Sultan Knish
"There is no more neutrality in the world," said Black Panther leader,
civil rights activist and fun-loving rapist; Eldridge Cleaver. "You
either have to be part of the solution, or you're going to be part of
the problem-- there ain't no more middle ground."
We live in Eldridge Cleaver's world now, a world with no more middle
ground. Where not doing anything does not mean you will be left alone.
This is no longer a nation founded on the curious premise that the
government should leave people alone unless they are causing problems.
That peculiar idea was held by a nation of farmers and merchants who
fled religious persecution, and whose great contribution to human
history was the notion that governments shouldn't be all-powerful and
that everyone should mind their own business when it comes to other
people's affairs. Our present-day rulers revile them as racist slave
owners who only cared about money, but they also happen to be racist
slave owners who only care about money, and they have far more of both.
The average American still holds the fanciful belief that, if he isn't
annoying anyone, he should be left alone. To the people running his
country, this is as bizarre and unworkable as Phrenology or the
Geocentric theory or handing out universal health care without also
compelling everyone to buy it.
This is not a nation where people are left alone anymore. This is a
nation where they are hounded from the moment they are born until the
moment they die by the arms of a regulatory state run by men and women
weaned on Cleaver, Alinsky, Fourier, Marx, Wells and countless others.
This is a nation, where accordingly, being left alone is the greatest of
luxuries.
It takes a lot of money to be left alone. Regulatory space is much more
expensive than physical space, and buying it requires investing in
lobbyists, fundraisers and lawyers. If you make the right payoffs, then
you can buy the privilege of being left alone, exempted from
regulations, going uninspected and protected against the agents of the
state. But once you do that, you are no longer neutral. You have bought
yourself the privilege of not being considered the problem; instead, you
have become part of the solution for the people you are paying off.
The Americans bushwacked by ObamaCare, the scam artist's dream of a tax
paid to a third-party in exchange for benefits accrued to a fourth
party, still thought they had the freedom to take the middle, to despise
meddling politicians in both parties, ignore most things the government
did, while living their own lives. They had seen their savings
devalued, their homes seized, their lives bedeviled by a thousand
regulations, but they still thought that it was possible to take a
middle-ground, to reject the solutions by asserting that they are not
the problem.
They did not understand that in Cleaverland, in Alinskytown and in
Obamaville-- no one opts out. Either you volunteer of you get drafted.
Raise your hand or you will be called on anyway. Not volunteering to be
part of their agenda means that you are the problem.
You, sitting right there in your chair, watching these words move across
your screen, are the problem. A problem 311,591,917 human souls strong.
You eat too much or you don't pay enough taxes, you drive your car too
often, you haven't bought solar panels for your roof, you browse
extremist websites when you should be browsing government informational
sites for tips on how to do or not do all of the above. But most of
all... you still don't understand what a great problem you are for the
people running this country into the ground between the Atlantic and the
Pacific. They keep trying to solve you, but you don't go away.
There is no neutrality when dealing with people who reject the very
concept of neutrality. Who draw everyone into the long columns of their
spreadsheets and catch everyone in their spider's web. There is no
middle ground with people who don't believe there is a middle ground,
who believe that every human on earth is part of the problem and can
only opt out of being the problem by joining up with them and following
their directives.
That is what we are up against. We confront the Great Solvers of the
Human Problem who are determined to arrange everyone and everything to
their liking. They began by controlling everything that people did. Now,
they have moved on to controlling what people don't do. If you live, if
you breathe, if you stir, move your muscles, track moving objects with
your eyes, then there are obligations imposed on you.
ObamaCare is one of the final declarations that there is no opting out.
Even if you don't drive, own a home, own a business, own a dog, or do
one of the infinite things that bring you into mandatory contact with
the apparatus of your local, semi-local, trans-local, national or global
government, you are committed to a task from maturity to death. Your
mission is to obtain health insurance, and, in a system in which you
become the ward of the government as soon as you taste air, it is the
price that you pay for being alive.
In a free country, you are not obligated to do things simply for the
privilege of breathing oxygen north of the Rio Grande and south of
Niagara Falls. But this isn't a free country anymore; this is a country
in which you get things for free. And there is a big difference between
those two things.
We are a nation in which everyone is entitled to everything, except the
right to opt out of all the entitlements and the cost of paying for
them. We may not have the Bill of Rights anymore, but we have a hell of a
bill to settle and, every year, the deficits keep making it bigger and
bigger. Our forefathers passed on to us a Bill of Rights, and we shall
pass on to our descendants a Bill. A tremendous Bill which can be
unrolled from the mountains to the prairies to the oceans white with
foam... and all the way across the ocean to China.
