Special to TLE
It's getting so that I dread downloading my e-mail.
Bad enough that, cold-bloodedly capitalizing on the atrocities of
September 11, the worst elements within the government are doing
their damnedest to convert this country into a replica of Nazi
Germany or Soviet Russia. What bothers me most is that advocates of
liberty all the way across the traditional political spectrum and
beyond it, are running around like chickens with their heads chopped
off, clearly without a clue as to what needs to be done in the
current regrettable circumstances.
They send me messages begging me to tell them what to do now, or
wailing at me that there's nothing anybody can do; they send messages
to one another on mailing lists, attempting to hatch one meaningless
irrelevant scheme after another, reinventing the wheel square and
then spinning it to no effect while adding to my own burden of
despair and uncertainty.
But whether for good or ill, having spent most of my childhood as the
littlest kid in class, I taught myself -- one black eye and split lip
at a time -- whenever I feel afraid, not to whistle a happy tune, but
to ball my fists up and take a step forward. That's what I'm doing
now.
Let me start by telling you what this is not a time for. This
is not a time for comparing notes with your buddies -- over an
Internet being spied on more and more every day by the sworn enemies
of liberty -- about what weapons are best for taking out tanks and
helicopters. On the contrary, that's the most efficient way that I
can think of to find yourself defined as a terrorist under current
unconstitutional law and made to disappear as surely as if this were
Argentina in the 1980s.
Which it increasingly resembles.
This is not a time to debate the best ways to hide your money or
other assets or to encrypt your little conversations with one
another. Openness is our most powerful weapon. We are not criminals.
We are the children of Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, and yes, even
that bastard Alexander Hamilton. We are the goddamned inheritors of
the American Revolution.
We are the goodguys and we have no need to skulk around in the
virtual baseboards of the Internet like cockroaches. Let the vile
minions of the current regime do that. It's where they belong and
what they are. We will stand tall in the light of liberty, let others
see us doing it, and encourage them, one by one if need be, to stand
with us.
It's the only path to victory.
Those of us who embrace traditional American ideas about freedom, and
oppose what the current regime is doing, comprise less than one
percent of the population. Most of us get whimpery about an ingrown
toenail, let alone bullet wounds. If we had to fight a revolution, it
would be over in less than an eye-blink. We'd be no more than a tiny
grease-stain on a footnote in the history books. And if the public
were ever allowed to hear about it, they'd applaud our demise as
troublemakers.
The fact is that, at the present rate, by the time most of the public
realize that they shouldn't have supported this regime in its naked
grab for absolute power, it'll be too late to do anything about it.
Therefore it's up to us, to liberty's one percent, to change that,
and in that kind of undertaking, we are particularly gifted. Our
martial virtues and numbers (or pathetic lack thereof) don't matter.
We are first and foremost communicators, and that's what counts. The
task ahead, while certainly formidable, is far from impossible to
accomplish.
I just received two e-mail messages this morning that I find very
encouraging. One was from one of the organizations that want Texas to
be an independent nation. These groups range from intelligent, sober,
and respectable to just plain lock-me-up-crazy. I don't know which
this is. They complain that the FBI has begun leaning on providers to
dump their website. They're not happy about it, but they're not very
intimidated, either. They're determined to get back up into
cyberspace again.
The other message was a magazine story in which the producer of a
leftist TV series was saying that the old-time Hollywood blacklist
was back, and that if you express opinions unacceptable to those
currently in power -- Bill Maher's view on the dishonorable way
America wages war was the example -- you're going to find it harder
and harder to work.
Why do I find this encouraging? Because the current regime has
managed to offend and alienate both ends of the traditional political
spectrum. Even better, while it's true neither group was favorably
disposed toward the Bush Administration in the first place (it's a
tossup which despised it more), they now perceive it clearly as an
enemy. Our job must be to get them to perceive each other as allies
-- and then encourage them to start working on the middle, from both
ends.
The means? The one thing any of us, right, left, and above the center
still have in common, the one thing traditional enough that few will
challenge its legitimacy, the one thing radical enough to do the job.
The Bill of Rights.
Or more to the point, enforcement of the Bill of Rights.
September 11 was a terrible thing for any nation to have to live
through. And, as I say, it's callously being used as an excuse by
evil politicians to do things to America that will prove to be even
more terrible. But September 11 also makes the best case that can be
made for imposing limits on what politicians do -- limits of the kind
the Founding Fathers meant to impose by enacting the Bill of Rights
into law.
If limits like those had been stringently observed over the last
century or so, regarding the power of the government to interfere in
the affairs of other nations, and of the President to start and wage
wars without following proper Constitutional procedure, the people of
the world wouldn't hate our guts and want to kill as many of us as
possible. And no, it isn't our wealth and freedom they hate us for.
Most of them want wealth and freedom themselves. It's our
bombs, stupid.
In short, if we had stuck with absolute political and military
"isolationism" and we simultaneously took government entirely out of
matters of free trade between individuals, September 11 wouldn't have
happened.
Similarly, if the Second Amendment rights of every man, woman, and
responsible child in America had been thoroughly and energetically
enforced, it would never even have occurred to the homicidal
religious zealots in question to hijack an airplane carrying a
leavening of heavily armed passengers -- and again, September 11
would never have happened.
Supporters of the current regime and the ongoing Nazification of
America hate those facts, although they can make no argument against
them, and can only shove their fingers in their ears and scream, "No!
