-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.jamesbovard.com/
<A HREF="http://www.jamesbovard.com/">James Bovard</A>
-----
Publication Date: February 24, 1999
FREEDOM IN CHAINS:
The Rise of the State and The Demise of the Citizen
By James Bovard
James Bovard, journalist and critically acclaimed author of Lost Rights:
The Destruction of American Liberty, accurately points out that the
greatest political debate at the close of the century is not liberalism
versus conservatism, but rather, Statism. In Mr. Bovard's words, Statism
is the belief that govemment is inherently superior to the citizenry,
and that progress consists of extending the realm of compulsion, that
vesting more arbitrary power in government officials will make the
people happy -- eventually. With his breakout new work, FREEDOM IN
CHAINS: The Rise of the State and the Demise of the Citizen, Mr. Bovard
shows how the idealistic conception of the "State" also has meant a
decline in liberty of the citizenry that the "State" serves.
    In FREEDOM IN CHAINS, Bovard examines the phenomenon of how the
welfare state has crippled America; to today's elected officials, whose
lust for power has brought about the highest level of distrust ever from
America's citizens (just look at both sides of the Clinton impeachment
process for justification of this point); to the growth of the Leviathan
State, where the playing field is tilted against the average citizen's
private behavior; to government's love of sovereign immunity and what
the State is actually entitled to.
    The U.S. Bill of rights seems to be steadily disappearing as
millions of Americans have their telephone calls tapped, are watched
under electronic surveillance at work, and appear to be harassed by
their own government and its activities to stifle independence and
creative thought by its own citizenry. The notion of "political
correctness" is such that each syllable a person utters today has to be
so guarded that virtually every citizen is afraid to exercise their
right of freedom of specch and freedom of expression. Bovard's FREEDOM
IN CHAINS will inform, enlighten, and enrage every reader, but most
importantly, completely exposes how we've become less free as people and
more as wards of the State.
James Bovard, author of Lost Rights: The Destruction of American
Liberty, and The Fair Trade Fraud, is a journalist who writes for The
New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and many other publications. He
lives in Rockville, Maryland.
Publication Date: February 24, 1999ISBN: 0-312-21441-3Price: $26.95 [336
pages -- cloth]Editor: Michael FlaminiContact: Meredith Howard (212)
982-3900 x267
Joe Rinaldi (212) 674-5151 x710
We would appreciate receiving two tear sheets
of any reviews or mentions.
=====
"The history of political thought
is the history of the
moral evaluation of political power."
--Hans Morgenthau, 1945
Pervasive confusion over the nature of government and freedom has opened
the gates to perhaps the greatest, most widespread increase in political
power in history. If we are to regain and safeguard our liberty, we must
re-examine the tenets of modern political thinking. We must reconsider
the moral presumptions and prerogatives that have allowed some people to
vastly expand their power over other people.
    The State has been by far the largest recipient of intellectual
charity in the 20th century. The issue of government coercion has been
taken off the radar screen of politically correct thought. The more
government power has grown, the more unfashionable it becomes to discuss
or recognize government abuses -- as if it were bad form to count the
dead from government interventions. There seems to be a gentleman's
agreement among some contemporary political philosophers to pretend that
government is something more noble, more lofty than it actually is - to
practice noblesse oblige and to wear white gloves when discussing the
nature of the State.
    The great political issue of our times is not liberalism versus
conservatism, or capitalism versus socialism, but Statism,-- the belief
that government is inherently superior to the citizenry, that progress
consists of extending the realm of compulsion, that vesting more
arbitrary power in government officials will make the people happy -
eventually. What type of entity is the State? Is it a highly-efficient,
purring engine like a Hovercraft sailing deftly above the lives of
ordinary citizens? Or is a lumbering giant grader that rips open the
soil and ends up clear-cutting the lives of people it was created to
help?
    The effort to craft a political mechanism to force government to
serve the people is the modern equivalent of the search for the Holy
Grail. Though no such mechanism has been found, government power has
been relentlessly expanded anyhow. Yet, to base political philosophy on
the assumption that government is inherently benevolent makes as much
sense as basing geography on the assumption that the Earth is flat.
Historian Henry Adams wrote in 1904: "Practical politics consists of
ignoring the facts." Unfortunately, much of modern political philosophy
also consists of ignoring the hard reality of the nature of government
action. Too many political thinkers treat government like some Wizard of
Oz behind the curtain, ordaining great things, enunciating high ideals,
and symbolizing all that is good in society. However, for political
philosophy to have any value, it must begin by pulling back the curtain
from the wizard - to lay bare the nature of the State.
