I was just watching Ben Shapiro debate on Fox regarding censorship. It came to my mind unbidden that there is a deadly error at the heart of the Bush worldview which has led us down this path--an error which we cannot afford to ignore.
Bush, Cheney, and their ilk believe that our ancient liberties of freedom of speech and thought, of the right to recourse to the law, and our right to choose the nation's destiny based on a full appreciation of the facts make us weak in comparison to our enemies--those radicals, Islamic and otherwise who would destroy the freedoms which each American almost unconsciously believes to be his or her birthright.
To the current leadership, giving those we capture in this fight the recourse to law and freedom from violent interrogation makes us weaker. They also believe as a matter of course that questioning a leader's decisions in wartime weakens the ability of the nation to fight our enemies. They want to have the ability to look at what we choose to read when we check books out from our local library--thinking that we are weaker because we allow ourselves the liberty to do what we wish, read and say what we wish, live and love as we wish. Bush and his administration also apparently believe that our right to see the actual facts upon which a decision to go to war is made and to use those facts to inform our elected representatives of what we think is the best course for the nation is also a weakness which could cause the country to shrink from a fight which they think to be important.
In this they share a common worldview with the terrorists and others who seek to destroy what we hold dear. The Islamic radical worldview held by Osama bin Laden and the others who seek to prevent the spread of liberty within the Islamic world holds that allowing people the liberty to make their own choices and to be able to seek redress from the government when we are harmed by that government makes a nation weaker. I have little doubt that these radicals also believe that any nation which decides that violent interrogation is something beyond the power of the government is weak as well.
It is no surprise, then, that Bush, Cheney and bin Laden share a common method for pressing us to give up our rights and freedoms: fear. Although the Vice President's references to smoking guns and mushroom clouds are a far cry from the deadly attacks of our enemies, both seek to use the same tool of fear for our own lives to influence us. By presenting only the data which indicated that the nation was in deadly peril from Saddam Hussein, the Administration thought that they knew better than an informed public what was best for the country. By hiding from us the techniques used to question those persons captured by our armed forces in this war, they think that they know better than us what is right for the nation--they think the country is stronger for not knowing what they are doing.
I hold a different view from Bush and Cheney and our enemies. I think our rights and freedoms make us strong. I see our right to recourse to the law, our right to choose the nation's destiny based on a full appreciation of the facts, and freedom from violent interrogation are freedoms which make us stronger than our enemies. Because of these freedoms, each individual is more invested in the common good provided by a commonwealth based on rights and freedoms. That is why we fight. Our people also feel free to invent new solutions to problems not foreseen by those who would rule us absolutely. They can draw upon the inherent wisdom a free people have to make the critical decisions about war and peace. Similarly, our freedom from violent interrogation by our own government allows each citizen to walk free of fear and to do and say whatever one wants--a powerful weapon against those who would impose a monolithic worldview on us all. Finally, our commitment to a universal application of these rights ensures that they will remain for all, and that those with designs on our liberty will not be able to argue that some among us do not deserve the same rights and freedoms that others hold.
These are the distinctions that every citizen should keep in mind in making the critical civic decisions upon which our political life rests. Abraham Lincoln understood this when he said:
At what point shall we expect the approach of danger? By what means shall we fortify against it? Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant, to step the Ocean, and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth (our own excepted) in their military chest; with a Buonaparte for a commander, could not by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the Blue Ridge, in a Trial of a thousand years.
At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.
When Americans decide what to do about the sad and frightening situation the nation finds itself in, they would be wise to heed his words.