By now, the farewell speech given by Ron Paul has been read
or watched by many. While the audience
assembled in Congress may not have been large, the audience enabled by the
internet is significant. The speech has
attracted significant attention online; much of this rightly revolving around
the “30 questions” raised by Dr. Paul.
I would instead focus on the root – the underlying reasons
that give rise to the thirty questions, the reasons that disallow open dialogue
surrounding these issues; that allow alternative views to be ignored or
dismissed. Ron Paul spent far more time
in his speech on this root than he did on the questions.
He asks “why?” Why
are the issues raised in the questions ignored?
I have thought a lot about why
those of us who believe in liberty, as a solution, have done so poorly in
convincing others of its benefits. If liberty is what we claim it is- the
principle that protects all personal, social and economic decisions necessary
for maximum prosperity and the best chance for peace- it should be an easy
sell. Yet, history has shown that the masses have been quite receptive to the
promises of authoritarians which are rarely if ever fulfilled.
The first layer of this onion is peeled back: he sees it as
an intellectual failing:
Without an intellectual awakening,
the turning point will be driven by economic law. A dollar crisis will bring
the current out-of-control system to its knees.
If it’s not accepted that big
government, fiat money, ignoring liberty, central economic planning, welfarism,
and warfarism caused our crisis we can expect a continuous and dangerous march
toward corporatism and even fascism with even more loss of our liberties.
Prosperity for a large middle class though will become an abstract dream.
He shows a glimpse of the next layer: a moral awakening:
Our job, for those of us who
believe that a different system than the one that we have had for the last 100
years, has driven us to this unsustainable crisis, is to be more convincing
that there is a wonderful, uncomplicated, and moral system that provides the
answers. We had a taste of it in our early history. We need not give up on the
notion of advancing this cause.
The immoral use of force is the
source of man’s political problems. Sadly, many religious groups, secular
organizations, and psychopathic authoritarians endorse government initiated
force to change the world. Even when the desired goals are well-intentioned –
or especially when well-intentioned – the results are dismal. The good results
sought never materialize. The new problems created require even more government
force as a solution. The net result is institutionalizing government initiated violence
and morally justifying it on humanitarian grounds.
Society has come to accept and expect government initiated
violence. Few speak of it in these terms
– wars are fought to bring peace and democracy, domestic programs are deemed
benevolent in one way or another. However,
at the root is theft; at the root is violence, initiated by the government
against individuals foreign and domestic.
It is rather strange, that unless
one has a criminal mind and no respect for other people and their property, no
one claims it’s permissible to go into one’s neighbor’s house and tell them how
to behave, what they can eat, smoke and drink or how to spend their money.
Yet, rarely is it asked why it is
morally acceptable that a stranger with a badge and a gun can do the same thing
in the name of law and order. Any resistance is met with brute force, fines,
taxes, arrests, and even imprisonment. This is done more frequently every day
without a proper search warrant.
The law is not law unless it is applied equally to all.
American now suffers from a culture
of violence. It’s easy to reject the initiation of violence against one’s
neighbor but it’s ironic that the people arbitrarily and freely anoint
government officials with monopoly power to initiate violence against the
American people – practically at will.
Because it’s the government that
initiates force, most people accept it as being legitimate. Those who exert the
force have no sense of guilt. It is believed by too many that governments are
morally justified in initiating force supposedly to "do good." They
incorrectly believe that this authority has come from the "consent of the
people." The minority, or victims of government violence never consented
to suffer the abuse of government mandates, even when dictated by the majority.
Victims of TSA excesses never consented to this abuse.
Yet it is the people that have given to the government this
veil of legitimacy to initiate violence.
This attitude has given us a policy
of initiating war to "do good," as well. It is claimed that war, to
prevent war for noble purposes, is justified. This is similar to what we were
once told that: "destroying a village to save a village" was
justified. It was said by a US Secretary of State that the loss of 500,000
Iraqis, mostly children, in the 1990s, as a result of American bombs and
sanctions, was "worth it" to achieve the "good" we brought
to the Iraqi people. And look at the mess that Iraq is in today.
Horrendous. Yet such
words are offered by governmental leaders regularly, and there is almost no
pushback from the people who send those leaders to office. The people sanction violence.
Government use of force to mold
social and economic behavior at home and abroad has justified individuals using
force on their own terms. The fact that violence by government is seen as
morally justified, is the reason why violence will increase when the big
financial crisis hits and becomes a political crisis as well.
More and more people are conditioned by the behavior
observed – a violent behavior, and behavior that not only allows for the initiation
of violence, but sanctions it, legitimizes it, and praises it.
