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Once Again, Democracy Is Not Freedom (and We Are Not the Government)
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
February 28, 2005
President Bush and his neoconservative supporters were
practically teary-eyed on election day in Iraq. No longer
did it matter that the weapons of mass destruction that
had been used to scare the American people into
supporting the war didnt exist. Or that thousands
of U.S. troops and tens of thousands of Iraqis were now
dead or maimed. Or that the Pentagon and CIA had plunged
America into a shameful orgy of torture and sordid sex
acts. Or that billions upon billions of dollars of U.S.
taxpayer money were being frittered away, even while the
value of the dollar continued to plummet in international
markets.
No, all that mattered now was that the Iraqi people had
finally been given the opportunity to elect their rulers.
Pardon me for asking some indelicate questions, but under what moral authority does one nation invade and occupy another nation for the purpose of conducting a national election, especially when the invasion and occupation are likely to result in the deaths and maiming of tens of thousands of people, including American soldiers and Iraqi citizens? Isn't it possible that those U.S. soldiers would have placed a higher value on their lives and health than on a national election in Iraq, especially if they had known prior to the invasion that they were not protecting America from a WMD attack after all? Isn't it possible those dead and maimed Iraqis would have preferred life and health, albeit under tyranny, just as millions of people in Eastern Europe did through the many decades of the Cold War?
Lets not forget the simple truth that
democracy is not freedom. Thus, the mere fact that many
of the Iraqi people voted in a national election does not mean that Iraqis are
now free or that theyre going to be free in the
near future. In fact, given the political and religious
beliefs of the Shiite group that garnered the most
votes, early indications are exactly the opposite.
What? you ask. How can that be?
Democracy is freedom! President Bush and our
military leaders tell us so.
Unfortunately, however, it just aint so. President
Bush and the Pentagon are as wrong about freedom and
democracy as they were about WMDs in Iraq.
The fact is that democracy is the very worst form of
government there is, except for all the rest, as Winston
Churchill once pointed out. Its only real advantage, as
Ludwig von Mises observed, is that it provides the
citizenry with the ability to peacefully change a regime
by voting it out of office. To change a totalitarian
regime almost always entails violence, such as a
revolution.
What ultimately matters with respect to freedom is not so
much how a ruler is selected but rather the extent of the
rulers powers once hes installed into office.
Lets assume, for example, that an elected ruler has
omnipotent power over the citizenry. That is, there is no
legislature that enacts laws and no judicial branch to
interpret them. Whatever the ruler says, goes. He rules
by decree. He has the power to jail anyone he wants for
any reason whatsoever, to torture people, to punish
critics, to shut down the press and public assemblies, to
confiscate weapons, and to send the nation into war. He
has unlimited power to tax. He even has the power to
force people to attend religious services.
Could people in that society be considered free?
President Bush would undoubtedly say, Yes, because
people had the right to vote, and he was the one who won.
And if people feel that their ruler has abused his
powers, they are free to oust him from office in the next
election.
But how can living under dictatorship, albeit
democratically elected, be considered genuine freedom?
Its not difficult to see how our American ancestors
felt about democracy. They considered it so bad that they
enacted the Bill of Rights to protect us from it.
After all, carefully read the Bill of Rights. Youll
notice something interesting: It doesnt give people
rights at all. Instead, it protects us from democracy.
The popular refrain, We are the government,
is false too. After all, if we are the government, then
why does the Bill of Rights protect those of us in the
private sector from those in the government sector?
Will Bushs militarily installed democracy bring
freedom to the Iraqi people? He says it already has,
because the Iraqi people were free to vote. There are
strong indications, however, that the new Iraqi regime
intends to establish close ties to the Islamic regime in
Iran, which Bush says is evil and unfree, and may even mirror
many Iranian policies. If that happens, one can only
wonder whether he will change his tune about democracy
and freedom, especially if U.S. troops end up killing and
dying both in Iraq and Iran.
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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