Robert Heinlein, he who is like unto a God, once noted that
if 'everyone' believes something, it almost certainly isn't true. There are a
handful of exceptions to this -- everyone believes that all politicians are
crooks, and that lawyers rank somewhere in between smallpox bacillae and car
salesmen in the Great Chain Of Being, and these things are true. Exception
proves the rule, and all that.
But there's plenty of things enthusiastically believed by the
general populace which most assuredly are not true -- that God exists, that
children are a valuable resource (unless one takes Swift seriously, I cannot
imagine to what productive use children can be put -- and isn't the definition
of 'resource' something which can be put to productive use?), and that there is
a purpose in life beyond that which you choose. But lately, one particularly
odious delusion has begun taking center stage again -- the belief that only
those who accept the system as it is have a right to seek to alter it. (The
fallacy should be obvious -- only those who do not accept the status quo will
seek to alter it!) This is usually expressed with the bumper-sticker level
slogan, "If you don't vote, you can't complain."
As with all common wisdom, this is uncommonly unwise. The
real truth is this: If you do vote, you can't complain.
Consider: The man who does not vote (and does so out of a
deliberate and well-justified revulsion at the system, rather than mere
apathy), is governed without his consent. He never took any positive action
indicating acceptance of the 'social contract'. If government derives its 'just
powers' from the consent of the governed, then the government can have no just
power over him. That it has power over him is sadly undeniable, but there is no
justice in that power -- and thus, no injustice in any actions he may take to
limit or evade that power, save those actions which are on their face unjust
regardless of the current status of the State.
From what dementia comes the logic that if you fail to
willingly cooperate in the process of your own enslavement, you have no right
to be angered at the actions of your unchosen masters? You might as well claim
that if you are not a 'made man', you should not protest the actions of your
local mafia -- or if you are not a Communist, you have no cause to complain
when your property is socialised. Clearly, it is precisely the opposite which
is the case -- that those who support the system -- the willing Mafioso, the
eager Communist, the enthusiastic voter -- who must accept with stoic silence
any injustices forced upon them by the system they helped create. In the
immortal words of Ayn Rand -- Brother, you asked for it!
But the rest of us did not.
We exist, all of us, under a system of 'government' that
almost no one -- not even the most blindly patriotic lever-puller -- has any
real control over. And no amount of 'campaign finance reform' or 'term limits'
or 'free TV time' is going to change that, because democracy is fundamentally
flawed. It's a sham, a con game, a humbug, a...hold on a second....con: see
trick(1)....ah...OK....fraud, deception, ruse, cheat, gyp, come-on, fast one,
dodge, plant, sucker deal, sell out. I knew that thesaurus my Mother got me
would come in handy one day, albeit nearly fifteen years later.
Call it what you will, the truth is that democracy is a lie.
The peoples of the world who live in democratic nations have been taught that
democracy is a synonym for freedom. That under democracy, government represents
the people. And that in a democracy, people have a say in how they are ruled.
Before I go on, let's get one thing clarified. 'The people
as a whole' does not exist. There is no collective 'people' which can be seen
as anything other than a whole lot of individual persons. 'The people' do not
hunger, do not hate, do not love. Only individuals can do that. There might be
some truth to the concept that 'the people as a whole' have some modicum of
control over some aspects of governance in the most free of the 'Democratic'
nations -- but this is irrelevant. The single citizen, the only unit of society
which matters, has no significant control whatsoever.
I hold that there is no one in government who represents me,
and that whether I vote or not, this will not change. I am governed by leaders
I did not choose, who enact policies I do not believe in, paid with in money I
earned but did not consent to give to them. In every meaningful way, I am
completely and utterly disenfranchised -- and so is just about everyone else.
Click To Enlarge |
Get the picture, boys and girls?
If the justification for government violence against the
citizenry (see What Is
government? for a lengthy list) is that government is 'representative', then
there is no justification at all -- since I have just shown, and I've yet to be
proven wrong, that government most assuredly does not represent me. If you're
clever enough to have turned on a computer and found this page, it almost
certainly doesn't represent you, either. Before you leap to your word processor
and tell me that it does -- think for a moment. Can you honestly, truly,
without hesitation claim that there is not one decision made by your
'representatives' that you would not have made yourself? Not one law passed, in
your name, using your money, that you consider unjust or unnecessary?
Not one
action taken by your 'representatives' that you would not consider wholly
unrepresentative of what you believe?
If so -- I recommend a short but ultimately enjoyable stay
at the Kevorkian Clinic. You are, to be blunt, too stupid to live. The atoms
which compose you can be put to better use. Thank you for playing.
Is there such a thing as an acceptable amount of tyranny? Of
course not.
So then. Resolved: All of us, to varying extents, spend part
of our lives living under a tyrannical government that does not represent us,
and cannot be reformed so that it does -- for there is no such thing as 'good
government'. The very nature of government is tyrannical -- government is
predicated on the thesis that some people have a right to tell other people how
to live their lives. Call it 'the divine right of Kings' or call it 'the will
of the people' -- it all boils down to some people telling other people how to
live, and killing them if they do not obey.
And if you vote -- if you participate in the great con-game
that is democracy -- you are part of the problem.
Just say no.
Related videos:
* The Truth About Voting (Video)
* Keith Preston & Jeremy Weiland of ARV/ATS interviewed by BBC Persia
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* The Truth About Voting (Video)
* Keith Preston & Jeremy Weiland of ARV/ATS interviewed by BBC Persia
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* Facebook: National-Anarchist
Movement (N-AM)