Your Tax Dollars at Work
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS

Frédéric Bastiat
famously observed that the State costs us in ways we can see and
ways we cannot see. Economists tend to focus on the second type
because they elude public perceptions. What inventions are we denied
because of regulations? What might have been done with the resources
that are diverted in taxes or higher prices due to protectionism?
The answers demonstrate that, because of intervention, we are worse
off than we know.
Sometimes,
however, we should also look at the potentially seen costs
of the State, if only because the State doesn’t want us to see those
either. These are the direct destructions caused by some State activity,
most especially war. Seeing war in photographs changes things. It
causes us to observe the State’s war and what it is doing to people:
us and them.
This is why
the State doesn’t want pictures of US wounded or dead circulating
in public. The media mostly obey. Did you ever notice that? You
are being shown only what the government wants you to see. The State
does not want you to see dead soldiers or suffering families of
those shot and killed.
Instead the
State wants you to believe that the Iraq War is about patriotism,
9/11, national pride, the campaign to make you safer, the administering
of justice, manhood and courage, and all the rest of the cover-ups
for what war really is: murder and destruction paid for by you and
me and made legal solely because it is the State and not someone
else doing it.
Take a picture
of dead soldier, or the child of a killed Iraqi family, broadcast
it on your blog, and what happens? Photo journalist Zoriah Miller
has found out. He was kicked
out of his "embed," which is the name for the pack
of journalists permitted to travel with a group of soldiers and
report what those in command want reported. Afterwards, he was prohibited
from traveling in any Marine-patrolled area of Iraq. The military
command worked to get him kicked out of the country altogether.
Yes, it all
seems very pre-modern and primitive, and contrary to all our pieties
about the free flow of information, the first amendment and all
that. But from the government’s point of view, it is running the
war, and it should control what people know about it to the same
extent it controls everything else about the war. As a result, after
4,000 dead soldiers, countless hundreds of thousands of Iraqi dead,
millions of wounded on all sides, there are only a handful of bloody
pictures to be found anywhere.
Amazing isn’t
it, just how effective the State can actually be when it cares intensely
about something? And why does it care so much? One reason, they
say, is that photos provide the enemy with information about the
effectiveness of their attack and the response. In effect, that’s
like claiming that anything but approved propaganda amounts to subversion
and treason. In any case, we can be pretty darn sure that when the
enemy makes a hit, the enemy knows about it.
Another claim and
actually they have said the same thing from World War I until the
present day their main interest is in protecting the families of
the dead from shock, privacy violation, and humiliation. Maybe that
sounds plausible, but another way to look at it is that the State
is most especially interested in continuing to foster the myth that
these kids are dying for their country, and there are no more important
people to convince of that than the parents of the dead.
But actually,
only the most naïve could possibly believe that this is what
the rules are wholly about. They want to protect the rest of us
from reality. The Vietnam war lost massive support at home when
the military loosened up on photojournalism. The handful of pictures
we have from World War II all date from a period after FDR too bowed
to public pressure.
At one level,
it is pathetic that we need pictures to underscore what war is all
about. But since the ancient world, the masses at large have proven
susceptible to believing every myth about the grandeur and glory
of war. We imagine that we as a people are going abroad to bring
justice, truth, and liberty to some unenlightened and threatening
foreign tribe. This has been the constant theme since the ancient
world.
Then we see
the pictures. It turns out that the unenlightened tribe is a collection
of individuals pretty much like us. They are made of flesh and blood,
have families, worship God, and struggle with pretty much the same
issues that all people everywhere have always struggled with. There
is no great glory in killing them, nor in being killed by them.
But the State
says that sometimes war is necessary. If our masters really believe
that, why hide its costs? Let us see precisely what we are getting
into here. If it is justified, let us see why and how, and let us
observe what we are giving up in exchange for the just war. The
truth is that the State must hide not only its wars but all of its
activities. It hides its inflation. It hides the effects of its
taxation and its protectionism. It fears anyone who draws the cause-and-effect
connection between its activities and their deleterious consequences
for the rest of us. It is the most destructive force in our world.
Because that truth is so momentous, the State does everything possible
to hide the smallest drop of blood.
The State wants
us to all go on with our lives, believing it, loving it, and seeing
only the pictures it wants us to see.
July
28, 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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