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        <title>Independence and Liberty - Crashing through the phony left-right paradigm  - Infowar&apos;s Blog - Bakersfield.com</title>
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        <description>Independence                and Liberty
by                Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory


&amp;nbsp;
Every Fourth                of July we celebrate American independence &amp;ndash; but why, and what does                it mean? 
The political                consequence of the American Revolution was the liberation of the                thirteen colonies from British rule. The Continental Congress declared                &amp;quot;that these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be,                Free and Independent States; that they are absolved from all Allegiance                to the British Crown, and that all political Connection between                them and the State of Great-Britain, is and ought to be totally                dissolved.&amp;quot;
It was a major                defeat for the world&amp;rsquo;s greatest empire, Great Britain. But the Americans                did not revolt over light and transient causes. 
The Americans                rebelled for freedom from their motherland because they had believed                that their liberties had been seriously undermined by the British                government.
The government                had levied taxes on them without their consent &amp;ndash; on some items,                as high as a couple percent. 
The government                had searched and seized their property on the basis of unreasonably                broad warrants called &amp;quot;Writs of Assistance.&amp;quot; 
The government                was elevating the military above the civil law. 
The government                was forcing the American people to finance its global empire. 
The government                was sending forth bureaucrats to regulate and tax the American people.
Do you see                a trend here? 
The British                government had acted despotically and tyrannically, expanding its                power further into the lives of the colonists, who had been used                to living in a condition of benign neglect for decades. During and                after the French and Indian War, the British government became much                more interested in the financial dealings of the American people,                raised taxes, and compelled the colonists to house and support the                troops in their communities. 
An important                point is that the patriots were not protesting taxes for programs                like Social Security or Universal health care &amp;ndash; though we can imagine                they would, as such monstrous programs would seem perfectly alien                to them &amp;ndash; but rather, they were primarily protesting taxes and impositions                that were being carried out in the name of empire, war finance,                national security and mercantilism. 
Today&amp;rsquo;s conservatives                should keep this in mind. For just as war and empire had led to                financial ruin and tyranny for the colonies, they have meant the                same for us today.
But it is staggering                the degree to which the U.S. government has now replicated and even                been more rapacious than the British empire, as far as American                liberties are concerned.
In recent years,                with the war on terror and the war on drugs, we have seen a steady                erosion of civil liberties. The Patriot Act essentially brought                back Writs of Assistance. Indefinite detentions and military commissions                resemble the Crown&amp;rsquo;s Star Chambers that had been vanquished long                before 1776. 
The degree                to which economic liberty has been destroyed in this country is                beyond description. We have completely lost our way. The tax rates                that average Americans suffer are ten times as high as the tax burden                under Britain. Even Britain&amp;rsquo;s targeted excise taxes on tea that                sparked the Boston Tea Party were low compared to today&amp;rsquo;s taxes                on alcohol, cigarettes, and other items. 
The U.S. government                intrudes into our financial lives in every conceivable way. Every                industry is regulated by thousands of bureaucrats and millions of                pages of federal regulations. 

    
        
            &amp;nbsp;
        
    

