In 2002 I asked my
House colleagues a rhetorical question with regard to
the onslaught of government growth in the
post-September 11th era: Is America becoming a police
state?
The question is no
longer rhetorical. We are not yet living in a total
police state, but it is fast approaching. The seeds
of future tyranny have been sown, and many of our
basic protections against government have been
undermined. The atmosphere since 2001 has permitted
Congress to create whole new departments and agencies
that purport to make us safer always at the
expense of our liberty. But security and liberty go
hand-in-hand. Members of Congress, like too many
Americans, dont understand that a society with
no constraints on its government cannot be secure.
History proves that societies crumble when their
governments become more powerful than the people and
private institutions.
Unfortunately, the
new intelligence bill passed by Congress two weeks
ago moves us closer to an encroaching police state by
imposing the precursor to a full-fledged national ID
card. Within two years, every American will need a
conforming ID to deal with any federal
agency including TSA at the airport.
Undoubtedly many
Americans and members of Congress dont believe
America is becoming a police state, which is
reasonable enough. They associate the phrase with
highly visible symbols of authoritarianism like
military patrols, martial law, and summary
executions. But we ought to be concerned that we have
laid the foundation for tyranny by making the public
more docile, more accustomed to government bullying,
and more accepting of arbitrary authority all
in the name of security. Our love for liberty above
all has been so diminished that we tolerate
intrusions into our privacy that would have been
abhorred just a few years ago. We tolerate
inconveniences and infringements upon our liberties
in a manner that reflects poorly on our great
national character of rugged individualism. American
history, at least in part, is a history of people who
dont like being told what to do. Yet we are
increasingly empowering the federal government and
its agents to run our lives.
Terror, fear, and
crises like 9-11 are used to achieve complacency and
obedience, especially when citizens are deluded into
believing they are still a free people. The loss of
liberty, we are assured, will be minimal,
short-lived, and necessary. Many citizens believe
that once the war on terror is over, restrictions on
their liberties will be reversed. But this war is
undeclared and open-ended, with no precise enemy and
no expressly stated final goal. Terrorism will never
be eradicated completely; does this mean future
presidents will assert extraordinary war powers
indefinitely?
Washington DC
provides a vivid illustration of what our future
might look like. Visitors to Capitol Hill encounter
police barricades, metal detectors, paramilitary
officers carrying fully automatic rifles, police
dogs, ID checks, and vehicle stops. The people are
totally disarmed; only the police and criminals have
guns. Surveillance cameras are everywhere, monitoring
street activity, subway travel, parks, and federal
buildings. There's not much evidence of an open
society in Washington, DC, yet most folks do not
complain anything goes if it's for
government-provided safety and security.
After all,
proponents argue, the government is doing all this to
catch the bad guys. If you dont have anything
to hide, they ask, what are you so afraid of? The
answer is that Im afraid of losing the last
vestiges of privacy that a free society should hold
dear. Im afraid of creating a society where the
burden is on citizens to prove their innocence,
rather than on government to prove wrongdoing. Most
of all, Im afraid of living in a society where
a subservient populace surrenders its liberties to an
all-powerful government.
It may be true that
average Americans do not feel intimidated by the
encroachment of the police state. Americans remain
tolerant of what they see as mere nuisances because
they have been deluded into believing total
government supervision is necessary and helpful, and
because they still enjoy a high level of material
comfort. That tolerance may wane, however, as our
standard of living falls due to spiraling debt,
endless deficit spending at home and abroad, a
declining fiat dollar, inflation, higher interest
rates, and failing entitlement programs. At that
point attitudes toward omnipotent government may
change, but the trend toward authoritarianism will be
difficult to reverse.
Those who believe a
police state can't happen here are poor students of
history. Every government, democratic or not, is
capable of tyranny. We must understand this if we
hope to remain a free people.
December 21, 2004
Dr. Ron Paul is a
Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Transcript
A Big Mistake: by Rep.
Ron Paul, MD
Before the US
House of Representatives, January 26, 2005
Americas
policy of foreign intervention, while still debated
in the early 20th century, is today
accepted as conventional wisdom by both political
parties. But what if the overall policy is a colossal
mistake, a major error in judgment? Not just bad
judgment regarding when and where to impose
ourselves, but the entire premise that we have a
moral right to meddle in the affairs of others? Think
of the untold harm done by years of fighting
hundreds of thousands of American casualties,
hundreds of thousands of foreign civilian casualties,
and unbelievable human and economic costs. What if it
was all needlessly borne by the American people? If
we do conclude that grave foreign policy errors have
been made, a very serious question must be asked:
What would it take to change our policy to one more
compatible with a true republics goal of peace,
commerce, and friendship with all nations? Is it not
possible that Washingtons admonition to avoid
entangling alliances is sound advice even today?
