Personal Sovereignty and “Killing Their Asses”.

Yesterday I quoted Tam:

I have no real love for the peccadilloes and strange beliefs of the Right. From politicians with a tenuous grasp of the Constitution to preachers sticking their noses where they don’t belong, I get a twinge of annoyance at least once a day. It remains largely an annoyance, however, as so much of what they hold dear has very little impact on me in my daily life: I don’t gamble, have no desire to marry another woman, and don’t have any children for them to teach that the Earth is flat or that Harry Potter is the tool of the devil. Besides, they generally want to let me keep my guns, so if they get too annoying in the future I figure I can always shoot them.

Today, SayUncle:

What makes me a gun nut?

Not the number of guns I own. For someone who yammers on so much about guns, I probably own considerably less than the average reader here. I own the following: Ruger 10/22, a Walther P22, Kel-Tec 380, an AR in 9mm, Glock 30, an AR in 5.56. I think that’s it. Six firearms. I have a lot on my to buy list but they always get pushed back due to other priorities or whatever. And here lately, I’ve actually sold a couple of firearms. One, because I didn’t care for it and one because I was offered too much to turn it down.

It’s not that I like how they work mechanically or tinkering. I do that with other stuff and I’m not nuts about that. I like to do woodworking but I am not a woodworking nut. And I don’t blog about woodworking.

It’s not hunting. I don’t hunt.

It’s not the zen of target shooting. I zen playing cards, golf, and other activities as well.

So, what is it? I thought about it long and hard. And it’s this simple truth:

If you fuck with me bad enough, I’ll kill your ass.

What both of these quotes illustrate is the concept of personal sovereignty. What is it? Here’s a good definition:

Personal sovereignty is an issue which affects each of us as individuals and as a society, whether we realize it or not. Understanding it can help us to interpret what is going on within us and around us. Increasing it can radically transform our existence.

The word “sovereign” means to be in supreme authority over someone or something, and to be extremely effective and powerful. Therefore, it is usually applied to gods, royalty and governments. We speak of kings and queens as sovereigns (even when they are figureheads), and of the sovereign rights of nations and States.

Personal sovereignty, then, would imply the intrinsic authority and power of an individual to determine his or her own direction and destiny. If that sounds suspiciously like free will, it’s because personal sovereignty and free will are the same thing.

It is, in fact, the polar opposite of statism. It is the thing that statists fear above all – a population that won’t do as it’s told by its betters.

When sovereign individuals in the State of Nature come together to form political community they create a higher law, a governing authority. Again, in political community the rule of law, the state’s monopoly on violence and the state’s internal sovereignty all mean the same thing. The right to be armed outside of the law is the right to individual sovereignty. Individual sovereigns by definition do not consent to be governed, do not give “just powers” to government, do not “quit everyone his Executive Power of the Law of Nature”. They exist in the State of Nature before there is law and government. They still want this government to have the “just powers” to secure the rights they proclaim.

The author of that piece obviously doesn’t grasp the essential difference between America’s founding and that of every other nation on earth – a founding best illustrated by Thomas Jefferson’s comment about Shay’s Rebellion:

A little rebellion now and then is a good thing. … God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. … And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.

The part that our statist friend just doesn’t get is what Tam, SayUncle, I and most other gun owners grasp intuitively:

Fuck with me bad enough

Or, as Jefferson originally expressed it, far more eloquently:

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

What holds true at the wholesale level does as well at the retail.

Statists grasp the inherent logic that statism cannot coexist with a population that has not surrendered its personal sovereignty – a population with the ability and willingness to reject government’s “monopoly on violence” is the keystone of individual rights and personal liberty, as I tried to illustrate in Those Without Swords Can Still Die Upon Them. Statism requires a population that is dependent – upon the state or upon their neighbors. People like those recently illustrated at Kim du Toit’s in No Helping Hand

Recently, four young families moved up here to Washington state after making small fortunes in the California real estate boom. These people are all friends of a friend so I run into them frequently. They are all liberal, but not of the raving moonbat type. None of them are anti-gun, but neither are they much interested in fireams.

Recently I was at a party with these four families present. I was encouraging them to make their own emergency kits and store food. Also, I described my efforts in this area. Once again someone made the “when things get bad we’re coming to your house” statement. This time it was not a joke.

They seemed to believe that I would feed and protect them in dangerous times; almost as if it was my responsibility to do so.

These are people who believe that someone else is responsible for their safety and security. If the state can’t (or won’t), it’s up to their neighbors who have prepared.

This is the essential core of people who support statism: What’s mine is mine, and what’s yours is also mine.

Unless you have a a weapon and the willingness to inhibit them from fucking with you bad enough….

Original JSKit/Echo comment thread.

The Mist from the RCOB™ is Getting Darker.

Two associated stories for your revision, one state-level, one federal. The state-level one:

Man arrested for ‘stealing’ own car

Stephen Janis, The Examiner
Aug 21, 2006 2:00 AM

BALTIMORE – Baltimore City police have a new crime on the books: Stealing your own car.

Just ask Keith Spence, a Baltimore City resident who was arrested when he was driving home from work in a car he bought with a tax refund.

“I couldn’t believe it was happening,” Spence said.

Spence, 28, said city police pulled him over in his 1993 red Cadillac Elderado(sic) coupe for a cracked rear window in February. Four officers dragged Spence and his two passengers from the car and said they were under arrest for stealing it, he said.

“I was listening to the radio from the back seat of the police car. It said a gray Cadillac sedan was stolen; mine is a red coupe. I guess the officer must have been color blind,” he said.

A photo of Mr. Spence with the title to his Cadillac:

Was the officer colorblind? Oh, the irony!

“I tried to tell them it was my car, but they wouldn’t listen.”

Spence and his two friends were arrested, and the car was impounded. Charged with one count of motor vehicle theft, Spence represented himself in court in June.

“I owned the car — I knew it wasn’t stolen,” he said.

Even though Spence had the title proving he owned the car, he said he was cleared of the charges because of the testimony of the owner of the stolen car.

“The whole courtroom fell out — even the judge laughed,” Spence told The Examiner.

Still, police sold Spence’s car at auction two months before his day in court.

Now Spence is without the car it took him a year to buy, and his lawyer, Roland Brown, said he is preparing to sue the city.

I damn well hope so. I hope he gets a brand-new Escalade out of it.

“Not only did the police violate my client’s constitutional rights by selling his car before the trial, but the case demonstrates that young black males in this city are blindly targeted by the Baltimore City police,” he said.

Brown said the case also points out problems with the city’s management of stolen vehicles. “You have to question why a stolen car would be sold at all,” he said.

Because the peons have no recourse?

(Appropriately named) Police spokesman Matt Jablow said police are investigating the incident.

“We’re looking into the circumstances surrounding why the car was sold,” Jablow said.

Spence said he only wants the Cadillac he worked so hard to buy.

“I loved that car.”

Are you pissed off yet? Wait till you read this one. A while back the BATF and other multiple-letter bureaus raided KT Ordnance. I believe Say Uncle has been on top of this story, but I found the current news at The Freeholder.

Here’s the latest update:

An Open Letter from KT Ordnance

August 24, 2006

As you know I had been raided by the ATF, FBI, and Canadian ATF back on June 7, 2006.

The Asset Forfeiture & Seized Property Branch of the BATFE has now contacted me. I have to date not been charged or arrested for anything. They sent this letter out on August 4 2006; I received it on August 22 2006. They gave me 20 days from date on the letter (not the date I received it) to file grievance (sent by certified, return receipt).

They obviously used the U.S. Postal Service

I also have to put up a 10% bond for the assets value (they valued the items at $11,350.00) just for the privilege of attempting to get the items back. They claim in the forfeiture letter that these items where “used or acquired in violation of federal law”, yet I’ve not been charged with violating any law.

Notice the “Disposal” afforded BATFE with no conviction or arrest.

(b) Disposal
In the case of the forfeiture of any firearm by reason of a violation of this chapter, no notice of public sale shall be required; no such firearm shall be sold at a public sale; if such firearm is forfeited for a violation of this chapter and there is no remission or mitigation of forfeiture thereof, it shall be delivered by the Secretary to the Administrator of General Services, General Services Administration, who may order such firearm destroyed or may sell it to any State, or possession, or political subdivision thereof, or at the request of the Secretary, may authorize its retention for official use of the Treasury Department, or may transfer it without charge to any executive department or independent establishment of the Government for use by it.

It seems they want to keep them for there own use, as some are desirable. I cannot help but think that these will end up in some politician’s private collection. You may view the items in question here: http://www.ktordnance.com/kto/showcase.php . The two items are the two 1911, 45 Cal pistols in the first three pictures (Abigail & Elizabeth). And there are others not pictured. All this with no charges filed, no arrest, and no conviction. I call this theft.

