Vladimir Lenin’s post-revolutionary destruction of
lower class entrepreneurs – the kulaks – is understood
by both Marxist and liberal historians to have been both cruel
and counterproductive. In the 1970s, even as our own post-FDR,
post-Truman, post-Eisenhower, post-LBJ and ongoing Nixon eras
of big federal government bloomed and grew – young and
old Americans alike still vocally condemned interference with
economic freedom, particularly the economic freedom of the
lower classes.
The Civil Rights movement, and the subsequent women’s
equality movement, were fundamentally about economic freedom.
For affected minorities, the lower social and political classes,
these shifts meant freedom to move, to travel and work; freedom
to hire and be hired, to conduct trade with whomever we chose.
As a people, we claim to be proud of that history, that defense
of economic freedom, as it were.
Americans prefer to act freely – witness the substantial
American cash and underground economies, our widespread craving
to learn, share, produce and create satisfied by 20th and
21st century technologies, and our recognized predisposition
toward liberty. Our heroes are liberators, not jailers. That
more than one in five Americans is today sympathetic to the
amazingly radical message of freedom articulated by Ron Paul
in the last election cycle also attests to the extreme level
of freedom with which we are comfortable.
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The American tradition loves liberty. Our national mythology
is of individuals, families and communities living free. Our
public conversation is littered with the language of liberty,
and marketing strategies, from cars to credit cards, from
medicine to menus, glitter with images of freedom. Freedom
sells.
So why is it that so many Americans seem to be such a freedom-fearing,
kulak-hating bunch?
Our legislation is stacked against small business, small
farms, and budding entrepreneurs. Most have read about the
farmers jailed and fined because they sold raw milk to forewarned,
eager consumers. Some have followed the saga of the USDA’s
program to identify all agricultural holdings with "premises
registration" and to ensure all cattle, hog, and sheep
owners adhere to computer scannable tagging systems, matched
to government inspectable databases, so that the federal government
can keep track of what it calls "the national herd."
The expanding nature of government-backed guild restrictions
– impacting hairdressers, flower arrangers, horse massage
therapists, computer repairmen and interior decorators, to
name a few of the thousand of career fields affected –
is another politically acceptable onslaught on the lower classes
cloaked in the language of the common good. This week many
Americans and hundreds of thrift store owners and charitable
operators discovered post hoc a new federal law, effective
February 10th, 2009, that will prohibit the sale of used children’s
clothing – all in the name of keeping children "safe."
The easy salability of the idea that government will keep
the faceless masses "safe" – from milk, meat,
a bad haircut, an improper equine massage or a depressing
living room – belies our love of and our loud talk of
freedom. We buy this line time and time again, even as we
are reminded that in big things and small, it is the government
from which we ought to be protected, and from which we should
be liberated.
Protect me, please, from an federally mandated SEC that can’t
understand Bernie Madoff’s annual reports, an SEC too
busy to take calls from shareholders and others who complain
about the Ponzi scheme, years before Bernie confesses to his
heavily invested children that he was running a Ponzi scheme
from the beginning.
Liberate me, please, from the looming social security nightmare,
and the appetites of our global military machine.
Congressmen Paul suggests that it is very difficult for government
to criticize the big swindlers like Madoff, or the unproductive
beggars in the financial and automobile industries, when government
itself manages and heavily promotes a far larger Ponzi scheme,
a far more vicious and heavy-handed tapping of our present
and future productivity, via the social security system!
Again, like eliminating used children’s clothing from
your local thrift stores, we are told the social security
system, as with the warfare state, is for the good of the
collective, for the betterment of the masses.
So, tell me why it is that so many Americans seem to be such
a freedom-fearing, kulak-hating bunch?
Is it that too many generations of Americans have remained
uneducated in basic ethics, philosophy, history and economics?
Is simple ignorance the reason for such cognitive dissonance
when it comes to freedom in this country? Are we so gullible
and uninformed that we can’t figure out when government
is telling us the same lies, over and over?