We have a welfare                state only slightly less socialistic than that of most other Western                democracies. We have the largest budget, the largest government                program &amp;ndash; social security &amp;ndash; the largest military and the largest                prison system on the planet. 
And now we                are facing a welfare-warfare state crisis that boggles the mind.                The Obama administration has continued and built upon the foreign                interventionism of Bush, expanding the war in Afghanistan and into                Pakistan. On civil liberties, he has solidified most of the worst                legal positions and policies of the Bush administration. 
Meanwhile,                in the economy, Obama is waging another war on the private sector.                Every week there is something ranging from ridiculous to downright                despotic &amp;ndash; tobacco bans, national healthcare plans, the cap-and-trade                power grab. In the name of the environment, he is shrewdly imposing                one of the highest tax increases ever, claiming new broad powers                over our lives, shoveling billions to connected industry and creating                a phony &amp;quot;market&amp;quot; in carbon emissions that will surely                benefit a very few at the expense of all of us. On healthcare, he                is poised to force the uninsured to buy health insurance, or else                be fined a thousand dollars, and begin the construction of a command-control                health care system with its philosophical underpinnings lying somewhere                between Mussolini and Karl Marx. This abominable program will be                invasive in countless ways, giving politicians and bureaucrats and                others a peak into our medical lives while usurping control over                some of the most intimate decisions a human being can make. 
In terms of                the political meaning of the Declaration, we have come a long way.                Our current government is far more tyrannical toward the American                people than Britain&amp;rsquo;s was before the Revolution.
Independence                from Britain did not guarantee the American states would be free                forever, of course. And from the beginning, American politicians                began reversing some of the victories of the Revolution. Taxes and                tariffs and Constitutional violations got worse. The principle of                secession and political self-determination was violently defeated                in the Civil War. The entire 20th century presented a                nearly undisturbed growth of the leviathan in Washington, DC. The                U.S. soon became a world empire, as Britain was.
But there was                another victory of the American Revolution, a victory of ideas.                As Bernard Bailyn argues in The                Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, the Revolution                gave birth to a &amp;quot;contagion of liberty.&amp;quot; The ideas of freedom                began to catch on, not just the principle of political self-determination,                but the generally connected ideas of personal, individual liberty.                The first anti-slavery societies were formed. People began demanding                more religious freedom, and voices began demanding equality for                women under the law.
Even in our                own time, we can see many reasons for hope. The ideas of liberty                have never had more champions, from more walks of life. The economic                thinking most needed to combat the status quo has never been more                refined with as many articulate defenders. Total war, wartime censorship                and conscription are not as popular as they were in earlier eras.                The courts are more resistant to executive wartime power grabs than                they were in the past. Ron Paul has succeeded in making monetary                policy and concerns about the unleashed Federal Reserve serious,                mainstream issues, for the first time in nearly a century. States                are resisting federal impositions left and right, American tax protests                and resentment are growing, Obamanomics is meeting public disapproval,                and the president&amp;rsquo;s betrayal of civil liberties and the cause of                peace have turned some of the left against him. And now we have                the Internet on our side.
And thanks                to the long-term consequences of ideals, the traditions we hold                dear, there are many freedoms we still have, but they are sometimes                easy to take for granted. Freedom from chattel slavery, women&amp;rsquo;s                rights, religious freedom, the freedom of speech, freedom from conscription                &amp;ndash; in many of these areas, we are freer than Americans were under                Britain, and in all these areas, we are freer than many of our forefathers                living in the United States. 
If these ideas                of liberty can win out, then others can too. And only when the ideas                win will we get our freedom. 
Independence                from out-of-control government might seem like a dream now. But                the ideas of liberty can be the most powerful thing on earth. To                do your part, declare your own independence from the dominant statist                zeitgeist, and spread the message of freedom to people you care                about today. 
Happy Fourth                of July. 
July                4, 2009
&amp;nbsp;
www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory189.html
Anthony                Gregory [send him mail]                is a research analyst at the Independent                Institute and editor-in-chief of the Campaign                for Liberty. He                lives in Oakland, California. See his                webpage  for more articles and personal information.</description>
        <itunes:summary>Independence                and Liberty
by                Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory


&amp;nbsp;
Every Fourth                of July we celebrate American independence &amp;ndash; but why, and what does                it mean? 
The political                consequence of the American Revolution was the liberation of the                thirteen colonies from British rule. The Continental Congress declared                &amp;quot;that these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be,                Free and Independent States; that they are absolved from all Allegiance                to the British Crown, and that all political Connection between                them and the State of Great-Britain, is and ought to be totally                dissolved.&amp;quot;
It was a major                defeat for the world&amp;rsquo;s greatest empire, Great Britain. But the Americans                did not revolt over light and transient causes. 
The Americans                rebelled for freedom from their motherland because they had believed                that their liberties had been seriously undermined by the British                government.
The government                had levied taxes on them without their consent &amp;ndash; on some items,                as high as a couple percent. 
The government                had searched and seized their property on the basis of unreasonably                broad warrants called &amp;quot;Writs of Assistance.&amp;quot; 
The government                was elevating the military above the civil law. 
The government                was forcing the American people to finance its global empire. 
The government                was sending forth bureaucrats to regulate and tax the American people.
Do you see                a trend here? 
The British                government had acted despotically and tyrannically, expanding its                power further into the lives of the colonists, who had been used                to living in a condition of benign neglect for decades. During and                after the French and Indian War, the British government became much                more interested in the financial dealings of the American people,                raised taxes, and compelled the colonists to house and support the                troops in their communities. 
An important                point is that the patriots were not protesting taxes for programs                like Social Security or Universal health care &amp;ndash; though we can imagine                they would, as such monstrous programs would seem perfectly alien                to them &amp;ndash; but rather, they were primarily protesting taxes and impositions                that were being carried out in the name of empire, war finance,                national security and mercantilism. 
Today&amp;rsquo;s conservatives                should keep this in mind. For just as war and empire had led to                financial ruin and tyranny for the colonies, they have meant the                same for us today.
But it is staggering                the degree to which the U.S. government has now replicated and even                been more rapacious than the British empire, as far as American                liberties are concerned.
In recent years,                with the war on terror and the war on drugs, we have seen a steady                erosion of civil liberties. The Patriot Act essentially brought                back Writs of Assistance. Indefinite detentions and military commissions                resemble the Crown&amp;rsquo;s Star Chambers that had been vanquished long                before 1776. 
The degree                to which economic liberty has been destroyed in this country is                beyond description. We have completely lost our way. The tax rates                that average Americans suffer are ten times as high as the tax burden                under Britain. Even Britain&amp;rsquo;s targeted excise taxes on tea that                sparked the Boston Tea Party were low compared to today&amp;rsquo;s taxes                on alcohol, cigarettes, and other items. 
The U.S. government                intrudes into our financial lives in every conceivable way. Every                industry is regulated by thousands of bureaucrats and millions of                pages of federal regulations. 