So do I

They can come in, steal your property, show no I.D., use a warrant that is so secret that the Sheriff could not see it, charge you with no crime, and then tell you, “we are keeping your property, and we will give/sell it to whomever we want.” If they do charge me (up to 5 years from now), and I win, will I get back my property that they sold/gave away to someone 5 years earlier? What do you think?

Well, Mr. Spence isn’t getting his car back, is he? At least he was charged first.

With the vague description of the items seized, it seems that they added items that are not mine, but who can tell with a description of “rifle” no serial number(s), no caliber, or any other descriptive markings (they did list the s/n’s for the two 1911’s). How do I know that they even are mine? Yet I must pay them 10% of the value just to find out. And they decide the value.

Cay you say, “racketeering” boys and girls?

This is a rogue agency, and must be stopped. I also feel that there may be a connection between the fact that I support JPFO (Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership) and GOA (Gun Owner of America), who are both actively trying to disband the BATFE. (see JPFO’s “The Gang” documentary)

Richard Celata

All emphasis in both stories are mine.

Remember when I wrote Pressing the “Reset” Button? I said at that time:

I think a lot of people are getting fed up with ever-increasing government intrusion into our lives. With our ever-shrinking individual rights. More than one of Jay’s respondents noted the apathy of the majority, though, and I agree. Government interferes lightly on a wholesale basis, but it does its really offensive intrusions strictly retail. So long as the majority gets its bread and circuses, it will remain content.

But not everyone.

I think more and more individuals will be pressing the “RESET” button in the future.

I understand the futility of the act, but I can also certainly understand the urge.

UPDATE: Oh, for Christ’s SAKE!

SEX OFFENDERS
Plan gains to publicly identify accused
Ohio panel backs registry proposal

BLADE COLUMBUS BUREAU

COLUMBUS – An Ohio legislative panel yesterday rubber-stamped an unprecedented process that would allow sex offenders to be publicly identified and tracked even if they’ve never been charged with a crime.

No one in attendance voiced opposition to rules submitted by Attorney General Jim Petro’s office to the Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review, consisting of members of the Ohio House and Senate.

Excuse me, but if “they’ve never been charged with a crime” how the FUCK can they be identified as “sex offenders”?

Look, I hate child molesters with a passion. I think that when they’re caught they should be hung from gibbets and left to rot as an example to others who “can’t control their impulses” to try a little harder, but there is such a thing as “due process of law” and “jury of their peers,” and that’s what’s being thrown out the window here.

Of course it’s for “public safety.”

It always is.

Rope, Tree; Some Assembly Required.

I got an email from Francis. He’s pretty torqued about this story:

Florida city considers eminent domain

By Joyce Howard Price
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
October 3, 2005

Florida’s Riviera Beach is a poor, predominantly black, coastal community that intends to revitalize its economy by using eminent domain, if necessary, to displace about 6,000 local residents and build a billion-dollar waterfront yachting and housing complex.

Yep. Those 6,000 residents sure will love living in those new houses… What? You mean they’ll have to live somewhere else??

“This is a community that’s in dire need of jobs, which has a median income of less than $19,000 a year,” said Riviera Beach Mayor Michael Brown.

He defends the use of eminent domain by saying the city is “using tools that have been available to governments for years to bring communities like ours out of the economic doldrums and the trauma centers.”

Mr. Brown said Riviera Beach is doing what the city of New London, Conn., is trying to do and what the U.S. Supreme Court said is proper in its ruling June 23 in Kelo v. City of New London. That decision upheld the right of government to seize private properties for use by private developers for projects designed to generate jobs and increase the tax base.

Err, no. That decision upheld the power of government to throw people out of their own homes for projects the government hopes will generate a larger tax base. “Right” has nothing to do with it.

“Now eminent domain is affecting people who never had to deal with it before and who have political connections,” Mr. Brown said. “But if we don’t use this power, cities will die.”

Then perhaps they should?

Jacqui Loriol insists she and her husband will fight the loss of their 80-year-old home in Riviera Beach.

But the Supreme Court has legislated decided. Your home is not your own, even if you pay your rent taxes.

“This is a very [racially] mixed area that’s also very stable,” she said. “But no one seems to care … Riviera Beach needs economic redevelopment. But there’s got to be another way.”

In the Kelo ruling, a divided Supreme Court held that private development offering jobs and increased tax revenues constituted a public use of property, but the court held that state legislatures can draft eminent-domain statutes to their satisfaction.

Dana Berliner, senior lawyer with the Institute for Justice, which represented homeowners in the Kelo case, said “pie in the sky” expectations like those expressed by Mr. Brown are routine in all these cases.

“They always think economic redevelopment will bring more joy than what is there now,” she said. “Once someone can be replaced so something more expensive can go where they were, every home and business in the country is subject to taking by someone else.”

Last week, the Riviera Beach City Council tapped the New Jersey-based Viking Inlet Harbor Properties LLC to oversee the mammoth 400-acre redevelopment project.

“More than 2,000 homes could be eligible for confiscation,” said H. Adams Weaver, a local lawyer who is assisting protesting homeowners.

Viking spokesman Peter Frederiksen said the plan “is to create a working waterfront,” adding that the project could take 15 years and that “we would only use condemnation as a last resort.”

Viking has said it will pay at least the assessed values of homes and businesses it buys.

Unless, of course, the owners tenants fight it. Then they’ll get less than market value minus “back rent” when the legal challenges finally run out.

Charming, no?

Other plans for the project include creation of a basin for megayachts with high-end housing, retail and office space, a multilevel garage for boats, a 96,000-square-foot aquarium and a manmade lagoon.

Mr. Brown said Riviera Beach wants to highlight its waterfront.

“We have the best beach and the most attractive redevelopment property anywhere in the United States,” he said.

Mr. Frederiksen said people with yachts need a place to keep and service them. “And we want to develop a charter school for development of marine trades.”

I’m sure the former residents will love working in the new marina.

Mr. Brown and others said this could be one of the biggest eminent-domain actions ever. A report in the Palm Beach Post said it is the biggest since 1954, when 5,000 residents of Washington were displaced for eventual development of the Southwest D.C. waterfront, L’Enfant Plaza, and the less-than-successful Waterside Mall.

That would be the initial “takings” case argued before the Supreme Court, Berman v. Parker. “Less-than-successful,” eh? You don’t say.

The fact that Riviera Beach is so financially downtrodden may seem ironic because as Mr. Brown notes “it sits right across the inlet from Palm Beach,” one of the nation’s wealthiest areas.

“Palm Beach County is the largest county east of the Mississippi, and we have the second-highest rate of poverty in the county,” the mayor said.

I’ve discussed the Kelo decision here twice before. Once, during the oral-argument phase in Slouching Towards Despotism, and then after the decision in Sprinting Towards Despotism. The only real surprise was that Sandra Day O’Connor, who wrote the Midkiff decision, the second “takings” case dealing with eminent domain, dissented in Kelo.

Francis, I don’t know what to do, but Mike of Feces Flinging Monkey sent me this cartoon that says a lot:

As some members of the blogosphere have recommended repeatedly, “Rope, tree; some assembly required” is the only thing that comes immediately to mind. I keep wondering if this won’t drive another person or three to press the reset button.

UPDATE – 10/5: And don’t miss this post by Ravenwood.

“They want to steal my land,” Segal said. “What right do they have when I intend to do the exact same thing they want to do with my property?”

Welcome to post-Kelo America. All your property are belong to us!

Pressing the Reset Button?

The blogosphere (at least the part of it that follows the gun rights agenda) is abuzz over this article:

New Orleans Begins Confiscating Firearms as Water Recedes

By ALEX BERENSON and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
Published: September 8, 2005

NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 8 – Waters were receding across this flood-beaten city today as police officers began confiscating weapons, including legally registered firearms, from civilians in preparation for a mass forced evacuation of the residents still living here.

No civilians in New Orleans will be allowed to carry pistols, shotguns or other firearms, said P. Edwin Compass III, the superintendent of police. “Only law enforcement are allowed to have weapons,” he said.

But that order apparently does not apply to hundreds of security guards hired by businesses and some wealthy individuals to protect property. The guards, employees of private security companies like Blackwater, openly carry M-16’s and other assault rifles. Mr. Compass said that he was aware of the private guards, but that the police had no plans to make them give up their weapons.

As Eugene Volokh notes:

(T)he Louisiana Constitution, art. I, sec. 11 (enacted 1974), provides that

The right of each citizen to keep and bear arms shall not be abridged, but this provision shall not prevent the passage of laws to prohibit the carrying of weapons concealed on the person.

Is there some implicit emergency exception to the right to bear arms here? On the other hand, doesn’t the emergency make the right especially valuable to the rightsholders? Should it matter that the government seems willing to let “businesses and some wealthy individuals” hire to people use arms “to protect their property,” but isn’t willing to let less wealthy individuals use themselves and their friends and relatives to protect their property (and their bodies and their lives)?

