XXIII
July 4, 2002: Americans Celebrate Dependence Day!
How
do you imagine present day Americans would have responded to the
events of July 4th, 1776, and the years immediately preceding
and following, had they occurred today? I shall take literary license
and do what most Americans have already been taught to do, namely,
compress this time period into one continuous event. Contrary to
widespread opinion, the drafters of the Declaration of Independence
did not upon completing this wonderful statement on
behalf of human liberty – sit down and draft the Constitution! The
latter occurred in 1787. The Declaration was only a statement of
philosophic principles, neither establishing – nor professing to
establish – a new state apparatus. In the true Lockean spirit in
which it was fashioned, it purported to bind none other than the
draftsmen themselves, mutually pledging "to each other, our
Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor."
What a remarkable act, and how alien to the mindset of most Americans
today who, if they had a grievance would draft a constitutional
amendment, or a piece of proposed legislation to be maneuvered through
Congress. The modern approach to political grievances is to grovel
before state officials and beg for leniency or, perhaps, a "new
deal" of the deck of cards which they imagine fate has dealt
them. But the Declaration spoke not to kings and prime ministers,
but to the spirit of humanity itself, an audience no longer patronized
by the practitioners of Realpolitik. It was a challenge to
state authority, not an appeal, that underlay their efforts.
The thinking of such people as Jefferson, Sam and John Adams, John
Hancock, and Franklin rarely informs political discussions anymore.
These were genuine renaissance men an architect, a publisher
as well as scientist and inventor, farmers, men of commerce, writers,
philosophers – whose visions far exceeded the crassness with which
we are more familiar in Washington: the Johnsons, Nixons, and Bushes,
along with their hirelings: the Kissingers, Albrights, McNamaras,
Renos, Rumsfelds, and Ashcrofts. We have gone from men who believed
in the supremacy and inviolability of the individual, to those who
believe that human beings have no intrinsic worth, save as resources
to be exploited on behalf of the power interests of a corporate-state
leviathan.
The voices of the drafters of the Declaration are heard on occasion,
such as at the Tiananmen Square demonstration in China a few years
ago. These young students – whose symbol was not the American
flag or the dollar sign, but the Statue of Liberty – were channeling
the sentiments of men like Jefferson and Sam Adams. The sight of
that sole individual, Wang Wei-Lin, confronting that row of faceless,
brutish tanks, spoke to the depletion of the human spirit with which
most of us have accommodated ourselves in America. He could well
have been the spiritual reincarnation of Patrick Henry, defying
the dehumanizing power of the state with his words "give me
liberty or give me death!"
To contrast the spirit of 1776 with modern America, let us imagine
the Revolutionary War era events taking place today. First of all,
but for the Internet, most of us would probably not hear of this
document. The lickspittles in the major media would play out their
assigned roles as protectors of the political establishment in much
the same way that they have ignored the spreading public opposition
to the "Patriot Act" that was hurried through Congress
with virtually no debate. As Nat Hentoff observed in a recent article
in the Village Voice, resolutions aimed at defending the
Bill of Rights against Bush Administration efforts to expand a federal
police state, have been passed at town meetings and/or city council
meetings in various cities in Massachusetts, as well as Ann Arbor,
Denver, and Berkeley. Have you heard any mention of this on network
or cable newscasts, or read of it in any of the major newspapers
or magazines?
If news of the Declaration managed to get through the media jamming
stations, I suspect that initial news reports would characterize
the drafters as "terrorists" associated with the "right-wing
militia group" that had gotten into a gun battle with government
troops at Lexington and Concord. Advocates of "gun-control"
laws would then be paraded before the television cameras to tell
us how dangerous it is for individuals to be armed, but how
a well-armed state poses no conceivable threat to the public.
We might also be shown videotape of Paul Revere’s ride, as he was
pursued by government forces in an earlier "horse chase"
on Massachusetts roadways.
When the content of the Declaration began to leak out, we might
see White House Press Secretary, Ari Fleischer, warning "all
Americans" that "they need to watch what they say, watch
what they do." Mr. Fleischer is in error, of course: given
the expanded role of federal authorities in spying upon and supervising
the behavior, speech, buying habits, and communications of us all,
there is no need for us to watch what we do and say: the
government is already doing these things for us!
After reading the grievances spelled out in the Declaration, British
Prime Minister Lord North (ooops, that should have been Attorney
General John Ashcroft) might have inveighed against those "who
scare peace-loving people with phantoms of lost liberty," and
then warn that such utterances "only aid terrorists, for they
erode our national unity."
With the word spreading that there were "extremists" afoot
in the land who insisted that governments were intended to be subservient
to people, rather than their masters, the news media and
federal officials would likely next undertake a campaign to identify
those who, in Ashcroft’s words, "give ammunition to America’s
enemies." The sordid backgrounds of the drafters would be revealed:
marijuana cultivation, smuggling, alcohol brewing, and tobacco farming
being just some of the activities for which the drafters would have
been pilloried.
When it is further shown that some of these men owned slaves, the
ad hominem nature of the attack would be in high gear. Intelligent
men and women might use the words "all men are created equal"
to begin questioning how "liberty" and "slavery"
could possibly co-exist. Such an approach might distill a deeper
understanding of the meaning of liberty, particularly when considering
ideas that went far beyond notions of "equal rights."
