Politicians and pundits
use the phrase “Cost of Freedom” a lot, usually in reference to something they
are asking you to do that you probably prefer not to, such as pay higher taxes,
wear a uniform, submit to intrusive surveillance, or simply keep quiet about
any doubts you may have about the former.
Before going into the
cost of freedom, however, perhaps we need to take a closer look at what we mean
by freedom, exactly.
There is no pure,
perfect freedom. We all agree that there are certain things we should not be
free to do, such as to walk in and out of each others’ homes removing TV sets
and jewelry, or shoot the neighbor who is hard of hearing and falls asleep each
night in front of the too-loud TV set. We understand and agree to certain rules
required to create a society in which specialized skills operate together in
mutually beneficial commerce.
So, let us start out by
defining a free society not as a society where people are free to do what they
wish, but as one in which we freely choose to surrender certain behaviors in
exchange for the benefits of living within that society. A covenant exists
between the rulers and the ruled in which each freely agrees to follow a set of
rules of behavior, in exchange for a certain set of rights. In the United
States, that covenant is enshrined in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights,
a contract which lays out what the government may, and more importantly may not
do.
In a free society, the
covenant must be enforced on both the rulers and the ruled equally. To enforce
the covenant upon the people there is law enforcement, and when needed, prison.
To enforce the covenant on the side of the government, the Founding Fathers
created a government of three components, each charged with keeping an eye on
the other two, and when needed, to legally restrain excess of authority.
Following the collapse
of the USSR, the United States Government lost its most potent demon to wave at
the masses. But it was quickly replaced with SARS, Aids, Swine Flu, Avian Flu,
Ebola, Global Warming, Global Cooling, inflation, deflation, and most recently
terrorists. Each and every demon was waved at us to trick us into surrendering
more of our money, more of our children’s lives, more of our rights, and each
and every demon had no more substance than the paper-mache’ heads used by the
Wizard of Oz to trick Dorothy into making war on the Wicked Witch of the West.
Fear gave politicians issues to run on, defense and medical corporations
markets for their products, and media sensational content for their periodicals
and broadcasts.
That it was all
trickery and deception with the purpose of tricking us out of our rights was
best illustrated by President George W. Bush’s plan to deal with Avian Flu,
which not only enriched his good friend Donald Rumsfeld, but also included gun
confiscation. It should be noted that firearms (and the second amendment) do
not increase one’s susceptibility to infection by viruses. Clearly, the real
agenda isn’t to save the populace from a flu virus (which as of this writing
has actually killed few humans), but to grab the guns and remove the right to
firearms recognized by the Founding Fathers.
The problem with a
government that rules by fear is that once they have started to use fear on
their own population they can never stop, never allow the fear to subside,
never allow the population to calm down and think rationally. Because when the
population stops being afraid, when they start to think, they will start asking
why they cannot have all the rights, freedoms, and money back. This actually
happened following the collapse of the USSR in 1990, when Americans, tired of
the trillions in taxes collected and spent on the nuclear deterrent, demanded a
drastic reduction in military spending. So, in 1991, the US tricked Saddam
Hussein into invading Kuwait by promising they would not object, then invaded
Iraq, thereby having a convenient war to keep the military budget inflated.
Today we are in two
wars, both of which now appear to have been started with outright lies by the
US Government. Americans are starting to say “no” to more wars and that is a
good thing, for above all else freedom means the freedom to say “no” to the
government,; to remind them that they too are bound by the covenant to restrict
their actions to the letter of the Constitution and the laws.
The Cost of that
Freedom isn’t paying more taxes or wearing a uniform; it is simply to decide
one will not be afraid of the manufactured demons put forth in print and in TV
that serve no purpose than to keep the people meek and under control. That is
all it takes; the will to not be afraid.
Of course the
government does not like people who refuse to live in fear, or who say no.
Every time a citizen stands up and says “no” the tyrant fears. Every time a
citizen refuses to be afraid the government will work extra hard to make that
person afraid, and even today we see those who speak out, because they are no
longer afraid, subjected to harassment and intimidation. Yet they remain
unafraid, for they see the harassment and intimidation for what it is, a
symptom of a government losing control of the people, and they choose to remain
unafraid.
So, that’s really all
there is to it. Refusing to be afraid. Refusing to be tricked out of your
rights.
Freedom is the freedom
to say “no”, and the freedom to live your life unafraid.
Article By: Michael Rivero
Accessible at: http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/costoffreedom.
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