The NYT piece continues:

Nearly two weeks after the floods began, New Orleans has turned into an armed camp, patrolled by thousands of local, state, and federal law enforcement officers, as well as National Guard troops and active-duty soldiers. While armed looters roamed unchecked last week, the city is now calm. No arrests were made on Wednesday night or this morning, and the police received only 10 calls for service, a police spokesman said.

Not exactly “unchecked.” Armed citizens checked them pretty well in many accounts, while there were no local, state, or federal law enforcement officers available to respond to calls for service or perform arrests.

Continuing:

Many neighborhoods in the northern half of New Orleans remain under 10 feet of water, and Mr. Compass said today that the city’s plans for a forced evacuation remained in effect because of the danger of disease and fires.

Mr. Compass said he could not disclose when New Orleans residents might be forced to leave en masse, but other police officers and law enforcement officials said the city planned to start as early as tonight.

The city’s Police Department and federal law enforcement officers from agencies like the United States Marshals Service will lead the evacuation, Mr. Compass said. Officers will search houses in both dry and flooded neighborhoods, and no one will be allowed to stay, he said.

Many of the residents still in the city said they did not understand why the city remained intent on forcing them out.

“I know the risks,” said Renee de Pontchieux, as she sat on a stool outside Kajun’s Pub in the working-class Bywater neighborhood east of downtown. “We used to think we lived in America – now we’re not so sure. Why should we allow this government to chase us out and allow people from outside to rebuild our homes? We want to rebuild our homes.”

But Ms. De Pontchieux said she was resigned to being evacuated if the police insisted. “It would be foolish” to fight, she said.

But I’m wondering if this forced disarmament and evacuation won’t force at least a couple of people over the edge. Back in June I wrote Freedom’s Just Another Word for Nothin’ Left to Lose. Most of these people literally don’t have much left.

An estimated 5,000 to 10,000 people remain inside New Orleans more than a week after Hurricane Katrina hit, many in neighborhoods that are on high ground near the Mississippi River.

Among the authorities, though, some confusion lingered about how a widespread evacuation by force would work, and how much support it would get at the federal and state level. Mayor C. Ray Nagin told the police and the military on Tuesday to remove all residents for their own safety, and on Wednesday, the police superintendent, Mr. Compass, said state laws give the mayor the authority to declare martial law and order the evacuations.

“There’s a martial law declaration in place that gives us legal authority for mandatory evacuations,” Mr. Compass said. “We’ll use the minimum amount of force necessary.”

“Legal authority”? I don’t think so. But what the government can do, and what it is legally empowered to do are two vastly different things.

State officials said Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco could tell the Guard to carry out the forced removals, but they stopped short of a commitment to do so. In Washington, Lt. Gen. Joseph R. Inge, deputy commander of the United States Northern Command, said regular troops “would not be used” in any forced evacuation.

Glad to hear that.

The state disaster law does not supersede either the state or federal Constitutions, said Kenneth M. Murchison, a law professor at Louisiana State University. But even so, Mr. Nagin’s decision could be a smart strategy that does not violate fundamental rights, Professor Murchison said.

Illegal, but smart? I don’t see how forced disarmament and forced relocation do not “violate fundamental rights.”

The people left in New Orleans are the ones who are too stubborn to leave, too intent on criminality to leave, or lacked the ability to leave. They are also the ones least likely to understand what their rights actually are. If I had lived in New Orleans (as if) I’d have left before the storm hit, and I’d have had at least most of my firearms with me already, but there’s the possibility that one or two of the stubborn ones still living in the city might find forced disarmament and forced evacuation to be their own personal breaking point – the point at which they are willing to press the “reset button.” But the overwhelming majority will most definitely just go along.

And the rest of us will just sit and watch.

Freedom’s Just Another Word for “Nothin’ Left to Lose”.

I ran across a quotation a few days ago that struck me pretty hard. I don’t really know why. It isn’t, in content, any different from many others I’m familiar with. Then this evening I read a post at No Quarters that reminded me afresh. Gunner posted the entire “Give me Liberty” speech by Patrick Henry which was certainly apropos, and I’ll repost it here:

No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism, as well as abilities, of the very worthy gentlemen who have just addressed the House. But different men often see the same subject in different lights; and, therefore, I hope it will not be thought disrespectful to those gentlemen if, entertaining as I do opinions of a character very opposite to theirs, I shall speak forth my sentiments freely and without reserve. This is no time for ceremony. The questing before the House is one of awful moment to this country. For my own part, I consider it as nothing less than a question of freedom or slavery; and in proportion to the magnitude of the subject ought to be the freedom of the debate. It is only in this way that we can hope to arrive at truth, and fulfill the great responsibility which we hold to God and our country. Should I keep back my opinions at such a time, through fear of giving offense, I should consider myself as guilty of treason towards my country, and of an act of disloyalty toward the Majesty of Heaven, which I revere above all earthly kings.

Mr. President, it is natural to man to indulge in the illusions of hope. We are apt to shut our eyes against a painful truth, and listen to the song of that siren till she transforms us into beasts. Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? Are we disposed to be of the number of those who, having eyes, see not, and, having ears, hear not, the things which so nearly concern their temporal salvation? For my part, whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to know the whole truth; to know the worst, and to provide for it.

I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of judging of the future but by the past. And judging by the past, I wish to know what there has been in the conduct of the British ministry for the last ten years to justify those hopes with which gentlemen have been pleased to solace themselves and the House. Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? Trust it not, sir; it will prove a snare to your feet. Suffer not yourselves to be betrayed with a kiss. Ask yourselves how this gracious reception of our petition comports with those warlike preparations which cover our waters and darken our land. Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? Let us not deceive ourselves, sir. These are the implements of war and subjugation; the last arguments to which kings resort. I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? Has Great Britain any enemy, in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? No, sir, she has none. They are meant for us: they can be meant for no other. They are sent over to bind and rivet upon us those chains which the British ministry have been so long forging. And what have we to oppose to them? Shall we try argument? Sir, we have been trying that for the last ten years. Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? Nothing. We have held the subject up in every light of which it is capable; but it has been all in vain. Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? Let us not, I beseech you, sir, deceive ourselves. Sir, we have done everything that could be done to avert the storm which is now coming on. We have petitioned; we have remonstrated; we have supplicated; we have prostrated ourselves before the throne, and have implored its interposition to arrest the tyrannical hands of the ministry and Parliament. Our petitions have been slighted; our remonstrances have produced additional violence and insult; our supplications have been disregarded; and we have been spurned, with contempt, from the foot of the throne! In vain, after these things, may we indulge the fond hope of peace and reconciliation. There is no longer any room for hope. If we wish to be free– if we mean to preserve inviolate those inestimable privileges for which we have been so long contending–if we mean not basely to abandon the noble struggle in which we have been so long engaged, and which we have pledged ourselves never to abandon until the glorious object of our contest shall be obtained–we must fight! I repeat it, sir, we must fight! An appeal to arms and to the God of hosts is all that is left us!

They tell us, sir, that we are weak; unable to cope with so formidable an adversary. But when shall we be stronger? Will it be the next week, or the next year? Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? Shall we acquire the means of effectual resistance by lying supinely on our backs and hugging the delusive phantom of hope, until our enemies shall have bound us hand and foot? Sir, we are not weak if we make a proper use of those means which the God of nature hath placed in our power. The millions of people, armed in the holy cause of liberty, and in such a country as that which we possess, are invincible by any force which our enemy can send against us. Besides, sir, we shall not fight our battles alone. There is a just God who presides over the destinies of nations, and who will raise up friends to fight our battles for us. The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone; it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave. Besides, sir, we have no election. If we were base enough to desire it, it is now too late to retire from the contest. There is no retreat but in submission and slavery! Our chains are forged! Their clanking may be heard on the plains of Boston! The war is inevitable–and let it come! I repeat it, sir, let it come.

It is in vain, sir, to extenuate the matter. Gentlemen may cry, Peace, Peace– but there is no peace. The war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms! Our brethren are already in the field! Why stand we here idle? What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!

Strong words, spoken at the end of hope for any peaceful resolution.

In the post immediately below that one, Gunner discusses Claire Wolfe’s much-repeated quotation:

America is at that awkward stage. It’s too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards.

He quotes Claire talking about that quip:

People have started using the expression “Claire Wolfe time” and “half past Claire Wolfe” to talk about how bad our loss of freedom is becoming. I can’t tell you how strange it is to have my name becoming a metaphor for the moment a shooting war begins.

What’s scarier is that I can no longer think of any moral reason not to “shoot the bastards.” I can think of many, many pragmatic reasons not to attack government thugs and their bosses. I’m still not advocating that anyone commit violence (not even against TSA screeners, federal prosecutors, or cops at checkpoints — though I understand the impulse).

