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Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto

Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto


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Chapter One

On Liberty and Tyranny

There is simply no scientific or mathematical formula that defines conservatism. Moreover, there are competing voices today claiming the mantle of "true conservatism" -- including neo-conservatism (emphasis on a robust national security), paleo-conservatism (emphasis on preserving the culture), social conservatism (emphasis on faith and values), and libertarianism (emphasis on individualism), among others. Scores of scholars have written at length about what can be imperfectly characterized as conservative thought. But my purpose is not to give them each exposition, as it cannot be fairly or adequately accomplished here, nor referee among them. Neither will I attempt to give birth to totally new theories.

Instead, what follows are my own opinions and conclusions of fundamental truths, based on decades of observation, exploration, and experience, about conservatism and, conversely, non-conservatism -- that is, liberty and tyranny in modern America.

To put it succinctly: Conservatism is a way of understanding life, society, and governance. The Founders were heavily influenced by certain philosophers, among them Adam Smith (spontaneous order), Charles Montesquieu (separation of powers), and especially John Locke (natural rights); they were also influenced by their faiths, personal experiences, and knowledge of history (including the rise and fall of the Roman Empire). Edmund Burke, who was both a British statesman and thinker, is often said to be the father of modern conservatism. He was an early defender of the American Revolution and advocate of representative government. He wrote of the interconnection of liberty, free markets, religion, tradition, and authority. The Conservative, like the Founders, is informed by all these great thinkers -- and more.

The Declaration of Independence represents the most prominent official, consensus position of the Founders' rationale for declaring independence from England. It states, in part,

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness....

The Founders believed, and the Conservative agrees, in the dignity of the individual; that we, as human beings, have a right to live, live freely, and pursue that which motivates us not because man or some government says so, but because these are God-given natural rights.

Like the Founders, the Conservative also recognizes in society a harmony of interests, as Adam Smith put it, and rules of cooperation that have developed through generations of human experience and collective reasoning that promote the betterment of the individual and society. This is characterized as ordered liberty, the social contract, or the civil society.

What are the conditions of this civil society?

In the civil society, the individual is recognized and accepted as more than an abstract statistic or faceless member of some group; rather, he is a unique, spiritual being with a soul and a conscience. He is free to discover his own potential and pursue his own legitimate interests, tempered, however, by a moral order that has its foundation in faith and guides his life and all human life through the prudent exercise of judgment. As such, the individual in the civil society strives, albeit imperfectly, to be virtuous -- that is, restrained, ethical, and honorable. He rejects the relativism that blurs the lines between good and bad, right and wrong, just and unjust, and means and ends.

In the civil society, the individual has a duty to respect the unalienable rights of others and the values, customs, and traditions, tried and tested over time and passed from one generation to the next, that establish society's cultural identity. He is responsible for attending to his own well-being and that of his family. And he has a duty as a citizen to contribute voluntarily to the welfare of his community through good works.

In the civil society, private property and liberty are inseparable. The individual's right to live freely and safely and pursue happiness includes the right to acquire and possess property, which represents the fruits of his own intellectual and/or physical labor. As the individual's time on earth is finite, so, too, is his labor. The illegitimate denial or diminution of his private property enslaves him to another and denies him his liberty.

In the civil society, a rule of law, which is just, known, and predictable, and applied equally albeit imperfectly, provides the governing framework for and restraints on the polity, thereby nurturing the civil society and serving as a check against the arbitrary use and, hence, abuse of power.

For the Conservative, the civil society has as its highest purpose its preservation and improvement.

The Modern Liberal believes in the supremacy of the state, thereby rejecting the principles of the Declaration and the order of the civil society, in whole or part. For the Modern Liberal, the individual's imperfection and personal pursuits impede the objective of a utopian state. In this, Modern Liberalism promotes what French historian Alexis de Tocqueville described as a soft tyranny, which becomes increasingly more oppressive, potentially leading to a hard tyranny (some form of totalitarianism). As the word "liberal" is, in its classical meaning, the opposite of authoritarian, it is more accurate, therefore, to characterize the Modern Liberal as a Statist.

The Founders understood that the greatest threat to liberty is an all-powerful central government, where the few dictate to the many. They also knew that the rule of the mob would lead to anarchy and, in the end, despotism. During the Revolutionary War, the states more or less followed the Articles of Confederation, in which most governing authority remained with the states. After the war, as the Founders labored to establish a new nation, the defects with the Articles became increasingly apparent. The central government did not have the ability to fund itself. Moreover, states were issuing their own currency, conducting their own foreign policy, and raising their own armies. Trade disputes among the states and with other countries were hampering commerce and threatening national prosperity.

