To Spite Your Face
In the early years of this blog, I wrote a story about Liberty and Justice. Now 17 years later, it is remarkably pertinent to our lives and to understanding the forces that are shaping them.
As Covid makes its return to our lives in the form of Delta, we have this remarkable political dialectic where a major party is invoking policies that endanger its own followers. Rs have adopted a meta strategy where they must oppose the present administration by making its primary goal of defeating the pandemic a failure. So, the "Right" and its Faux news outlets have adopted a whisper campaign to oppose taking vaccinations, to make masking mandates actually illegal, and to oppose formal vaccination identification and thresholds for businesses, educational institutions, and even cruise ship owners.
It is such a convoluted concoction of irrationality and self destructive behavior it taxes the sane mind. Their embrace of liberty may be on brand, but it also reminds us of the old proverb "to cut off your nose to spite your face"
Liberty and Justice
I pledge Allegiance to the Flag of
the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands,
one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
Most of us learned these words before we could write very well. They
were written by Francis Bellamy, a Baptist minister. Ironically, he was
a Christian Socialist. Originally, although he was a minister, he did
not include “under God” in his
pledge. Congress added those words in 1954 after an extensive campaign
by the Knights of Columbus. Earlier, in 1924, the National Flag
Conference, under the leadership of the American Legion and the
Daughters of the American Revolution, changed the Pledge's words, “my Flag,” to “the Flag of the United States of America.” Bellamy disliked this change, but his protest was ignored.
It’s fairly short. But it is pretty packed. There is the “Republic” idea for which the country stands. There is the “one nation under God, indivisible” thing. I’m not about to touch that. And then, there is the “liberty and justice for all” thing. It is said the Bellamy would have added “equality”, but at the time of the writing, women still did not have the right to vote.
Since most of us learned these words before we really thought much
about anything except maybe how much more attention our younger brother
was getting than we were, it’s likely that you haven’t thought much
about it since.
I would offer that this country is founded on liberty and justice.
These are the two great pillars of the Republic. But, the pillar
metaphor is not really a good one. For it seems that liberty and justice
come out of the same bucket so to speak. Liberty and Justice are two
constituents of a single pillar. They are more like the yin and the yang
of the Tao.
Liberty would hold that we should be free to drive down the freeway
at whatever speed we choose. Justice would hold that we must drive at a
safe speed so that innocent drivers are not injured or killed by your
need to drive like an Indy want-to-be. Liberty would hold that we should
be free to live as we choose; justice asserts that we must abide by
laws that protect us all.
Liberty would hold that we should be able to discharge whatever we
want into our air or waters with impunity; justice maintains that these
emissions should be regulated to protect the health of those who breath
the air and drink the water. Liberty would defend the right to use our
private property any way we choose; justice says you can’t build a
chemical plant next to an elementary school or a hospital.
Lovers of Liberty value their right to own guns. Lovers of Justice
believe that gun manufacturers should be responsible somehow for the
natural result of the use of their product. (or should just the bullet
manufacturers be responsible?)
Whether the issue is States Rights, a woman’s right to choose,
corporate behavior, universal health care, the environment, or the way
we choose to build our homes, there is always a tension between liberty
and justice.
It is this tension that has made the two party system function so well in this country.
In general, although it has not always been this way, the Republican
Party represents Liberty, and the Democrats represent Justice. It is
within this tension that good law and good public policy is conceived
and implemented. Big business likes the Republicans because they want to
be free of regulation. Big labor likes the Democrats because they want
justice for their membership. Republicans don’t like big government.
Democrats are not supposed to like unregulated corrupt corporations that
pollute and steal, and then bribe our leaders to look the other way.
Look at any list of issues and see for yourself. The tension between
liberty and justice is the foundation of our two party system and the
Republic itself. Those groups outside of the margin on the right are
called Libertarians. Those on the left are concerned with environmental
justice, social justice and other justice issues. We just don’t call
them Justicians.
And, like the yin and the yang of the Tao, one is constantly turning into the other.
To "not be able to use your land the way you intended when you
bought it" turns into a justice issue. The justice of equal opportunity
turns into a liberty issue for those who suffer from discrimination. It
turns into a loss of liberty for those who wish to discriminate
(Sometimes for justified reasons)
Republicans view the right to life as a justice issue for the
unborn. Democrats see abortion as a woman’s right to choose, a liberty
issue.
The tension between Liberty and Justice is the lifeblood of this
Republic. The constant turmoil of these two basic rights makes our
system work.
The system, however, does not work when those who should be arguing
the virtue of their principles argue instead based on their desire to
maintain power. Then, the system breaks down.
The President says he wants to “get to the bottom” of a leak from
the White House that has revealed the name of a CIA operative. Yet, he
has not publicly called for the resignations of those who participated
in the crime. He has not called on those journalists who know the names
of the perpetrators of the crime to help him preserve the rule of law in
his own administration. His sense of justice is therefore subordinated
to his need to maintain power.
When Democrats do not pursue justice for fear of the loss of power, we all lose.
When Republicans condone the loss of civil liberty in the name of
national security in order to maintain their grip on power, they are
abandoning their basic principles. When both sides of the aisle choose
to confuse liberation with occupation, we are truly lost.
When we are no longer guided by our great principles, truth becomes a prisoner to the mendacities of power.
And the Republic is endangered.
To cut off your nose to spite your face" is possibly derived from Henry IV who contemplated destroying Paris but soon thought better of it based on advice.
I suspect some Rs are trying to hold onto their own noses.
While the rest of us do the same
to avoid the stench of their deadly folly.
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Labels: american fascism, Constitution, existential philosophy, pandemic, Pledge of Allegiance, political philosophy