    For many politicians and political commentators, government is not
the problem; instead, the problem is people who don't appreciate
government or who are insufficiently docile to its commands. President
Bill Clinton declared in January 1997 that people can "make [America]
better if we will suspend our cynicism" that exists between the public
and the politicians. This is the "Peter Pan" theory of good government -
that government is not wonderful only because people refuse to believe
that government has magical powers. Besides, far greater crimes have
been committed in this century by those who were obeying the government
than by those who were resisting government power.
    Trusting contemporary governments means dividing humanity into two
classes: those who can be trusted with power to run other people's
lives, and those who cannot even be trusted to run their own lives.
Modern Leviathans seek progress by giving some people the power to play
God with other people's lives, property, and domestic tranquility.
Modern political thinking presumes that restraints are bad for the
government but good for the people. The first duty of the modern citizen
is to assume the best of the government, while government officials
assume the worst of him - to assume that discretion is good for
government officials and bad for private citizens - to assume that
autonomy is good for bureaucratic fiefdoms but too perilous to permit to
property owners. Congressmen are far more fretful about private gun
ownership than about the FBI using 54-ton tanks to gas the children of
gun owners. And the more the government presumes the citizen is guilty,
the more the citizen is supposedly obliged to presume that the
government is innocent.
    The history of the rise and triumph of the idealistic conception of
the State is inevitably also the history of the decline of liberty. We
cannot put the State on a pedestal without putting the people under the
foot of the politician and bureaucrat. To glorify the State is to
implicitly glorify coercion - the subjugation of some people to other
people's will and dictate.
    The notion of the citizen's inviolable right to liberty - the
underlying principle of the Declaration of Independence - has
practically vanished from the American political landscape. Attorney
General Janet Reno, in a 1995 speech vindicating federal action at Waco,
informed a group of federal law enforcement officers: "You are part of a
government that has given its people more freedom... than any other
government in the history of the world." Reno's portrayal of freedom as
a gift from the government epitomizes the shift in American political
thinking away from the individual and towards the State as the fount of
all good and all rights. If freedom is a gift from the government to the
people, then government can take freedom away at its pleasure.
    Welfare State freedom is based on the illusion that government can
financially strip-mine the citizen's life - and the citizen can still
miraculously stand on his own two feet afterwards. Modern political
thinkers have assured citizens that dependence on government is the same
as self-reliance, except better.
    Today's citizen is obliged to find his freedom only in the narrow
ruts pre-approved by his bureaucratic overlords. "Risk-free liberty" is
the ideal of the Welfare State: citizens are permitted only liberties
which have been declawed, defanged, neutered, certified and wrapped in
benevolent restrictions. In the name of "freedom," the citizen is
obliged to lower the drawbridges around his own life to any government
employee who thinks he knows better.
    The Supreme Court declared in a 1988 decision: "Servitude means 'a
condition in which a person lacks liberty especially to determine one's
course of action or way of life.'" Yet, despite the vast increase in the
number of government decrees restricting people's "course of action or
way of life," there is little recognition of the growing servitude of
the American people to the federal government. Lives are made up of
choices. Insofar as government confiscates, nullifies, or decimates the
choices a person can make, the government has effectively confiscated
part of their lives.
Democracy as Pseudo-Savior
Nowadays, "democracy" serves mainly as a sheepskin for Leviathan - a
label to delude people into thinking that government's big teeth will
never bite them. Voting has changed from a process by which the citizen
controls the government, to a process which consecrates the government's
control of the people. Elections have become largely futile exercises to
reveal comparative popular contempt for competing professional
politicians. The question of who nominally holds the leash has become
far more important than whether government is actually leashed. The
ability to push a lever and register a protest once every few years is
supposedly all the protection a citizens' liberties need - or deserve.
Americans are implicitly taught in public schools that they will be able
to control their government, regardless of how expansive it becomes. But
the larger government grows, the more irrelevant the individual voter
becomes. The current theory of democracy derives from a time when
government was a tiny fraction of its current size - and is practically
a parody of modern reality. The illusion of majority rule is now the
great sanctifier of government abuses -- and perhaps the single greatest
barrier for people truly understanding the nature of government. No
amount of patriotic appeals can hide the growing imbalance between the
citizen's power to bind the government - and the government's power to
bind the citizen. Does the appearance of someone's name on a ballot for
Congress automatically entitle the person to dispose of 38% of any
voters' income??
    Rather than "government by the people," we now have Attention
Deficit Democracy. Less than half the voters show up at the polls; less
than half of the voters who do show up understand the issues; and
politicians themselves admit that they often have little or no idea what
lurks in the bills they vote upon. The larger government becomes, the
less democratic it will tend to be - simply because people become less
able to comprehend and judge the actions of their rulers. The great
issue for modern democracy is whether politicians can fool enough of the
people enough of the time in order to continue expanding their power
over all the people.
