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Selfish
Disobedience
By Katie Kieffer
October 10, 2011
When
a majority of progressive slugs
call for thievery, I believe that a minority of “selfish” job creators
may
exercise Thoreau-style civil disobedience.
The
Occupy Wall Street protestors
setting up camp in Manhattan’s Financial District are not exercising
civil
disobedience. Rather, they are rousing hatred against an unprotected
minority:
The rich.
Henry
David Thoreau is an American
pioneer of civil disobedience. He refused to obey what he considered to
be an
unjust law—a “poll-tax.” This tax disenfranchised African American
voters and
Thoreau viewed it as an extension of slavery. Upon refusing to pay the
poll-tax, Thoreau was arrested and sent to jail until (to his chagrin)
his aunt
bailed him out after one night.
In
Thoreau’s essay “On the Duty of
Civil Disobedience,” he points out that a warped society will
perpetuate the
notion that a man is “selfish” if he genuinely and completely helps his
fellow
men, while declaring a manipulator to be a “benefactor and
philanthropist.”
Occupy
Wall Street protestors wave
signs like: “We are the 99%” and “Billionaires, your time is up” by
day, and
sleep on air mattresses in Zuccotti Park by night. They are essentially
asking
the government to steal from the rich. These protestors are brazen
manipulators
but the press hails them as progressives “seeking a voice” and
President Obama
says they represent the concerns of the American public.
Meanwhile,
the “selfish” one percent
comprehensively helps society: Selfish people make themselves
financially
independent and then they create jobs for everyone else.
Who
is the unprotected minority here?
Who is being attacked unjustly? The Occupy Wall Street Protestors are
rallying
against the wealthy capitalists and entrepreneurs who pay most of the
nation’s
taxes while they prance around in a park, sew sleeping bags and hold up
New
York traffic.
Thoreau-style
civil disobedience
occurs when a rational minority rises up and defends truth, not when an
emotional majority storms the public square. Writes Thoreau, “But a
government
in which the majority rule in all cases cannot be based on justice,
even as far
as men understand it. … Why has every man a conscience, then? I think
that we
should be men first, and subjects afterward.”
Thoreau
retreated to the woods. He
built his house with his own hands and became self-sufficient. He was
“desirous
of being a good neighbor” and he had no qualm about paying fees like
highway
taxes. He respected the founding fathers and the Constitution but he
abhorred
slavery. He agreed to go to jail rather than give up his belief that
all men
are free and equal. In short, Thoreau only justifies disobeying the
government
when one is following the dictates of one’s conscience, or natural law.
In
his Second Treatise of Civil
Government, the philosopher John Locke wrote that there is “a law of
nature …
which obliges every one” and “reason … is that law.” Both Locke and
Thoreau
maintained that when a government acts against natural law—when it
unjustly
seizes a man’s property either directly or via unjust taxes—civil
disobedience
is justifiable. Thoreau explicitly states that: “[The government] can
have no
pure right over my person and property but what I concede to it.”
The
protests in New York are marked by
an absence of natural law, which comes from reason. Occupy Wall Street
protestors are acting irrationally in attempting to overthrow the only
system,
namely capitalism, capable of generating the jobs and equal opportunity
they
claim to be fighting for.
The
current administration is
proposing a so-called jobs plan that will seize even more money from
the
rich—the “one percent” who take risks with their wealth and thereby
create jobs
and financial security for the “99 percent.”
Thoreau
believed that “action from
principle”—such as refusing to pay an unjust tax—is “essentially
revolutionary.” When Thoreau refused to support slavery with his tax
dollars he
didn’t protest in the streets, hold up traffic or organize mass
sleepovers in
public parks. He didn’t ask rich people to pay more taxes so he could
ride on
their coattails.
Thoreau
says that a single man who is
courageous enough to stand up against an unjust law is infinitely more
civil
than a majority that merely opines about freedom: “Moreover, any man
more right
than his neighbors, constitutes a majority of one already.”
Imagine
if one—just one—American
billionaire refused to pay the Buffet Tax if it is implemented? Or
refused to
pay the full 35 percent corporate income tax rate? What if Mark
Zuckerberg or
Bill Gates agreed to go to jail for one night on principle? Would not
this
behavior, where a “selfish” minority opposes an unjust law on rational
principle, be true civil disobedience?
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