Eventually the Articles were replaced with the Constitution, which granted the federal government enough authority to cultivate, promote, and "secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity," but not enough authority to destroy it all. James Madison, the most influential of the Constitution's authors, put it best when he wrote in "Federalist 51":

But what is government itself, but the greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.

For much of American history, the balance between governmental authority and individual liberty was understood and accepted. Federal power was confined to that which was specifically enumerated in the Constitution and no more. And that power was further limited, for it was dispersed among three federal branches -- the legislative, executive, and judicial. Beyond that, the power remained with the states and ultimately the people.

The Framers recognized that the Constitution may require adjustments from time to time. Therefore, they provided two methods for proposing amendments, only one of which has been used in adopting all current amendments. It requires a supermajority of two-thirds of the members of both Houses of Congress to propose an amendment to the states for ratification, and three-fourths of the states to successfully ratify the proposed amendment. In all our history the Constitution has been amended only twenty-seven times -- the first ten of which, the Bill of Rights, were adopted shortly after the Constitution was ratified. Clearly the Framers did not intend the Constitution to be easily altered. It was to be a lasting contract that could be modified only by the considered judgment of a significant representation of the body politic.

But in the 1930s, during the Great Depression, the Statists successfully launched a counterrevolution that radically and fundamentally altered the nature of American society. President Franklin Roosevelt and an overwhelmingly Democratic Congress, through an array of federal projects, entitlements, taxes, and regulations known as the New Deal, breached the Constitution's firewalls. At first the Supreme Court fought back, striking down New Deal programs as exceeding the limits of federal constitutional authority, violating state sovereignty, and trampling on private property rights. But rather than seek an expansion of federal power through the amendment process, which would likely have blunted Roosevelt's ambitions, Roosevelt threatened the very makeup of the Court by proposing to pack it with sympathetic justices who would go along with his counterrevolution. Although Roosevelt's plan failed, the justices had been effectively intimidated. And new justices, who shared Roosevelt's statism, began replacing older justices on the Court. It was not long before the Court became little more than a rubber stamp for Roosevelt's policies.

The federal government began passing laws and creating administrative agencies at a dizzying pace, increasing its control over economic activity and, hence, individual liberty. It used taxation not merely to fund constitutionally legitimate governmental activities, but also to redistribute wealth, finance welfare programs, set prices and production limits, create huge public works programs, and establish pension and unemployment programs. Roosevelt used his new power to expand political alliances and create electoral constituencies -- unions, farmers, senior citizens, and ethnic groups. From this era forward, the Democratic Party and the federal government would become inextricably intertwined, and the Democratic Party would become as dependent on federal power for its sustenance as the governmental dependents it would create. Ironically, industrial expansion resulting from World War II eventually ended the Great Depression, not the New Deal. Indeed, the enormous tax and regulatory burden imposed on the private sector by the New Deal prolonged the economic recovery. The significance of the New Deal is not in any one program, but in its sweeping break from our founding principles and constitutional limitations. Roosevelt himself broke with the two-presidential-term tradition started by George Washington by running for four terms. His legacy includes a federal government that has become a massive, unaccountable conglomerate: It is the nation's largest creditor, debtor, lender, employer, consumer, contractor, grantor, property owner, tenant, insurer, health-care provider, and pension guarantor.

And yet, the Statist has an insatiable appetite for control. His sights are set on his next meal even before he has fully digested his last. He is constantly agitating for government action. And in furtherance of that purpose, the Statist speaks in the tongue of the demagogue, concocting one pretext and grievance after another to manipulate public perceptions and build popular momentum for the divestiture of liberty and property from its rightful possessors. The industrious, earnest, and successful are demonized as perpetrators of various offenses against the public good, which justifies governmental intervention on behalf of an endless parade of "victims." In this way, the perpetrator and the victim are subordinated to the government's authority -- the former by outright theft, the latter by a dependent existence. In truth, both are made victims by the real perpetrator, the Statist.

The Statist veils his pursuits in moral indignation, intoning in high dudgeon the injustices and inequities of liberty and life itself, for which only he can provide justice and bring a righteous resolution. And when the resolution proves elusive, as it undoubtedly does -- whether the Marxist promise of "the workers' paradise" or the Great Society's "war on poverty" -- the Statist demands ever more authority to wring out the imperfections of mankind's existence. Unconstrained by constitutional prohibitions, what is left to limit the Statist's ambitions but his own moral compass, which has already led him astray? He is never circumspect about his own shortcomings. Failure is not the product of his beliefs but merely want of power and resources. Thus are born endless rationalizations for seizing ever more governmental authority.