Or is it that the model of state socialism is simply irresistible,
tailor-made to appeal to greed, gluttony, sloth, and envy
among both the populace and the political class, with a structure
always ready to stoke nationalist fires of lust, pride and
anger when the proles begin to question the model?
Is it apathy? Perhaps three hundred million citizens in a
constitutional republic is just a few hundred million too
many. Maybe the problem is simply the ease with which the
state deceives us on issues such as the value of our money,
the significance of our debt, the cost of our wars, and the
nature of our national lawlessness. A king in feudal Europe
would have long ago lost his crown, and probably his head
with it, for a thousandth of the misdeeds of any of the modern
American presidents. Even Caesars had to fear the people –
our modern American caesars seem to have lost that fear, as
they construct large and loyal armies, build ever more prisons,
and invest in the technology of monitoring and management
of crowds, both real and virtual.
I think it is not that we are poorly educated – but
wrong-headed state education has probably achieved a toehold
here. Consider our latest Nobel Prize-winning economist –
he attended the best universities, and has been exposed to
every opportunity, yet he remains amazingly uninformed and
illogical in his area of lauded expertise. Happily, most working
Americans have a far better understanding of economics than
Paul Krugman – and he remains as irrelevant as ever
to their actual lives and actions.
I think it is not that we are poorly informed, or illogical.
If one eavesdrops on a typical American conversation these
days, domestic policy will be discussed, and Americans get
it. Average Americans hope to get social security checks,
as they have paid into the system, but they generally understand
it correctly as an unfunded Ponzi scheme near collapse. On
some level, they get that printing fiat money is not good
for them when they go grocery shopping, or job hunting. They
reject government bailouts, and they want to be able to start
businesses and make a living doing what they love, with a
minimum of government levies, interference, and restrictions.
Most heartily despise the IRS, and hold local, state and federal
government officials in high contempt. On foreign policy,
average American instincts are solid. Leave other countries
alone, do not waste hard-earned money on either friends or
lost causes. The few hard cases of intellectual dishonesty
who claim to want to "Win the War in Iraq" or "Make
Afghanistan a Western Democracy" depend solely on the
false prophets of talk radio and Washington politicians for
their argument, and tend not to talk too loudly or too long
about these topics in their local diner or hardware store.
Is it that state socialism is the cockroach of government
species? Certainly state socialism seems able to survive,
and even thrive. But state socialism, corporate capitalism,
or fascism are not variants of the cockroach, a hardworking
creature who adapts readily, and plays fairly, on its own
merits. Instead, these are parasitic systems, and as parasites,
they are below average, because they too quickly weaken and
destroy the viability of the host.
There is apathy – and American political apathy may
be a blessing in disguise. We may indeed be socialistically
indoctrinated from an early age, but we are not passionate
about our federal government, and government in general. We
imagine that it leaves us alone (even as it does not!) and
so, when we do notice its stupidity and cost we are able to
imagine that we are not invested in it. Unlike a divorce,
where a onetime co-dependent and widely accepted mutuality
is torn apart – our eventual divorce from our overbearing
government will be a much happier and more positive event.
This divorce will be, like any divorce, pursued by individuals
who realize, in their own time, that they can’t live
like this anymore. It will be initialized in our imagination
of freedom, and manifest as we begin to live differently,
separately and uniquely from the overbearing and unproductive
state.
Contrary to our shared language and mythology, there seems
to be a collective American hatred of the kulak, the productive
and creative entrepreneur, and strangely, of liberty itself.
There seems to be a dissonance between talking about freedom
and actually practicing it in our lives, work, and community.
However, the promotion of class envy, collectivism, authoritarianism,
and centralized control is not something emanating from the
people of this country. Instead, this is the theme of the
state, the siren song of its deception, a deception that continues
even as the state fails before our eyes, emptying our pockets,
frightening our children, and shooting the insufficiently
submissive in the back.
Incompatible with individual freedom, expression and imagination,
we have identified the only true freedom hater in American.
It is the state. And while we may be guilty of many shortcomings
as a people, a cognitive dissonance over liberty is not one
of them.