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Striking at Roots, One at a Time Exclusive to STR Happy
fifth birthday, Strike The Root. The
editors and readers of Strike The Root have had an awful lot to talk about
over the past five years: 9-11
and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq;
the latest cycle of acceleration in the growth of the Federal national
security state with new departments and agencies like Homeland
Security and the TSA;
the enactment of such onerous laws as the PATRIOT
Act and the No
Child Left Behind Act (“No Child Left Alone” would be a more
accurate name); the continuing war on private gun
ownership; the enactment of a very costly new Medicare prescription drug
subsidy; the ongoing war
on drugs; the Federal Reserve’s Magical
Mystical Money-Making Machine; the Kelo
case; the current war in the Middle
East courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer-funded
armaments industry; Uncle Sam’s saber-rattling at Iran
and Syria—the
list is long. And all under a
Republican administration! Remember
when Republicans used to say that they were all for small and limited
government? Bush is much more
of a disciple of FDR
and LBJ
than he is of such noteworthy old-school small government conservatives
like Robert Taft,
though the philosophy of Bush and his neocon cronies isn’t just “guns
‘n’ butter,” it’s “missiles ‘n’ bombs ‘n’ inflation
‘n’ pharmaceuticals.”
Those
who spend the better part of their time tracking the growth of the U.S.
Federal Megastate are quick to point out that these developments should
come as no surprise, especially considering the historical fact that it
was actually the Republicans,
not the Democrats, who were the first major party of big government in the
United States. So
here we are, five years later. The
more things change, the more they stay the same—only more so. So
after five years, is Strike The Root having an impact?
I think so. Is it
“changing the world?” Hardly,
though I don’t know what is really meant by “changing the world,”
and those “progressive” left-liberals
and neoconservatives who
claim such a goal scare the livin’ bejesus out of me, considering their
blithe rationalizations for initiating force to achieve whatever
fantastical, ideal global society they dream of in their
reality-challenged imaginations. So
then, just how is Strike The Root having an impact? STR
is making inroads one conscience at a time.
Once
upon a time, I vaguely thought of myself as some sort of “centrist
Democrat.” An actor involved
in the theater scene, I just assumed that naturally I must be
“liberal,” in the contemporary statist sense, which is the political
disposition of most people in the arts.
I reached such a conclusion without giving too much thought to any
philosophical or moral principles—in other words, I chose to be
ignorant. But after eight
years of the Clinton administration and its many
injustices, I
gradually began to reassess. Then
came 9-11 early on in the Bush administration and the subsequent wars in I
had stumbled upon libertarian literature quite by accident at the Chicago
public library while researching a stage role (ironically, the character
was a deluded post-Soviet era Russian who was still stubbornly clinging to
communist ideology). Out of
curiosity, I picked up David Boaz’s Libertarianism:
A Primer in the political science section (though in hindsight I
wish I had come across Murray Rothbard’s more thorough and comprehensive
For
A New Liberty first). I
then started searching the web for libertarian sites and it was through a
Yahoo! discussion group for the Libertarian Party of Illinois that I first
came across Strike-The-Root.com. It
was because of a wide array of books, articles and websites that I was
eventually convinced of the philosophy of freedom.
It made sense because it was philosophically and morally
consistent—it did not contradict itself –especially as presented by
consistently principled individuals.
The foundation of the philosophy is simply this:
No one, but no one, has any right whatsoever to initiate any form of force,
fraud or coercion against anyone else, and that naturally includes those
individuals who gather together and comprise the institution called
government and thereby carry out its legalized theft and bullying
allegedly permitted them by virtue of the consent of a voting
majority. Such a philosophy
respected me and my rights as an individual, unlike the philosophies of
neoliberalism and neoconservatism, both of which see me as a means to
their proponents’ ends—no thank you, I would prefer not to live in a
social meat-grinder, if you don’t mind.
I became convinced that there’s no more satisfying arrangement of
social cooperation than freedom limited only by one’s own legitimate
responsibilities, rather than by the arbitrary whims of self-serving
oligarchs and their sycophantic ass-kissers. But
it was specifically Strike The Root that cemented my conversion from mere
minarchy to free market anarchy. Again,
it’s all about consistent application of principle, and I don’t see
how anyone who recognizes that government is an instrument for initiating
force against some in order to benefit others can advocate the nebulous
notion of merely downsizing the institution and still call themselves
“libertarian” or “pro-freedom.”
Expecting a government to roll back its self-granted power and
privileges to some vaguely determined level of “small” or
“limited” is as unrealistic as expecting a great white shark to simply
swim away when it smells blood. Even
if government managers could agree on a definition of “small and
limited” that does not make a mockery of those terms—and I don’t
think they can—they would never achieve it because it’s just not in
the nature of the beast. The
writers of Strike The Root and the many and varied resources linked on its
home page and blog,
as well as the more than 3,000 people who participate in its discussion forum,
helped me to understand that. It’s
gratifying to frequently see more
and more
new columnists
contributing to STR. I think
we can take this as an indication that the ideas of peaceful, voluntary
anarchy are gaining ground and that STR has been an important factor in
bringing that about. We have
tyranny in our midst largely because of the unfortunate fact that most
people consent to it or condone it in one form or another, and that’s
why websites like Strike The Root are important.
It’s very difficult for many who value freedom to understand, but
most of our fellow human beings simply do not desire true freedom, due to
their delusion that government provides at least some physical and
economic security, and so they are willing to give up many aspects of
their liberty in exchange for those fleeting illusions.
People all over the world need to be exposed to the philosophy of
freedom so that they may understand that state tyranny is not a necessary
or inevitable evil, nor would the disappearance of states mean a thousand
years of darkness and plague upon the Earth, and that they can live in a
world in which the legitimate rights of every individual human being are
truly respected, but they have to consciously choose
freedom in order to achieve that world.
Freedom is a very scary leap of faith for most people as it entails
a massive amount of personal responsibility and presupposes that there
would no longer be anyone to go cry to for a hand-out forced out of
someone else’s pocket when things don’t go their way, but the present
path of statism is leading inexorably to an even scarier state of affairs:
endless war, grinding poverty, mass imprisonment, slavery . . . and
eventually, the end of civilization. So
keep telling your friends and family, keep e-mailing those links to STR
articles to everyone in your address book.
I don’t think anyone who writes for this site is convinced that
they’re ending tyranny and despotism in our time, but what we are doing
is making this appeal to the conscience of every person who visits the
site: Choose truly voluntary
arrangements, responsibility and mutual respect for individual rights and
private property over the initiation of force, coercion, theft and
violence. Choose freedom, not
slavery. You’re not
anyone’s property, and no
one else is your property, either.
Keep
striking at the roots of evil, one person at a time. “Can there not be a government in which majorities do not virtually decide right and wrong, but conscience?—in which majorities decide only those questions to which the rule of expediency is applicable? Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator? Why has every man a conscience, then? I think that we should be men first, and subjects afterward. It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume is to do at any time what I think right.” ~ Henry David Thoreau discuss this column in the forum Robert Kaercher is a stage actor and writer residing in Chicago, Illinois. |