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The world’s least-free country
Backwoods Home Magazine ^ | Sept/Oct 2002 | John Silveira

Posted on 08/28/2002 4:44:33 AM PDT by watcher1

Here’s a quiz: Which is the freest country on earth? The answer’s easy. It’s the United States. Ask anyone. And why are we the freest? Not because we’re the richest. Long before we became the world’s richest nation we still regarded ourselves as the freest, and millions flocked to our shores to enjoy that freedom. The reasons we are free are: First, because of the philosophical basis upon which this country was founded. It is assumed that individuals have rights, e.g., free speech, the right to bear arms, the right of a jury trial before our peers should the government try to imprison us, seize our property, or deprive us of our lives, etc. Second, we have a Constitution that limits the powers of a central government to intrude into our lives.

And third, our rights have been enshrined in the First 10 Amendments to our Constitution.

Many other countries, like England and Canada, also have their own Bill of Rights, but those rights are at the pleasure of the government. It says so right in their laws. So they are not “unalienable” rights. Only our country, in all of history, was founded on the assumption that the individual has rights that exist apart from the government and not at its pleasure. Then, in 1868, the Constitution was amended to say that even the states cannot violate our unalienable rights. Pretty powerful stuff. These things form the basis of our freedom and are the reasons why the United States is the freest country on earth.

So if we can identify the freest country, can we also identify that which is the least free? I’ve tried to find a qualitative way to make that determination, but it’s difficult, because no country has a constitution that guarantees tyranny. Even the constitutions of the old Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China read as if those countries were free. You’d never have guessed that what happened under Stalin and Mao could have happened, just from reading those documents. (Of course, you’d never have guessed we once enslaved a huge portion of our own citizens or screwed the Indians out of a large portion of a continent by reading our Constitution. But that’s another story.)

What I’m getting at is it’s hard to determine qualitatively which is the least free country on earth. So I decided to see if there is a quantitative way to measure it. I found two. First, the country with the most laws would be a candidate for that which is least free. Laws regulate people, so the country which is the least free would surely regulate its people the most. Second, the country with the greatest percentage of its population in jail would also be a candidate for the least free, for obvious reasons. And, if, by chance, some country not only had the most laws but also had the largest percentage of its own population behind bars, we’d at least have a candidate for the least free country on the planet.

So which country has the most laws regulating its citizenry? After looking high and low I discovered that the country with the most laws—not just today, but in all of history is...geez Louise, it’s the United States. We not only have the most laws in all of history, but we also turn out more new laws and regulations to manage our people every single year than most countries turn out in decades.

How can it be that the world’s freest country needs more laws to tell its people what to do than the Soviet Union, Red China, Nazi Germany, or any two-bit banana republic dictatorship? And it’s not like we’ve always had so many laws. Most of them are new. In 1814, when President Madison and the Congress fled Washington, DC, ahead of the invading English troops bent on arson, they took the papers of the federal government with them. It was easy. They loaded all the laws and regulations into a few boxes and left. This was all the federal government had generated to regulate us in the first 38 years of our existence. Today, Congress and anonymous bureaucrats generate more laws and regulations than that in minutes.

Maybe we should consider the other criterion. Which country imprisons the highest percentage of its own citizens? Let’s see, Russia’s up there. And so is the Union of South Africa. And there are some little potentates as we see in Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. Hmm, but who leads the list. On, no! Folks, you’re not going to like this. It’s...it’s...the United States, again, heading the list of least free countries. The prime reason is the War on Drugs, the war waged against our country’s own citizens “for their own good.”

When I presented my results to others, some said if you obey the laws, you have nothing to worry about and you’ll still be free. I pointed out that that’s the case in every country. Toe the line and you won’t get in trouble. If the women in Afghanistan wore their burkas and didn’t drive or get an education, then by that definition they could still be free. I also pointed out that Jews in Nazi Germany, blacks in the postbellum South, and many American Indians did toe the line and tried to be good citizens but they still got screwed. So obeying the law doesn’t guarantee freedom.

Another said, despite all our laws, we have safeguards in that we have a jury system and that those laws are filtered through juries. I pointed out that more and more agencies regulate us without juries. E.g., the IRS, family courts, OSHA, the EPA, etc. don’t allow juries. And where juries are allowed the courts exclude people who realize they can nullify bad laws. This is hardly a recipe for freedom.

So, somehow, I have arrived at a paradox. What, on paper, would appear to be the freest society in the world appears, in practice, to be among the most oppressive.
Does this bother anyone besides me?


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: freedom
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Yes, it bothers me! Any comments before this gets pulled?
1 posted on 08/28/2002 4:44:33 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: STD
Freedom bump
2 posted on 08/28/2002 4:45:29 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1
Why would this get pulled, it makes sense. However most 'un-free' countries have an instant death penatly unlike USA.

I also find many of our laws are to produce quality of life and law and order so to speak.

Yes there are some bad and downright stupid laws but many of them make sense.