But with freedom being sucked away and absolutely no one making any effective large-scale effort to restore it (but lots of people making effective large-scale efforts to destroy it), I can easily see how the next checkpoint or the next arbitrary detention or the next demand for biometric ID will simply be The Moment for some of us. Not just for the edgy Carl Drega people, either. But for good, solid, sensible people who must make the choice either to live with themselves or live as a cowed, obedient comrade of the Stalinist state being created around them.

Sometimes survival of freedom’s soul requires uttering a big, fat, frickin’ loud, emphatic, get-out-of-my-face right this minute, no doubt about it, this planet ain’t big enough for the two of us NO.

And that “NO” — as governments understand and dread — is best enforced at the point of a gun in the hands of a determined citizen willing and ready to use it.

Why must anyone be squeezed into making that choice in America, of all places? Nothing is more heartbreaking. Why the hell can’t governments just get out of our way and let ordinary people go about their business unmolested?

I left a comment on Gunner’s blog pointing to my conclusion that Claire was wrong. It’s not too early, it’s too late.

There’s a discussion running over at AR15.com this evening about the Supreme Court’s vacating the 9th Circuit’s U.S. v Stewart decision and what it means. I’m sure there are discussions on many other boards about it. Here are a few example posts in reaction:

Exactly as I expected after the Raich ruling. The Feds can now legislate/regulate just about anything in your daily lives and to hell with what the states think.

Knew it was going to happen, but it still sucks.

Raich and McCain-Feingold basically said that the Federal government has unlimited powers, and state’s rights no longer exist. The United States of the Founders is gone, and the US Constitution can be ignored at will.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. –That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. US Declaration of Independence.

Time to do it again.

The very reason for the Supreme Court was to validate rulings using the Constitution as the final arbiter.

Now all the entire legal system does is base shitty and unconstitutional law on previous shitty and unconstitutional law using the bullshit excuse of “precedent”.

We’re fucked.

The system was set up as a LIMITED Federal government GRANTED those powers not reserved to the States and the People. It’s been totally flipped the other way. The Federal government has given themselves virtual control over EVERYTHING that is done in this country. The States are merely annoying political sub-divisions that are obstacles to get around (again through more “interpreted” laws). The ultimate tool is financial. The system has been rigged to give most of states citizen’s tax monies to the Federal government and therefore if you don’t comply with what the Feds want, we’ll simply find one of those hundreds-of-thousands of laws we’ve created that say we can’t give you any of YOUR money back. Too bad, so sad.

States rights were at the heart of the first Civil War. The ground work is being laid for the second one in exactly the same way.

I’m 48. I wonder if I’ll see it happen before I die?

We are governed by tyrants and traitors. The Constitution is regarded by the government it created as a contemptible rag.

We, and our own fathers, allowed the Republic the Founding Fathers authored to be slowly digested by those who promise that intrusions are so small as to be meaningless, or shriek that transitory emergencies must be allowed to override ancient liberties.

We have a health care privacy law whose primary effect is to ensure the right of hospitals and insurers to sell your private health information. We lurch toward national ID cards; our anonymity when unoffending is not assured by the privacy right that allows us to kill unborn children and sodomize one another. Your 12 year-old daughter has a right to privacy that assures that she can undergo an invasive surgical procedure without your knowledge, but does not guarantee that she can walk down a public street without disclosing her identity to any interested minion of the law. The First Amendment protects pornography – even simulated child pronography – and flag-burning, but it does not guarantee the right to criticize a congressman in the 60 days before an election.

We begin to reap the consequences of the ill-considered forbearance that allowed Chief Justice Hughes to say “We are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is,” and escaped unhanged. What generations of lawyers and politicians have taken as elevated drollery or cynical realism was in fact civic blasphemy and open treason. We have for centuries said with pride that we are governed by laws rather than men; we have celebrated the rule of law. It is time we began to dig its grave. We are governed by men, by majoritarian whim, by horsetraders and whores in Congress, by judicial cowardice and caprice, by every vile, low, unworthy, ungodly, despicable artifice and trick that led to the rebellion of ’76, lacking only a crown.

We draw closer and closer to the hell of totalitarianism or the hell of revolution. Wise men will contemplate their choice of poisons.

You know, when a computer gets bogged down with too much shit floating around in it… memory leaks, orphaned processes… you need to do a CTRL-ALT-DEL to reboot, just to get a fresh start.

The gov’t needs a CTRL-ALT-DEL every so often just to get rid of the accumulated shit that’s built up.

And it doesn’t need to be by force… the founders should have made a mandatory maximum sunset clause for every law that was passed, and each one must be be brought up for debate individually before renewing it. Eventually you would get to the point where all our elected officials would have time to do is renew laws. They wouldn’t have the time to cram anything else down our throats.

Yes, all that is interesting but can you tell me when the next American Idol comes on please. All this talk of government wears me out. I need to know who: is voted off the island, or makes it too the next round, or can’t control their kids, or will have a house built for them they can’t afford thanks to lease payments to the federal and state government.

I fear the nation left to my daughter will be no better than any other socialist hell by the time I’m off this mortal coil. Sometimes I wish it would just come to a boil so we can get on with it…. slide down the sewer or pick a fight. My heart wants to think men will not stand for it. My head tells me only a very few will risk their middle-class home, 3 cars, and big screen for any ideal such as freedom. It makes me sad.

I hate to quote a movie but one of my favorite quotes from The Patriot: “Why would I trade one tyrant three thousand miles away for three thousand tyrants one mile away. An elected legislature can trample a man’s rights as surely as a king”. The real tyrant is an ignorant population. They are all around you and only 1 in 50 can correctly tell you what any portion of the Constitution means or why it’s important.

That last one was the most insightful, accurate post in the thread.

Just yesterday I finished re-reading Heinlein’s masterpiece The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve read it. I know I, personally, have worn out three copies. It’s a great read, and a sobering look into the mechanics of revolution. I am constantly in awe of the men and women who carried off our American revolution and then made the government that we, their descendants, have so badly mangled. Claire Wolfe asks “Why the hell can’t governments just get out of our way and let ordinary people go about their business unmolested?” Heinlein has an answer:

Must be a yearning deep in human heart to stop other people from doing as they please. Rules, laws – always for other fellow. A murky part of us, something we had before we came down out of trees, and failed to shuck when we stood up.

I’m beginning to believe that Edward O. Wilson’s analysis of Marxism, “Wonderful theory. Wrong species.” is applicable to self-government as well. It certainly appears to be.

So what was that quote? I found it a few days ago at American Digest. It’s from a speech Alexander Solzhenitsyn gave at Harvard in 1978. It’s taken out of context, but it really does stand alone:

In a state of psychological weakness, weapons become a burden for the capitulating side. To defend oneself, one must also be ready to die; there is little such readiness in a society raised in the cult of material well-being. Nothing is left, then, but concessions, attempts to gain time and betrayal.

Claire Wolfe thinks that we’ll individually reach some breaking point: “I can easily see how the next checkpoint or the next arbitrary detention or the next demand for biometric ID will simply be The Moment for some of us.” I made that observation myself in Pressing the “RESET” Button:

I don’t think you’re going to see a widespread armed uprising. What you’re going to see is individuals and small groups who’ve simply had enough arming and striking – and probably dying in the process. If you’ve read John Ross’s Unintended Consequences you’ll get the idea, but I don’t expect anything like the level of response he writes of. Not enough people are pissed off enough to do that.

Of course the media will spin it as “lone deranged gun-nuts” or “anti-government militias,” but if you pay attention you’ll note an increase in the numbers over time.

Read that whole piece.

Thomas Jefferson’s greatest fear has come home to roost, “lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty.” Many, but not most of us can see what’s happening. Most, but not all of us who see it simply ignore it, shoving it into the recesses of our consciences. We have too much to lose. There’s still some hope. It’s not our responsibility. Who’s getting booted off of Survivor tonight? Can you believe that Michael was acquitted?

For more and more of us, though, I think Claire’s right. A few of us are going to reach our own individual Moments and those reactions will be used as excuses to further tighten the clamps, but for the majority the “cult of material well-being” has resulted in psychological weakness. “Give me liberty or give me death” is not a phrase they can embrace.

So as for me? I’m going to stick to my own advice:

(M)y life, my fortune, and my sacred honor stand ready to be sacrificed in the defense of my rights and the rights of those I love as I understand them. I am a citizen of this nation as much or as little as it protects and defends those rights under which it was founded, not as they are (mis)understood today. I will obey those laws with which I agree, follow those laws I am unwilling to suffer the penalty for, and I will disobey those laws I find egregious. This may mean that, at some time in the future, the State may decide to “selectively enforce” itself on me to make an example. At that time and at that place I will decide how to respond, for that choice is mine and always will be. In the mean time, I will agitate for those rights, making sure those in power remember that they swore oaths to defend them whether they understood them or not. I will continue trying to educate others so that they, too, understand what it is they are losing, what they are allowing others to throw away, and so they will hopefully not choose slavery.

That’s what I owe my grandchildren.

But I weep for the legacy they should be receiving.