In the midst stands the individual, who was a predominate focus of the Founders. When living freely and pursuing his own legitimate interests, the individual displays qualities that are antithetical to the Statist's -- initiative, self-reliance, and independence. As the Statist is building a culture of conformity and dependency, where the ideal citizen takes on dronelike qualities in service to the state, the individual must be drained of uniqueness and self-worth, and deterred from independent thought or behavior. This is achieved through varying methods of economic punishment and political suppression.

The Statist also knows that despite his successful usurpations, enough citizens are still skeptical and even distrustful of politicians and government that he cannot force his will all at once. Thus he marches in incremental steps, adjusting his pace as circumstances dictate. Today his pace is more rapid, for resistance has slowed. And at no time does the Statist do an about-face. But not so with some who claim the mantle of conservatism but are, in truth, neo-Statists, who would have the Conservative abandon the high ground of the founding principles for the quicksand of a soft tyranny.

Michael Gerson, formerly chief speechwriter for President George W. Bush, has written in his book, Heroic Conservatism, that "if Republicans run in future elections with a simplistic anti-government message, ignoring the poor, the addicted and children at risk, they will lose, and they will deserve to lose." Gerson argues for a "compassionate conservatism" and "faith-based initiatives" in which the federal government plays a central role.

Gerson all but ignores liberty's successes and the civil society in which humans flourish, even though he is surrounded in his every moment by its magnificence. So numerous are liberty's treasures that they defy cataloguing. The object of Gerson's scorn is misplaced. Gerson does not ask, "How many enterprises and jobs might have been created, how many people might have been saved from illness and disease, how many more poor children might have been fed but for the additional costs, market dislocations, and management inefficiencies that distort supply and demand or discourage research and development as a result of the federal government's role?"

Liberty's permeance in American society often makes its manifestations elusive or invisible to those born into it. Even if liberty is acknowledged, it is often taken for granted and its permanence assumed. Therefore, under these circumstances, the Statist's agenda can be alluring even to a former advisor to a Republican president. It is not recognized as an increasingly corrosive threat to liberty but rather as coexisting with it.

Columnists William Kristol and David Brooks promote something called "national-greatness conservatism." They coauthored an opinion piece in which they exclaimed that it "does not despise government. How could it? How can Americans love their nation if they hate its government? But the way to restore faith in our government is to slash its flabbiness while making it more effective."

The Conservative does not despise government. He despises tyranny. This is precisely why the Conservative reveres the Constitution and insists on adherence to it. An "effective" government that operates outside its constitutional limitations is a dangerous government. By abandoning principle for efficiency, the neo-Statist, it seems, is no more bound to the Constitution than is the Statist. He marches more slowly than the Statist, but he marches with him nonetheless. The neo-Statist propounds no discernable standard or practical means to hem in the federal power he helps unleash, and which the Statist would exploit. In many ways, he is as objectionable as the Statist, for he seeks to devour conservatism by clothing himself in its nomenclature.

The Conservative is alarmed by the ascent of a soft tyranny and its cheery acceptance by the neo-Statist. He knows that liberty once lost is rarely recovered. He knows of the decline and eventual failure of past republics. And he knows that the best prescription for addressing society's real and perceived ailments is not to further empower an already enormous federal government beyond its constitutional limits, but to return to the founding principles. A free people living in a civil society, working in self-interested cooperation, and a government operating within the limits of its authority promote more prosperity, opportunity, and happiness for more people than any alternative. Conservatism is the antidote to tyranny precisely because its principles are the founding principles.

Copyright © 2009 by Mark R. Levin

(Continues...)

Excerpted from "Liberty and Tyranny" by Mark R. Levin. Copyright (C) by Mark R. Levin. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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Amazon User Reviews

Common Sense


Mar/07/2010
This book is a must read. My favorite chapter is the one on the Environmentalists and global warming. He systematically and calmly picks the movement apart using remarkable, refutable logic and reason and backs everything he says up with footnote after footnote. This book is pure excellence from cover to cover.
by Mark Ottman (Tennesse)

Intelligent. Historical. Cogent. Excellent.


Mar/07/2010
LIBERTY AND TYRANNY by Mark Levin is the most intelligent, well-written, cogent articulation of conservatism in modern America. Levin blends history, politics, philosophy, economics and passion into a must-read book of the new decade.

