Sultan Knish
The barges were towed along the Hudson. Streets were blocked off, police
officers collecting overtime were assembled as the crowds trickled in
early to grab prime viewing positions for the fireworks display in a
celebration of freedom under heavy guard by opponents of freedom. They
were not celebrating the freedoms of the Declaration or the
Constitution, but the freedom to get free things.
Nancy
Pelosi explained that the ObamaCare mandate was a penalty on “Free
Riders”. Down by the Hudson River, British warships once plied the
waterway in a bid to prevent the colonists from acting as “Free Riders”
on their investment.
The debate over whether people could be
disenfranchised and compelled to pay for the grandiose plans of an out
of touch government was eventually thought to have been settled further
north at Saratoga. But the debate is back.
Co-Dependence Day is
the new Independence Day. “I love you, you tolerate me and we all live
together in a happy planned economy.” Free riders are people who, like
the Colonists, are perceived to have benefited from the gargantuan
investment of government without paying their proper share.
All
that the Crown really wanted was for the colonists to pay their “fair
share”, a share that was determined thousands of miles away. All that
the colonists wanted was the rights of Englishmen that they believed
they were entitled to. After a great deal of bloodshed, the colonists
won the right to be Americans instead—an odd series of consonants and
vowels having to do with an Italian explorer but meaning free and
limited government.
The “Free Riders” who didn’t want to pay into
the empire won the day, but hardly anyone in the crowds heading toward
the Hudson remembered what the day was about. The denizens of public
housing, who are the true “Free Riders”, certainly don’t. They are
getting a free ride on everything from food to housing, but the free
ride comes from the taxpayers that Pelosi and Obama damn as “Free
Riders”. And the only way to keep their free ride going is by ending
everyone else’s freedom.
The fireworks are just one more free
thing in the sea of free things that they swim in. The Fourth to them is
Fireworks Day. Every country has its fireworks days and this is the day
that this one chooses to light up the night sky. The day means nothing
to them because though they are surrounded by free things, they aren’t
free.
The difference between freedom and free things has been
progressively erased so that many think that the American Revolution was
fought because the British weren’t providing affordable health coverage
to the colonies. If only they knew about the NHS, they would vote to go
back.
There is a big difference between a free country and a
country of free things. You can have one or the other, but you can’t
have both. A free country isn’t obsessed with free riders, only a
country of free things obsesses with making everyone pay their fair
share for the benefit of the people who want the free things.
The
rugged individualism of Colonial America has given way to stifling
crowds, co-dependent on each other, lined shoulder to shoulder,
clutching at each other’s wallets, crying, “Take from him and give to
me.”
We are a nation overflowing with the right to things paid
for with other people’s money. A nation where the government gives you
food, housing and education; while Walmart gives you cheap products made
in China, that used to be made in America, back when people were able
to afford health care, housing and food without having to pick each
other’s pockets.
The fireworks that shoot up in a wonderland of
blue and red, silver and gold, are a faint echo of the real thing, the
gunpowder that blasted back and forth between the lines of government
troops, their Hessian mercenaries and the rebel colonists who chose to
ride free, rather than bend their necks to the plans of an expanding
empire. The faint smell of gunpowder and the dark shapes of the barges
only mime the war that was fought here. A play of light and shadow whose
meaning reaches fewer and fewer people each year.
The expected
speeches will celebrate some notion of American Exceptionalism and
Independence, but what substance is there to either one? Did so many men
risk their lives just to end up with a system that made the one they
escaped seem positively libertarian by comparison? If they had known
that they were going to end up with the NHS, death panels that will
eventually adopt some version of the Liverpool Care Pathway’s euthanasia
protocol, and a co-dependent system where everyone is looted for the
greater good of the looters—they might have stayed home on their farms,
sadly watching the fighting from a distance.
JFK’s famous line,
“Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your
country” was always a hollow lie. Half the country is expected to ask
what their country can do for them, while the other half is expected to
ask what they can do for their country.
This simmering civil war
is often pegged as a class war, but it isn’t about class. There are
billionaires and paupers on both sides, and the divide cuts across the
Middle Class, dividing those who derive their income from private
business from those who receive it from government and
government-subsidized employment.
The
Fourth of July is Independence Day, but every other day is
Co-Dependence Day, the days we celebrate our integration, our
volunteerism and our compliance with a vast system which makes everyone
dependent on the government and which makes the government dependent on
everyone who still works for someone other than the government—including
the freest of free riders, who work for themselves.