While Evils are Sufferable

There will be no second Civil War, but it might be better if there could.

Last week there was a three-way discussion with much commentary on the possibility of a second American civil war, given the apparent deepening and widening divide between the Left and the Right. I’ve written on the topic before, in Pressing the “RESET” Button, What if Your Loyalty is to the Constitution?, and ARE We Headed for Another Civil War?, but this recent discussion started, more or less, with a piece I wrote Wednesday, Sept. 1, Democrat Meltdown where I concluded:

So, here’s my prediction: When Bush wins the election with enough margin to prevent cheating on the part of the Dems, there are going to be riots. There will also be domestic terrorism by the moonbats.

The “Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party” has no place to go? They’ve been stirred up past the point of no return. They’re going to go completely nuts.

This was picked up by Ironbear at Who Tends the Fires?, where he wrote a piece entitled “So, is it a Spade, or an ‘Earth Removal Device’?”. Ironbear’s main thrust was that the philosophical divide was too great, that there could no longer be any useful discourse, and when the divide reaches that point we will inevitably fall into civil war.

He made a strong argument, and initially I agreed with him. I was leaning that way anyway. What he argued fell in well with another piece I wrote Saturday (before I read “Is it a Spade…”) entitled How Divided ARE We? that illustrated the apparent uselessness of further discussion between the sides. We’re just too far apart anymore. There can be no consensus, no compromise. I think he’s right about that part.

On Sunday, Jed of Freedomsight wrote I Wish I Could Be More Optimistic. He referenced both my site and Ironbear’s piece, but his conclusion was different:

…I find it hard to agree with Ironbear about where he thinks the divide between the left/right (or Democrat/Republican, or Liberal/Conservative) philosophies is taking us, i.e. to irreconcilable conflict.

…I think that the statism embraced by both major parties has far to much intertia and popular support. And that encapsulates pretty well the reason for my pessimism. That and, as Sobran points out, we have, collectively, forgotten the language of true freedom.

A cogent point, and well made. But that was not the end of the discussion. I wrote a third piece on Sunday 9/5, Freedom, the Constitution, and Civil War referencing all the pieces prior by all parties. It didn’t answer any questions or propose a solution, it was a summary and some suggestions: Learn to think for yourself. Teach your children to do the same. Hope for the best. Prepare for the worst. Because something’s coming, and it isn’t going to be pretty.

In addition, all three of us had quite active commenters, among which were Lynnette Warren of the anarchist group blog No Treason! and Billy Beck of Two-Four. Beck made a post of a comment he left on Ironbear’s essay, and it was good enough that I went out and bought the book he quoted from just so I could read the entire cite. Beck sees civil war looming. Warren thinks not.

I have to admit, morbid as it was I enjoyed reading (and contributing to) the entire exchange. I have, though, spent the following weeks considering and discussing the topic. The weekend at the du Toit’s (not to mention 2,000 miles of windshield time) provided a fertile ground for this. So, here are my current thoughts on the matter.

The divide is certainly real. It is wide and deep and growing. It has passed the point, I think, of reversal. The last time the nation was this divided, we did go to war – an actual, by-god uniforms-and-artillery shooting war.

But this time we won’t. It won’t be that simple. The problem isn’t that we’re divided, it’s that there’s not two sides UNITED.

Let’s look at that last civil war.

In 1860 the Constitution was a mere seven decades old – recent enough that the arguments around its ratification were still living memory for some. It was hardly ancient history for the remainder. Slavery had been the sticking point, and the seeds of the Civil War were sown in the compromise required to secure ratification. The philosophical divide was pre-existing. It took seventy years to fester, deepen, and widen. It was a geographical divide as well, with the geography becoming more defined as time passed. It was also a Constitutional question – how much power did the Federal government have over the States? Even if you disagreed with slavery, that question weighed heavily. And, finally, the South shot first. The attack on Ft. Sumter opened the war. That attack was executed by organized military forces, not guerillas. In all that, there were only two sides, and those sides had single, uniting purposes. For the North, preservation of the Union. For the South, retention of the practice of slavery. (Don’t write letters. That’s what it boils down to, in the end.)
The divide now is philosophical, too, but not as easily demarcated. It isn’t slavery vs. abolition, it’s “Left” vs. “Right.” It’s Libertarian vs. Conservative. Green vs. Democrat. Socialists vs. Capitalists. Anarchists vs. Government. Christians vs. Humanists. Jihadists vs. Infidels. Atheists vs. Christianity. Gun-grabbers vs. Gun-nuts. The perpetually disinterested vs. everyone else.

Grab any six random people off the street – chances are they’ll have strongly held (and largely unsupported) opinions on a variety of topics, and those opinions will stray all over the philosophical boundaries of the merely Left and Right. It’s not a binary division, it’s an n-dimensional space of varying density.

The divide is largely geographical, but again not conveniently so. It’s primarily Rural vs. Urban. The “Red State/Blue State” division is more of a reflection of how heavily urbanized any particular state is rather than a real state division. Remember the Red/Blue county map?

That’s my impression of the sides, and we’re not going to put on uniforms and engage in combat over our ideals. Not gonna happen.

Why no civil war? Because the Left won’t be able to organize themselves to, and without that the Right won’t drop its internal schisms enough to be motivated to. I stick by my argument that there will be riots (small) and guerilla activity (smaller) but there won’t be organized warfare. As the majority of those at the du Toit’s agreed last Saturday, “Bring it on! That’ll be the shortest rebellion in history!” Look, for example, at this piece in the UNC-Greensboro school paper by student Joe Killian predicting the outcome of a Bush re-election. What’s he predicting? Not a mass exodus of Leftists to Canada or EUrope, but a mass exodus from this mortal coil via suicide. There! That’ll show THEM! (Of course the brave author won’t be among the wrist-slitters – he’s going to stick it out.)

There’s no rationality there. None. Organized warfare requires rationality. It also requires, by definition, organization. Terrorism just requires blind faith, and the Left is strong on that (see their 100+ year dedication to the idea that Socialism works.) So is the Right, for that matter.

Now, here’s my problem with what’s happening: Either civil war or terrorism can destroy a society, and we’re already witnessing the slow destruction of what it is we’re trying to save. Civilization is a pretty fragile thing. Freedom is more fragile still. I said in the comments to “Freedom, the Constitution, and Civil War”, I think our system is going to fail. It’s well on its way. I said then that I believed this meant civil war, but upon further reflection, I don’t. Civil war is not required for the system to fail. (It might be better if we could have another civil war if that would settle a specific disagreement that we can no longer settle through negotiation, but the separation is too diverse for that now.)

Loss of belief is the only necessary ingredient.

I’ve had some long exchanges over my contention that a “Right” is what the majority of a society believes it is. This is, however, only a subset of a greater truth: A society is what the majority of the people in it believes it is – and since human beings can be schizophrenic, societies can be too. That schizophrenia need not be destructive, at least not immediately. After all, it did take over seventy years for the American schizophrenia over slavery to produce a societal breakdown, and after five years of intense shock therapy, that schism was – in major part – corrected. Not completely, not even now over 130 years later. There are scars, but there’s not a lot of scab left for the remaining combatants to pick at.

Here’s what it boils down to: America is an IDEA. Its central concept is individual freedom. Personal sovereignty. Independence. As an illustration, money, too, is an idea. We all know it’s just paper printed with inks. Money has no inherent value, but we believe it has value, so it does. We all agree to share in the delusion that a $10 bill is worth, oh, three pounds of ground beef, half a dozen 75W lightbulbs, or two tickets to the matinee. (Nobody believes that another ten-spot is worth a large popcorn and two large sodas, but we pay it anyway.) See? We’re nuts. But it’s a shared insanity. America is the same thing – freedom, independence, individual sovereignty. It’s bullshit, but it’s beautiful bullshit. And as long as we – as a nation – believe it, it is real, and it’s better than anything else humanity has tried. Even in the face of income taxes, Child Abductive Protective Services, Eminent Domain abuses, invasions of privacy, “Wetland protection”, et cetera, et cetera, we’re free because we believe we’re free. We put up with it because we choose to, not because we have to. We can revolt, we just don’t care to.

Thomas Jefferson put it in the Declaration of Independence:

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes; and accordingly all Experience hath shewn, that Mankind are more disposed to suffer, while Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long Train of Abuses and Usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object, evinces a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their Right, it is their Duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future Security.

The South tried to “throw off such Government” in 1861 – and lost – but because they, as a people, believed in the bigger part of the American Fantasy, and the North did too, the rebellious states were reintegrated without too much more bloodshed.

Many, many of us still believe we’re free. Bill Whittle believes it. You can feel it in the often aching eloquence of his Silent America essays. James Lileks believes it. You can read it in every paragraph about his daughter, his wife, his home, his dog, his idiosyncracies, and his deep love for his community and his nation. Kim and Connie du Toit believe it. Emperor Misha believes, Charles Johnson believes, Ironbear believes…. Well, you get the idea.

