Libertarians
& Civil Liberties
by Harry Browne
March
9, 2002
I recently received a letter from
a Libertarian who believes that invasions of our civil liberties are
necessary to defend ourselves against the terrorists. The following
dialogue provides his opinions (indented, in quotation marks) together
with my replies, edited only slightly:
"I agree that rights should not be compromised
and that exceptions should not be made. I do not agree that all rights
are created equal and absolute. The right to life and, by extension,
the right to defend ourselves must take priority over civil liberties.
"Let me illustrate. We defend free speech.
However, if a person were giving a speech and someone threw a brick at
the speaker, we would shout, Watch out!' We would to try to save
the speaker from harm even though we interrupted the speech. If the
right to free speech were absolute and inviolate regardless of
context, we would be committing a breach of ethics to interrupt the
speaker under any circumstances. But it would be ethical to save the
speaker's life even if it means abridging freedom of speech."
"Freedom of speech" does not refer to any
relationship between you and the speaker. "Freedom of speech"
means that "Congress shall make no law abridging" the freedom of
citizens to express themselves on any subject. It has nothing to do with
your interrupting the speaker. Rules governing that are set by whoever
owns the venue in which the speech is taking place just as you can
decide for yourself what can be said in your own home.
"Here's another example. A man should not be
putting his hands on a woman without her permission. But suppose that
a lady is waiting to cross the street and decides to cross against the
light. A man behind her sees a car bearing down on her just as she
steps in its path. If the right to be free of physical harassment were
absolute, the man would be ethically bound not to grab her and pull
her back to the curb. But he should help her. Why? Because her right
to life supersedes her right to be free of physical coercion."
You do not impede the woman because she has a
"right to life," but because you want to save her life.
You will experience the consequences of your act. The woman may have been
intending to kill herself, in which case she may hate you and malign you
publicly ever after. Or she may thank you profusely for the rest of her
life. In either case, you make the decision, you take the risk, and you
experience the consequences of your acts.
To transfer such an example to government is completely
inappropriate. Politicians do not suffer the direct consequences of their
own acts and rarely even suffer indirect consequences. When they pass
laws governing how people must act on public streets, they never suffer
themselves if the laws lead to terrible consequences. And to use the
example of your hoping to save the life of a woman on the street as an
excuse to allow politicians to violate the Constitution supposedly for our
own good is wholly inappropriate.
The principal problem with these examples is that they
are about individuals, while you're trying to draw conclusions regarding a
nation. We are not a collective. What one person does with another is of
no relevance when discussing what the government does to individuals.
The Siren
Song of Dictators
"I ask you: Is it better to torture a suspect to
prevent your city from being consumed in a nuclear holocaust or to
respect his rights of person and due process and thereby suffer the
incineration of a hundred thousand innocents and the creation of a
nuclear wasteland? The rights of the suspect are not equivalent to the
right to life of me, my family, my friends, and my community. It would
be immoral not to try to force the suspect to stop the detonation even
though it violates the suspect's civil liberties."
It is examples like this that have allowed tyrants
throughout history to arrogate to themselves the right to torture, to
suspend due process, and to ignore any tried-and-true rules of evidence in
order to get what they want. After all, you don't want your city
incinerated, do you?
And don't forget that anyone can be considered a
suspected terrorist. Once you give the government the power to torture, you
could be the next "suspected terrorist" to be tortured. Why not?
Are you going to have a court trial first, employing all the rules of
evidence to be sure that some law-enforcement official hasn't fingered you
because of his incompetence? And what happens when it turns out that you
weren't guilty at all? Who will face dire consequences for having made
"an honest mistake"? And how will you put your life back
together after a week of sheer horror and a maimed body?
"It has been said that our rights are most
essential when our neighbors think we do not deserve them. I answer
that, if my neighbors have good reason to think that I am trying to
murder them, they should stop me even if that means violating my
rights. My civil liberties are subordinate to their right to life.
They are doing the ethical thing to defend their lives. They are
placing their rights and mine in proper perspective. Life and defense
of lives are the ultimate rights."
Once again, you are confusing your neighbors with the
government. If your neighbors hurt you mistakenly, they will face direct
consequences for their acts. To use this as an excuse to give
unaccountable government officials the power to suspend your civil
liberties (and there is no such thing as "accountable"
government officials) is to go the way of the Soviet Union or Nazi
Germany.
