Yeah, it took me a LONG time to read this book.
The irony is it is an easy, short-chaptered read. So one would think one would be able to rush through it. However, the content and depth of the book makes one inclined to take one’s time to absorb and subsequently (and hopefully) appreciate the premise and point of the book.
The premise of the book is that consensual crimes – or those considered to be consensual crimes- put a pointless and needless drain on society, because one cannot legislate morality. McWilliams points this out throughout the book; this is not to say that there are crimes that are not harmful, to individuals and broadly, to society. Hence, the genesis of religious factions and politicians to annihilate the “crime-in-question.” Yet, even in the example of cigarette smoking, prostitution and illegal drugs, one must also starkly see that there is also a hypocrisy to these socially-considered consensual crimes. Yes, we all know (especially now) that smoking is bad for you. Yet, and at every attempt to completely annihilate it, it does not make it go away. Why? Because of personal choice, underground access, and someone, even with government ‘blessing’ profits off the consensual crime.
Yet, the bigger danger here as McWilliams points out, IS the encroachment to our individual and broadly, our collective freedom every time someone want to annihilate what it considers to be a consensual crime. First, who determines what the crime is, the degree of same, finally, who enforces it, and ultimately, does criminalization, prosecution, enforcement eliminate (annihilate) the crime in question? McWilliams’s chapter on this with the religious and political (left/right) bents on these is irreparably stark. Further, in the prosecution these alleged crimes – again, under the presumption of innocence- one loses one’s home, income, livelihood, and ability to keep oneself going as one can/tries to prove one’s innocence. Add a conviction, and one then and henceforth, cannot start over again, even after serving one’s time! So, you’ve lost everything before the conviction and now cannot start over post-conviction – having served one’s time, as once one is a convicted felon, you can’t get a (good) job, an apartment, nor vote! What then, is one to do to live? You turn to crime to survive and feed the beast once more.
The encroachment deepens when religious and political (left/right) try to impose, which is what they’re actually doing with religious factions wagging the political wheels its ideal/standard of morality on the rest of society. The chapter on the origin of the nuclear family is also telling to this end when one considers the historical basis for it, with the idealized American standard. These factions (conveniently) forget that the United States separated church and state for a reason. They have forgotten or disregard the history behind this tenet, for lack of a better word. The tenet is that no one religion, and subsequently ideology is to take possession of the country when the pivot point is (still) for citizens to be able to do what they please, of course with the limitation that what they please does not infringe upon the right of others to in general, pursue the ‘same’ thing (“life, liberty and the pursuit so happiness”). Yet, factions wish to limit liberty to suit its interests, standards, and subsequently determine what (and how) happiness is to ‘supposed to be.’ However, no one is to question, let alone, curtail that imposition, because then, the presumption on the part of the adherent is the questioning and curtailment is against God. No, it’s not against God: factions want to determine, enforce and ultimately control what others can do to suit their interest; induce a global and narrow comfort zone … in a country that has fought on many levels and times thus far, to preserve freedom, which includes the freedom to choose. These fame factions also forget that they are not in a position to rule which is their quiet objective, but intentionally, via the Bill of Rights and the United Stated Constitution, to serve! There is a difference between the two, and here is the warning, lesson, hope and resolution in McWilliams’ book.
The people have forgotten their history, what their country was founded upon, with the fact that factions cannot and do not have power nor keep same without following. McWilliams makes the valid point that sadly, politicians come to, and stay in power by what they feel/gauge their constituency wants. It is a double-edged sword as it is career-dangerous to be out-of-touch with what one’s constituency wants. However, it is another matter in that what the constituency wants is diametrically opposed to the Bill of Rights and United States Constitution, the latter of which each representative, irrespective of the level of government swears to uphold! People need to keep this in mind and also be mindful of what they want does have consequences. I love McWilliams’ chapter on Education which goes into this. It’s a brief chapter, yet it reminds the reader what he/she learned in history class, and why there is a reason for conscious choice as opposed to just and only top-down given ‘choice;” propaganda. What people fail to realize is that when you demonize and subsequently try to eliminate who(ever) you feel you do not like, there will come a time when that same authority that you depend upon to uphold what you feel is freedom, will, and can also come to get you:
In Germany, they came first for the Communists, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Communist. Then, they came for the Jews, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then, they came for the trade unionists, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist. Then, they came for the Catholics, and I didn’t speak up because I was a Protestant. Then, they came for me, and by that time, no one was left to speak up. – Martin Niemoeller. Page 756
… and if that isn’t enough for consideration and reflection:
Freedom is not a luxury that we can indulge in when at last we have security and prosperity and enlightenment; it is rather, antecedent to all these, for without it, we can have neither security nor prosperity nor enlightenment. – Henry Steels Commager. Page 767
Liberty trains for liberty. Responsibility is the first step in responsibility. W.E.B. DeBois. Page 768
A man is either free or not. There cannot be any apprenticeship for freedom. Imamu Amiri Baraka. Page 768
If there is anything a public servant hates to do it’s something for the public. Elbert Hubbard. Page 768
The war for freedom is never truly won because the price of freedom is constant vigilance over ourselves and over our government. Eleanor Roosevelt. Page 769
This government is ours whether it be local, county, State or Federal. It doesn’t belong to anyone but the people of America. Don’t treat it as an impersonal thing; don’t treat it as something to sneer at; treat is as something that belongs to you. – Harry L. Hopkins. Page 771
When liberty is taken away by force it can be restored by force. When it is relinquished voluntarily by default, it can never be recovered. – Dorothy Thompson. Page 771
Overall and still, a cautionary tale, that is, if we, the people are aware of what our responsibilities are with the consequences of our choices. It’s a big book, but worth the considerate read on so many levels.