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VERBOTENLAND - RULING OF AMERICA
DADI Organization ^
| Balint Vazsonyi
Posted on 06/20/2002 7:35:10 AM PDT by NYer
Ruling of America
By Balint Vazsonyi
Jeanne Kirkpatrick, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in the Reagan administration, is in trouble with the law. Apparently, she left her poodle in her automobile while going into a shop. Worse still, she did so despite a sign posted right where she had parked the car. It reads: "Pets Die in Hot Cars! It's Against the Law. If You See It, Report It! Call 911 Immediately."
Forty years ago, when I arrived on these shores, Americans regularly poked fun at Germany's proclivity for prohibiting all manner of normal human activity -- from walking on grass to taking pictures near a railway line -- giving rise to a society permanently ensconced in a straitjacket of excessive legislation. Use of the actual German word verboten (forbidden) signified the disagreement Americans had with the idea of regulating the daylight out of human conduct.
That was then.
Currently, America is adopting more and more of the thoroughly alien political philosophy that holds people cannot be permitted to act on their free volition, or else their base urges and thoughtless egotism will frustrate construction of the perfect world.
Actually, the miracle we call America has brought forth a breed of human being noted for its desire to do the right thing because common decency and common sense combine to guide common standards of conduct. As anxiety about meeting basic needs subsided, so each generation rose higher on the ladder of civilization, with genuine and lasting results.
Coercion and the threat of punishment produce the opposite, as they deprive people of individual discretion. Resentment builds, counting the hours, then minutes, until tyranny is brought down at last.
That is the story of Germany, as well as of France, Russia, Spain, Italy. That is why the one-way traffic to America has continued for a very long time.
But now, the pestilence that turns the law from the greatest blessing into a hated tyrant has infested our land. Human interaction across a broad spectrum came to be forbidden in recent years, or regulated to the point where it amounts to a prohibition for all practical intents and purposes.
It is forbidden to call persons and things what they are. It's forbidden to disapprove of persons or of their conduct. It's forbidden to make or tell jokes if someone might find them offensive, and selected groups have been endowed with the right to declare anything offensive to their hearts' content. Punishment may be expulsion from school, loss of employment or financial ruin rather than prison, but punishment there will be.
It's forbidden to show up for a flight without identity documents, one of which must be issued by government and include a photograph. It's forbidden to go near a gate or to enter a public building without going through a metal detector. It's forbidden to sit in an airplane without the seat belt fastened when the seat belt sign is off. It's forbidden to disobey crew member instructions, and it is a federal crime to tamper with smoke detectors in the lavatory.
Because, of course, it's forbidden to smoke.
It's forbidden to operate a business with no wheelchair access. It's forbidden to hold a concert in an auditorium with no wheelchair access. It's forbidden to ask essential questions of a prospective employee. It's forbidden to enter into any employment agreement, however satisfactory to the parties, if it does not comply with the whims of government. It's forbidden to deny a sublease of your home to a person you consider undesirable. It's forbidden for a goose to eat a Kanab amber snail.
It's forbidden to use your own money for your own medical care the way you think is in your own best interest, after a certain age. It's forbidden to say things to or about women, or to touch them, at any age. Six-year-olds are now the object of the hysteria that has replaced nature's arrangements in the relationship of the sexes, and 6-year-olds are subject to government surveillance whether through the pretext of immunization or a school-to-work program. It's forbidden for parents to bring up their children as they believe it would be best for the children. It's forbidden to drive along Pennsylvania Avenue near the White House.
And, naturally, most any place, it's forbidden to smoke.
Smoking is the recurring theme because it has been the great test: Will Americans give up their liberties if the initial purpose appears to make sense and the strangulation is gradual?
We know the answer.
For sure, smoking is a health hazard. But that had little to do with the true purpose of the campaign.
For sure, all prohibitions begin with an honorable and desirable purpose. Seat belts save lives. Employment practices ought to be fair and equitable. It is great that our society can afford to build ramps everywhere and thus offer mobility to people confined to wheelchairs. Men should treat women with dignity and courtesy. (Also vice versa.)
And dogs are at risk in hot cars.
But in an American America, those were manners of conduct to be encouraged and cultivated, prompted by principle and pride, rewarded by life in a variety of ways. Now they have become the domain of commissars who claim to know how all the rest of us ought to behave. And they have captured and corrupted the law.
Remember the sign next to Mrs. Kirkpatrick's car? "Pets Die in Hot Cars! It's Against the Law. If You See It, Report It! Call 911 Immediately."
"Pets Die in Hot Cars!" Yes, we are in America. Someone cares about something and reminds fellow citizens.
"It's Against the Law." Oops! We have entered Verbotenland.
"If You See It, Report It!" Here is the precipice. Americans are now encouraged to inform on one another. And it starts early. Children are taught to inform on their friends and teachers -- and most of all on their parents.
In Hungary, I lived under two regimes that based their existences on that practice.
Are we certain we want America to go that way?
TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: america; freedom; legislation; politics
Now they have become the domain of commissars who claim to know how all the rest of us ought to behave. And they have captured and corrupted the law. Pass enough legislation and eventually we are all guilty of some crime!
