OPINION:
When the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche proclaimed that God was dead, he didn’t mean it literally, as that would have been impossible. He meant that God’s creatures have so failed to acknowledge God and relate to him, it is as if God decided to end his own existence.
Stated differently, Nietzsche recognized that Christianity had ceased to be influential in contemporary life. Though properly rejected as a madman, he reminded the world that the loss of virtue can be sustained only from the bottom up, not from the top down.
He meant that for all the power the financial and governmental elites have, none of their valueless impulses would prevail were they not accepted by the majority or a determined minority.
He made these observations in 1886, a time of relative peace but little freedom in Europe. His sentiments are just as valid today in the United States, where there is neither peace nor freedom.
People usually get the government they fear, be they Hitler’s willing executioners or America’s willing and obedient.
Thus, when cultural and financial elites craft a government based on nihilism — a belief in nothing but power — when everything the government says is a lie, when everything the government has it has stolen, when the one thing the government does well is engage in violence, the result is a culture of death.
America today epitomizes a culture of death.
At home, America is at war with itself. The government permits the slaughter of babies in the womb and teaches children in government schools how to change genders.
And America is at war abroad. The federal government has sent cash and military hardware worth $100 billion to its failing vassal state Ukraine. The president and the Senate want to send $61 billion more. And the feds continue to fund the slaughter in the Gaza Strip.
What’s going on?
What’s going on is the American rejection of the core moral value of the intrinsic worth of every person, and the failure of American government at all levels to take human rights seriously.
Because the government glorifies violence — constant wars, an annual defense budget larger than those of the next dozen countries combined, the adulation of the military, the encouragement and financing of abortion, collective punishment for the crimes of a few in the Middle East, and the use of the death penalty — it undermines the value of human life and sets a tone whereby because the government kills with impunity, violence has become a personal tool.
Is it any wonder that deranged people pick up where the government has left off? For a person filled with hate and incapable of reason living in a society that rejects the intrinsic worth of every human life, is it that much of a leap from killing babies in the womb to killing strangers in a supermarket or a classroom?
Thomas Jefferson argued that the only moral purpose of government is to protect individual rights.
What is a right? A right is an indefeasible and permanent claim against the world that originates in our humanity. Thus the right to live, to worship or not to worship, to think as you wish, to say what you think, to publish what you say, to associate or not to associate, to acquire and use property, to defend your life and property, to travel, to leave the government, and to be left alone — to pursue happiness — are rights that are inherent in our nature. Rights are above the law. Like the color of our eyes, they are immune from the lawmaking power.
The government, which is an artificial entity based on a monopoly of force in a geographic area, may never morally interfere with our rights unless we waive them. A burglar waives his natural rights when he violates the property rights of the legal occupant of the house.
But absent that waiver, the government cannot infringe upon rights without engaging in monstrous theft. And government theft has consequences. Whether it calls its theft “taxation” or “regulation,” one can understand Nietzsche’s aphorism that the government exists by lying and stealing.
So, when the government impairs the right to self-defense but at the same time expects madmen to follow the law, the result is tragedy and the agony of endless heartbreak.
The government has banned God in the classroom and on the football field, banished God from the public square and public buildings, and ignored God’s commands when it writes laws and unleashes violence.
When James Madison wrote the Bill of Rights, he did not intend for the liberties that are protected thereby to become privileges subject to the whims of government. But through the long march of history, that’s what has happened.
Jefferson predicted this when he said that without a radical reassessment of government once in every generation, government will grow and liberty will shrink. Government is the negation of liberty. As President Ronald Reagan argued, “Government is not the solution to our problems; government is the problem.”
What are mass killings but a metaphor of government violence? Mass killings are not the blame of inanimate weapons, but of a nihilistic government repressing helpless, defenseless citizens.
What can we do about it?
Bring the troops home. Leave NATO. Shut down our 1,000-plus foreign military bases. Shrink the defense budget. Sell the Pentagon. Stop killing babies in the womb. Expect people to defend themselves using the same means as the government uses. Starve the federal government to only what the Constitution permits. Abolish the income tax. Worship God in public. Base all laws on natural rights. Recognize state nullification and secession. Outlaw punishment before trial.
And when the government assaults — or fails to protect — life, liberty and property, or uses excessive force, alter or abolish it.
Take rights seriously. Recognize that rights are integral to our humanity. Take Jefferson seriously: “When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is liberty.”
• To learn more about Judge Andrew Napolitano, visit https://JudgeNap.com.
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