Posts Tagged ‘liberty’

1984 – Twenty-five Years On

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

In 1949, George Orwell wrote 1984, a chilling tale of life under totalitarianism, 35 years into the future. When that year arrived, our enlightened media scoffed, saying that it had not happened. My own reaction was simply “not yet”. As I argued in a letter to the editor that year, Orwell simply failed to anticipate the drag on technology caused by government regulation. In 1984, we didn’t have the technology necessary for universal surveillance of the citizenry. IBM probably could have provided it, but they had been slowed down by increasing government regulation, not to mention massive antitrust litigation.

But 25 years on, we’re about there. The technology exists, and is being deployed. CCTV cameras cover almost every square inch of London, and are rapidly being installed in most US cities. Worse yet, many people who would have protested such intrusive government surveillance 25 years ago now accept red light cameras, speeding cameras, and massive government eavesdropping on telephones and e-mail as “necessary” security measures. We line up, take off our shoes and submit to totally unconstitutional searches just to get on an airplane. So they not only have the technology, they have our acquiescence.

Think about it. Not a day that goes by without a story in your local newspaper about technology used to ticket a traffic scofflaw, catch a criminal, or bust a cheating spouse. Surveillance videos are reviewed any time something happens, even in seemingly remote locations. No trial lawyer would start a case without demanding e-mail records, even of those thought long since deleted. Passing through a toll booth leaves your presence time- and date-stamped, and don’t even ask about your cell phone records!

And how do they keep us from demanding our freedom back? Fear, the eternal tool of tyrants. In 1984, Orwell spoke of endless wars in far off corners of the earth. Today we have active wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, frequent incursions into Pakistan and daily saber rattling over Iran. And to keep it geographically balanced, we have North Korea.

In case the wars don’t keep us fearful enough, we have terrorist plots and pandemics. I don’t think the terrorist threat level has ever gotten below “Amber”, and the swine flu makes the news daily. The swine flu “pandemic” hasn’t killed nearly as many people as the plain old seasonal flu, but you wouldn’t know it from the main stream media. Before that, it was the avian flu, similarly a non-event, and before that, SARS. Remember SARS? A “totally new” virus, almost always fatal, and against which we had “no natural immunity”. If we had “no natural immunity”, why didn’t we all catch it, and why are any of us still here to read my blog?

In Washington, the fear-mongering goes on. Without health care reform, we can’t possibly continue to afford health care. (I’m afraid we’re about to find out how well we can afford it WITH health care reform!) And just in case the tea bag movement figures out that health care reform is a really bad deal, don’t forget global warming. After eleven years of global cooling, we’re still being threatened with “imminent” catastrophe if we don’t give up our modern way of life and go back to living in caves. As if the government has EVER been the solution, and not the cause, of almost any problem you can think of.

Why are we afraid, and in the light of history, how can we possibly believe that government will protect us? Freedom has blessed America with unimaginable wealth, ever improving standards of living, longer, healthier lives, and countless other blessings. Our government has brought us wars, panics, recessions, bubbles, the Great Depression and very likely another one in the making. They’ve also brought us the public school system, the post office and the DMV. Yet we are about to let that same government take over our health care and tax affordable, reliable energy out of existence.

Even George Orwell would be amazed.

We Are All Socialists Now? – Count Me Out!

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

I could only cringe when I saw the February 16, 2009, cover of Newsweek, “We Are All Socialists Now”. Count me out. The 20th century was the Century of Socialism, and it’s high time we dispose of that horrific philosophy forever. At least 120 million innocent people died at the hands of their own socialist governments. Millions more, both military and civilian, died in two world wars and countless smaller conflicts with socialist/communist/fascist governments. While we avoided outright socialism here, socialist experiments from the New Deal to the Great Society held millions of Americans in poverty in a land of plenty and of opportunity. That centerpiece of FDR’s legacy, Socialist Insecurity, may soon bankrupt us as a nation. Socialism has proven an abject failure every where and every time it has been tried. Individual liberty and private property rights lead to peace and prosperity. Socialism leads inevitably to destitution and death. So NEVER call me a socialist. Many cling to the false promises of socialism with the best of intentions, but the proof is in and it is incontrovertible. I will fight the scourge of socialism until I draw my last breath on this earth.

Don’t Vote! It only encourages them!

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

As we wake up on Election Day, most of us are probably thinking “Thank goodness, it’s almost over”. But what has happened to us? Throughout history, we have always been threatened by barbarians, people willing to use force to disrupt society, take the property and control the lives of others. To defend ourselves, we formed societies, built defenses, and fought back. At some point, we apparently concluded that we had defeated them. But they are still amongst us. Yes, they have put on expensive suits, and learned to speak eloquently, but they are still barbarians. They still use force take our property and control our lives. And they have completely fooled us. Now we call them “politicians” and “public servants”, “great men and women”, and consider it our civic duty to go out and vote to choose which ones will be our masters. They are still barbarians, and our future looks bleak.

We are voting in the midst of an “economic crisis”, brought on by years of misguided government manipulation of the economy. Yet the chattering classes shout out that it’s a “market failure”, and the barbarians promise to save us with a bailout. I have trouble believing that free markets somehow “failed”, when we haven’t had a free market in this country for at least a hundred years, but we seem to be falling for that nonsense yet again. Already we have narrowed the field to two candidates promising bigger government, more regulation, and less freedom. One candidate is unquestionably a socialist, the other is simply the pot calling the kettle black. (He is, after all, the co-author of the “McCain-Feingold Incumbent Protection Act”.)

So when we awake tomorrow, we will have “chosen” our new masters, but what will we have accomplished? We have already allowed the current administration to nationalize the banks. Is there anything we won’t let the incoming barbarians do to have their ways with us? Will we ever again stand up to them and proclaim that each of us was “created equal”, endowed with the “inalienable rights” of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”? If not, then the barbarians have truly won, and our best days are indeed behind us.

I personally don’t believe that our best days are behind us, but today is a hard day to be optimistic. So skip the lines at the polls, have a second cup of coffee, and think about the things that really matter.

Give Me Liberty

Liberty for all, or power to the few?

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Chicago Tribune readers were treated to a rare commentary on liberty Sunday morning (October 26). John Kass, (who does excellent work exposing Illinois corruption) wrote a great column exposing how we baby boomers, the anti-establishment movement of the ’60s, have fallen hook, line and sinker for the siren song of big government. It’s a great story, read it here. His analogy to wild pigs is entertaining and appropriate, although probably too kind for We the Sheeple. As Benjamin Franklin said, “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

Thought for the Day

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

I used to think that government was a necessary evil. But after years of thoughtful consideration, I’ve concluded that I was only half right. Government is not necessary.