    Modern democracy has become largely an overglorified choice of
caretakers and cage keepers. We must ask whether citizens are still free
after they vote to make themselves wards of the State. Supposedly, as
long as the citizens are permitted to push the first domino, they are
still self-governing, regardless of how many other government dominos
subsequently fall on their heads. And the demagoguery of many
politicians helps many citizens confuse a right to vote with a license
to steal.
Nightstick Ethics
Faith in the redemptive powers of government permeates contemporary
political thinking.
    In 1993, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner David Kessler, a
regulatory hero among modern Statists, declared, "This morality, this
moral glue that binds us together... to a great degree comes from the
governments that we choose to conduct our affairs. The morality that the
best of governments has to offer is what defines us as a nation, what
makes us different, for better or for worse, from our neighbors on this
planet." (Kessler resigned a few years later shortly after he was
accused of bilking the government with expense account overstatements).
Out of this glorification-of-government comes the belief that government
should have practically unlimited power, since government is equated
with righteousness.
    "Fairness" has become a bewitching word, a talisman to lull people's
critical faculties before politicians attach the latest
"shackle-of-the-month." Modern political thought measures the triumph of
good over evil by the number of citizens the government slaps with
fines, penalties, and prison sentences-- as if the more activities are
criminalized, the fairer society becomes. In a string of Supreme Court
cases starting in the 1960s, obscene material was judged by the
following test: Did it have socially redeeming value? (This test led to
blue movie producers including vignettes of porn stars singing the Star
Spangled Banner). However, when it comes to morally evaluating
government intervention, no test is required: - intervention is
routinely assumed to be automatically morally redeeming.
    Private citizens have become the moral underclass in the modern
State. The values of politicians and bureaucrats are presumably so
inherently superior to those that they have a right to coercively impose
them on others -- the same way that imperialists in the 1800s forcibly
imposed their values on the backward natives in Africa and Asia. But,
now instead of "the White Man's Burden," we have the "Bureaucrat's
burden" - consisting of endless Federal Register notices, entrapment
schemes, and abusive prosecutions aiming to maximize submission to the
government. In practice, "justice" has become whatever serves the
political or bureaucratic needs of the government. Every new definition
of fairness becomes another trump card that politicians and bureaucrats
can play against private citizens. Public policy disputes routinely
degenerate into morality plays in which the government is almost always
the "good guy."
The Mirage of Paternalism
In the nineteenth century, socialist thinkers openly ridiculed the
notion of a Night Watchman State - of a government limited to protecting
the rights and safety of citizens. The Night Watchman State is long
since junk-heaped, replaced by governments zealous to reengineer
society, control the economy, and save individuals from themselves.
Unfortunately, rather than a triumph of idealism, we now have Highway
Robber States - governments in which no asset, no contract, no domain is
safe from the fleeting whim of a bevy of politicians. The government can
now claim the benefit of the doubt when it seizes a person's car,
batters down a person's front door, roams without a warrant over a
person's land, and nullifies its contracts with a business. Public
policy today is a vast maze of payoffs and kickbacks, tangling
everything which the State touches in political intrigue and
bureaucratic dependence. Modern societies are increasingly dominated by
political money laundering - by politicians commandeering scores of
billions of dollars from one group and foisting it on another group,
from one generation to another, from the general populace to one
specific occupational group (such as farmers). And when government
defaults on its promises to the citizenry, it is not a question of
"robbery" - but merely of "sovereign immunity."
    Contemporary paternalism largely consists of forcing the individual
to pay the salary of his own social jailkeeper. Like Tom Sawyer
persuading his boyhood friends to pay him for the privilege of painting
his aunt's fence, modern politicians expect people to be grateful for
the chance to pay for the fetters that government attaches to them.
James Byrne, president of the University of Chicago, warned in 1949
that, with the growth of government power and taxation, "an individual
will soon be an economic slave pulling an oar in the galley of the
state." Even though the average family now pays more in taxes than it
spends for housing, clothing, and food, tax burdens are not an issue for
the vast majority of American political thinkers.
    To call contemporary governments "welfare states" is an oxymoron.
The so-called Welfare State advances either by seizing more of people's
paychecks or by punishing more of their actions. It was a common saying
before the Civil War: "That government is best which governs least."
Nowadays, the rule of thumb appears to be: that government is best which
penalizes most. Salvation through increased State power means maximizing
the number of Damocles swords hanging over each citizens' head -
maximizing the number of individual lives that can be destroyed as a
result of political edicts -- the number of people who can be locked
away for "mandatory minimum" violations, the number of people whose
homes and boats and wallets can be seized, the number of children who c
an be taken away from their parents, the number of people can be
prevented from using their own land, and the number of people who the
government has pretexts to forcibly disarm.