In medicine
mistakes are made man is fallible.
Misdiagnoses are made, incorrect treatments are
given, and experimental trials of medicines are
advocated. A good physician understands the
imperfections in medical care, advises close
follow-ups, and double-checks the diagnosis,
treatment, and medication. Adjustments are made to
ensure the best results. But what if a doctor never
checks the success or failure of a treatment, or
ignores bad results and assumes his omnipotence
refusing to concede that the initial course of
treatment was a mistake? Let me assure you, the
results would not be good. Litigation and the loss of
reputation in the medical community place restraints
on this type of bullheaded behavior.
Sadly, though,
when governments, politicians, and bureaucrats make
mistakes and refuse to reexamine them, there is
little the victims can do to correct things. Since
the bully pulpit and the media propaganda machine are
instrumental in government cover-ups and deception,
the final truth emerges slowly, and only after much
suffering. The arrogance of some politicians,
regulators, and diplomats actually causes them to
become even more aggressive and more determined to
prove themselves right, to prove their power is not
to be messed with by never admitting a mistake.
Truly, power corrupts!
The
unwillingness to ever reconsider our policy of
foreign intervention, despite obvious failures and
shortcomings over the last 50 years, has brought
great harm to our country and our liberty.
Historically, financial realities are the ultimate
check on nations bent on empire. Economic laws
ultimately prevail over bad judgment. But tragically,
the greater the wealth of a country, the longer the
flawed policy lasts. Well probably not be any
different.
We are still a
wealthy nation, and our currency is still trusted by
the world, yet we are vulnerable to some harsh
realities about our true wealth and the burden of our
future commitments. Overwhelming debt and the
precarious nature of the dollar should serve to
restrain our determined leaders, yet they show little
concern for deficits. Rest assured, though, the
limitations of our endless foreign adventurism and
spending will become apparent to everyone at some
point in time.
Since 9/11, a
lot of energy and money have gone into efforts
ostensibly designed to make us safer. Many laws have
been passed and many dollars have been spent. Whether
or not were better off is another question.
Today we occupy two countries in the Middle East. We
have suffered over 20,000 casualties, and caused
possibly 100,000 civilian casualties in Iraq. We have
spent over $200 billion in these occupations, as well
as hundreds of billions of dollars here at home
hoping to be safer. Weve created the Department
of Homeland Security, passed the Patriot Act, and
created a new super CIA agency.
Our government
now is permitted to monitor the Internet, to read our
mail, to search us without proper search warrants, to
develop a national ID card, and to investigate what
people are reading in libraries. Ironically, illegal
aliens flow into our country and qualify for driving
licenses and welfare benefits with little restraint.
These issues are
discussed, but nothing has been as highly visible to
us as the authoritarianism we accept at the airport.
The creation of the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) has intruded on the privacy of
all airline travelers, and there is little evidence
that we are safer for it. Driven by fear, we have
succumbed to the age-old temptation to sacrifice
liberty on the pretense of obtaining security. Love
of security, unfortunately, all too often vanquishes
love of liberty.
Unchecked fear
of another 9/11-type attack constantly preoccupies
our leaders and most of our citizens, and drives the
legislative attack on our civil liberties. Its
frightening to see us doing to ourselves what even
bin Laden never dreamed he could accomplish with his
suicide bombers.
We dont
understand the difference between a vague threat of
terrorism and the danger of a guerilla war. One
prompts us to expand and nationalize domestic law
enforcement while limiting the freedoms of all
Americans. The other deals with understanding
terrorists like bin Laden, who declared war against
us in 1998. Not understanding the difference makes it
virtually impossible to deal with the real threats.
We are obsessed with passing new laws to make our
country safe from a terrorist attack. This confusion
about the cause of the 9/11 attacks, the fear they
engendered, and the willingness to sacrifice liberty
prompts many to declare their satisfaction with the
inconveniences and even humiliation at our
nations airports.
There are always
those in government who are anxious to increase its
power and authority over the people. Strict adherence
to personal privacy annoys those who promote a
centralized state.
Its no
surprise to learn that many of the new laws passed in
the aftermath of 9/11 had been proposed long before
that date. The attacks merely provided an excuse to
do many things previously proposed by dedicated
statists.
All too often
government acts perversely, professing to advance
liberty while actually doing the opposite. Dozens of
new bills passed since 9/11 promise to protect our
freedoms and our security. In time we will realize
there is little chance our security will be enhanced
or our liberties protected.