No! No!", whenever they're presented. They are facts; nothing can be
done about that. Eventually they hope to kill the people who present
them.
The same facts also smash to bits any contention that our rights
weren't meant to be absolute. They've been held non-absolute for more
than a century -- since the War Between the States -- and look where
it's taken us: six thousand dead because the Bill of Rights was not
enforced.
Okay, so what can we do now?
A few years ago, I designed and Scott Bieser drew a graphic logo
representing the concept of Bill of Rights enforcement. It consists
of a European-style "forbidden" sign, with the diagonal center bar
broken out by the emergence of a scroll on which the Bill of Rights
is inscribed.
You can see a some very nice renderings, in a couple of different
sizes, starting at http://lneilsmith.org//bor_enforcement.html
What I propose now is that thousands upon thousands of pin-backed
buttons be made up on that design, and those of us who value freedom
and oppose the police state wear them wherever we go, as one might
wear the button of a favored political candidate, or those of us wore
buttons in the 1960s with slogans opposing the draft and the war in
Vietnam.
Those who wish to help, with money or manufacturing, contact me at
the e-mail address above. Then wear your button wherever you go, at
home, in church, or on the street. Wear it to work or to school until
"they" demand that you take it off -- and then make them explain why
in public. Wear it especially if you're compelled to fly
commercially, make them force you to take it off, and, once again, to
explain why publicly.
Make them explain exactly how the Bill of Rights endangers public
safety.
The all-important difference is that each of these buttons will be
accompanied by a card, three by five inches, containing an annotated
copy of the Bill of Rights, a brief explanation of how Bill of Rights
enforcement might have prevented the hideous events of September 11,
and how, even now, it might restore America to peace, freedom, and
prosperity. I'll start to work on that as soon as I mail this to the
world.
Another difference is that those who participate fully in this effort
will carry a pocketful of these cards and another pocketful of
buttons to give anyone who shows an interest in enforcing the Bill of
Rights. Cards can also be given to people who hesitate. They can even
be left in library books, in magazines on airliners, and on
restaurant tables.
Of course many will refuse us, at first, some of them angrily, some
even violently. Of others who join us, some will give up after a
while. But if we one percenters keep it up persistently enough,
sooner or later, more and more individuals will come to wear our
buttons, carry our cards, and persuade friends, families, and
coworkers to do so.
At first this may seem like a feeble tactic in the face of forces we
confront today. It may seem trivial or lame. It is not. What it is is
simple, inexpensive, and effective. The more that the government does
to make people afraid or angry, and the more BoRe buttons they see
around them, the easier it will be for them to start wearing one
themselves.
At the same time, our enemies are abject cowards. They derive what
meager principles they possess from moment to moment, from opinion
polls and Madison Avenue focus groups. When BoRe buttons and cards
show up all over America by the thousands, let alone by the millions,
they'll begin to falter. Any jackbooted move they try to make against
the movement will damage them in the public eye. And when our BoRe
buttons show up on the lapels of their own bureaucrats, they'll
collapse.
Right now we're only one percent. Make it ten and the war at home and
abroad is over. Even if I'm wrong, at the very least, this modest
undertaking will give us one percenters some practice with a kind of
cross-spectrum cooperation that doesn't need hierarchies, debate,
voting, or the giving or taking of orders that are fatal to so many
efforts.
Persuading those on the right and the left, respectively, to join us
presents its own peculiar difficulties. Some on the right will jump
at absolutely any excuse to humiliate, injure, and kill anybody whose
pigmentation, accent, and religious practices they disapprove of. The
cost, the utter obliteration of every principle that ever made
America the home of the brave and the land of the free, doesn't
matter even a bit.
If you discover that this is what you're dealing with, stop
immediately and move on to somebody else. There isn't time to do
otherwise.
It is the left -- Hollywood, Nashville, and the ACLU -- who will
eventually win or lose this war for us. When you find yourself among
those who call themselves liberals, ask them point blank if they'd be
willing to embrace a libertarian reading of the Bill of Rights -- the
whole Bill of Rights -- if it meant putting an end to this war and
the Nazification of America this war was created to serve as an
excuse for.
If they say yes, give them a button.
If they say anything else, give them a card.
Be implacable, be unrelenting, and we will have our country back. It
beats hell out of being a grease-stain on a footnote in the history
books.
L. NEIL SMITH is the award-winning author of more than 20 novels
about individual liberty and the right to own and carry weapons. Read
more than 80 articles and speeches: buy LEVER ACTION: ESSAYS ON
LIBERTY, for $21.95+$6 S&H from
http://www.lneilsmith.org//leveraction.html
Order HOPE (with Aaron Zelman), get free stuff and a special offer:
click on: http://www.jpfo.org/hope.htm or read about MAKING A MOVIE
of The Mitzvah the action-adventure thriller by Aaron Zelman and L.
Neil Smith -- and maybe even help get it done! -- click on
http://www.lneilsmith.org//mitzvahmovie.html
PRE-ORDER L. Neil Smith's long-awaited THE AMERICAN ZONE plus a new
trade paperback edition of The Probability Broach from Tor
Books, coming in November and December, 2001, respectively, by
clicking on: http://www.lneilsmith.org//americanzone.html
http://www.lneilsmith.org//lns_tpb-3.html
AUTOGRAPHED COPIES of Lever Action, Hope, Forge of the
Elders, Henry Martyn, The Mitzvah, and a few others are
available from the author. For details, write to him at
[email protected]
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