Last week's announcement that the terrorist
threat warning level has been raised in parts of New York, New Jersey, and Washington,
D.C., has led to dramatic and unprecedented restrictions on the movements of
citizens. Americans wishing to visit the U.S. Capitol must, for example, pass
through several checkpoints and submit to police inspection of their cars and
persons.
Many Americans support the new security measures because they claim to feel
safer when the government issues terror alerts and fills the streets with militarized
police forces. As one tourist interviewed this week said, "It makes me
feel comfortable to know that everything is being checked." It is ironic
that tourists coming to Washington to celebrate the freedoms embodied in the
Declaration of Independence are so eager to give up those freedoms with no questions
asked.
Freedom is not defined by safety. Freedom is defined by the ability of citizens
to live without government interference. Government cannot create a world without
risks, nor would we really wish to live in such a fictional place. Only a totalitarian
society would even claim absolute safety as a worthy ideal, because it would
require total state control over its citizens' lives. This doesn't
stop governments, including our own, from seeking more control over and intrusion
into our lives. As one Member of Congress stated to the press last week, "people
who don't want to be searched don't need to come on Capitol grounds."
What an insult! The Capitol belongs to the American people who pay for it, not
to Congress or the police.
It is worth noting that the government rushes first to protect itself, devoting
enormous resources to make places like the Capitol grounds safe, while just
beyond lies one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in the nation. What makes
Congress more worthy of protection from terrorists than ordinary citizens?
To understand the nature of our domestic response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks,
we must understand the nature of government. Government naturally expands, and
any crises whether real or manufactured serve to justify more
and more government power over our lives. Bureaucrats have used the tragedy
of 9/11 as an excuse to seize police powers sought for decades, such as warrantless
searches, Internet monitoring, and access to bank records. It should be no surprise
that the recently released report of the 9/11 Commission has but one central
recommendation: bigger government and more spending at home and abroad.
Every new security measure represents another failure of the once-courageous
American spirit. The more we change our lives, the more we obsess about terrorism,
the more the terrorists have won. As commentator Lew
Rockwell of the Ludwig von Mises Institute
explains, terrorists in effect have been elevated by our response to 9/11: "They
are running the country. They determine our civic life. They shape our private
life. They decide how public resources are spent. They may dictate who gets
to be the next president. It should be obvious that the government doesn't object.
Not at all. The government benefits, by getting ever more reason for ever more
money and power."
Every generation must resist the temptation to believe that it lives in the
most dangerous time in American history. The threat of Islamic terrorism is
real, but it is not the greatest danger ever faced by our nation. This is not
to dismiss the threat of terrorism, but rather to put it in perspective. Those
who seek to whip the nation into a frenzy of fear do a disservice to a country
that expelled the British, fought two world wars, and stared down the Soviet
empire.
Liberty is lost through complacency and a subservient mindset. When we accept
or even welcome automobile checkpoints, random searches, mandatory identification
cards, and paramilitary police in our streets, we have lost a vital part of
our American heritage. America was born of protest, revolution, and mistrust
of government. Subservient societies neither maintain nor deserve freedom for
long.