But such a response would simply not do in an age that prefers to
stick labels – such as "white-male racist" on each
of these men. In such ways does attention get deflected from the
content of ideas.
You can probably script out the rest of the political/media campaign
for yourself. Having declared that "all men . . . are endowed
by the Creator with certain unalienable Rights," the "feminists"
will attack the document for "sexism," while the reference
to a "Creator" would suffice to uphold the charge of "religious
fundamentalism."
When it is further established that these men had been influenced
by the writings of Tom Paine – whose atheist sentiments would seem
to negate the religious fundamentalism charge – allegations that
this group was part of some kind of "cult" would also
likely be made. News reports would then begin to appear asking about
possible "cult" connections between the "rebels"
and David Koresh. And since the government massacre at Waco was
the alleged motive of Timothy McVeigh’s actions in Oklahoma City,
grounds for dismissing the Declaration of Independence as a "terrorist"
statement would likely have become overwhelming to those "inquiring
minds" who "want to know" in today’s culture!
All media examinations of the drafters would, of course, be undertaken
by so-called "news reporters." Government officials, retired
military officers, and minds accustomed to swimming in the shallow
ends of "think tanks," would be brought in to summarize
and characterize the views of the drafters. At no time would these
men, themselves, be given the opportunity to explain or defend their
words or deeds, it being the role of the media "experts"
to put the state’s desired spin on such matters.
Now you have some idea as to how this document would have been greeted
had it come into being some two and a quarter centuries later. It
would likely have been dismissed, by all "right-thinking"
people as the irrational rantings of an "extremist right-wing
fundamentalist cult of white-racist and sexist drug-dealing males
who belong to paramilitary militia groups whose anti-government
views ‘aid terrorists.’" Public attention would then be redirected
back to where it safely belongs: examining the sexual escapades
of politicians, celebrity gossip, and the relative box-office earnings
of various movies.
Do my speculations sound far-fetched to you? If so, perhaps you
need to listen more closely to what government officials and the
media are telling you and, more importantly, what they are not
telling you. You also need to pay closer attention to how
you are being informed of events in your world.
If you have not already done so, you might want to sit down and
read the "Declaration of Independence." As with so many
other basic writings, most of us have a familiarity that has not,
unfortunately, arisen from an actual reading of the works. Ask yourself
whether the human spirit that burned those liberating words into
parchment in a day when men were hanged for such anti-government
sentiments – is aflame within you.
To focus on this question a bit more, ask yourself how – if at all
– you intend to spend July 4th. Will it be in celebration
of your independence, or submission to a condition of dependence?
Do you regard your interests as primary, and the state’s
as secondary, in political matters, the basic premise underlying
the Declaration of Independence? Perhaps the following quotation
can help you to answer this question:
I hold
it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is
a good thing, and as necessary in the political world
as storms in the physical.
These
words would doubtless raise the ire of Mr. Ashcroft which, he would
say, "aid terrorists" and "erode our national unity."
One who spoke them, today, would likely be arrested, transported
to an isolated military base to be held indefinitely, incommunicado,
and without benefit of a public trial as an "enemy combatant."
The man who spoke these words was, of course, a former American
president and the draftsman of the Declaration of Independence,
Thomas Jefferson!
To generations of Americans long conditioned in the collectivist
premises of the Pledge of Allegiance – which speaks of "one
nation, indivisible" – the idea of the moral supremacy of individuals
who, no longer "consenting" to be governed, had the "right
to alter or abolish" the political system they had set up,
is incomprehensible. It is not so much that most people disagree
with the proposition as it is that they find it meaningless,
as irrelevant to their lives as the provisions of Magna Carta!
Most Americans have contented themselves with their subservience
to the state. When I was growing up, we understood a "patriot"
to be as it is described in The
Oxford English Dictionary: "one whose ruling passion
is the love of his country," and "who maintains and defends
his country’s freedom or rights." Such a definition was even
extended to one who was "a factious disturber of the government."
Today, "patriotism" – like "liberty" – has come
to mean little more, to most people, than obedience to political
authority!
Bear in mind that, on July 4th, 1776, the British were
not an invading army, but the established government in America.
But such men as drafted the Declaration had a deeper love for the
country that transcended any duty of obedience the state sought
to impose upon them. It was in this sense that those of my generation
learned to regard Jefferson and his colleagues – not the Loyalists
who supported the existing government – as patriots.
The Declaration’s appeal to the sovereignty of each individual has
become weaker over the decades, as most of us accept the propriety
of others exercising authority over our lives. We increasingly
accept the proposition that we are not to be trusted with any genuine
power over our lives and that, for our "own good,"
the state must act on our behalf. Even such limited power as is
found in firecrackers, sparklers, and Roman candles, are deemed
too "dangerous" to our well-being and so, on July 4th,
we allow the government, with its fireworks displays, to
celebrate our "liberty" and "independence" for
us!
The liberating words of men like Thomas Jefferson are regarded as
passé in modern America. Most of us now prefer the soothing
assurances of our current George III!
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