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by William
L. Anderson
While I watched
very little of the Democratic National Convention, I did
observe a ceremony to kick off one evening’s activities: a
television actor, along with some children, read from the
Declaration of Independence. The audience, of course, cheered
the event. However, if the Democratic delegates had actually
understood the implications of what they were hearing, most
likely they would have booed those folks off the stage as
viciously as they booed the Boy Scouts who also participated
on stage in another ceremony.
To understand
what is behind the US Constitution, one must understand the
Declaration of Independence, and to understand the
Declaration, one must understand what the founders of this
nation believed to be the origin of rights. From the few
speeches I heard from the Democrats in Los Angeles, it is
absolutely clear that those folks know less about the origin
of rights than a four-year-old child knows the source of
babies.
The tip-off to
the Democrats’ cluelessness came when Al Gore declared (once
again, ad nauseum) that his government would do everything
possible to continue the world’s most liberal laws on
abortion, and the audience burst into its loudest applause.
The 1973 "landmark" Roe versus Wade decision, in
which the US Supreme Court "discovered" that the
Constitution guarantees every woman an almost unlimited
"right" to abortion, is probably the holiest of all
Democratic doctrines. That politicians of both parties believe
the Constitution actually holds that women have the
"right" to an abortion tells us they don’t know
much about rights.
Yet, the actor
and his young companions were reading from Thomas
Jefferson’s famous document that declares that the
"Creator" bestows rights upon individuals.
Furthermore, Jefferson declared, the role of government is to
protect those rights that we already own. Apparently, not one
person sitting in the audience that night realized that nearly
everything they were cheering in the political harangues that
came upon them is absolutely opposed to Jefferson’s words.
If one were to
ask Americans who bestows their rights upon them, most would
answer "the government." I have no doubt that most
of the Democrats (and many of the Republicans) assembled in
the convention halls would say the same thing. The people of
the United States of America have enjoyed relative freedom for
more than two centuries, they seem to believe, because of the
magnanimity of the state.
To further
deconstruct this observation, I turn again to Roe v. Wade. If
the Democrats say that they actually "believe" the
Declaration of Independence, then they must hold to the
proposition that individuals own rights bestowed upon them by
their creator, or more specifically, God (the God of Judaism
and Christianity, to be even more specific). Furthermore, one
can easily surmise that the framers of the Constitution were
guided by Jefferson’s principles when they constructed the
Bill of Rights.
As numerous
constitutional scholars have pointed out, the Bill of Rights
was not an enumeration of a few privileges that government
generously gives them. Instead, the Bill managed to cover
nearly every imaginable intrusion into the rights of
individuals by government. For example, the First Amendment
assures people that the central government could not interfere
with their religious beliefs. There was no "compelling
government interest" that the modern federal courts have
found that limit legitimate religious practices.
The framers
also understood that a tyrannical state would soon seek to
disarm its citizens, hence the Second Amendment. The Third,
Fourth, and Fifth amendments specifically forbid the state
from violating the private property rights of individuals.
Furthermore, in the Ninth and Tenth amendments, the framers
made it clear that the central government was greatly limited
in its dealings with state governments and the citizens of
those states. In other words, the framers understood rights
from a "negative" concept. Individuals already own
those rights; government is obligated to protect those rights,
not to take them away or create new "rights" to
replace the old ones.
If one believes
that Roe v. Wade is constitutional in any historical sense,
then one is left in a real dilemma. If rights as outlined by
the framers come from God, then God also gives the
"right" to an abortion. Since we have already
identified the God who the framers had in mind, for abortion
to be from God, it would be clear to those who worship God
that abortion was something that pleases God.
However, if one
examines both historical Judaism and Christianity, opposition
to abortion has been a central doctrine of both religions
since their foundation. While nothing on abortion per se
appears in the Old and New Testaments, numerous other ancient
writings from Jews and Christians have made it plain that they
considered it to be a terrible sin. Opposition to abortion by
Christians and Jews is hardly new; rather, it is thousands of
years old.
That leaves
those who believe that the Constitution harbors a
"right" to abortion to believe that rights flow
either from government itself or from another source. For
example, many libertarians who profess to be atheists believe
that rights are natural to humanity. We have rights because we
have rights.
Others turn to
utilitarian arguments. Nat Hentoff, a civil libertarian who is
also an atheist, believes that abortion is wrong because it
takes a human life. While there is nothing sacred per se in
human life, according to Hentoff, taking innocent life is
still a bad thing because he believes it to be bad for
society.
Although one
can admire Hentoff’s stand, however, his arguments are
incomplete. There is nothing inherent in utilitarianism that
says that killing people is bad. Furthermore, one cannot hold
to what Hentoff and other utilitarians believe and also
endorse the Declaration of Independence.
People who
believe that rights simply come from government have an even
more difficult intellectual road ahead of them. First, if
government both defines and distributes rights, what is to
keep the state from abusing its citizens? We have seen such a
scenario repeatedly as communist dictators imprisoned, killed,
and tortured people for expressing the slightest disagreement
with the state. At the same time, however, those same
dictators were successfully appealing to western intellectuals
on the basis that their governments were "caring for the
poor" by providing them with essential services.
Second, those
who hold to this point of view cannot simultaneously hold to
the Declaration of Independence. That is why President
Clinton’s recent awarding of the Medal of Freedom to John
Kenneth Galbraith was an obscenity. Galbraith has made a
career of promoting some of the most murderous, freedom-hating
regimes in history. It is clear that Galbraith – and others
like him – believe that government is the true author of
liberty.
In short, the
political classes that tell us that our freedom is based upon
"our form of government" are either ignorant or
devious. I believe it is the latter. For more than a century,
Americans have been fed statist propaganda that has undermined
real freedom. In the end, we are left with the ridiculous
picture of clueless political delegates cheering the reading
of a document that in their hearts they truly despise.
August 28,
2000
William L.
Anderson, Ph.D., is assistant professor of economics at North
Greenville College in Tigerville, South Carolina. He is an
adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. |