"I agree that if we allow our civil liberties
to be subordinated to our self-defense, we will be in danger of all
things being justified. We have currently before us a classic example
of how the power-hungry try to feather their nests in the name of a
worthy goal. In the name of campaign finance reform, incumbent
politicians are trying to assure their re-elections by prohibiting
paid political ads a clear violation of free speech."
Then why don't you apply this principle to civil
liberties? The politicians who are trying to ram campaign reform down our
throats are the same ones who would have the power of life and death over
you if you suspend the last effective elements of the Constitution.
Giving Them
the Power to Do What They Want
"Government abuses and injustices will occur in
the name of saving our lives. Those in power will sometimes be
overzealous, dim-witted, inept, mistaken, corrupt, or ambitious."
Not "sometimes." Any power you give to
politicians will inevitably be abused if not today by the
"good" politicians you give it to, then tomorrow by the
"bad" politicians who will succeed them. As Michael Cloud has
said, "The problem is not the abuse of power, it is the power to
abuse."
"But is it not better to risk sliding down the
slippery slope of allowing our government to infringe upon our civil
liberties than to suffer terrorists throwing us off the cliffs and
dashing us upon the rocks?"
Once on the slippery slope, when have we ever been able
to climb back up to regain lost liberties?
"We must subordinate our civil liberties to our
self-defense not only for the ethical and philosophical considerations
above, but also because of practical considerations. First, it is
clear that the fanatics who have attacked us will keep attacking until
we or they are destroyed. I see no person or group who has the
investigative or military capacity to stop them except our government.
And with $2 trillion at its disposal, our government has
apparently achieved nothing. So what will the government achieve with $2
trillion plus our lives?
"We have not turned overnight into a Nazi or
Stalinist state. The government has not suspended all our liberties
and has limited the detentions and interrogations to suspects rather
than condemning all those of a particular group or religion to
internment camps."
"Suspects" are by definition people that
government officials don't like. Couldn't you be one of them once we
descend another couple of feet down the slippery slope?
It Hasn't
Hurt Yet
"So far, the government's violation of our civil
liberties has amounted to minor inconveniences for most and major
disruptions for a few."
This is the way these things always begin. "I haven't
noticed any inconvenience." . . . "If you
have nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry
about." . . . "Honest people aren't afraid
of their own government." Eventually, everyone is inconvenienced,
everyone has something to hide, and everyone is afraid of his own
government.
"And I see ways that we as individuals can
exert pressure on our government to moderate rights abuse."
This is another mistaken belief that makes it easy for
government to grow the idea that you can give politicians power and
then draw a line at exactly where you think that power should end. But you
won't get to draw the line, and the politicians' power will eventually be
unlimited. That's why the income tax today is 39%, not the 6% it was at
the start why Social Security is 15%, not 2% why every bank
transaction is subject to government snooping, not just large
transactions.
Why We Are
Threatened
"I don't see how we can alter either the mind set
or actions of those zealots who have been raised to hate us, who have
devoted their lives to finding ways to destroy us, and who find their
ultimate glory and fulfillment in our demise."
Here we come to what, in my opinion, is the most
important issue in this entire War on Terrorism the idea that we have
no choice but to cede to our own government unlimited power to fight
people who won't rest until they destroy us.
But there have always been thugs in the world who wanted
to destroy others. There have always been people who hated America for
justifiable reasons or because they were loony. There have always been
evil people, malicious people, brutal people. Why is it that only now do
they represent such a grave threat to us that we must discard the last of
what made America unique in all the world the few remaining
constitutional rights we possess?
The truth is that the evil, malicious, brutal people
rarely have the ability to make any real trouble outside their own
neighborhoods. The few exceptions, people like Adolf Hitler or Osama bin
Laden, succeed only because they are able to get large numbers of people
to support them to provide the financing, the contacts, the networking
and other resources necessary to cause noticeable trouble.
And that support comes from people who have been
mistreated, as with the Germans after World War I who had
valuable pieces of Germany torn off and handed to France, Poland, or
Czechoslovakia who had all their foreign investments confiscated who were
told to pay astounding reparations, even though all their valuable assets
had been taken from them who were made to bear the
entire guilt for a war they were only one part of.
Or the support comes from hundreds of millions of people
around the world who resent American troops stationed in their country
who are appalled by the constant American bombing of Iraq who have
watched for 50 years as the Americans propped up dictatorial regimes in
Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, and other countries.
