Conflicts
“I John Brown an now
quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but
with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very
much bloodshed it might be done.”
In 1859 John Brown and a score or so of followers seized the
armory at Harper’s Ferry with the idea of starting a revolt among slaves in Virginia. It was a foolhardy and
pointless venture from the first. It had almost no chance of success, and if it
had succeeded, it would have led to a brutal suppression of the slaves Brown
wanted to help and a hardening of the
opinions of those in the slave states against any thought of ending
slavery. Yet, so inflamed were passions
in the country that many sensible people supported Brown’s attempt without
regard to any concern for its practicality, and various mature and serious abolitionists
helped fund it. Many people seemingly were ready for something to be done about
slavery, even something hopeless and quixotic. Less than two years later Brown’s
prophecy came true with the divided nation at war with itself in the bloodiest
conflict in American history.
A few weeks ago, a crusty old rancher in Nevada defied
federal bureaucrats who wanted to remove his cattle from a piece of federal
land. He was in arrears on his rent and legally had no leg to stand on. Yet people
all around the country rallied behind the old man, seemingly ready for someone
to do something about the federal authorities’ encroachment on people and their
rights, even if he was in the wrong in his particular fight. That tells us
something important.
We are nowhere near the conditions of the 1850’s, and there
is no present danger of armed conflict
within our society. There are reasons
to be concerned however. The divisions within the country are deep and
raw, and the Obama administration has made them worse by its actions. Many of those
who oppose his administration do so fundamentally and with deep concern for
what is being done to their country and their freedoms. More and more people
are calling the present political situation a war, only metaphorically to be sure, but a war. And one
can hear serious, sober people musing about the possibility of citizens someday
having to resort to armed resistance against the government, not yet in any
concrete way but not in a purely fanciful one either.
People on the left should be especially concerned. The
present conflict in the country is nothing like the old disputes between labor
and management where reasonable people on both sides knew they needed each
other. Now many in the opposition view the welfare and bureaucratic constituencies
of those now in power as a pure burden they would be better off without, and as
a pragmatic matter are mainly correct to do so.
They don’t need those in those constituencies in any important way while
those in those constituencies need the productive people (a majority
of whom are in the opposition) to survive.
Prudent leftists would at all costs want to keep this from dawning
on too many of those being fleeced and herded - taking
their victims for what they can and kicking them around as much as they can without
making them disturbed enough to do something about it. The great risk at
present for the left is that a large number of the victims are starting to
notice and are becoming significantly bothered.
So such prudent leftists might suggest
to Obama to call off the regulators,
tell all the commissars and commandos manqué
in the various agencies to stand down and disband, and ease off in general. They might hope for the election of a Republican of the
moderate sort in 2016 to help things simmer down. Of course one cannot know how many leftists
are prudent. Prudence seems to be in short supply among our present rulers.
We should all hope things can simmer down. The problems of
this nation are real and serious, but
they need to be settled peaceably. Even whiffs of other possibilities are
worrisome.
Labels: Civil War, John Brown, Obama, politics
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