Memo
to Terrorists of the World
Published
on WorldNetDaily.com on December 24, 1999
MEMO
To: Terrorists of the World
From: Llewellyn H. Rockwell
Jr.
Date: End of the Century
The
U.S. State Department and every other official agency is telling
us to be on the lookout for terrorist attacks from you guys. The
attacks could come in any form, say the press releases, from a letter
bomb to a truck bomb. Security at airports and U.S. borders is tighter
than ever. But it is not just you swarthy foreign types who are
under suspicion, but also regular Joe citizens. We are all suspects.
It's
hard to know what to make of these warnings. You might not be plotting
anything at all. This could just be propaganda designed to instill
fear in the American people. All governments know that people living
in fear of attack are more likely to be obedient. Or it could just
be an excuse to step up violations of civil liberties: searching
us, interrogating us, snooping in our bank accounts, reading our
emails, and tapping our phones.
It
could also be a sign of our own government's deepening paranoia.
Certainly since the Oklahoma bombing, but even before, the U.S.
government has become very defensive. Washington, D.C., is an armed
camp. It is hard to believe that when I was a young man, all government
buildings were open to the public, and in my father's day, anyone
could knock on the White House door. But back then, the U.S. government
was small and didn't attempt to run the world. Through commerce
and example, the U.S. sought the friendship of nations.
On
the other hand, these warnings may indeed be justified. Because
of its foreign policy, imperial military reach, and global arrogance,
the U.S. government is the most hated in the world. It's not surprising
that some of you might want to vent your anger. But before you do
so, you should consider this: what the U.S. government has done
to you and to everyone else in the world has nothing to do with
the American people. Don't blame us for the actions of the government.
You
are undoubtedly outraged at the bombings and ongoing sanctions against
Iraq. It's true that these actions are grossly contrary to morality.
It's also true that tens of thousands of civilians have died because
of them. But these actions were undertaken by the dictatorial executive
branch, and with only the tacit approval of the Congress. No one
asked the American people if we wanted this. Thanks to the long,
progressive seizure of power by the presidency, the Clinton administration
can act on its own, and pursue its own agenda apart from the will
of the American people.
The
same goes for the bombing of that pharmaceutical factory in the
Sudan. It's true that this was a ghastly crime. It's an outrage
that the Clinton administration has still not issued a formal apology
or offered to compensate the factory's owner for the property damage.
But here again, the American people were not asked if they wanted
to lob bombs on innocents. The decision was undertaken at the highest
levels, in consultation with half a dozen un-elected bureaucrats.
The
same point applies to all the other grievances you have against
us. The American people were not asked if we wanted to bomb the
Chinese embassy in Yugoslavia. That happened in the midst of a war
that was never even declared by Congress. The official polls showed
that the war was only supported by 40 percent, and there's no telling
how many of those were just wanting to please the pollsters and
get off the phone. Pollsters can be very intimidating; to average
Americans, they have the air of officialdom about them, and that
is hardly an inaccurate perception.
Americans
are not war-like by nature. If you look at the U.S. Constitution,
you can see the powers of the president listed in Article II. There's
nothing about the power to go to war, which is found in Article
I, under Congress. Even there, the power is way down a long list
of items in Section 8. Clearly the men who drew up this document
did not envision the U.S. as a warfare state.
If
the U.S. military's actions are unconstitutional, how can the president
get away with it? Over the course of the decades, the Constitution
has become something of a dead letter. It began in the last century,
when the president used the military to stop half the states from
exercising their right to secede, and to terrorize dissenters in
the North. It was downhill from there, though only since the 1950s
has the government routinely gone to war without the approval of
the American people.
You
might object that the American people elected Clinton and elected
the Congress which has the power to impeach and remove him from
office. That's true, but that doesn't mean that we should be held
responsible for everything they do. You also need to understand
something about the American electoral system. It is not separate
from the government itself. The two major parties are as closely
tied to the central state as any parties in any country in the world.
Yes,
we have the vote. But look at the choices we have. The candidates
usually offered up to us have already been vetted by the political
establishment. Most of the time, that puts voters in the position
of choosing the lesser of two evils, which is still evil. We are
not allowed to choose "none of the above." For that reason and many
others, fewer and fewer people are showing up at the polls.
Besides,
most of the people who run our lives never appear on the ballot,
especially judges. And the federal government employs 2 million
people as full-time bureaucrats, their salaries crowbarred out of
the American taxpayer. They never run for office and they can't
be fired. If we could unseat them, we would. But the system is set
up to lockout citizen influence.
So,
you see, you are not the only ones with complaints and gripes about
the behavior of the U.S. The American people suffer under its thumb
too. In many ways, we are all in the same boat victims of an
imperial, grasping, unaccountable and rogue regime that cares little
for human rights and liberties, except as propaganda devices.
What
can be done about it? You may propose violence, but that would be
wrong, and it can only lead to more bombings, more interventions,
and more crackdowns on liberties, at home and abroad. Indeed, terrorism
can only play into the hands of the government because it seems
to validate everything the Clinton administration is saying.
There's
a better way. The American people do not revere their leaders as
they once did. In every way that is permitted, and some that are
not, the American people are systematically withdrawing their consent
from the powers that be. As we saw in Eastern Europe ten years ago,
in Iran under the Shah and India under Gandhi, or in the American
colonies in the 1770s, no government can continue to hold power
once the people withdraw their consent.
So
be patient. The U.S. military dominance of the world will not last
forever. Give it some time; we'll curb the power of the Leviathan.
In the meantime, refrain from blaming the American people for the
actions of our government, and from the violence that can only aid
the empire.
December
24, 1999
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send
him mail], is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
Copyright
1999 by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
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