The American Iron Curtain
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
In March 1946, Winston Churchill told a Missouri
audience, "From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in
the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across
the Continent. Behind that line lie all the capitals
of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe.
Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Belgrade,
Bucharest and Sofia."
Today a new iron curtain is descending. It
encloses the small Missouri town where Churchill
gave his speech and all the great capitals of a
great nation. Behind the iron curtain lie New York,
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston,
Philadelphia and countless others.
It covers a million streets and hundreds of millions
of people. Its shadow passes over stores and
factories, homes and schools. It is not a physical
wall. There are, as of yet, no border guards with
rifles waiting to shoot those wanting to leave,
there are no watchtowers or leashed dogs keeping an
eye on the inner frontier.
It is a wall of words. A wall of laws, regulations
and mandates. The 2012 Federal Register had 78,961
pages. There are 11 million words of ObamaCare
regulations alone. With so many regulations,
everyone violates a few of them without even knowing
it. Assemble all the millions of them together and
you have a great wall that would dwarf anything in
China
The American iron curtain is still made out of
paper, but in time it will be made out of cement and
iron. Tyrannies begin with paper, but end with
metal. The state begins by imposing bureaucracy on a
free people and ends by imposing tyranny on them.
When they will not obey the paper, it resorts to
steel, iron and lead.
Four decades after Churchill invoked the Iron
Curtain, in his Evil Empire speech Reagan named the
Soviet enemy as those who "preach the supremacy of
the state, declare its omnipotence over individual
man, predict its eventual domination of all peoples
of the Earth."
"They are the focus of evil in the modern world," he
said.
Quoting C.S. Lewis, he warned that the greatest evil
"is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried
and minuted) in clear, carpeted, warmed, and
well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white
collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks
who do not need to raise their voice."
That is the struggle now before us.
We do not fight men with nuclear missiles or red
armies of freezing conscripts waiting to march
through Europe. Instead we fight against an evil
empire that has arisen in our cities and its red
army of front groups that insinuate their ideas into
every institution they take control of.
Conservatives have lost the ability to lay out the
stakes in the clear and simple language of a
Churchill or a Reagan, to let the people know that
they are not choosing between politicians, but
choosing whether they will be able to have the car
of their choice, the doctor of their choice, the
meal of their choice and the book of their choice.
Choice, the word that once used to define the
American experience, has been relegated to a debate
over whether mothers have the right to kill their
children. That choice is still the focus of a
national debate. But the billion other choices that
millions of people make have been taken off the
table.
The conflict is simple and straightforward. It is
the struggle over whether America will be an open
system or a closed system.
In an open system, you choose the life you live. In
a closed system, your life is mandated for you. An
open system believes in the genius of the individual
while the closed system believes in the genius of
the visionaries of the ideology and the moral purity
of the bureaucrats who implement it.
The open system is a door that you can choose to
lock or leave open. The closed system is a cell door
with wardens and guards who will let you out when
they choose to.
In the open system you are in control. In the closed
system you are being controlled for your own good,
for the greater good, for the good of the state and
the five-year-plan and the policy paper and the
sub-paragraph of the regulation of page 50,261 as
reinterpreted by a Federal judge in a court ruling
that you never even heard of.
In the open system, you are a free man or woman
standing at an open door. In the closed system, you
are one of countless numbers in a book and a
database. A number has been given to you at birth
and your life is an interaction with other numbers
that rate your behavior and your potential until
your death when you are given your final number--
the sum total of your property that will be claimed
by the state.
Even in an age where the internet has proven the
supremacy of open systems, liberals insist on
pursuing the iron dream of the 19th century of
stewardship and slavery, of a state that runs like a
factory with managers to oversee the cradle to grave
lives of its dumb and unwilling workers.
The iron dream has failed everywhere. Its ruins dot
the Russian landscape. Its corpses fill the tundra
from Asia to Europe. Its victims cry out across
thousands of miles. The statues of its visionaries
fill the scrap heaps of the east and its empty
fields and abandoned factories can be found on every
continent.
But everywhere there are men who need to believe in
the supremacy of the state, in the closed system,
the iron dream and the iron curtain, in 78,000 pages
of regulations and all their millions and millions
of words, in the nudge, the mandate, the law, the
bill and the billy club.
These are the dreamers of the iron dream; the
professors who tell their students to change the
world by enslaving others to their iron dream, the
newsreaders and entertainers who vividly paint the
joys of living in the iron dream and the horrors of
life outside it, the activists who crowd around
shouting for the iron dream in the name of the
"People" and the politicians of the iron dream whose
faith is in the good of the many and the power of
the few.
