.
But in the name of doing so, the state invades everyone's privacy,
controls speech, interferes with families, and otherwise uses the
issue as a wedge to undermine every freedom.
Thus do we
see what is wrong with statements such as the following: "We have
an obligation to protect children from sexual exploitation and abuse,
and we can do this by increasing communication between state and
federal agencies to help combat this repulsive industry. While
privacy rights should always be respected in the pursuit of child
pornographers, more needs to be done to track down and prosecute
the twisted individuals who exploit innocent children."
Do we really
want to unleash the state to solve this problem? Not if we understand
the dynamics of statism. The power will not be used to solve the
problem, but rather to intimidate the population in ways to which
people will find it difficult to object. The trouble is that the
above words were not written by the typically naïve do-gooder,
social worker, or Justice Department bureaucrat. They were
penned by spokesmen for the Libertarian Party.
Thus can we
see the power of propaganda, and its uses. Not even self-identified
libertarians can see that state authority over the family is a basis
for the loss of liberty in our time, and that the state always poses
the greater threat to society than whatever problem it purports
to solve. There is a further problem: a concession that the state
can indeed solve social problems that cannot be corrected without
the state, is to give up the entire argument over the future of
liberty itself.
April
30, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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