Ever since the attacks of 9/11, unsanctioned alternative
explanations of what happened and why have been in ample
supply. What are the American people to make of these
explanations? That depends on the alternative offered. My
purpose here is not to lend credence to any of them, but
rather to examine the attitude that officialdom expects
of us. According to the opinion molders inside and
outside the government, we regular people are supposed to
scoff, with melodramatic flourish if possible, at any
suggestion that the Official Version of events is, shall
we say, incomplete. The implied principle is that the
government and the mainstream media couldnt
possibly have gotten things wrong, either intentionally
or inadvertently.
Thats the principle I wish to question. Governments
regularly get things wrong, either because their
knowledge is imperfect or because they have an interest
in getting them wrong.
I certainly accept the maxim that the burden of proof
rests on the one offering an assertion. Without that
maxim, we are at the mercy of any arbitrary claim
that comes down the pike. Until you get an answer to the
question Whats your evidence? you have
no obligation to consider the assertion at all.
Most people who proffer conspiracy theories are eager to
offer what in their eyes constitutes evidence. It may
turn out to be bad evidence, but at least they see their
responsibilities. They give the rest of us something to
grab hold of, scrutinize, chew over, and accept or
discard as we see fit.
Thats more than we can say for the Loyal Order of
Defenders of the Official Version of Things. They rarely
deign to rebut the evidence provided by the devotees of
alternative versions, for to do so would be to give those
versions attention; and to do that would be to suggest
they are worthy of attention. That, the Loyal
Defenders cannot afford to do. Better to portray anyone
who entertains a nonstandard, unsanctioned theory as a
lunatic.
What do the Loyal Defenders offer in behalf of the
Official Version? Not very much. Yes, bipartisan
blue-ribbon commissions are often impaneled, comprising
prominent members of the power establishment. Yet the
last thing anyone expects of such commissions is a
bombshell implicating high officeholders in gross
negligence or malfeasance. Instead there is the
obligatory boilerplate about the pointlessness of
recrimination. The 9/11 commission is a good example.
Ive never understood why recrimination is
considered pointless.
This arrangement looks suspiciously like a rigged game,
and it should concern anyone who worries about the threat
to liberty from power. As things are now set up,
government is in a fine position to get away with murder
and assorted lesser crimes. All it need do is hand down
its exculpatory account, which will be dutifully conveyed
by the news media, and have its agents impugn the motives
or sanity of dissenters. That will be enough to keep most
respectable people away.
We are asked, in other words, to put our trust in the
state. But no collection of men is less deserving of
trust than the state. A casual look at its history is all
that is necessary to substantiate that claim. States have
been committing horrendous crimes on a mass scale for
ages. Democratic states are not exempt from
that judgment. The U.S. government has much to answer
for, from the Trail of Tears in 1838 to Atlanta in 1864
to the Japanese internment in 1942 to Ruby Ridge in 1992
to Waco in 1993. And thats only some of its
domestic offenses. We could bring up the
Philippines, Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Beirut,
and others.
I am not saying that any particular conspiracy theory is
accurate. All I am saying is that governments ought to be
held to the same standard of proof as everyone else.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Send him email.
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