First, we recognize that
individuals shouldn’t initiate violence, then we give the authority to
government. Eventually, the immoral use of government violence, when things
goes badly, will be used to justify an individual’s "right" to do the
same thing. Neither the government nor individuals have the moral right to
initiate violence against another yet we are moving toward the day when both will
claim this authority. If this cycle is not reversed society will break down.
He plainly states the non-aggression principle:
To develop a truly free society,
the issue of initiating force must be understood and rejected. Granting to
government even a small amount of force is a dangerous concession.
He next speaks plainly about the shortcoming, and the need
to strike at the root of the problem:
The real question is: if it is
liberty we seek, should most of the emphasis be placed on government reform or
trying to understand what "a virtuous and moral people" means and how
to promote it. The Constitution has not prevented the people from demanding handouts
for both rich and poor in their efforts to reform the government, while
ignoring the principles of a free society.
The solution is not to be found in government – even a
government based on a written constitution.
The problem that must be confronted is the virtue and morality of the
people.
If the people are unhappy with the
government performance it must be recognized that government is merely a
reflection of an immoral society that rejected a moral government of
constitutional limitations of power and love of freedom.
The solution will not come from politics as long as society is
immoral.
Achieving legislative power and
political influence should not be our goal. Most of the change, if it is to
come, will not come from the politicians, but rather from individuals, family,
friends, intellectual leaders and our religious institutions. The solution can
only come from rejecting the use of coercion, compulsion, government commands,
and aggressive force, to mold social and economic behavior. Without accepting
these restraints, inevitably the consensus will be to allow the government to
mandate economic equality and obedience to the politicians who gain power and
promote an environment that smothers the freedoms of everyone. It is then that
the responsible individuals who seek excellence and self-esteem by being
self-reliance and productive, become the true victims.
He then rightly confronts those who claim that application
of the non-aggression principle is idealistic, or utopian:
What a wonderful world it would be
if everyone accepted the simple moral premise of rejecting all acts of
aggression.
It would not take “everyone” to accept this – just a
significant minority will make the difference in changing opinion.
The retort to such a suggestion is
always: it’s too simplistic, too idealistic, impractical, naïve, utopian, dangerous,
and unrealistic to strive for such an ideal.
The answer to that is that for
thousands of years the acceptance of government force, to rule over the people,
at the sacrifice of liberty, was considered moral and the only available option
for achieving peace and prosperity.
What could be more utopian than
that myth – considering the results especially looking at the state sponsored
killing, by nearly every government during the 20th Century, estimated to be in
the hundreds of millions. It’s time to reconsider this grant of authority to
the state.
The burden of proof should not be placed on those who see
non-aggression as the only moral means to a civil society, but on those who
advocate for “government” as that term is understood today.
The government reflects the society, and the society is one
that accepts the initiation of violence as the normal course:
The Founders were convinced that a free
society could not exist without a moral people.
Benjamin Franklin claimed
"only a virtuous people are capable of freedom." John Adams
concurred: "Our Constitution was made for a moral and religious people. It
is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."
A moral people must reject all
violence in an effort to mold people’s beliefs or habits.
A society that boos or ridicules
the Golden Rule is not a moral society. All great religions endorse the Golden
Rule. The same moral standards that individuals are required to follow should
apply to all government officials. They cannot be exempt.
The solution resides in each one of us. We must reject the idea that the initiation
of violence can be justified:
The #1 responsibility for each of
us is to change ourselves with hope that others will follow. This is of greater
importance than working on changing the government; that is secondary to
promoting a virtuous society. If we can achieve this, then the government will
change.
Then he gets to the last layer of the onion – the root:
To achieve liberty and peace, two
powerful human emotions have to be overcome. Number one is "envy"
which leads to hate and class warfare. Number two is "intolerance"
which leads to bigoted and judgemental policies. These emotions must be
replaced with a much better understanding of love, compassion, tolerance and
free market economics. Freedom, when understood, brings people together. When
tried, freedom is popular.
This is a remarkable speech – not for the “30 questions”
raised by Dr. Paul (although an honest dialogue around these will help to get
to the source of the problems), but for the moral issues raised. The government reflects the values of the
people, and these values are based on envy and intolerance. These result in justifying violence as a
means to rectify perceived wrongs and potential threats.
Until these immoral values are confronted, the government
will not be changed. This is the
powerful message of Ron Paul’s farewell speech.
Excellent!! :-) Bluebird
ReplyDeleteThank You!
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