by Joel Barret
A tragedy has occurred on Patriots
Day today in Boston, with two bombs exploding at the finish line of the Boston
Marathon and another at the JFK Library. The terrible carnage at the scene is
not unlike what the colonists experienced as they picked up the dead and
wounded along the Battle Road in the hours after the opening shots of the
Revolutionary War when British forces fired on the colonial militia at
Lexington, Mass before proceeding to Concord on a mission to confiscate the people's
guns.
It is unknown who the perpetrators
were, but you can be sure the NRA and Tea Party will be blamed, just as they
were in the hours following the Sandy Hook, Colorado Theater, Fort
Hood and Phoenix massacres. Progressives in the media, government and
academia, and garden variety group-thinkers love to parrot the inane arguments
that private firearms ownership is the source of violence in America and gun
bans will prevent criminals from acquiring and using guns to commit crimes.
They are also itching to grab hold of any evidence, however thin or specious,
to generalize a perception of the typical gun owner as both a moron and part of
a sleeper cell.
The great irony in these
accusations is that the Boston Bombing is another example of how the insurgent’s
weapon of choice is not a gun, but a bomb, as all modern insurgencies have
shown. Despite all the chest-thumping by gun advocates about the Second
Amendment’s purpose in empowering the people to revolution if necessary,
civilian gun ownership, training, and actual use are uniformly defensive, and
patriotic respect for police and military is a distinguishing factor among
conservatives. In any case, a fundamental principle of the firearms community
is that guns are not to be used for intimidating people into compliance with
any particular political view. The Second Amendment exists to protect the
First. Any fear that gun ownership will actually foment a rebellion is really a
straw argument designed to garner support for policies that have less to do
with guns, than control.
But if it can actually be shown that
someone even remotely associated with the NRA, Republican Party, Tea Party, or
the neighbor of a distant relative of Ron Paul, this would be a liberal's wet
dream.
This time, it's perhaps
understandable why associations to the gun rights or limited government
community would be drawn: this year April 15th is also the third Monday in
April, which means that Tax Day coincides with Patriots Day. In view of the
current discontent over federal tax policy and the progressive efforts to trade
in the values of the American Revolution for those of the French Revolution,
the timing couldn’t be more obvious.
In fact, President Obama’s wholesale
rejection of both the proper duties and proper limits of office is not
altogether different from the complaints the Founders lodged at King George III
in the Declaration of Independence. Obama's administration is overreaching with
limitless expansion of an omnivorous government bureaucracy, draconian
regulations, confiscatory taxation and flagrant disregard for the natural
rights of the people and longstanding traditions of limited government. He is
appointing judges who do not respect the Constitution, ambassadors who do not
place American interests first, and hordes of unaccountable “czars” to regulate
everything under the sun. His administration refused to take proper measures to
protect our embassies and consulates abroad, then said “who cares.” He has
undermined military morale and readiness, and is permitting invasion across
open borders by criminals and migrants who seek the benefits of American
society without its responsibilities or loyalties. Obama may play fast and
loose with language and the truth, but he is keeping his promise to
"fundamentally transform this country."
In fact, the timing of the Boston Bombing may be a little too
obvious… I seriously doubt any patriotic, limited government advocate would be
so stupid as to sully this day by perpetrating this evil, terrorist act,
although every movement has its nutcases. But unlike the progressive movement,
which curiously has strong sympathy for Islamic Fundamentalists and Occupy Wall Street
rioters, conservatives consistently repudiate any violent extremists. It's as
likely, or more so, that the perpetrators were Fascist Islamists, anarchists, or that this is a false flag event to cast blame on all
gun owners and advocates of limited government. Remember, the Tea Party Rallies
were all peaceful events with zero incidence of criminal activity, while the
Occupy Wall Street protests were rife with violent crime, including robbery,
rape and murder.
To caricature the other side with
hasty generalizations and irresponsible exaggerations is something we have come
to expect as a cornerstone of progressive rhetoric. How else could they label
the Tea Party and other advocates of limited government as anarchists who want
no government at all? What’s even more revealing is how the militant Occupy Wall
Street movement has morphed from a populist phenomenon, demanding more
socialist goodies from the state and greater regulatory control over business,
into an anarchist underground brooding for a revolution that would topple the
government entirely. It’s rather reminiscent of the work of admitted domestic
terrorist, America-hating socialist reformer and longtime Obama friend and
fundraiser, Bill Ayers. Saul Alinsky would be proud.
But don’t underestimate the
conservative movement’s ability to self-destruct. It wasn't so long ago when
millions of "staunch conservatives" did their level best to re-elect
Obama by refusing any support for Romney. Warnings abounded that gun control
would be a major priority for Obama's second term, and whaddya know, it is --
along with a litany of odious encroachments by the fascists who run the
Nanny State.
Conservatives, you missed your
chance at the ballot box in November, 2012. Don't let foolish antics destroy
our chances of winning back the Senate in 2014. We need that to prevent
approval of international treaties that restrict our rights at home.
In reflecting on the events of April
19th, 1775, John Adams recalled the carnage he
beheld walking the length of the Battle Road the following day, saying, “O
Posterity! You will never know what it cost the present generation to preserve
your freedom. I hope you will make good use of it. If you do not, I shall
repent in heaven that ever I took half the pains to preserve it.”
The Founding Generation fought the
War of Independence so that subsequent generations of Americans wouldn’t have
to. They gave us a republic, if we can keep it. When asked when the
Revolutionary War began, Adams said that although the first shots were fired
April 19th, 1775 at Lexington and Concord, it was won years before
then in the hearts and minds of the American Colonists, in their resolve to
live free.
The battle to rebuild our nation’s
foundations in liberty and limited government is an urgent one, but it will not
be won in a day. And yet, it can be lost in a day if we allow the values of the
founding to be sullied in popular perception by false association with domestic
terrorists who do not represent us. It took a century to lose this country, and
it will take time to win back. We must do the hard work of bringing clear
arguments for liberty and limited government to the American people. Change
must occur through the electoral process, or we’ll have no hope of rescuing our
nation. If it comes down to a violent revolution, we’ve already lost.
Let us honor those who fought so
long ago to secure for us the blessings of liberty, as well as those who were
hurt by the Boston Bombing, by recognizing that the road ahead will not be a
sprint, but a marathon.