The powerful and
intrusive TSA certainly will not solve our problems.
Without a full discussion, greater understanding, and
ultimately a change in the foreign policy that
incites those who declared war against us, no amount
of pat-downs at airports will suffice. Imagine the
harm done, the staggering costs, and the loss of
liberty if the next 20 years pass and airplanes are
never employed by terrorists. Even if there is a
possibility that airplanes will be used to terrorize
us, TSAs bullying will do little to prevent it.
Patting down old women and little kids in airports
cannot possibly make us safer!
TSA cannot
protect us from another attack and it is not the
solution. It serves only to make us all more obedient
and complacent toward government intrusions into our
lives.
The airport mess
has been compounded by other problems, which we fail
to recognize. Most assume the government has the
greatest responsibility for making private aircraft
travel safe. But this assumption only ignores
mistakes made before 9/11, when the government taught
us to not resist, taught us that airline personnel
could not carry guns, and that the government would
be in charge of security. Airline owners became
complacent and dependent upon the government.
After 9/11 we
moved in the wrong direction by allowing total
government control and a political takeover by the
TSA which was completely contrary to the
proposition that private owners have the ultimate
responsibility to protect their customers.
Discrimination
laws passed during the last 40 years ostensibly fuel
the Transportation Secretarys near obsession
with avoiding the appearance of discrimination toward
young Muslim males. Instead TSA seemingly targets
white children and old women. We have failed to
recognize that a safety policy by a private airline
is quite a different thing from government agents
blindly obeying anti-discrimination laws.
Governments do
not have a right to use blanket discrimination, such
as that which led to incarceration of Japanese
Americans in World War II. However, local
law-enforcement agencies should be able to target
their searches if the description of a suspect is
narrowed by sex, race, or religion.
We are dealing
with an entirely different matter when it comes to
safety on airplanes. The federal government should
not be involved in local law enforcement, and has no
right to discriminate. Airlines, on the other hand,
should be permitted to do whatever is necessary to
provide safety. Private firms long denied the
right should have a right to discriminate.
Fine restaurants, for example, can require that shoes
and shirts be worn for service in their
establishments. The logic of this remaining property
right should permit more sensible security checks at
airports. The airlines should be responsible for the
safety of their property, and liable for it as well.
This is not only the responsibility of the airlines,
but it is a civil right that has long been denied
them and other private companies.
The present
situation requires the government to punish some by
targeting those individuals who clearly offer no
threat. Any airline that tries to make travel safer
and happens to question a larger number of young
Muslim males than the government deems appropriate
can be assessed huge fines. To add insult to injury,
the fines collected from airlines are used for forced
sensitivity training of pilots who do their very
best, under the circumstances, to make flying safer
by restricting the travel of some individuals. We
have embarked on a process that serves no logical
purpose. While airline safety suffers, personal
liberty is diminished and costs skyrocket.
If were
willing to consider a different foreign policy, we
should ask ourselves a few questions:
- What
if the policies of foreign intervention,
entangling alliances, policing the world,
nation building, and spreading our values
through force are deeply flawed?
- What
if it is true that Saddam Hussein never
had weapons of mass destruction?
- What
if it is true that Saddam Hussein and
Osama bin Laden were never allies?
- What
if it is true that the overthrow of
Saddam Hussein did nothing to enhance our
national security?
- What
if our current policy in the Middle East
leads to the overthrow of our client oil
states in the region?
- What
if the American people really knew that
more than 20,000 American troops have
suffered serious casualties or died in the
Iraq war, and 9% of our forces already have
been made incapable of returning to battle?
- What
if it turns out there are many more
guerrilla fighters in Iraq than our
government admits?
- What
if there really have been 100,000
civilian Iraqi casualties, as some claim, and
what is an acceptable price for doing
good?
- What
if Rumsfeld is replaced for the wrong
reasons, and things become worse under a
Defense Secretary who demands more troops and
an expansion of the war?
- What
if we discover that, when they do vote,
the overwhelming majority of Iraqis support
Islamic (Sharia) law over western secular
law, and want our troops removed?
- What
if those who correctly warned of the
disaster awaiting us in Iraq are never asked
for their opinion of what should be done now?
- What
if the only solution for Iraq is to
divide the country into three separate
regions, recognizing the principle of
self-determination while rejecting the
artificial boundaries created in 1918 by
non-Iraqis?
- What
if it turns out radical Muslims
dont hate us for our freedoms, but
rather for our policies in the Middle East
that directly affected Arabs and Muslims?
- What
if the invasion and occupation of Iraq
actually distracted from pursuing and
capturing Osama bin Laden?