    The Welfare State offers an "under my thumb" recipe for happiness.
Paternalism presumes that the path to the citizen's happiness consists
in increasing the number of government restrictions imposed on him and
the number of government employees above him. While earlier types of
government coerced people ,to keep them in their place, the Welfare
State uses coercion to make them happy - in their place.
    The Paternalist State maximizes the power of politicians and
bureaucrats to punish citizens for failing to follow their selfinterest,
as defined by politicians and bureaucrats. But the more power government
acquires to protect people from themselves, the less able people are to
retain any control over government.
    The issue is not whether government should or can be abolished;
instead, the issue is whether the use of force should be minimized. In
the American colonies from the early 1700s onwards, fierce disputes
raged between prerogative parties and antiprerogative parties - between
those that favored an expansive interpretation of the King of England's
power and those who sought to restrain or roll back the monarch's
authority over colonists. In the future, the grand division in American
politics will be between those who champion increased government power
and those who demand that government power be reduced or minimized.
    The notion that government is inherently entitled to obedience is
the most costly entitlement program of them all. Seventeenth-century
English philosopher John Locke, who inspired the Founding Fathers,
declared, "Tyranny is the exercise of Power beyond Right." Locke
recognized that governments that oppress citizens destroy their own
legitimacy. Yet, there now seems to be an irrebuttable presumption of
legitimacy to any exercise of government power not involving genocide or
racial discrimination.
    To govern means to control. Government, in practical terms, is
largely a question of how some people acquire the right, power, and
prerogative to control other people. The question of "how much
government?" is largely "how much power should some people possess to
control other people?" The question of the proper scope of government
power is simply: "How many activities and behaviors should politicians
be permitted to punish?"
    Government is force, and we must determine the rightful limits and
the moral sanction of that force. Government power is little more than
political will enforced by bureaucratic aggression. What does the
citizen owe the State? i.e., what does the citizen owe the politicians
and bureaucrats who claim to represent and embody the State? By what
metaphysical process does the government become superior to the
governed? Does the creation of political machinery automatically void
all prior restraints on the interference of one person with another
person's life?
    We will begin by seeking a clearer understanding of the nature of
the State and of the meaning of freedom. We will then examine how the
glorification of government leads to swollen democracies that crash and
burn; examine how putting government on a pedestal has fundamentally
changed conceptions of justice, fairness, and equity; examine where
government's right to command originates, and how far it extends; and
conclude by reconsidering the forgotten blessings of liberty.
    Modern political philosophy consists largely of glorifying poorly
functioning political machinery - the threats, bribes, and legislative
cattle-prods by which some people are made to submit.to other people.
What are the political and bureaucratic mechanics through which
idealistic goals are supposed to be achieved? It is a delusion to think
of the State as a thing in itself - something loftier than all the
edicts, penalties, prison sentences, and taxes that it imposes.
Throughout this book, we shall focus on exactly how politicians and
bureaucrats propose to save people from themselves. We shall take an
uncompromising look at the mechanics of political salvation.
    So much of political thought throughout history has consisted of
concocting reasons why people have a duty to be tame animals in
politicians' cages. "The mass of mankind has not been born with saddles
on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them
legitimately, by the grace of God," as Thomas Jefferson declared. Each
citizen has a natural right not to be made a government pawn. Does
whether a person was born to submit or born to rule depend solely on
whether he attended night school and received a Masters of Public
Administration?
    Each person begins with sovereignty over his own life, his own body,
and his own talent. As Etienne de la Boettie, a sixteenth-century French
thinker, observed, "It is fruitless to argue whether or not liberty is
natural, since none can be held in slavery without being wronged." Since
the citizen is not born as property of some other group or bureaucracy
or tinhorn dictator he owns himself - and thus has a right to run his
own life, take his chances, and reap his own harvest. The challenge is
to calculate how far the sovereignty of each person over their own life
must be abridged in order to preserve civil peace.
    Politicians and bureaucrats understand how to advance their own
power far better than citizens understand how to defend their rights and
liberties. Clear thinking is the first line of defense for individual
liberty. Americans need a concept of freedom that does not
intellectually disarm the citizen in the face of the State. A good
definition of liberty should provide a barricade behind which a person
can stand - as well as draw a line in the sand which 10,000 enforcement
agents are not allowed to cross.
    Have we transferred to government the rights that we previously
condemned in slaveowners? We cannot understand the current system of
government without examining the intellectual premises upon which it is
built. We cannot understand present problems without again asking the
burning questions that occupied the Founding Fathers in the era when
this nation was born.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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