Not since Reagan have conservative principles been so clearly and persuasively stated. Indeed, the voice of Reagan's weighty thoughtfulness, love of country, and conservative foundations, and simplicity of language echo deeply in this book.

Amidst the horrific nightmare of modern liberalism, the corruption of federal government, the hypocrisy of modern politicians, and the lies of the Democratic leadership stands Liberty and Tyranny - proud, honest, true.

Levin tackles the most difficult issues of the day: the welfare state, foreign policy, economic recovery, health care and immigration. But this book is more than a thundering repudiation of socialism and other statist philosophies. It provides a vision for the future, embodied in a "Conservative Manifesto". A vision every conservative, whether Republican, Independent, Libertarian or Tea Party can and should embrace.

Conservatives are in debt to Levin for this clear, concise, singular work. He has the clarity, conviction, and courage to speak the right things at the moment when history most requires it.
by Jeffrey E Ellis (Naperville, IL USA)

Levin Calls America Back to Her Founding Principles


Mar/04/2010
In the second-best selling book of 2009 (Sarah Palin's Going Rogue was first) Mark Levin pulls off the difficult task of defining the conservative philosophy for contemporary American society. A constitutional lawyer who has studied American history and law his entire life, Levin uses the breadth of his impressive knowledge to weave a comprehensive and articulate philosophy for today's American conservative movement. While I think he usually comes across as mean-spirited and caustic on his popular talk radio show, he seems much more intelligent and reasonable here.

Levin begins by describing the difficulties of defining conservatism:

"There is simply no scientific or mathematical formula that defines conservatism. Moreover, there are competing voices today claiming the mantle of "true conservatism" - including neo-conservatism (emphasis on a robust national security), paleo-conservatism (emphasis on preserving the culture), social conservatism (emphasis on faith and values), and libertarianism (emphasis on individualism), among others."

He then explains that it is not his purpose to "referee" among these groups or to give each of them a fair and comprehensive portrayal. Rather, he simply wishes to give his "own opinions and conclusions of fundamental truths, based on decades of observation, exploration, and experience, about conservatism and, conversely, non-conservatism - that is, liberty and tyranny in modern day America."

The book then neatly divides into chapters tackling a variety of issues facing America. In each chapter, Levin succinctly defines the issue, explains the conservative viewpoint and how it identifies with the value of liberty, and contrasts that with the "statist" view and how it, in turn, correlates to tyranny. The chapters tackle a variety of issues from properly interpreting the Constitution to environmentalism, from federalism to immigration, from faith to the free markets. Indeed, one of the most impressive aspects of Levin's bestseller is the breadth of issues he manages to cover while still tying everything together under the umbrella of conservatism.

Levin opens with a concept I immensely appreciated because it is rarely understood: liberty's perdurable bond with private property. He writes:

"In the civil society, private property and liberty are inseparable. The individual's right to live freely and safely and pursue happiness includes the right to acquire and possess property, which represents the fruits of his own intellectual and/or physical labor. As the individual's time on earth is finite, so, too, is his labor. The illegitimate denial or diminution of his private property enslaves him to another and denies him his liberty."

Another seldom-discussed issue the book tackles is federalism. Very basically, federalism is the Constitutionally-designed division of authority between the states and the federal government. Under this system, the federal government has "exclusive power" in a select few areas (foreign policy, immigration, etc.) while the states "retained their authority" in all other respects. In America today, the federal government has grown on a massive scale, to the point that its tentacles reach into and influence almost every aspect of American life - something, Levin explains, the Founders would have never wanted. Levin explains the immense advantages of federalism:

"States are more likely to better reflect the interests of their citizens than the federal government. Localities are even more likely to better reflect these interests because the decision makers come from the communities they govern - they are directly affected by their own decisions. Moreover, the interaction between the people and their representatives at the state and local levels is easier and more direct. When the federal government acts beyond its constitutional limits, it assaults the purest form of representative government by supplanting representative decision making at the state and local levels. The federal government cannot possibly comprehend the diversity of interests that are affected by its decision making. It cannot adequately weigh the costs and benefits of its decisions on communities. Besides, that is not its purpose. It seeks to dictate rather than represent."

In his chapter on environmentalism, Levin explains how statists manufacture crises or emergencies as convenient excuses to grow the government's jurisdiction or power (e.g. "Never let a good crisis go to waste"):

"...the Statist uses junk science, misrepresentations, and fear-mongering to promote public health and environmental scares, because he realizes that in a true, widespread health emergency, the public expects the government to act aggressively to address the crisis, despite traditional limitations on governmental authority. The more dire the threat, the more liberty people are usually willing to surrender. This scenario is tailor-made for the Statist. The government's authority becomes part of the societal frame of reference, only to be built upon during the next 'crisis.'"