- What
if we discover that democracy cant
be spread with force of arms?
- What
if democracy is deeply flawed, and
instead we should be talking about liberty,
property rights, free markets, the rule of
law, localized government, weak centralized
government, and self-determination promoted
through persuasion, not force?
- What
if Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda actually
welcomed our invasion and occupation of
Arab/Muslim Iraq as proof of their
accusations against us, and it served as a
magnificent recruiting tool for them?
- What
if our policy greatly increased and
prolonged our vulnerability to terrorists and
guerilla attacks both at home and abroad?
- What
if the Pentagon, as reported by its
Defense Science Board, actually recognized
the dangers of our policy before the
invasion, and their warnings were ignored or
denied?
- What
if the argument that by fighting over
there, we wont have to fight here, is
wrong, and the opposite is true?
- What
if we can never be safer by giving up
some of our freedoms?
- What
if the principle of pre-emptive war is
adopted by Russia, China, Israel, India,
Pakistan, and others, justified
by current U.S. policy?
- What
if pre-emptive war and pre-emptive guilt
stem from the same flawed policy of
authoritarianism, though we fail to recognize
it?
- What
if Pakistan is not a trustworthy ally,
and turns on us when conditions deteriorate?
- What
if plans are being laid to provoke Syria
and/or Iran into actions that would be used
to justify a military response and
pre-emptive war against them?
- What
if our policy of democratization of the
Middle East fails, and ends up fueling a
Russian-Chinese alliance that we regret
an alliance not achieved even at the
height of the Cold War?
- What
if the policy forbidding profiling at our
borders and airports is deeply flawed?
- What
if presuming the guilt of a suspected
terrorist without a trial leads to the total
undermining of constitutional protections for
American citizens when arrested?
- What
if we discover the army is too small to
continue policies of pre-emption and
nation-building? What if a military
draft is the only way to mobilize enough
troops?
- What
if the stop-loss program is
actually an egregious violation of trust and
a breach of contract between the government
and soldiers? What if it actually is a
backdoor draft, leading to unbridled cynicism
and rebellion against a voluntary army and
generating support for a draft of both men
and women? Will lying to troops lead to
rebellion and anger toward the political
leadership running the war?
- What
if the Pentagons legal task-force
opinion that the President is not bound by
international or federal law regarding
torture stands unchallenged, and sets a
precedent which ultimately harms Americans,
while totally disregarding the moral,
practical, and legal arguments against such a
policy?
- What
if the intelligence reform legislation
which gives us bigger, more expensive
bureaucracy doesnt bolster our
security, and distracts us from the real
problem of revamping our interventionist
foreign policy?
- What
if we suddenly discover we are the
aggressors, and we are losing an unwinnable
guerrilla war?
- What
if we discover, too late, that we
cant afford this war and that
our policies have led to a dollar collapse,
rampant inflation, high interest rates, and a
severe economic downturn?
Why do I believe
these are such important questions? Because the #1
function of the federal government to provide
for national security has been severely
undermined. On 9/11 we had a grand total of 14
aircraft in place to protect the entire U.S.
mainland, all of which proved useless that day. We
have an annual DOD budget of over $400 billion, most
of which is spent overseas in over 100 different
countries. On 9/11 our Air Force was better
positioned to protect Seoul, Tokyo, Berlin, and
London than it was to protect Washington D.C. and New
York City.
Moreover, our
ill-advised presence in the Middle East and our
decade-long bombing of Iraq served only to incite the
suicidal attacks of 9/11.
Before 9/11 our
CIA ineptly pursued bin Laden, whom the Taliban was
protecting. At the same time, the Taliban was
receiving significant support from Pakistan
our trusted ally that received millions
of dollars from the United States. We allied
ourselves with both bin Laden and Hussein in the
1980s, only to regret it in the 1990s.And its
safe to say we have used billions of U.S. taxpayer
dollars in the last 50 years pursuing this
contradictory, irrational, foolish, costly, and very
dangerous foreign policy.
Policing the
world, spreading democracy by force, nation building,
and frequent bombing of countries that pose no threat
to us while leaving the homeland and our
borders unprotected result from a foreign
policy that is contradictory and not in our
self-interest.
I hardly expect
anyone in Washington to pay much attention to these
concerns. If Im completely wrong in my
criticisms, nothing is lost except my time and energy
expended in efforts to get others to reconsider our
foreign policy.
But the bigger
question is:
What if Im
right, or even partially right, and we urgently need
to change course in our foreign policy for the sake
of our national and economic security, yet no one
pays attention?
For that a price
will be paid. Is it not worth talking about?
Dr. Ron Paul
is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.