Your Tax
Dollars at
Work
By
Llewellyn H.
Rockwell,
Jr.
28/07/08 "Lew
Rockwell"
-- - Frédéric
Bastiat
famously
observed
that the
State costs
us in ways
we can see
and ways we
cannot see.
Economists
tend to
focus on the
second type
because they
elude public
perceptions.
What
inventions
are we
denied
because of
regulations?
What might
have been
done with
the
resources
that are
diverted in
taxes or
higher
prices due
to
protectionism?
The answers
demonstrate
that,
because of
intervention,
we are worse
off than we
know.
Sometimes,
however, we
should also
look at the
potentially
seen costs
of the
State, if
only because
the State
doesn’t want
us to see
those
either.
These are
the direct
destructions
caused by
some State
activity,
most
especially
war. Seeing
war in
photographs
changes
things. It
causes us to
observe the
State’s war
and what it
is doing to
people: us
and them.
This is why
the State
doesn’t want
pictures of
US wounded
or dead
circulating
in public.
The media
mostly obey.
Did you ever
notice that?
You are
being shown
only what
the
government
wants you to
see. The
State does
not want you
to see dead
soldiers or
suffering
families of
those shot
and killed.
Instead the
State wants
you to
believe that
the Iraq War
is about
patriotism,
9/11,
national
pride, the
campaign to
make you
safer, the
administering
of justice,
manhood and
courage, and
all the rest
of the
cover-ups
for what war
really is:
murder and
destruction
paid for by
you and me
and made
legal solely
because it
is the State
and not
someone else
doing it.
Take a
picture of
dead
soldier, or
the child of
a killed
Iraqi
family,
broadcast it
on your
blog, and
what
happens?
Photo
journalist
Zoriah
Miller has
found out.
He was
kicked out
of his
"embed,"
which is the
name for the
pack of
journalists
permitted to
travel with
a group of
soldiers and
report what
those in
command want
reported.
Afterwards,
he was
prohibited
from
traveling in
any
Marine-patrolled
area of
Iraq. The
military
command
worked to
get him
kicked out
of the
country
altogether.
Yes, it all
seems very
pre-modern
and
primitive,
and contrary
to all our
pieties
about the
free flow of
information,
the first
amendment
and all
that. But
from the
government’s
point of
view, it is
running the
war, and it
should
control what
people know
about it to
the same
extent it
controls
everything
else about
the war. As
a result,
after 4,000
dead
soldiers,
countless
hundreds of
thousands of
Iraqi dead,
millions of
wounded on
all sides,
there are
only a
handful of
bloody
pictures to
be found
anywhere.
Amazing
isn’t it,
just how
effective
the State
can actually
be when it
cares
intensely
about
something?
And why does
it care so
much? One
reason, they
say, is that
photos
provide the
enemy with
information
about the
effectiveness
of their
attack and
the
response. In
effect,
that’s like
claiming
that
anything but
approved
propaganda
amounts to
subversion
and treason.
In any case,
we can be
pretty darn
sure that
when the
enemy makes
a hit, the
enemy knows
about it.
Another
claim – and
actually
they have
said the
same thing
from World
War I until
the present
day – their
main
interest is
in
protecting
the families
of the dead
from shock,
privacy
violation,
and
humiliation.
Maybe that
sounds
plausible,
but another
way to look
at it is
that the
State is
most
especially
interested
in
continuing
to foster
the myth
that these
kids are
dying for
their
country, and
there are no
more
important
people to
convince of
that than
the parents
of the dead.
But
actually,
only the
most naïve
could
possibly
believe that
this is what
the rules
are wholly
about. They
want to
protect the
rest of us
from
reality. The
Vietnam war
lost massive
support at
home when
the military
loosened up
on
photojournalism.
The handful
of pictures
we have from
World War II
all date
from a
period after
FDR too
bowed to
public
pressure.
At one
level, it is
pathetic
that we need
pictures to
underscore
what war is
all about.
But since
the ancient
world, the
masses at
large have
proven
susceptible
to believing
every myth
about the
grandeur and
glory of
war. We
imagine that
we as a
people are
going abroad
to bring
justice,
truth, and
liberty to
some
unenlightened
and
threatening
foreign
tribe. This
has been the
constant
theme since
the ancient
world.
Then we see
the
pictures. It
turns out
that the
unenlightened
tribe is a
collection
of
individuals
pretty much
like us.
They are
made of
flesh and
blood, have
families,
worship God,
and struggle
with pretty
much the
same issues
that all
people
everywhere
have always
struggled
with. There
is no great
glory in
killing
them, nor in
being killed
by them.
But the
State says
that
sometimes
war is
necessary.
If our
masters
really
believe
that, why
hide its
costs? Let
us see
precisely
what we are
getting into
here. If it
is
justified,
let us see
why and how,
and let us
observe what
we are
giving up in
exchange for
the just
war.
The truth is
that the
State must
hide not
only its
wars but all
of its
activities.
It hides its
inflation.
It hides the
effects of
its taxation
and its
protectionism.
It fears
anyone who
draws the
cause-and-effect
connection
between its
activities
and their
deleterious
consequences
for the rest
of us. It is
the most
destructive
force in our
world.
Because that
truth is so
momentous,
the State
does
everything
possible to
hide the
smallest
drop of
blood.
The State
wants us to
all go on
with our
lives,
believing
it, loving
it, and
seeing only
the pictures
it wants us
to see.
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com, and author of Speaking of Liberty.
Copyright © 2008 LewRockwell.com