1
posted on
06/20/2002 7:35:11 AM PDT
by
NYer
To: NYer
>>>>Pass enough legislation and eventually we are all guilty of some crime!<<<
In Verbotenland, everyone is guilty of something by design, it's only takes time to find what it is.
Kafka's nightmare, Stalin's dream. Coming to your neighborhood.
2
posted on
06/20/2002 7:56:14 AM PDT
by
DTA
To: NYer
Crapola. I don't care who it is. If you leave a pet in a locked car in the summer, you ought to be ticketed and fined at the very least.
3
posted on
06/20/2002 8:26:47 AM PDT
by
ArcLight
To: NYer
I presume these are local laws. I give thanks America is so far too large a nation to pass these German type rules into Federal Law ---- of course, this is before we get Departmennt of Homeland Security!
" Forty years ago, when I arrived on these shores, Americans regularly poked fun at Germany's proclivity for prohibiting all manner of normal human activity -- from walking on grass to taking pictures near a railway line -- giving rise to a society permanently ensconced in a straitjacket of excessive legislation. Use of the actual German word verboten (forbidden) signified the disagreement Americans had with the idea of regulating the daylight out of human conduct.
That was then.
Currently, America is adopting more and more of the thoroughly alien political philosophy that holds people cannot be permitted to act on their free volition,"
To: NYer
You don't need laws that prohibit the examples the author gives. It's impossible to codify the rules for proper behavior that children should have been brought up with naturally. And even if you didn't grow up in a good home, at least you should be able to learn those societal rules just with a little observation, a little commonsense, and a little concern for others.
Now everything has to become a court case or become legally defined. People dream up new rights everyday but forget all about their responsibilities. You need laws that prohibit crimes, not laws that regulate proper behavior. Good behavior comes from good societies with a proper understanding of their culture and heritage.
5
posted on
06/20/2002 8:28:47 AM PDT
by
Tancred
To: NYer
and PC coffee is probably the Saudi-owned chain Caribou Coffee, right? I presume that the Schwartz-owned Starbucks is VERBODEN! N'est pas?
To: ArcLight
So--come and get me! I leave my dog in the car nearly every day, down here in Texas, where we are known for hot weather. Somehow, the dog has survived more than 11 years of this "horrible treatment".
It may be hard for some people to believe, but responsible pet owners know how to be sure that their pet is safe. There is always cold water in the car for my dog, and I make sure that I am never away from the car for more than 5 minutes. With all four windows left open a few inches, the dog is perfectly safe.
7
posted on
06/20/2002 8:49:27 AM PDT
by
basil
To: ArcLight
If you leave a pet in a locked car in the summer, you ought to be ticketed and fined at the very least. Even if it is a mild day, the car is out of the sun, the windows are open enough to allow circulation and the owner is absent for so short a time period that heat death is impossible?
To: NYer
Balint knows whereof he speaks -- he escaped from Budapest after participating in the 1956 Hungarian uprising against the Russians.
He has "Been There, Done That," and has a lot more than a t-shirt to show for it. He has lived under both Nazi and Russian regimes, and knows the evils of totalitarianism
Also, Dr. Vazsonyi, a concert pianist and historian, is the author of "America's 30 Years War: Who Is Winning?" [I highly recommend reading this book!]. He is the director of the Center for the American Founding.
Well said, Dr. Vazsonyi. Well said!
9
posted on
06/20/2002 11:08:03 AM PDT
by
Taxman
To: NYer
Forgot to give you kudos for finding and posting this article. KUDOS!
10
posted on
06/20/2002 11:08:56 AM PDT
by
Taxman
To: NYer
Leaving your pet is fine for a few minutes, and in itself should not be criminal. Letting it die from the heat is another matter.
It's 112 degrees today here in Phoenix, and we are just entering the "dog/baby/grandma dies in hot car" season.
To: NYer
Most interesting of all is the admonition to use 911 to report an endangered puppy....
I'm all for dogs and for treating them properly, but 911 is intended to protect people, note - people, and it doesn't always do so good at that.
Do you really want to see the system tied up with do-gooders phoning in reports of panting dogs?
If it really ticks you off - break the window and hope the doggie does not bite.
12
posted on
06/20/2002 12:18:39 PM PDT
by
norton
To: DTA
What the *ell is Verbotenland? First of all, there's no such thing, second verboten (forbidden) is a adjetive and not a noun or pronoun
13
posted on
06/20/2002 12:37:26 PM PDT
by
Kaslin
To: NYer
we are At War now
do no Wrong, Nothing to fear
it's for The Children
To: Kaslin
What the *ell is Verbotenland? First of all, there's no such thing, second verboten (forbidden) is a adjetive and not a noun or pronoun Somehow I think your desire to be a language cop (or perhaps you're a lawyer) has prevented you from seeing the point
15
posted on
06/20/2002 1:36:47 PM PDT
by
saurus
To: NYer
This is a good article but it is by no means new and I recall reading it over a year ago right here on FR.
16
posted on
06/20/2002 6:13:54 PM PDT
by
boris
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