The “Right,” in the overwhelming majority, believes that America, the United States of, is the Land of the Free and Home of the Brave. We’re the Sword of Justice, defenders of the oppressed from the Halls of Montezuma to the Shores of Tripoli, from sea to shining sea (so long as it’s in our National Interest to be.) As long as this belief represents the dominant paradigm, that is the way our nation will act, in the main. We are human, of course. We’re not perfect. We will make mistakes, but as I wrote in That Sumbitch Ain’t Been BORN!, those mistakes are just that. They are not evidence of our evil Imperialist nature, just mistakes. The “Left,” quite simply, thinks we’ve left the tracks if we were ever on them to begin with. To them, we’re oppressive, racist, imperialistic warmongers out to take what isn’t ours and distribute it unfairly among the white males. After all, they have centuries of European exploitive colonization to point to, don’t they? The Greens think we need to give up industry so that we can “save the planet.” They don’t hate America, they hate humanity. Of course, the Anarchists see both sides as delusional and dangerous. They believe that the Free Market is the answer to it all, and that we need to give up this nationalistic fantasy crap and start dealing with objective reality.

As if objective reality would appeal to people who voluntarily share common delusions.

But as long as the majority of the society believes in “Truth, Justice and the American Way,” that society will put up with only so much before attempting to “throw off such Government.” Billy Beck quoted Ayn Rand’s essay Don’t Let It Go on the same topic, which I’ll steal shamelessly from:

Only one thing is certain: dictatorship cannot take hold in America today. This country, as yet, cannot be ruled — but it can explode. It can blow up into the helpless rage and blind violence of a civil war. It cannot be cowed into submission, passivity, malevolence, resignation. It cannot be “pushed around.” Defiance, not obedience, is the American’s answer to overbearing authority. The nation that ran an underground railroad to help human beings escape from slavery, or began drinking on principle in the face of Prohibition, will not say “Yes, sir” to the enforcers of ration coupons and cereal prices. Not yet.

Note the two “yet”s. She wrote that in the 70’s.

The question now is, “Is she still right?” Or, “For how much longer?” Jed thinks we’ve already “forgotten the language of true freedom.” Ironbear stated that the coming conflict would be between

those to whom personal liberty is important, and those to whom liberty is not only inconsequential, but to whom personal liberty is a deadly threat.

He meant “People like us” – i.e., the Right, and “People like them,” i.e., the Left. His thrust being that the Left is directed towards Dictatorship, or as he put it “the boot across the throat.” Jed noted that the “Left,” in the form of the Democrat Party is most definitely Statist, but that the so-called “Right” is damned near as bad. The Anarchists say “hear, hear!” in agreement – all government being coercive and evil by definition.

I think that we’re headed towards tyranny, and I don’t know if enough of us remain who understand “the language of true freedom” so that we can defy “overbearing authority” and “throw off such Government, and…provide new Guards for (our) future Security.” We’re too divided. We’re too poorly educated in the language of freedom, something that, despite Jefferson’s Declaration, is not “self-evident.” We’ve succumbed to the decades-long dumbing-down of ourselves and our children. Too many of the population have been force-fed an “entitlement mentaltity.” Too many, too high up are disconnected from reality, and see what they want to see rather than what is. Example? Madeline Albright – Secretary of State under Clinton, and responsible for the nuclear anti-proliferation treaty with North Korea, was asked point-blank on Meet the Press:

But didn’t North Korea develop a nuclear bomb on Bill Clinton’s watch?

Her response?

No, what they were doing, as it turns out, they were cheating. And the reason that you have arms control agreements is you don’t make them with your friends, you make them with your enemies. And it’s the process that is required to hold countries accountable. The worst part that has happened under the agreed framework, there was these fuel rods, and the nuclear program was frozen. Those fuel rods have now been reprocessed, as far as we know, and North Korea has a capability, which at one time might have been two potential nuclear weapons, up to six to eight now, we’re not really clear. But in this period of time when there has not enough action been taken, I think that the threat from North Korea has increased.

Imagine that! Korea didn’t develop nukes on Clinton’s watch! They cheated! The Clinton administration got them to sign a nice treaty and they cheated! So it’s not really the administration’s fault at all. Give Madeline an “A” for effort and a gold star! It’s the effort that counts, after all, and how good you feel about yourself. Right? Right?

This from one of the people with her hands on the levers of power.

We’re headed toward tyranny because we won’t look at it. The signs are all there, but we won’t admit to ourselves that it’s possible. I have to agree with the Left on one thing: bloody oppression of our rights is coming, eventually. I just think it’s equally likely to be at their hands as at the hands of the Right. For decades now our government has been constructing the individual mechanisms of it, as the Geek with a .45 once wrote eloquently about. He put it this way:

We, who studied the shape and form of the machines of freedom and oppression, have looked around us, and are utterly dumbfounded by what we see.

We see first that the machinery of freedom and Liberty is badly broken. Parts that are supposed to govern and limit each other no longer do so with any reliability.

We examine the creaking and groaning structure, and note that critical timbers have been moved from one place to another, that some parts are entirely missing, and others are no longer recognizable under the wadded layers of spit and duct tape. Other, entirely new subsystems, foreign to the original design, have been added on, bolted at awkward angles.

We know the tools and mechanisms of oppression when we see them. We’ve studied them in depth, and their existence on our shores, in our times, offends us deeply. We can see the stirrings of malevolence, and we take stock of the damage they’ve caused over so much time.

Others pass by without a second look, with no alarm or hue and cry, as if they are blind, as if they don’t understand what they see before their very eyes. We want to shake them, to grasp their heads and turn their faces, shouting, “LOOK! Do you see what this thing is? Do you see how it might be put to use? Do you know what can happen if this thing becomes fully assembled and activated?”

I’m one of the people the Geek was talking about in his piece. I’ve studied history, philosophy, and our Constitutional form of government, and I’ve seen how it’s been folded, twisted, spindled, mangled and mutilated for expediency, for advantage, for gain. I recognize the mechanisms of oppression that have been built and that simply await final assembly. I’ve watched as we’ve calmly, almost absent-mindedly forged the chains of tyranny, never believing that they’ll ever actually get used for that – the argument being: “Our government would never do that! We’re all about Truth! Justice! And the American Way!” I’ve seen the social-utopists of the Left wreck our schools, producing significant percentages of ignorant drones, illiterate, innumerate, unwilling to learn and unable to reason. I’ve seen the authoritarians of the Left and the Right pass laws “for our own protection” that have been abused and will be perverted – as soon as a sufficiently bad “national emergency” raises its ugly head.

And I see that “national emergency” coming. We’re currently at Threat Level Bert™

because of the Attack of the IslamoFascists. Let’s just have, oh, say a Beslan or two here; a little more home-grown terrorism (more abortion-clinic bombings, more school-shootings, another Branch Davidian compound, another Oklahoma City bombing, Anti-Globalists hurling firebombs at the Haliburton offices in Houston, you get the idea) and see what happens to our individual rights. The Patriot Act holds no dangers? I’m sure whatever administration is in power will be able to find some to exploit. Ironbear is right, to some the idea of personal liberty is a deadly threat, and people like that are heavily overrepresented in government. It’s axiomatic.

We’ve been building the mechanisms and the mindset for decades, perhaps as far back as the last Civil War, perhaps even earlier. The general consensus in the academic and legal communities is that the Constitution is essentially dead. It’s not going to be restored. The courts will not save us, and the People aren’t even conscious of the loss, for the most part. The only remaining questions are “What comes next, tyranny or anarchy?” (The real kind of anarchy, not the idealistic kind.) and “When?”

There’s a chance – a small, small chance – that we can hold off the collapse. Individual freedom rests on the tripod of reason, the free flow of information and ideas, and the ability and willingness to defend ones self and ones property. So long as enough of us retain all three of these, the descent isn’t inevitable. But if we as a people give any one of these up, we are lost. Our future teeters on the edge of a precipice, but far too few will open their eyes to see, and seeing, step back.

UPDATE: Buckethead of the Ministry of Minor Perfidy has a comment related piece.

UPDATE, 9/19: I hadn’t read it before I wrote this essay, but Orson Scott Card wrote a piece August 22 entitled Who Was On Watch As the Dark Age Approached? – a review of a recent book by Jane Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead. He comments on her ideas:

“Every culture,” she says, “takes pains to educate its young so that they, in their turn, can practice and transmit it completely.” Our civilization, however, is failing to do that. On the contrary, we are systematically training our young not to embrace the culture that brought us greatness.

A civilization is truly dead, she says, when “even the memory of what has been lost is lost.”

I would apply this principle in areas where, as a true Leftist, she would not dream of applying it: For instance, we have now raised a generation that does not even expect that marriage will precede sexual union and cohabitation because they have never seen it work that way. We have spent a generation trivializing the family, debasing it and undermining it until it doesn’t have as much practical value as a stock certificate.

