Tyranny and the Rule of Law
Americans need to stop picking the politicians they support based on how
those politicians self-identify. Each of us needs to know what values we hold,
and when all the evidence shows that the guy claiming to represent those values
doesn’t, give up the party line.
Conservatives
are supposed to be for limited government—both in size and centrality of
power—restrained foreign adventuring, and economic liberty. In the immediate
aftermath of September 11, 2011, the Independent Institute warned repeatedly
against the terrorist attacks being used as the premise for vastly expanding
the size and scope of government power—as such crises have historically been
used to do, as chronicled in Robert Higgs’s brilliant Crisis and Leviathan: Critical
Episodes in the Growth of American Government.
Michael
Barone dismissed such warnings in the Wall
Street Journal, confidently declaring that since Republicans held
both the House and the Presidency, runaway government would not be a problem.
The Republican House, of course, proceeded to grant the Republican Executive
unprecedented budgets and powers, quadrupling the size of the federal
government under their “Conservative” watch.
Likewise,
conservatives figured they could “trust” a Republican to tell them the truth
about things like imminent threats, and provided full support for expansionary
wars. The supposed conservative in the White House was also the first
Republican president to support the federal department of education, bringing
on “No Child Left Behind.”
The
entire litany of non-conservative positions and acts under President George W.
Bush could not fit in a Beacon post.
Modern-day
liberals are supposedly in favor of peace and civil liberties, especially those
protected by the First and Fourth Amendments, and to be defenders of the
economically disadvantaged.
And
thus was Barack Obama brought to power, promising peace and preemptively awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize, heralded as the great liberal hope.
As well detailed many places, President Obama has
built upon the Bush war-mongering legacy and unleashed new terrors in far-away
lands. Civilian and military deaths continue galloping—about three times as many Americans dying
in Afghanistan, and just never mind about what’s going in the “liberated” Iraq. With more than 300 drone strikes under
his watch, as compared against 52 by Bush, President Obama has been responsible
for more than 2,000 deaths by drones, including 290 civilians, 64 children and 4 Americans. (One of the Americans, 16 year-old
Abdulrahman Anwar al-Awlaki, may or may not have been involved in terrorism,
but former White House press secretary Robert Gibbs brushed aside any
suggestion that the killing was unjustified, declaring that he “should have had
a more responsible father.” Sins of the father, indeed.)
On the
civil liberties side, it’s hard to find the liberal behind President Obama’s
facade. Warrantless wire-tapping, surveillance, capturing and storing every single
email and phone call indefinitely, are alive and prospering under the
current administration. And he’s certainly no defender of free speech. As with drone strikes, President Obama
has set a new record in this area as well: going after whistle-blowers:
The Obama administration has charged five people with leaking — more
than the governments of all other presidents combined. He has sent a clear
message to all those in the federal government — source journalists with
information and you will be silenced and even jailed.
And the
economically disadvantaged? Still here, no better off than when he came into
office.
Mr.
Bush was given a pass by conservatives who either thought an extraordinarily
dangerous world required extraordinarily extra-Constitutional powers for the
presidency, or who viewed him as a nice guy who could be trusted.
Mr.
Obama is similarly being given a pass by liberals who like his rhetoric on gays
or abortion or something. But the plain fact of the matter is he’s not a
liberal. He demonstrably believes he can do whatever he wants, and that his
motives and ability to do as he believes
must not be questioned.
The
problem with personality politics—giving a politician a pass based on what
he says or
how “nice” he is, vs. holding elected officials accountable to the Rule of
Law—is that it leads to where we are getting uncomfortably close: tyranny. Mr
Obama is increasingly acting as above the law and angry when challenged. In a 5
year-old, it’s annoying. In the person holding the most powerful office in the
world, it’s scary.
2015
marks the 800th anniversary of “The Great Writ,” when a group of nobles decided they
weren’t going to take such behavior from the king anymore. I suggest we not
wait two years. Let’s rein in this office now, learn our lesson, and stop
delegating our freedoms to those who talk prettily.
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