Suddenly, the Left's obsession with global warming makes sense. Manufacturing crises like these allow the government to grow its power under the auspices of solving said crisis. Levin highlights a perfect example from 2007 when the Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, that CO2 was a pollutant covered by the Clean Air Act. This gave the EPA, a bureaucracy of administrative appointees and unelected officials, unprecedented power over all vehicle emissions. Thus the government grew because of the alleged crisis of global warming.

Levin also uses this chapter to discuss the Left's long history with bad science, including the global cooling scare of the 1970's and their long campaign to rid the world of DDT, the now-proven safe pesticide that almost rid the world of malaria before it was banned.

In Liberty and Tyranny's chapter on immigration, Levin discusses the importance of assimilating immigrants into American culture as they join our society. In a society that neglects this step, he explains, "balkanization grows, antagonism and conflict are aroused, and victimhood is claimed at perceived slights." Rather than teaching American exceptionalism, the Left wishes to equate American culture with all others. Levin writes:

"Moreover, rather than Americanize aliens and use public and private institutions to inculcate them with the virtues of American culture, language, mores, history, traditions, and customs, the Statist is cultivating a cultural relativism in which the cultures from which the aliens fled are given equal accord with the American culture. But all cultures are not equal, as evidenced, in part, by the alien fleeing his own country for the American culture and the American citizen staying put. It is normal and healthy for ethnic groups to celebrate their diverse heritages...But neither the heritage nor home language of the individual has ever competed with the American culture for dominance. The history of immigration in the United States up to now has been of assimilation."

Finally, I was pleased to see that Levin understands the vital role faith plays in both conservatism and civil society. While admitting that, of course, a conservative can be a secularist and is free to not believe in God, he adds, "[I]t must be observed, that the Declaration is at opposite with the Secularist. Therefore, the Conservative would be no less challenged than any other to make coherent that which is irreconcilable." He continues:

"Moreover, for the Conservative, as it was for Burke and the Founders, faith is not a threat to civil society but rather vital to its survival. It encourages the individual to personally adhere to a dogma that promotes restraint, duty and moral behavior, which not only benefit the individual but the multitudes and society generally. As George Washington wrote in his Farewell Address, 'Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable results...And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion.'"

At the book's conclusion, Levin lists practical and concrete steps that can reverse America's statist direction and help our country improve return to her Founding principles. The actions listed fall under a variety of categories, mostly the same subjects covered previously by the book. Levin's manifesto contains the policy punch a book like this needs, helping ordinary citizens understand exactly what needs to be enacted in Washington.

Levin's book is a call to conservatives to return to their core values and a call to America to return to her founding roots. It is relatively concise and easy to read, which helps explain its immense popularity. Indeed, it is Liberty and Tyranny's popularity which makes Levin's message so invaluable. By placing a broad and reasoned conservative philosophy into the hands of millions of Americans across the country, Levin has championed the intellectual heft behind the burgeoning conservative grassroots movement. It is no accident that the book's release nearly exactly coincided with the rise of the Tea Party movement. I cannot think of a better book for the conservative movement to base its ideas and philosophy on; it presents a conservative message that is relevant, comprehensive and smart.
by Matthew P. Cochrane (Fort Lauderdale, FL)

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Mar/03/2010
Mark Levin's political position allows no shades of grey. You're either with him or against him; not a fair and balanced assessment of our present political environment.
by Frank (Long Beach, CA)

Fascinating and massively thought-provoking


Mar/03/2010
In this fascinating and massively thought-provoking book, author and political commentator Mark Levin looks at what modern Conservatism is, and how it compares with its present rival - Statism. Statism is a "progressive" philosophy that feels that the United States can be turned into a utopia, but only through the equalizing work of a federal government that has the power to affect social change through unlimited power. Throughout the book, the Mr. Levin shows how modern Statism compares with the original designs of the architects of the U.S., and what is has accomplished.

Overall, I must say that this is a profound book, which kept me turning the pages with avid interest. I found the author's arguments to be well thought-out and quite compelling. If you want to get a feel for the ideological underpinnings of modern American Conservative, then go to the source and read Mark Levin's Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto. I highly recommend it!
by Kurt A. Johnson (North-Central Illinois, USA)

Washington Post Reviews