“A culture is unsalvageable if stabilizing forces themselves become ruined and irrelevant,” she says, and she is absolutely right: And the single most important stabilizing force in any civilization is and always has been the family.

Read the piece.

Update, 9/20: Mrs. du Toit expands on her comment. I may have to write a response to that.

Update, 9/22: Matthew at Triggerfinger.org comments. Money quote:

We had entire generations of people who could live under a government in a city or town if they chose, but who also had the choice to go off in the wilderness on their own.

That choice is no longer effectively open to us, because the federal government has abandoned the enumerated powers doctrine and seeks now to regulate almost everything that can be regulated, and there is no place for those who do not consent to this form of government to go. We are, in short, cornered wolves — with no place to run, the teeth are starting to show. And the sheep are no fonder of our presence than we are of theirs.

UPDATE 11/15/13: John Hardin, reader, programmer extraordinaire and all-around great guy, has preserved the original comment thread for this post.

“Ghost Voting” and Pressing the RESET Button

There has been some discussion over at AR15.com over the California Assembly’s passage of AB50 – a bill prohibiting the sale of rifles chambered for the .50BMG round, and requiring registration of currently owned rifles. (Or does it? The bill text I have referenced says “bans the sale of” but this Tri-Valley Herald piece quotes Sandra DeBourelando, principal assistant to the bill’s sponsor Paul Koretz saying that acquiring a .50 after Jan. 1, 2005 will require a permit and:

It won’t be easy to get a permit. You would have to show a good reason why you need it.

Of course you realize that the position of the gun-grabbers is that no one needs a .50. She also says:

We’re not going to confiscate guns.

The “yet” is, as always, unspoken.

It was reported by the Fifty Caliber Institute that the bill lost on the original vote by a tally of 35 yeas to 36 nays (total: 71 total votes.) Then they revoted using what is known as “ghost voting” – that is, a legislator votes using the pushbutton at his or her desk, then gets up and walks over to the desk of an absent legislator and votes again. You know, like the people who are registered to vote in both New York and Florida can. This time the vote was 45 ayes, 32 nays with four abstentions (total 77 votes, 4 abstentions). Now, granted the number of nays dropped by four, but “ghost voting”??

This spawned, as you can imagine, some outrage over at AR15.com, and this question came up: At what point do we fight?

First let me be clear.

It is not my intention to incite, propose a Turner Diaries solution or promote any violent activity on the part of anyone else.

But THIS generation has witnessed the 89 Import Ban, the 94 Crime Bill (including the various State versions which DO NOT sunset) and is now looking down the barrel of a Cali .50 Ban which could spread like a cancer to even the Federal level.

Some have witnessed the 86 MG ban and the initial restrictions of the 1968 GCA which gave us the unconsitutional “Sporter” clause.

So when do we stop permitting Representatives who don’t represent us and pass laws contrary to the Constitution?

Where do we draw the line in the sand? And when do we finally throw the tea in the harbor? If at all?

What are possible alternatives? Is there a way to turn it back?

Can residents of other states do anything besides just blame Cali residents?

And can anyone HONESTLY expect anyone with a family, good job, comfortable home and life to risk and sacrifice it all?

I don’t have the answers…

It is reminiscent of the the Pressing the “RESET” Button essay in this response:

I’ve already started.
There are plenty of laws I don’t obey. If I get caught for the smaller ones I’ll just suck up alittle slap on the wrist. If I ever get nailed for something big? I pity the person who puts his job in front of the U.S. Constitution. Will I win…no…but I damn sure will take some with me.

I know I know…the supreme court tells me what the constitution means…but ya know. I have a pretty good measure of common sense and I CAN read.

And this one:

(H)earing about “ghost” votes in CA is pushing me a lot closer. That is clear evidence of a tyrranical government.

I have the feeling I’ll be leaving this world the same way I entered it: kicking, screaming, and covered in someone elses blood.

There does appear to be a growing sense that Claire Wolfe‘s idea of “shooting the bastards” is becoming the only option.

At this time the discussion covers five pages of posts. Were I a legislator, I’d be paying attention to the grumblings of the populace.

You Have to Wonder…

I haven’t commented on Marvin Heemeyer’s bulldozer rampage in Granby, Colorado. Reader Matthew wrote a piece on Triggerfinger.org entitled The Canaries are Dying that he linked to in the comments to Are We Headed for Another Civil War? that I recommend you read.

Back in December when I wrote Pressing the “RESET” Button I said:

I think a lot of people are getting fed up with ever-increasing government intrusion into our lives. With our ever-shrinking individual rights. More than one of Jay’s respondents noted the apathy of the majority, though, and I agree. Government interferes lightly on a wholesale basis, but it does its really offensive intrusions strictly retail. So long as the majority gets its bread and circuses, it will remain content.

But not everyone.

I found this editorial today from The Rocky Mountain News that I think illustrates this very well.

Heemeyer’s ire understood, but not his act (Tina Griego)

Since 2001 – Sept. 7, 2001, to be precise – Ted Mascarenas, of Brighton, has fought with his homeowners association and/or with the city zoning department over his roof, his gate, his fence.

“Even the driveway, if you can believe that,” Ted says.

Then there was the trailer. “I used to have a trailer parked out front, I don’t anymore, but they thought I was living in it. I wasn’t. But there were three guys down the road living in theirs. ‘How about them?’ I asked. ‘You can’t be throwing rocks,’ they said.”

It didn’t end there. Don’t even get him started on the barn.

“I finally finished my barn; it’d burned. One of the HOA board members, he inspected it after it was done. But then we had a falling-out over the gate because I built my fence and then they wouldn’t approve my gate and I put it up anyway.

“So, they told me, ‘You don’t have 12-inch soffits on the barn roof’ – you know where the roof overhangs, the flat part underneath, that’s the soffit. They wanted me to redo it. That’d cost me roughly around $8,000. So, I pointed out 10 other detached barns like mine, identical. I said, ‘What about them? They don’t have soffits.’ You know what their ruling was? ‘They’re grandfathered.’ And I said, ‘Well, my barn was one of the first put up here. I built it in 1997.’ I said, ‘If anybody has a right to be grandfathered, it’s me.’

“I can’t win, I tell you, I just can’t win. They have different rules for different people.”

Which brings us to Marvin Heemeyer.

Heemeyer, as you know, is the muffler shop owner who took out his frustration with Granby officials by bulldozing several buildings and then apparently killing himself. I’m not saying Ted Mascarenas thinks Marvin Heemeyer is some kind of a hero who took on government – he doesn’t – though it’s pretty clear from a quick look online that Heemeyer is already being mythologized as such.

“Colorado MAN has had enough of their crap,” begins one news group entry. “Good for him.”

My, how short the journey from maniac to martyr. I doubt the “attaboy” cheerleading would be heard if Heemeyer had killed anyone other than himself.

Ted doesn’t condone what Heemeyer did, either. No, what Ted feels is a certain amount of understanding.

“I know what he’s going through,” he told his wife as they watched the news.

Ted keeps pages of letters and papers documenting his various squabbles. His voice climbs in outrage when he describes his disputes. Leave it alone, his wife tells him, maybe they’ll leave you alone. “I’m not built that way,” he says. When he saw footage of the bulldozer biting into a building, he said: “Boy, I wish I had the guts to do that.”

“No, you didn’t,” I say.

“I did,” he says.

“You’re not building a tank in your barn, are you?” I ask.

He laughs and says no, he likes living. “What a price to pay. It’s crazy.”

I keep wondering if at any point Heemeyer fired up the blowtorch, studied the flame and thought, “What am I doing?”

“He just had enough,” I hear, as if this were a reasonable explanation for the rampage. Most adults are able to work out their differences without welding themselves into a bulldozer and punching the gas. But, there is some germ of truth here.

I’ve met plenty of people, decent and, by all appearances, sane, who feel powerless in the face of government, who believe they have been jerked around, dismissed. What part of public servant don’t these bureaucrats understand, these people say.

Their ire usually zeroes in on a zoning inspector or parking enforcement officer or cop, on rules arbitrarily enforced, on someone in some office saying one thing and someone else in the same office saying just the opposite, leaving Joe Taxpayer red-faced and shouting, “Aaargh! Why didn’t you tell me this before?”

Several people called the office Sunday to make this point.

One said he doesn’t understand why more people don’t go off the way Heemeyer did, what “with the cities and the land-taking and their condemnation and their closed-door politics. They just run over all the small people all the time.”

A woman tells me of several frustrating experiences she had with Denver’s zoning office. She spent a lot of time trying to get the problem worked out.

It never did happen.

“You can’t fight City Hall and win,” she said.

The whole thing was causing too much stress, so she and her husband decided to let it go.

After Granby, you have to wonder how many Marvin Heemeyers are out there who can’t.

Yes, you do. And perhaps more government officials should, before they pass the next ordinance or enforce the next niggling little regulation, or confiscate the next chunk of property.

