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1776 vs. 9/11 [September 10, 2008]
Non-actions also have consequences. Inspired by Patrick Henry's Stamp Act Resolves in 1765, the American colonies
rallied together in a common cause to oppose the British Parliament's authority
to impose taxes, and to retain their right of self-governance. The Stamp Act was
repealed exactly a year later, triggering a political form of the law of
diminishing returns: As the Crown enacted more and more controls and regulations
on the colonies, the colonies' opposition stiffened and grew more intransigent
in direct proportion to the severity of Crown actions. The result was the American Revolution, the Crown's loss of all control, and
the founding of the freest country in history, a country proud of its origins
and of its existence. The epochal event demonstrated the power of ideas. It was
the triumph of reason over force. Fast-forward two hundred and twenty-five years to 9/11. When America was
attacked by Islamists, nothing so radical as a retaliatory declaration of war
against them ensued. Instead, the U.S. dragged its feet for a year before taking
action against the messengers of the states that sponsored the attacks. Seeing that the U.S. is a paper tiger, a giant reluctant to extinguish its
enemies because it was sensitive to "world opinion," the Islamists have only
continued their physical assaults. Seeing also that especially the U.S. has
little confidence in its own value, they have initiated an accelerated cultural
jihad within its borders, resulting in concessions and capitulations to the
primitivism of Islamic law and custom in all walks of American life, from Wall
Street to the classroom to the editorial offices of newspapers and book
publishers. The Islamists thought: "If the infidels doubt the value of their vaunted
institutions of liberty, freedom of speech, and secular government, if they no
longer believe in them, then they should and will submit to an all-encompassing
Islam, which requires unquestioning belief and permits no doubts." This agonizing, exhausting, drawn-out state of affairs demonstrates the
impotence of abandoning ideas in favor of value-negating pragmatism, which in
turn makes possible the triumph of evil and force over reason. When men reduce their virtues to the approximate, then evil acquires the
force of an absolute, when loyalty to an unyielding purpose is dropped by
the virtuous, it's picked up by scoundrels - and you get the indecent
spectacle of a cringing, bargaining, traitorous good and a self-righteously
uncompromising evil. So wrote Ayn Rand in Galt's speech in her novel, Atlas Shrugged. Is
this not a precise description of our situation today? Do not the Islamists seem
to have the force of an absolute, loyal to an unyielding purpose - which is the
conquest, subservience, and dhimmitude of the West - and is not our political
leadership cringing, bargaining and traitorous in the face of the unmitigated,
murderous evil their cowardice and pragmatism have unleashed on us and exposed
us to indefinitely? Our political leadership cannot be said to have any virtues
worth mentioning, and it no longer even deals in the fuzzy realm of the
approximate. Some readers of my Sparrowhawk novels have claimed that the heroes in the
series are incredible or unbelievable. My answer is that they are more credible
and believable than what I have seen pass for political heroes today, which is
one reason why I created them. Many, many more readers concur with my estimate
of them. The Founders existed, they acted, and blessed us with their ideas,
convictions, and the courage to stand by them. To them, nothing less than
victory was practical or moral. In literature they had never been depicted with any kind of justice. That was
another reason I wrote the series. So, I repeat here what I wrote in the
acknowledgments in Book One: Jack Frake: "I owe a debt of thanks to the
Founders for having given me something worth writing about, and a country in
which to write it." Edward Cline is the author the Sparrowhawk series of novels set in England and Virginia during the Revolutionary period, the detective novel First Prize, the suspense novel Whisper the Guns and of numerous other published articles, book reviews and essays.
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