The American iron curtain is not substantively
different than the iron curtain anywhere else, its
descent is only slower and the men and women
lowering it are more familiar.
The politicians are not guttural foreigners with
harsh voices, they speak of American values and
invoke American history even as they dismantle both,
they stand in front of flags and speak of social
justice at state fairs.
They claim that the old system is broken, that it's
unfair and inhumane, that progress is inevitable and
that the march of progress and the progress of
science have revealed that their way is best. The
Mohamedans had their revelation from an angel and
the politicians have their muse who shows them that
a better world is possible when all men are slaves
and the right men rule over them.
They speak of the power of the people, but they only
mean certain people will have power and other people
will have the power to support them. Like a Soviet
election, the power of the people will be limited to
voting "Yes" or "No" with the negative vote
punishable as subversion and treason.
They don't call for shooting their opponents, though
occasionally the liberal thinkers at the think-tanks
that come up with the ideas and talking points that
are incorporated into their laws and speeches are
indelicate enough to broach the subject. That sort
of thing usually comes later.
For now they are concentrating on building their
paper walls higher and higher. There are more laws
than anyone can read, let alone know or follow.
The laws, like the marching Chinese, are effectively
infinite. Even if a curious fellow were to sit down
and try to read through them, going without food or
sleep around the clock, it would be a hopeless task
because no sooner will he have finished 100
pages,than a fresh delivery of another 200 pages
will have already been added.
There is too much law being made to count.
Laws are being passed to find out what's in them and
even reading them is useless because the added
regulations define what the law does and judges
decide how they should be implemented. Nearly 100
million Americans will have their health plans taken
away because of how the regulations were written.
That is the power of the paper wall.
In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt delivered a speech that
began, "The great fundamental issue now before the
Republican party and before our people can be stated
briefly. It is: Are the American people fit to
govern themselves, to rule themselves, to control
themselves? I believe they are. My opponents do
not."
"I believe in the right of the people to rule," he
continued. "I believe the majority of the plain
people of the United States will, day in and day
out, make fewer mistakes in governing themselves
than any smaller class or body of men, no matter
what their training, will make in trying to govern
them."
A hundred years later, that is still the issue
before us. Will we have an open system in which the
American people govern themselves or a closed system
in which they are governed by bureaucracies and
judges, by the activists and mediacrats of the iron
dream and their politicians who promise to protect
them from their own choices?
We cannot have a hybrid system of both functioning
together for very long. Freedom and tyranny do not
naturally co-exist. A system does not hang in
equilibrium between open and closed. Or as Lincoln
put it, "This government cannot endure, permanently,
half slave and half free." And it isn't enduring.
America has been moving back toward the closed
system for some time now. The movement is
incremental, its bureaucratic chains come wrapped in
populist rhetoric, its power plays take the moral
high ground for the oppressed, for progress and for
efficient government, and its worst abuses are kept
out of the headlines.
Each generation has less freedom than the last. Each
generation lives under a more powerful system that
is relentless in its determination to control and
command. And each generation fails to make the
connection between its incremental poverty, its
incremental loss of freedom and its growing
government.
The iron curtain, like the Berlin Wall, is
vulnerable. It can be torn down when enough men
inspired to be free converge on it and begin
destroying it with sledgehammers and even their bare
hands. Its greatest strength is that men do not even
know that it is there.
When Churchill named the iron curtain, he expressed
a reality that people were familiar with, but lacked
the words to describe.
The Communists had seized control of Eastern Europe
through deception and double-dealing, they had
promised freedom and delivered tyranny, and did it
with the collaboration of politicians and media
abroad who defended their crimes and spoke of them
as humanitarians and defenders of equality. And
there lay their greatest strength; until they were
named for what they were, it was impossible to see
the iron curtain and the evil empire that Churchill
and Reagan made real.
That is true of the American iron curtain, which
goes by a thousand names like liberal, progressive,
humanitarian, social justice, equality, opportunity,
reform... and 993 others like it. To destroy it, it
has to be named.
People do not try to tear down a wall that they do
not even know is there. It is only when they see the
wall, when they feel its chill in their bones, when
they sense its shadow over their lives, when they
strive to climb over it and are shot down, when they
chant against it and are beaten; will they be ready
to tear it down.
Until the men and women of the open system come with
a clear message warning of the wall that is being
built around a free people, then they will go on
losing elections and the cause of freedom will be
lost, drowned in iron and paper, put in chains and
filed in a trillion crowded databases.
Only when Americans see the wall, when they sense
its shadow over Missouri and Florida, over New York
and California, from ocean to ocean and border to
border, will they be ready to tear it down.
Only then will they be ready to be free.