Are We Headed for Another Civil War?

A while back I wrote in response to a Steven Den Beste piece why I thought the U.S. would not see another Civil War. In What if Your Loyalty is to The Constitution? I said that America wouldn’t see another Civil War because the majority of the population is too willfully ignorant and too apathetic to care much anymore. That piece was an update of Pressing the “RESET” Button, which I wrote in December. In that piece I wrote:

Generally, government is treated by the media as a vast benevolent force (unless, of course, that same government is defeating an enemy totalitarian government or unseating a murderous tyrant – then it’s eeeeeevil.) Whatever actions that government takes for the benefit of an endangered species, or “for society” is more important than what it does to the people who are directly affected by these actions.

Oh, occasionally something really egregious will pique some reporter, and we’ll get a “human interest” story that pisses off the few of us who are paying attention. Sometimes our ire will get the government to back off, claiming it was all a big misunderstanding or worse, the government doesn’t back off at all. The recent incidents of Melvin Spaulding in Florida, George Norris in Texas, Dennis Pryslak in New Jersey, Stratford High School in South Carolina, and many others come to mind. Scroll through the archives of this site. There’s probably at least one a week that will raise your blood pressure.

I’ve quoted Jefferson’s letter to William Smith several times recently, but this part is the one I find most interesting:

Where did it ever exist, except in the single instance of Massachusets? And can history produce an instance of a rebellion so honourably conducted? I say nothing of it’s motives. They were founded in ignorance, not wickedness. God forbid we should ever be 20 years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, & always, well informed. The past which is wrong will be discontented in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive; if they remain quiet under such misconceptions it is a lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty.

It seems, in the main, that we aren’t informed at all, much less well. Lethargy? For the overwhelming majority, yes indeed.

Until it happens to you. Then you get pissed right quick, and wonder why nobody hears your side of the story.

I think a lot of people are getting fed up with ever-increasing government intrusion into our lives. With our ever-shrinking individual rights. More than one of Jay’s respondents noted the apathy of the majority, though, and I agree. Government interferes lightly on a wholesale basis, but it does its really offensive intrusions strictly retail. So long as the majority gets its bread and circuses, it will remain content.

But not everyone.

And I gave the example of Steven Bixby, of South Carolina, who shot and killed two police officers over a 20′ section of his property taken under eminent domain.

Today I read via Instapundit this quotation from a Village Voice theater review:

Republicans don’t believe in the imagination, partly because so few of them have one, but mostly because it gets in the way of their chosen work, which is to destroy the human race and the planet. Human beings, who have imaginations, can see a recipe for disaster in the making; Republicans, whose goal in life is to profit from disaster and who don’t give a hoot about human beings, either can’t or won’t. Which is why I personally think they should be exterminated before they cause any more harm.

Compare and contrast this *ahem* progressive opinion with that of Wretchard of The Belmont Club in his latest piece:

Reader MG wrote to ask “in what way is The Left the spirit behind all the carnage of the 20th Century”. The answer might properly begin with the words of the Internationale (1871), which took as its starting point the notion that men born to the world had nothing to lose but their chains.

It set the theme which was to endure for more than a hundred years: that the familiar world is not worth fighting for. Only the unseen tomorrow gives life any meaning. The present could never be ended too soon. The odious aspects of life in the early 20th century were clear enough, and nowhere better portrayed than George Orwell’s The Road to Wigan Pier. Who can forget his portrayals of coal workers and their daily lives? From its earliest inception, the Left cried that the world was not good enough. It held that any attempts to find happiness in the present were not only doomed, but immoral. Religion, Marx said, “is the opium of the people. The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real happiness.” He claimed that capitalism could never feed the poor. Lenin said Marxism could, and defined Communism as “socialism plus electricity”.

What they forgot to add was that the world would never be good enough. That not a single Marxist state ever managed to provide either the food or electricity in adequate quantities remained beside the point. Shortages were always in the present and the present was unimportant anyway. When capitalism provided wealth in quantities that Lenin could only dream of, then food and electricity themselves became hated in turn, the way starvation once was.

Lenin’s future was attractive only for so long as it didn’t exist and was legitimate only when its promises were not provided by capitalism. John Buchan could tell his son, when he wrote “Memory Hold The Door”, which described friends who died in the Great War, that “they held up the world for you”. But a true Leftist could only ever dream of boasting to his progeny that ‘I tore down the world for you’. The present was always too hateful to endure.

Please, take the time to read the whole thing.

I doubt that many of my readers would argue with the proposition that the Left has a firm grip on a large part of American society. They certainly control the entertainment industry – perhaps the strongest propaganda machine ever assembled. They control the education system, and are busy cranking out more little ignorant, pliable leftists daily. They, by and large, control the courts. But they do not yet control the NATION, and are, as many people are noting, coming unhinged by that fact, as America still supports, in the main, the war that they abhor in their very veins.

Hugh Hewitt commented on George Soros’s speech at a “Take Back America” conference. (Take it back? They haven’t – quite – taken it yet.) Soros is spending $15 million – regardless of the “Campaign Finance Reform” law – to see President Bush defeated. Soros spent $18 million, according to this USAToday piece, to support that legislation. Soros’s speech equated the Abu Ghraib prison abuses to 9/11, much as Teddy Kennedy equated the abuses there to Saddam’s murder and torture. And he was loudly applauded for it. He was introduced, gushingly, by Sen. Clinton. Soros is a major contributor to MoveOn.org. The Left is quite large, quite powerful, and very well directed.

I believe that Wretchard is correct in his assertion that the desire of the Left is to “tear down the world.” I don’t think the rank-and-file see it that way, but the pursuit of their beliefs would absolutely result in it. It would appear that the Left believes that the Right wants to “destroy the human race and the planet.” (Projection, do you think?)

This is a philosophical divide every bit as wide as the one that resulted in the last Civil War.

I cannot help but wonder: Are we going to war again, against each other? And what form would that take?

I think the answer might very well be “YES,” and the form will be that of domestic terrorism.

And that means a very, very ugly future.

But What If Your Loyalty is to the Constitution?

Steven Den Beste (soon to be married and fathering little Den Bestes if Connie du Toit has anything to say about it) has a piece on “What prevents another Civil War?”

Steven has two answers: The first, sort of flippantly, the U.S. Army. The second, the fact that we as citizens no longer see our loyalty as being primarily toward our State but toward our Nation (unless you’re a fringe leftist, in which case your loyalties are towards some nebulous “world government” currently represented by the corrupt UN.)

There’s more to it than that, though. With the advent of easy high-speed travel, the State borders have no real meaning to us beyond what the tax rates look like, and the climate and scenery. State borders aren’t just unimportant, they are largely meaningless (unless you’re a Texan) to us in terms of loyalty.

But what happens when a large (but minority) portion of the population becomes convinced that the Federal government has abandonded the founding legal structure it supposedly “protects and defends?”

Professor Randy Barnett’s recent book Restoring the Lost Constitution makes the point that, for all intents and purposes the Constitution is, if not dead, on final life support. Justice Antonin Scalia protests that the Supreme Court no longer feels bound to follow the Constitution – “five hands is all it takes,” he says. Senator Zell Miller protests that ours is a Republic no longer.

Our Constitutionally enumerated and protected individual rights are under constant legal assault under the aegis of the War on Crime, the War on Drugs, and the War on Terror, and all three branches of the government are complicit. The media – the unacknowledged Fourth Branch – largely is too.

What prevents another Civil War?

Thomas Jefferson predicted it long, long ago in his letter to William Smith concerning Shay’s Rebellion of 1787:

And can history produce an instance of a rebellion so honourably conducted? I say nothing of it’s motives. They were founded in ignorance, not wickedness. God forbid we should ever be 20 years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, & always, well informed. The past which is wrong will be discontented in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive; if they remain quiet under such misconceptions it is a lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty.

And Jefferson was right, as we have seen. Jefferson continued, though:

We have had 13. states independant 11. years. There has been one rebellion. That comes to one rebellion in a century & a half for each state. What country before ever existed a century & half without a rebellion? & what country can preserve it’s liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon & pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants. It is it’s natural manure.

Seems that Jefferson counciled a bit of revolution from time to time.

Libertarian pundit Claire Wolfe wrote a while back, “America’s at that awkward stage. It’s too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards.” Claire had it wrong. The time to shoot the bastards is early on. Now it’s too late.

What prevents another Civil War here isn’t the Army or the fact that we hold a higher loyalty to our Nation than to our State of residence, it’s ignorance and apathy.

EDIT: Another link from Steven in less than a week! I must be doing something right.

Anyway, this piece is merely an update of an older one, Pressing the “Reset” Button from last December, which I also suggest you read. Professor Barnett’s book, Scalia’s quote, and Zell Miller’s complaint just add to my convictions on the topic. The first part of the 21st Century promises to be an ugly one.