Empires function by draining every drop from their possessions to cover their costs.
The
British Crown tried to drain America to pay down its debt, resulting in
growing protests from the population and eventually a revolution. Now
the Empire of Co-Dependency is draining its independent subjects for the
benefit of its dependent subjects and the dependency infrastructure
that employs its numberless bureaucrats who govern it all.
The
Tea Party, both of them, began when an out of touch government and its
monarch levied taxes on a subject population that the cloistered capital
considered mere savages, clinging to backward beliefs and living
without the benefit of the civilization to be found in the inner cities
of the realm.
The Gadsen flag with its twining serpent is not a
symbol to be found on the split river that flows around a narrow island.
But the island was a Loyalist government enclave even then, that
Washington was forced to flee, putting the torch to half of Brooklyn to
aid his escape. Now the new empire operates out of a city named after
him and buildings with more bureaucrats than the entire deployment of
British forces in the colonies govern what is still described as a “Free
Nation.”
The American Revolution was not a struggle for another
nation, one of many, but for a free nation. It was not split off to
accommodate the national strivings of an ethnic group or their
historical destiny. Its guiding idea, like its national holiday, was
independence, but independence means very little unless it reaches the
individual.
A nation where everyone is part of one great
co-dependent community, a centrally planned marketplace that can only be
balanced if everyone is forced to buy what they are told to buy, is not
a free nation. It will not even be independent for long. The logic of
co-dependence is to expand that dependency beyond the borders and make
the region and then every part the world dependent on one another to
balance out the numbers.
Co-dependence required an end to states
rights. It will eventually require an end to the rights of nations. The
Eurozone is a spectacle of co-dependent economic implosion with bailouts
for all in the name of a regional stability that cannot be sustained.
America, like Spain and Greece, is also passing along its debt to more
vibrant economies. We are no longer co-dependent with the Mother
Country, instead we are co-dependent with the People’s Republic of
China, buying their products, while their buy our debt.
As
Britain gives way to the European Union and America gives way to NAFTA
and nations give way to the United Nations, the burden of dependency is
passed on to greater and greater systems until its weight is more than
that of the entire world. That burden of co-dependency is like a rock
rolling downhill; it gathers more and more mass to itself, increasing
its momentum, until it crashes.
The system attempts to stay ahead
of the inevitable crash by making sure that every productive person
pays his “fair share”. It hunts for “Free Riders”, both individuals and
nations, who still aren’t rolling downhill, tips them over and pushes
them off the mountain. All in the name of the greater good.
The
“Free Rider” principle is that the benefits of a policy must be forcibly
extended to everyone in order to mandate that they help fund the
entitlement. There is no natural limit to such an expansion. If your
wages can be said to have risen because unions negotiated a new
contract, then you can be compelled to pay the union. If you aren’t
buying health insurance, then you must be getting it for free. If you
aren’t part of the system, then there will be a mandate that will make
you part of it.
“Free
Riders” is a polite version of the Soviet Union’s “Parasites”. The
concept is the same. In a system where benefits are extended to
everyone, everyone is obligated to the system. The new Crown is not a
person, it is an idea. The throne at whose foot a formerly free people
kneel is the golden seat of the welfare state. While the fireworks
light up the sky, a counterrevolution undid the revolution. There is a
new king and his face is on every magazine cover in the land. His bounty
turns everyone into a ward of the state at their own expense.
As
the last wave of fireworks die out, the shooting stars sinking to earth
and vanishing into the darkness, the light of Independence Day fades
and the crowds slowly trudge away from the brief spectacle, past the
lines of police barricades, through narrow streets, past government
buildings, back to their co-dependent lives in a co-dependent nation
where the will of the people and the rights of the individual matter
less than the latest proposal to solve the problems of their
independence by making the country a more dependent place.
A few
hundred years ago in these streets, men and women celebrated the end of
tyranny, and in its darkest hour, lines of grim men marched along the
waterfront up to the highest point on the island to mount a final
defense. Sometimes the older buildings still wear their shadows on
their brick walls and by the golden light of the fireworks you can
almost see them, shadows moving in the darkness, their footsteps taking
them north, a faint song on their lips, muskets in their hands, their
lives lost and gained in defense of their freedom.
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