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Erazmus
03-19-2010, 09:49 AM
Historian Robert Higgs wrote a splendid article posted today at LRC. I wanted to post it here for comment. It's short, sweet, and nails the point home. I get pretty frustrated when I hear people regurgitate that "America is the freest country in the world!" Clearly people who say this aren't exactly keen on America's history or the philosophy of individualism and liberty. Anyway, here's the article.

Nothing Outside the State (http://www.lewrockwell.com/higgs/higgs143.html)



Nothing Outside the State

A popular slogan of the Italian Fascists under Mussolini was, “Tutto nello Stato, niente al di fuori dello Stato, nulla contro lo Stato” (everything for the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state). I recall this expression frequently as I observe the state’s far-reaching penetration of my own society.


What of any consequence remains beyond the state’s reach in the United States today? Not wages, working conditions, or labor-management relations; not health care; not money, banking, or financial services; not personal privacy; not transportation or communication; not education or scientific research; not farming or food supply; not nutrition or food quality; not marriage or divorce; not child care; not provision for retirement; not recreation; not insurance of any kind; not smoking or drinking; not gambling; not political campaign funding or publicity; not real estate development, house construction, or housing finance; not international travel, trade, or finance; not a thousand other areas and aspects of social life.

One might affirm that the state still keeps its hands off religion, but it actually does not. It certifies certain religious organizations as legitimate and condemns others, as many young men discovered to their sorrow when they attempted to claim the status of conscientious objector during the Vietnam War. It assigns members of certain religions, but not members of others, as chaplains in its armed services.


Besides, isn’t statism itself a religion for most Americans? Do they not honor the state above all else, above even the commandments of a conventional religion they may embrace? If their religion tells them “thou shalt not murder,” but the state orders them to murder, then they murder. If the state tells them to rob, to destroy property, and to imprison innocent people, then, notwithstanding any religious strictures, they rob, destroy property, and imprison innocent people, as millions of victims of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and millions of victims of the so-called Drug War in this country will attest. Moreover, in every form of adversity, Americans look to the state for their personal salvation, just as before the twentieth century their ancestors looked to Divine Providence.


When the state produces unworkable or unsatisfactory conditions in any area of life, and therefore elicits complaints and protests, as it has for example in every area related to health care, it responds to these complaints and protests by making “reforms” that heap new laws, regulations, and government bureaus atop the existing mountain of counterproductive interventions. Thus, each new “reform” makes the government more monstrous and destructive than it was before. Citizen, be careful what you wish for; the government just might give it to you good and hard.

The areas of life that remain outside the government’s participation, taxation, subsidization, regulation, surveillance, and other intrusion or control have become so few and so trivial that they scarcely merit mention. We verge ever closer upon the condition in which everything that is not prohibited is required. Yet, the average American will declare loudly that he is a free man and that his country is the freest in the world. Thus, in a country where more and more is for the state, where virtually nothing is outside the State, and where, aside from pointless complaints, nothing against the State is permitted, Americans have become ideal fascist citizens. Like the average German during the years that Hitler ruled Germany, most Americans today, inhabiting one of the most pervasively controlled countries in the history of the world, think they are free.

FreeTraveler
03-19-2010, 10:22 AM
Let's look at some more concrete examples.

I can't rely on my communications being private. Say the wrong thing, and big guys in dark suits show up and question you about your intent.

I can't get on an airplane to move freely about the continental US without being electronically strip-searched and having my most private possessions pawed over. Never mind that every year there's story after story about all the crap people sneak onto airplanes anyway, let's keep wasting time and energy on a process that doesn't stop contraband from getting on the plane if someone is serious. And don't even think about carrying liquids or sharp objects like a toothpick aboard.

I can't drive within 100 miles of the border without entering a "border" area where I might be forceably detained and searched, nor can I go out for an evening on local streets and highways secure in the knowledge that I won't be stopped and searched, contrary to the Fourth Amendment, to determine if I've been drinking.

I can freely contract with anyone to provide any form of entertainment, as long as that entertainment does not involve any "naughty" body parts. I can pay two half-brained jocks to get in a ring and beat each other senseless, and show it on national TV. I can't pay two people to get in a bed and be nice to each other unless I claim I'm a movie producer, and even that's nebulous and may get you sent to jail.

I can't ask questions of the policeman who pulls me over unless I want to risk getting yanked out of the car and tazed. I better not have a Ron Paul bumper sticker on my car or a copy of the Constitution in the back seat, or I might be labeled a suspected terrorist.

I can't go down to the courthouse with the lifepartner or partners of my choice and enter freely into a marriage contract, unless we happen to be of the appropriate blend. In this century, it's gender. In the last century, it was race.

I can't rearrange furniture in New Jersey unless I'm a licensed interior designer. WTF is up with that? Afraid I'll leave an ottoman out for Dick van Dyke to trip over?
I can't freely shop at the bookstore or the library, because my list of selections just may trigger another visit from those big guys in dark suits.

If I happen to be the wrong color, I can't be out in certain neighborhoods around Washington DC at certain times. In other parts of the country, color doesn't matter, but age does.

I can't go to the local dairy farm and buy whole milk, fresh from the cow, if that happens to be what I like, because the USDA says so.

I can't risk my money in games of chance, because then I might not be able to feed my non-existent children. Oh, wait, I CAN risk my money, as long as I do it in one of the ways approved by the government, such as the state lottery or at a casino. If I choose to go to play in Bernie's back room, the big guys with guns may show up and there goes my money.

I can't go to an anti-war protest or any other form of civil protest without noting the government agents with their cameras, taking pictures of all those so evil as to question the motives of those in charge.

I can't donate cookies to the local homeless shelter on a regular basis, because I'm not a licensed baker. I can't even ship cookies to my stepson serving in the military unless I buy them off the shelf, because he's been told to throw away anything not in official factory wrapping.

Anytime I'm foolish enough to go into a mall or onto a university campus, I either have to break the law or hope that no lawbreaker decides it's my day to die, because I'm stripped of my ability to defend myself and forced to enter a victim disarmament zone.

I can worship as I please, as long as the way I worship pleases the powers that be. If I consider marijuana a sacrament, too bad, because I'm not native american, and please provide proof in triplicate if you please. Oh, and you better change your concept of religious marriage to one man, one woman, because we don't allow no bigamist freaks in the land of the free.

I can't make long-term investments, secure in the knowledge that the rules concerning income from those investments and my obligations to the government won't change on a whim.

I can put all sorts of dangerous drugs in my body, some with lists of dangers that take 30 seconds to describe on TV, as long as those drugs are approved by big daddy and produced by big pharma. If I stop on the street corner to buy herbs to treat glaucoma, I can go to prison.

My mother-in-law can't order her drugs from Canada, and save almost $1000 a month. I can't legally treat my glaucoma with cheap herbs, and refuse to pay big pharma big bucks for legal treatments, yet the doctors are always happy that there's no sign of advancement each time I visit.

What amazes me is that people are under the illusion that they are free.

Then again, if 50,000 gun laws are non-infringing, I can see how that happens.

CCTelander
03-19-2010, 10:33 AM
The "best" kind of slaves are those who THINK they're free.

BillyDkid
03-19-2010, 10:37 AM
The truth is too many people are terrified of anything like genuine freedom. They live under the delusion that they are somehow being protected.

Stary Hickory
03-19-2010, 10:39 AM
The "best" kind of slaves are those who THINK they're free.

Exactly because they continue to work and produce. Resistance in the hearts and minds of the slaves on a large scale is what always ends oppression. That is why education and resolve best serve the interests of freedom promoters.