The Bill of Rights was a list of things that the government could not
do. The Bill is a list of things that the government has done. It's an
endless bill, because we have an endless government that is doing things
all the time. And though we didn't do any of them, we are still stuck
with the bill. Even if we could reach into our pockets and settle the
bill with a couple of loose trillion dollar bills, this Bill doesn't
just demand money, it demands power.
If all that government officials did was go to Vegas, give each other
prizes and sing silly songs, then the Bill would be large, but it
wouldn't ask for a piece of our soul. But the amount of money that the
government spends is almost beside the point. The amount may bankrupt
us, it may destroy our economy, it may turn us into debt slaves-- but
it's secondary to how the money is being used. It's bad enough to be
eaten out of house and home-- worse to be forced to feed the occupying
army that is taking away your freedoms one by one.
People often talk about the First and Second Amendments, the Fifth comes
up, and even the Fourth. But how often do we think about the Third
Amendment, that old relic of a time when we were ruled by a distant
power with no concern for our lives or our freedoms? "No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner".
It's one of the few amendments that goes unnoticed. No one challenges
it. No Supreme Court blots it out with the stroke of a pen or rephrases
it to mean that there is a Constitutional right to abortion or a ban on
executing juveniles.
There is no occupying army quartered in our homes. They have sizable
barracks with marble floors, gleaming chandeliers and metal detectors
through which you must pass in order to meet with even one of their
lower officers. They aren't quartered in your living room, they rent
hotel names and build buildings and send the bill to you. And then they
send you another bill, which informs you that they have decided that the
War on Obesity, the War on Health Care or the War on the Economy
requires you to do a set number of things, the costs of both the doing
and the enforcement to be borne by you.
The old kings used to play chess games with human chess pieces, a
metaphor for how they saw their power over their subjects. The new kings
or czars play with hundreds of millions of chess pieces. They assess
how many pieces they have in a census, determine what kind of pieces
they are and pass laws telling them where to move, what to buy and how
to live. And they are no more tolerant of pawns who fail to move when
ordered to; than the old kings playing human chess in their gardens.
In the last century, the Great Solvers went to work on a national and
global game of human chess. They called this game by various names, The
New Deal, the New Frontier, Hope and Change, or, most commonly, Social
Justice. The real name of the game is "There Ain't No More Middle
Ground". Either you are a New Dealer, a New Frontierer, a Hope and
Changer, a Tolerator, a Liberal, a Donor, an Activist and an Organizer--
or you are on the wrong side.
You might think that you are standing in the great moderate middle, the
open-minded frontier of the old American, but the frontier and ground
are both gone. There is only Problemtown and Solutionville and the
bulldozers are coming to knock down Problemtown next week and deport its
residents to Solutionville.
ObamaCare is the bus to Solutionville. It is the problem that is "You"
being solved in the same inept brute-force fashion in which the Great
Solvers solve everything, from Russian agriculture to European Union
democracy.
The problems are many, and the Solvers are impatient. There are too many
peasants, and weekends are too short, the golf courses are too crowded,
the protesters are too annoying, and the numbers never add up. Each
problem keeps needing to be solved many times, but they have already
moved on to the next problem and the one after that in the great mass of
problems that some people still call America.
The American Bushwhacked still wonder what happened. When did this stop
being a free country? Then they finish pumping their gas, buy their
sodas, paying several taxes on each and completing a transaction for two
commodities whose production and distribution involve more laws than
the entire legal codes of Rome and Greece combined, and then drive home,
where they begin making notes for next year's taxes, while reading how
the latest laws will affect them.
On the television, an anchor with carefully molded hair and the grave
look of the career idiot who has learned to disguise this fact by always
appearing concerned about something, interviews an activist who is
proposing new regulations as the only responsible thing to do. "If you
aren't part of the solution," she says with equally grave sincerity,
"then you are part of the problem."
The American Bushwhacked nod along because the proposal seems so
reasonable. Who doesn't want to do something for the children, the
oceans, the endangered red-banded shrub, the people somewhere who don't
have something and that sincere young woman who really seems passionate
in a way that few are anymore. Then he turns back to his desk, somewhere
in the great middle ground that once was, studies the tax forms again
and wonders when this stopped being a free country.
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