3 posted on 08/28/2002 4:57:53 AM PDT by alisasny
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To: alisasny
Posts critical of the status quo seem to have a short life on FR lately
4 posted on 08/28/2002 5:04:28 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1
I can think of any number of nations the writer should consider living in before talking about how "un-free" we are. Cuba, North Korea, and Iraq leap to mind.

One of the major differences: In those places you can't even talk about how un-free the nation is, let alone publish your comments or try to do anything about it.

-Eric

5 posted on 08/28/2002 5:06:52 AM PDT by E Rocc
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To: alisasny
Corruptisima republica plurimae leges.
[The more corrupt a republic, the more laws.]
-- Tacitus, Annals III 27
6 posted on 08/28/2002 5:07:00 AM PDT by SkyRat
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To: watcher1
We have plenty of personal freedom. Good thing we have enough politically correct laws to keep those freedoms in check. (/sarcasm)
7 posted on 08/28/2002 5:07:11 AM PDT by JoeSixPack1
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To: watcher1
One difference, as pointed out to me by a friend from Venezuela, is that other countries' laws state what the people can do.

Here, we're told what we cannot do.

8 posted on 08/28/2002 5:12:15 AM PDT by Marauder
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To: watcher1
You have a strange mindset. We have a legislative branch at both the Federal and State government level. Freedom within our nation has always had limitations based on moral priciples. We'd have sheer chaos with unbridled freedom.

I always like the Stop light analogy. Take all the Stop lights down in your city and see what happens!!!

Sac

9 posted on 08/28/2002 5:12:38 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: watcher1
Try living in Cuba or North Korea, then post such mindless drivel.
10 posted on 08/28/2002 5:14:08 AM PDT by Moby Grape
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To: E Rocc
I can think of any number of nations the writer should consider living in before talking about how "un-free" we are. Cuba, North Korea, and Iraq leap to mind

Comparing the USA to north korea or iraq isn't fair.
I think we should compare ourselves to how we were ( say 50 or 100 years ago) to how we are now.

All our freedoms have been eroded and continue to be eroded with no end in sight.

11 posted on 08/28/2002 5:14:40 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1
Yes. Somehow all that has transpired to enslave us, subsequent to the intelligent actions on the part of our founding fathers, must be eradicated.

The only way I can see to do that is to have a massive reenactment of the Boston Tea Party. However, it shouldn't be bales of tea thrown into the harbor; rather it should be the members of both houses of congress with few exceptions.

Blanket amnesty programs for illegal aliens lards the voting ranks (thereby diluting our ranks) with grateful, uneducated fools who wouldn't know how to go about changing their oppresive countries, so they come here to aid those bent on enslaving us.

Rushmo said a few months ago that the serfs in Merrie Olde England were taxed by their lords at a much smaller rate than we are to pay for this burgeoning elite political and bureaucratic class. We know we need to do something, but perhaps are waiting for that patriot to rise up and found the political party that will drive a wedge between the existing two thereby syphoning off the votes that are needed to take over.

12 posted on 08/28/2002 5:14:59 AM PDT by elcaudillo
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To: Impeach the Boy
Try living in Cuba or North Korea, then post such mindless drivel.

Are you for real? See my #11

13 posted on 08/28/2002 5:16:49 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1
the country with the most laws—not just today, but in all of history is...geez Louise, it’s the United States

And by coincidence, we are also the country with the most lawyers, many of them making the laws.

---

Flyer

14 posted on 08/28/2002 5:19:37 AM PDT by Flyer
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To: watcher1
The basis for a significant fraction of our laws is "fairness". The trouble is, no matter how many laws are passed, outcomes always seem to come out skewed (see the concurrent thread: Merit-Based Scholarships Critiqued) so we must pass more laws to assure equal outcomes for all.
15 posted on 08/28/2002 5:19:57 AM PDT by FairWitness
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To: FairWitness
We don't need more laws. We need Less laws
16 posted on 08/28/2002 5:21:58 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1; Prodigal Daughter; Thinkin' Gal; Jeremiah Jr; babylonian; Fred Mertz; ...
>Yes, it bothers me! Any comments before this gets pulled?

If it is truly a free country, why would this get pulled?

17 posted on 08/28/2002 5:22:56 AM PDT by 2sheep
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To: watcher1
You may have missed the (invisible) sarcasm tag at the end of my post.
18 posted on 08/28/2002 5:23:18 AM PDT by FairWitness
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To: 2sheep
why would this get pulled?

LOL

19 posted on 08/28/2002 5:23:55 AM PDT by watcher1
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To: watcher1
We not only have the most laws in all of history, but we also turn out more new laws and regulations

I agree there are far too many laws, but would suggest that a lot of that verbiage exists for the sake of clarity, that is, to comply with the constitutional requirements that laws not be vague, not violate due process, etc. In most other countries, I doubt that's a big concern.

20 posted on 08/28/2002 5:26:06 AM PDT by mountaineer
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