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Today's Highlights |
From
the Front...
of
an Antiwar Rally
by
Mike Ewens
March 23, 2003
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First, the signs A sampling from the Left: "F$#@ this S%!#", the classic "No Blood for Oil," (note: the neocons had an interesting rebuttal "No Blood for French Oil") and "Instead of War, Invest in People." My fellow libertarians brought in their own mix of signs: "War is to Liberty as Death is to Life", "War is the Health of the State," "Capitalists Against Aggression," and the ever-popular "Make Profits, Not War."
What follows is what I should have read to the rally that day: I stand before you today an antiwar activist of a unique type. My politics seek dramatically different ends than many of the placards before me. Nonetheless, my perspective of this war and its effects appeals to all.
These costs of war affect Americans of all ideologies. For without liberty and freedom, our varying aspirations will go unfulfilled and forgotten. So I ask you all today to fight against this war of aggression as, dare say, selfish friends of individual liberty. In practical form, this approach involves protesting war not through advocating further government actions, but with a understanding that the State is the ultimate source of plunder and of death. View war as a destructive vehicle for increasing the means of the State's coercive power. Finally, let us hope that Randolph Bourne was not prophetic, when he writes:
We should heed to this warning. Also, beware, for when this American State can arbitrarily decide how to define who are the tyrants and who are not, we, the malcontents, must prepare ourselves for that same arbitrary power to fall upon our heads. Recognize that this agenda stretches from Left to Right and from it may emerge a principled and intelligent opposition to war and perhaps a solution to the conflict before us. Unfortunately, the rhetoric spewing from the majority of antiwar rallies ignores these real costs of war. I rely on Ludwig von Mises to summarize my point: Whoever wishes peace among peoples must fight statism. (Nation State and Economy, pg. 77) This advice applies to both sides of the political spectrum. Each are selective when declaring the "proper" role of government and each are adamant that their choice is the safest for freedom and liberty. However, limited government in all spheres of life is the best route for peace and prosperity. Finally, I was posed the following question by an indifferent bystander at the rally: "Why protest the war when it has already started? You can't turn the troops around." This caused me a brief pause. Indeed, I feel quite helpless reading the continual reports of troop movement and bombings. Nonetheless, there is a place for ex post activism and protest. This is no longer a battle to stop a war...but to save a nation: America. The desire for Republic has been replaced by a demand for interventionist foreign policy, while the Constitution is ignored because of the "annoying hindrances" it creates for the executive and its "solutions" for a tanking economy and failing bureaucracy. These are the new battles, the battles that will rage as Baghdad is occupied, the world grows more resentful and Americans pay the price of Empire. So I will fight on!
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