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Terrorism and Blind Faith in Government
by James Bovard
One of the most surprising results of the September 11 terrorist attacks
is the sharp increase in the number of Americans who now trust the federal
government. According to a Washington Post poll released on September 27,
64 percent of Americans now "trust the government in Washington to do
what is right" either "just about always" or "most of
the time." The number of people who trust the government to do the
right thing has doubled since last year -- and is now more than three
times higher than in 1994.
The Washington Post interviewed a 26-year-old New Jersey high-school math
teacher who proclaimed: "I have a renewed respect for the federal
government, absolutely. People see that the government is one of the only
avenues we have to get some things done. It puts renewed hope about the
government and their capabilities to do things." The Post ran a photo
of a 22-year-old woman praying on a hillside across from the Pentagon. The
lady told a reporter that she "puts her trust in God and government
-- that's all I can do."
The terrorist attacks could not have succeeded if several federal agencies
had not dropped the ball. Yet, the bigger the catastrophe, the more
credulous many people seem to become. The worse government failed to
protect people in the past, the more certain people become that government
will successfully protect them -- next time. John Bartz, a
highly-respected Ohio psychiatrist, observed that this reaction is akin to
"that of abused children, who become more dependent on their abusive
parents the more they are abused."
Many liberals expect the terrorist atrocities could fundamentally alter
Americans' political thinking. Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam
said: "I think there is the potential that September 11 will turn out
to be a turning point for civic America.... There could be some good
coming from it if it causes us to become ... more aware of the obligations
we have to other people and more open-minded about the role of
government."
A Wall Street Journal front page article on September 26 vivified the new
era of opportunity in Washington: "In just two weeks, the terrorist
attacks have turned a two-decade trend toward less government into a
headlong rush for more." Washington Post columnist Jim Hoagland, in
an article headlined "Government's Comeback," declared,
"Bush and his congressional allies must ... return government closer
to the center of American life, not whittle away further at its powers and
funding." Hoagland asserted that, before the terrorists' attack,
"government was rapidly losing its relevance, its reach, and its
right to make demands on the purses and practices of private
citizens."
Perhaps Hoagland has been too busy doing "Big Picture" articles
to notice
that federal revenues have soared over the last decade. Nor have there
been any reports of the Federal Register suffering from anorexia. The
rumors of Big Government's demise are a hoax to make people believe they
have suffered from a shortage -- rather than an overdose -- of government
in recent years.
Wall Street Journal columnist Al Hunt, in an article headlined
"Government
to the Rescue," called for "a moratorium on
government-bashing" along with a sweeping expansion of government
spending and regulation. Hunt conceded: "To be sure, there always are
dangers in bigger government. Congress and the press must play a critical
oversight role."
But Congress and the Washington press corps have consistently done a worse
job overseeing "Big Government" than the CIA and FBI have done
keeping an eye on foreign terrorists. Hunt favors a blanket expansion of
government even though there is no reason to expect archaic
checks-and-balances to prevent fresh government abuses.
The new enthusiasm for government threatens to become a steamroller that
crushes constitutional rights. The Justice Department has submitted an
anti-terrorism bill to Congress. Yet Attorney General John Ashcroft
admitted that the September 11 attacks might not have been prevented even
if the Justice Department got all the power it seeks from Congress.
A few of the specific expanded powers the Justice Department seeks are
common-sense fine-tunings of existing laws which can be granted with
little
threat to public safety. Others -- such as the expansive definition of
terrorist and the restrictions on the use of encryption -- must be
vigorously resisted by friends of freedom.
At a time when Americans are being urged to put their faith in government,
we must not forget the wisdom of the Founding Fathers. John Adams wrote in
1772: "There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free
government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the
public liberty." Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1799, "Free
government is founded in jealousy, not confidence.... Let no more be heard
of confidence in men, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the
Constitutions."
To blindly trust government is to automatically vest it with excessive
power. Americans must not let the defense against terrorists subvert the
bulwarks of freedom. We owe it to both our forefathers and progeny not to
squander our constitutional inheritance in a moment of panic.
Mr. Bovard is the author of Feeling Your Pain: The Explosion & Abuse
of
Government Power in the Clinton-Gore Years (St. Martin's Press) and a
policy advisor to the Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org)
in Fairfax, Va.
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