    
        
            &amp;nbsp;
        
    

We have a welfare                state only slightly less socialistic than that of most other Western                democracies. We have the largest budget, the largest government                program &amp;ndash; social security &amp;ndash; the largest military and the largest                prison system on the planet. 
And now we                are facing a welfare-warfare state crisis that boggles the mind.                The Obama administration has continued and built upon the foreign                interventionism of Bush, expanding the war in Afghanistan and into                Pakistan. On civil liberties, he has solidified most of the worst                legal positions and policies of the Bush administration. 
Meanwhile,                in the economy, Obama is waging another war on the private sector.                Every week there is something ranging from ridiculous to downright                despotic &amp;ndash; tobacco bans, national healthcare plans, the cap-and-trade                power grab. In the name of the environment, he is shrewdly imposing                one of the highest tax increases ever, claiming new broad powers                over our lives, shoveling billions to connected industry and creating                a phony &amp;quot;market&amp;quot; in carbon emissions that will surely                benefit a very few at the expense of all of us. On healthcare, he                is poised to force the uninsured to buy health insurance, or else                be fined a thousand dollars, and begin the construction of a command-control                health care system with its philosophical underpinnings lying somewhere                between Mussolini and Karl Marx. This abominable program will be                invasive in countless ways, giving politicians and bureaucrats and                others a peak into our medical lives while usurping control over                some of the most intimate decisions a human being can make. 
In terms of                the political meaning of the Declaration, we have come a long way.                Our current government is far more tyrannical toward the American                people than Britain&amp;rsquo;s was before the Revolution.
Independence                from Britain did not guarantee the American states would be free                forever, of course. And from the beginning, American politicians                began reversing some of the victories of the Revolution. Taxes and                tariffs and Constitutional violations got worse. The principle of                secession and political self-determination was violently defeated                in the Civil War. The entire 20th century presented a                nearly undisturbed growth of the leviathan in Washington, DC. The                U.S. soon became a world empire, as Britain was.
But there was                another victory of the American Revolution, a victory of ideas.                As Bernard Bailyn argues in The                Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, the Revolution                gave birth to a &amp;quot;contagion of liberty.&amp;quot; The ideas of freedom                began to catch on, not just the principle of political self-determination,                but the generally connected ideas of personal, individual liberty.                The first anti-slavery societies were formed. People began demanding                more religious freedom, and voices began demanding equality for                women under the law.
Even in our                own time, we can see many reasons for hope. The ideas of liberty                have never had more champions, from more walks of life. The economic                thinking most needed to combat the status quo has never been more                refined with as many articulate defenders. Total war, wartime censorship                and conscription are not as popular as they were in earlier eras.                The courts are more resistant to executive wartime power grabs than                they were in the past. Ron Paul has succeeded in making monetary                policy and concerns about the unleashed Federal Reserve serious,                mainstream issues, for the first time in nearly a century. States                are resisting federal impositions left and right, American tax protests                and resentment are growing, Obamanomics is meeting public disapproval,                and the president&amp;rsquo;s betrayal of civil liberties and the cause of                peace have turned some of the left against him. And now we have                the Internet on our side.
And thanks                to the long-term consequences of ideals, the traditions we hold                dear, there are many freedoms we still have, but they are sometimes                easy to take for granted. Freedom from chattel slavery, women&amp;rsquo;s                rights, religious freedom, the freedom of speech, freedom from conscription                &amp;ndash; in many of these areas, we are freer than Americans were under                Britain, and in all these areas, we are freer than many of our forefathers                living in the United States. 
If these ideas                of liberty can win out, then others can too. And only when the ideas                win will we get our freedom. 
Independence                from out-of-control government might seem like a dream now. But                the ideas of liberty can be the most powerful thing on earth. To                do your part, declare your own independence from the dominant statist                zeitgeist, and spread the message of freedom to people you care                about today. 
Happy Fourth                of July. 
July                4, 2009
&amp;nbsp;
www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory189.html
Anthony                Gregory [send him mail]                is a research analyst at the Independent                Institute and editor-in-chief of the Campaign                for Liberty. He                lives in Oakland, California. See his                webpage  for more articles and personal information.</itunes:summary>
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        <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2009 19:59:24 PDT</pubDate>
                
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