Cato
Institute
Celebrating
Independence Day’s Principles
By
Roger Pilon
On
the 4th of July we celebrate our nation’s birth, announced to the
world some 228 years ago through a remarkable document: the
Declaration of Independence. In that document the Founders set forth
both the reasons that impelled them to independence and, more
important, the moral vision that has inspired us, and millions more
around the world, ever since. Individual liberty, secured by limited
government: that is its essence. Too often today, however, government
is not serving liberty but is at war with it, telling us that it
knows best, that it will decide for us.
When
the Founders spoke of liberty, they meant that each of us has a right
to plan and live his own life, as he thinks best, to pursue happiness
in his own way, by his own lights, provided that in doing so he
respect the equal rights of others to do the same. That basic idea is
captured nowhere more clearly than in Thomas Jefferson’s
magnificently simple phrase, “the pursuit of happiness.”
Jefferson wrote that all men are created equal. He then immediately
defined that equality by listing our rights to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness.
That
right “to pursue happiness,” which is nothing less than the
foundation of individual liberty, is key to understanding the
Declaration’s basic principle — and our modern problem.
Happiness, after all, is an individual, subjective notion. What makes
you happy is not necessarily what makes me happy. You like vanilla; I
like chocolate. That’s what makes life interesting. It would be a
dull world if our tastes were all the same. In a free society, we
have a right to practice whatever religion, pursue whatever job, and
buy whatever product we wish, as long as we respect the rights of
others in the process.
Yet
the more we ask government to do for us, the more we undermine that
vision. Every time government creates a new program “for our own
good,” it forces us all to a common vision of the good. Take Social
Security. Do you want to retire at 55? Sorry, too early. We’ve
decided that you can retire at 62, but at a reduced rate.
Do
you want the government to pay for your child’s education? Here’s
the school you have to use and the curriculum your child must study?
No thanks, you say, you’ll send your child to a private school
instead, where you have a choice of programs? You’ll still have to
pay for the public system.
You
say you’re dying of cancer, but you’ve heard of a new drug that
offers hope? Sorry, it takes on average 12 to 15 years for the Food
and Drug Administration to approve a new drug for sale. We wouldn’t
want you to take a chance on its being unsafe or inefficacious.
And
speaking of health care, government today restricts our medical
choices in countless ways, direct and indirect, which has led many to
call for a Canadian style, single-payer system. In education, at
least, we can opt out of the public system, even if we still have to
pay for it. In Canada, there is no opting out of the government
health care system, except by going to America. It’s illegal to pay
a doctor for more than the system offers. Get in line.
In
these and countless other ways, in the name of helping us, government
throws us all in a common pot and decides for us. We “pursue
happiness” not as individuals but collectively — through
government. We’ve turned Jefferson’s order on its head. Is it any
wonder that so many of us are “unhappy” with the programs we get,
with the choices government makes for us? Imagine if government chose
our national religious program. When government chooses everything,
individuals choose nothing. Look at North Korea for the extreme
example of that.
It
was not for nothing that Jefferson put liberty first, limited
government second, as a means to liberty. What the Founders
envisioned was a world in which individuals pursued happiness as
individuals or as members of private, voluntary associations —
families, businesses, churches, charities, and the like. That world
of private individuals and associations — the civil society that
Tocqueville spoke of — was where most of life was meant to be
lived, with government limited primarily to securing the rights we
have or we create in that world.
As we
celebrate our independence today, let’s keep in mind that we’re
celebrating our independence from overweening government — British
or American.
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