The difference between relatively harmless brutes and
brutes who are truly dangerous is that the latter have been handed real
grievances to play upon. They are still brutes, but they gain the support
of honest, peace-loving people who have been pushed to the limit.
You will never be able to subdue all the brutes of the
world, especially if you kill more innocent people in the process
because the very act of trying will arouse even more resentments around
the world.
If you want to make the brutes relatively powerless to
hurt us, you can do it only by taking power away from our politicians to
interfere in foreign countries not by taking away the last remaining
rights of American citizens.
(Incidentally, I find it hard to understand how so many
Libertarians could have complained so loudly about American foreign policy
for so many years, but now seem to refuse to pin any blame on that foreign
policy for what happened on September 11. And even if they do say now the
foreign policy was wrong, they also say that America is justified in
bullying the world now, because of what happened on September 11, even
though the current bullying is an extension of the very foreign policy
they condemn.)
You Can't Control Them
"Therefore, we must support our government to
stop these assassins by whatever means necessary. I don't see how our
government can effectively find and stop these killers without being
able to control entry to our country, without having data about those in
the country, without being able to detain and interrogate suspects, and
without proceeding immediately and secretly on occasion to foil them.
Some of these activities will necessitate limitations on our
freedoms."
In other words, give people like Teddy Kennedy, Newt
Gingrich, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush a blank check and then pray
they don't abuse it.
"But we must not allow the government to do
things in the name of our self-defense that are not necessary,
especially if it means giving up our civil liberties. Our politicians
are quick to grab power from us when emergencies arise and slow to
return it when the crises pass. So we must closely monitor our
politicians as they endeavor to win this war on terror."
Once again, you believe you will be able to draw the
line that you will be asked to determine what is
"necessary" and what isn't. But you will never participate in
such decisions. And as you "monitor" the politicians, what will
you do when you see them crossing the line? How will you rally the
American people to stop the abuse? If you know a way to do this, why aren't
you using it to free us from the income tax, from Social Security, from
the insane War on Drugs, and from other government abuses?
"One step that we might take immediately would
be to insist that, whenever legislation is passed which grants
emergency powers to our government, there would be an expiration date.
I would propose that the term of such laws would be no longer than 4
years-one term of the presidency."
That's long enough to gain complete control of our
lives.
"At the end of its term, if the law still seems
sound and the emergency still exists, it can be re-enacted. If not,
any powers lost to us under that law will automatically be returned to
us. This is the exact opposite of what happens to us now. Long after
emergencies pass or legislation stops making any sense, the law
remains and the government indefinitely keeps the powers it took from
us."
And you believe that, at the end of the 4-year term, you
will be able to rally the American people to prevent an almost-automatic
extension of one of these dreadful laws. If you have that kind of
influence, why didn't you rally the American people to stop passage of the
campaign finance reform that you thought was so disgraceful?
Because you can't. And you won't be able to stop
impositions on your liberty from becoming permanent even if can be
shown clearly that a particular imposition has achieved nothing. When has
a government program been ended no matter how destructive or
unsuccessful?
In addition, you support taking away our civil liberties
provided a 4-year time limit is attached. And who in Congress will see to
it for you that the time limit is attached to new laws taking away our
civil liberties?
I don't like to say this, but I believe you've fallen
for the same pipe-dream that has deluded conservatives and liberals for
the past hundred years or so. We are where we are today because citizens
like yourself supported their favorite politicians as those politicians
supported dangerous legislation, reassuring their supporters that the
proposed legislation included valuable safeguards and then the
politicians compromised at the last minute to pass the dangerous
legislation without any of the safeguards.
"Possibly, our current crisis can become a
blessing in disguise. It is not just in the name of war that our
liberties are infringed. With virtually every new law, policy, and
court decision we are diminished. Hopefully, if we become conscious of
not squandering our rights in one area, we can be moved to preserve
and even enhance them in all."
Sorry, but I just don't see how we will preserve our
rights by giving up more rights and then hoping people will help us get
them back. This is exactly what Republicans have done telling us they're
for smaller government and proving it by making government bigger.
Once the liberties are gone, they aren't coming back.
Liberty isn't saved by giving a blank check to those who want to take our
liberties away from us.
I appreciate your thoughtful comments. I hope you'll
continue to think about these issues.
With best wishes,
Harry
Browne
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