By Ross Kaminsky
Malala Yousafzai can't speak for herself, and it remains to be seen whether
she ever will again. For the crime of going to school -- and blogging about it
-- she was shot in the head by a Taliban assassin while in her school bus.
Yousafzai, now 14, knew the risk she was taking when at the age of 11 and
under a pen name ("Gul Makai") she began posting an online diary
which then appeared on the BBC's website under the banner "Diary of a Pakistani schoolgirl." This followed the
Taliban's 2007 overrunning of the Swat Valley where she lives, including the
destruction of hundreds of schools for girls.
On Monday, Malala was flown to England for care, perhaps as much to protect
her from another near-certainassassination
attempt as to get better medical treatment than is available in Pakistan.
Malala's closest friend, Shazia Ramzan, was also shot by the Taliban
assassin. Fortunately, her wounds, in her shoulder and hand, were not
life-threatening. Shazia is giving voice to the millions of girls like herself
and Malala, taking on a similarly brave mantle. In a weekend interview with the UK's Daily
Mail newspaper, Shazia said "[Malala] will recover and we will go
back to school and study together again."
I intend no hyperbole by suggesting that this sort of bravery is rarely
seen anywhere, at any time. It is of the same character as our Founding Fathers
who signed a Declaration of Independence which concluded "And for the
support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine
Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our
sacred Honor." They did this knowing that they were likely -- as they were
taking on the mightiest military power ever known -- to lose the first two,
along with the lives of those they loved most.
Preserving their honor in pursuit of their noble goals was of paramount
importance to those brave men. Their success in keeping not only their honor
but their lives is one of the most remarkable David versus Goliath stories in
history.
Although the rest of today's story is not yet written, much the same can be
said of Malala and Shazia who -- utterly more defenseless than the Americans
were in 1776, and aware of the truly brutal nature of their oppressors -- have
proven their willingness to risk their lives to make a statement about what is
effectively an American principle: All people are created equal.
The courage of these girls, and now of the many Pakistanis publicly
supporting them, in their efforts to ensure true fundamental freedom, stands in
stark contrast to today's American liberal and feminist activists.
I was struck by the pettiness, the sense of entitlement, of whiney liberals
when, on the same day that I read the interview with Shazia, I saw an ad released by the Obama
campaign complaining that Mitt Romney opposes federal funding of Planned
Parenthood and that he threatens "access to birth control." The
female narrator says, "He'll cut it off…he'll cut us off." (I can't
help but wonder if there's a subtle John Wayne Bobbitt image intended in the
first half of that statement; the anger of the narrator seems positively
Lorena-like.)
Similarly, Democrat activist Cecile Richards, in her role as the president
of Planned Parenthood's political operation, said at the Democratic National
Convention that Republicans "want to end access to birth control."
Obviously, this claim is false; indeed it is essentially impossible. Yet Sandra
Fluke -- also invited to the DNC -- along with Richards is making a living on
it. And Barack Obama is trying to keep his job with it.
This subject has been covered enough that we don't need to relitigate it
here. Suffice it to say that what these leftists want -- and what they have
largely gotten through Obamacare -- is not "access" to these things,
but government funding for them which is to say that they want taxpayers to pay
for their "reproductive services" whether that means medical tests,
contraceptives, or abortions.
As someone who is pro-choice, I say this: What they want is not liberty. It
is not equality. It is not justice. It is what Frédéric Bastiat in his seminal
work, The Law, called "legalized
plunder." If you will permit an extended quote:
Man can live and satisfy his wants only by ceaseless labor; by the
ceaseless application of his faculties to natural resources. This process is
the origin of property.
But it is also true that a man may live and satisfy his wants by seizing
and consuming the products of the labor of others. This process is the origin
of plunder.
Now since man is naturally inclined to avoid pain — and since labor [RGK:
no pun intended as we discuss maternity] is pain in itself — it follows that
men will resort to plunder whenever plunder is easier than work. History shows
this quite clearly. And under these conditions, neither religion nor morality
can stop it….
It is impossible to introduce into society a greater change and a greater
evil than this: the conversion of the law into an instrument of plunder.
What are the consequences of such a perversion? It would require volumes to
describe them all. Thus we must content ourselves with pointing out the most striking.
In the first place, it erases from everyone's conscience the distinction
between justice and injustice.
No society can exist unless the laws are respected to a certain degree. The
safest way to make laws respected is to make them respectable. When law and
morality contradict each other, the citizen has the cruel alternative of either
losing his moral sense or losing his respect for the law. These two evils are
of equal consequence, and it would be difficult for a person to choose between
them.
What a nation of plunderers we have become!
Feminists (or is that term passé?) might argue that their ability to
campaign for free birth control and government-funded abortions is simply a
sign of the progress that a prior century of civil rights work has allowed, now
that women's rights really are equal (some might argue superior) to men's in
American society.
But unlike a right to vote or buy property, there can be no right to
something which is to be provided, whether through their labor or their money,
by others. More than 600,000 Americans died in our Civil War to end
"rights" such as those.
There can be no right to taxpayer-subsidized (or employer-subsidized) birth
control, abortion, or any other medical service or product. This is
particularly true for claims by the non-indigent for products or services that
are only needed due to voluntary behavior on their part. (Medicare is a
trickier moral question in the sense that people have, at least in theory, paid
into the system in advance.)
Sandra Fluke and her ilk are no better than muggers; they just try to get
government to hold the gun for them. When I say to these women "pay for
your own damn birth control! (or get your boyfriends or husbands to),"
it's not because I object to birth control. It is because I object to the
assertion that their desires and voluntarily-taken risks are my financial
responsibility.
It's not just birth control, of course. Others among the Democratic
faithful campaign for free or subsidized college education (including for
non-citizens), home ownership, television and radio (PBS/NPR/Big Bird), and
home weatherization, just to name a few.
As I hear the looters and the moochers argue that what is mine is theirs,
that they have a right to have their wants satisfied by plundering whatever
financial success others might achieve, I cannot help but think of the
contrasting courage of Malala and Shazia who are risking their own lives to
make a true stand for equality.
And I cannot help but wonder: Do Democrats really think that large numbers
of American women (and perhaps many American men) believe, during a period of
high unemployment and declining national incomes, during a time when many
wonder how they will feed or educate their children, during a time when our
enemies are acting boldly and our allies wonder if we can be trusted, that this
election is about who must pay for birth control pills which, for most women,
are available at Target, Wal-Mart, and many supermarkets, for $9/month?
And if Democrats truly believe that, is there any hope for America, at
least as Washington, Jefferson and Madison understood it, if it turns out that
they are right?
Malala and Shazia, two young girls scarred for life by a Taliban assassin,
have risked -- and nearly lost -- everything in a fight for equality, a fight
to go to school just like the boys do, a fight to be given the opportunity to
learn and thrive and succeed.
Their heroism stands in opposition to the money-grubbing demands of
American liberals whose fight is not for equality or freedom -- both of which
abound in our nation -- but rather for using government force to make others
pay for their wants.
While Malala and Shazia are fighting at ultimate peril for the right to be
responsible for their own lives, Sandra Fluke and President Barack Obama are
fighting to shift responsibility to others (a daily activity for Obama, to be
sure, as noted here, here and here).
It is a rare and sad day indeed when Americans can learn a lesson about
morality from a remote Taliban-infested valley in Pakistan. Yet here we are.
No comments:
Post a Comment