America Closing Her Door to Freedom – Commentary by Douglas Young
"You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free."
--John 8:32
"There is no truth existing which I fear, or would wish unknown to the whole world."
--Thomas Jefferson
At 47, I lament how today’s America is far less free than the country of my youth. Replacing it is not
a 1984ish totalitarian dictatorship, but what Alexis de Tocqueville called the “soft tyranny” of what Mark Levin sees as a 21st
century “nanny state.” We so feared a Stalin or Hitler that we ignored endless assaults on our liberty by idealistic home-grown
statists and the seductive narcotic of ever more government goodies buying our acquiescence. What makes Americans’ surrender
to statism so shameful is that we freely chose this course in direct contravention to our founding principles.
Nowhere have we seen such an accelerating atrophy of our freedom as in K-12 public schools where
recent decades have witnessed far more books banned, and not some print version of Debbie Does Dallas. No, literary classics
like J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye and Mark Twain’s Huck Finn are verboten -- required reading in those decadent days of
my ’70s high school. But educrats with the backbone of a large worm now avoid anything controversial.
Students have far less choice of classes in high school, and often teachers can’t make their
own lessons since they must teach the test so schools can make “adequate yearly progress.” Only about 40 percent of my
college students say they were ever even allowed to discuss any controversial issues in high school. My high school classes
reveled in such debate.
Similarly, so many high schools have become gated, closed campuses. Mine was wide open. “Zero
tolerance” for drugs and violence policies punish students carrying aspirin, cough drops, and Tweety-Bird key chains. Now
diligent do-gooders want to ban school coke machines as well. And to think at my high school we could even smoke!
Today political correctness constipates free speech at many schools (as well as in much of the
public and private sectors), and hysterical sexual harassment policies suspend children for
hugging a classmate. If you had predicted all this to my 1980 senior high class, we’d have
laughed that you’d smoked some mighty bad dope to conjure up such an Orwellian dystopia.
Young folks’ freedom has been lost off campus as well. The drinking age has of course been
raised, and now there’s a host of teen driving restrictions I never had to obey.
But we’ve all lost so much liberty. Look how government’s neurotic nannies have restricted us
with a host of seatbelt, child seat, and helmet laws. Likewise, so many cities and states ban smoking even in private restaurants
and bars. A WWII vet can’t even light up in his own bar.
So many laws have eroded our Second Amendment gun rights that, as P.J. O’Rourke notes, if
Massachusetts had the same gun laws in 1775 that it has now, we’d all be Canadians.
Even political campaign speech is constricted. The Obama administration argued at the U.S. Supreme
Court that the McCain-Feingold Act can ban books about ongoing election campaigns. Yet Justice Hugo Black warned that:
The freedoms of speech, press, petition, and assembly guaranteed by the First
Amendment must be accorded to the ideas we hate, or sooner or later they will be
denied to the ideas we cherish.
Almost half of all U.S. income is taxed today which means we’ve lost about half our economic
freedom. With record government spending and soaring debt, we’re set to lose a lot more. And to think the Boston Tea Party was
waged over a three-cent-a-pound tax on tea.
Government regulations on business cost us well over $1 trillion a year in higher consumer prices,
and there are exactly 26,911 government words policing the sale of a head of cabbage.
In recent years, obsessive-compulsive environmental regulations halted a Massachusetts town
from using fireworks on Independence Day since an “endangered” bird’s nest was found near it. News flash: on July 4 we celebrate
independence from a tyrannical government. Yet George III never taxed, regulated, or policed us remotely as much as Washington,
D.C. does today. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says “Every aspect of our lives must be subjected to an inventory.”
Everywhere rules and paperwork mushroom as nit-picking bureaucrats grow in numbers and
power. As a buddy bemoaned, the increasingly shrill message of the establishment is “Sit down –
and shut up.” No wonder so many Americans feel frustrated and impotent.
Why has our liberty eroded so badly? Statist public schools have long taught that equality
(of results) and “social justice” trump freedom since liberty is the handmaiden of “selfish” individualists harming “the
community.” As we’ve grown affluent, there’s more desire to protect everyone from risk, and our burgeoning welfare state
demands ever more of our economic liberty. Plus, as societies get more secular, they become more socialist (see Western Europe).
We also have endless media-savvy professional grievance groups contending that every erosion of
freedom is imperative for our safety. But, as Justice Louis Brandeis warned:
Experience teaches us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government’s purposes
are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest
dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.
Meanwhile too many liberty-loving Americans are so ensconced in busy private lives that they
neglect their public duties. But Jefferson warned that “The price of liberty is eternal vigilance.” Never forget that we are
the heirs of the most libertarian, God-fearing revolutionaries in history. So let’s pay attention, think critically, speak up,
and VOTE in every election.
"The liberties of our country, the freedom of our civil Constitution, are worth defending at all hazards; and it is our duty to
defend them against all attacks. We have received them as a fair inheritance from our worthy ancestors: they purchased them for
us with toil and danger and expense of treasure and blood, and transmitted them to us with care and diligence. It will bring an
everlasting mark of infamy on the present generation, enlightened as it is, if we should suffer them to be wrested from us by
violence without a struggle, or to be cheated out of them by the artifices of false and designing men.”
-–Samuel Adams, from The Rights of the Colonists, p. 419
"The U.S. has constructed a society, the first in modern history, in which native-born productive citizens are the tax slaves of
the welfare and immigrant lobbies. The 35 million taxpayers who carry the burden of the income tax have no more claim to their
income than did medieval serfs or 19th century black slaves."
-–Paul Craig Roberts, Compassionate Tyranny
Dr. Young
teaches political science and history at Gainesville State College
where he also advises the Politically Incorrect and Chess Clubs. He is a life member of the Sons of Confederate
Veterans and the [Gen. James] Longstreet Society.
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