Freedoms
I Wish the Military Were Defending
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: Cursed
Be Unconditional Obedience
"Freedom
itself was attacked this morning by a faceless coward, and freedom
will be defended." ~
George
W. Bush, September 11, 2001
We have heard
it repeated loudly and continuously since 9/11 – the troops are
defending our freedoms. This claim is made so often and by so many
different segments of society that it has become another meaningless
national dictum – like "God Bless America" or "In
God We Trust."
This cliché
is actually quite insidious. It is used as a mantra to justify or
excuse anything the U.S. military does.
U.S. troops
are engaged in unconstitutional, undeclared wars – but the troops
are defending our freedoms. U.S. drone strikes killed civilians
in Pakistan – but the troops are defending our freedoms. U.S. bombs
landed on a wedding party in Afghanistan – but the troops are defending
our freedoms. U.S. soldiers murdered Afghan civilians and kept some
of their body parts – but the troops are defending our freedoms.
U.S. helicopter pilots gunned down Iraqi civilians – but the troops
are defending our freedoms. U.S. soldiers killed civilians for sport
– but the troops are defending our freedoms. U.S. troops carelessly
killed civilians and then covered it up – but the troops are defending
our freedoms.
But as I have
pointed out many times in my
articles on the military, and others like Jacob Hornberger of
the Future of Freedom Foundation have been arguing for years (see
here
and here),
the troops are doing everything but defending our freedoms. In fact,
the more the troops defend our freedoms by bombing, invading, and
occupying other countries, the more enemies they make of the United
States and the more our freedoms get taken away in the name of "fighting
terrorism" or "national security."
Not in any
particular order, and in varying degrees of significance, here are
some freedoms I wish the military were defending:
- The freedom
to fly without being sexually violated.
- The freedom
to purchase a gun without a waiting period.
- The freedom
to grow, sell, and smoke marijuana.
- The freedom
to sell goods and services for whatever amount a buyer is willing
to pay.
- The freedom
to make more than six withdrawals from one’s savings account each
month.
- The freedom
to drink alcohol as a legal, voting adult under twenty-one years
of age.
- The freedom
to purchase Sudafed over the counter.
- The freedom
to gamble without government approval.
- The freedom
to deposit more than $10,000 in a bank account without government
scrutiny.
- The freedom
to not be stopped at a checkpoint and have one’s car searched
without a warrant.
- The freedom
to sell any good or offer any service on Craigslist.
- The freedom
to fill in a "wetland" on one’s own property.
- The freedom
to cut someone’s hair for money without a license.
- The freedom
to home-brew over 100 gallons of beer per year.
- The freedom
to advertise tobacco products on television.
- The freedom
to smoke Cuban cigars.
- The freedom
to not wear a seatbelt.
- The freedom
to be secure in our persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures.
- The freedom
to keep the fruits of one’s labor.
- The freedom
of an employer and an employee to negotiate for any wage.
- The freedom
to discriminate against anyone for any reason.
- The freedom
to videotape the police in public.
- The freedom
of businesses to hire and fire whomever they choose.
- The freedom
to not be brutalized by the police.
- The freedom
to not be arrested for victimless crimes.
- The freedom
to sell raw milk.
- The freedom
to not have one’s child subject to unnecessary vaccinations.
- The freedom
to not have one’s child unjustly taken by Child Protective Services.
- The freedom
to not be subject to the Patriot Act.
- The freedom
for kids to set up neighborhood lemonade stands.
- The freedom
to not have every facet of business and society regulated.
- The freedom
to stay in one’s home during a hurricane.
- The freedom
to not have our e-mail and phone conversations monitored.
- The freedom
to travel to and trade with any country.
- The freedom
to be left alone.
Certainly there
are hundreds of things that could be added. We no longer live in
a free country. We are increasingly living in a police state, a
warfare state, and a national security state. Our freedom is not
absolute. The only reason the United States is still considered
"the land of the free and the home of the brave" is because
we are relatively free, with the degree of freedom varying
depending on which country America is compared to.
Would I rather
live somewhere else? No, I wouldn’t, but that is a ridiculous question.
First of all, if the typical German, Italian, Swede, Korean, Australian,
or Spaniard were asked if he would rather live somewhere else you
would probably get the same answer. And second, although a prisoner
would rather live in a clean prison than a dirty prison and a safe
prison rather than a violent prison, he would prefer to not be a
prisoner in the first place.
I conclude
with three brief thoughts. One, I want the military to defend our
freedoms. But fighting foreign wars only reduces our freedoms. After
all, it is still true that war is the health of the state. Two,
if the military is going to defend our freedoms, then we need freedoms
to defend. Our freedoms must be restored before the military can
defend them. And three, the greatest threat to our freedoms is the
U.S. government, not the governments of China, Syria, Libya, Yemen,
Iraq, Afghanistan, Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, or Iran.
September
6, 2011
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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