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FEATURES: The Moral Basis of a Free Society
By Steve Forbes
Sustaining a healthy society requires more than capitalism and democracy. It takes a commitment to moral renewal
When
the government of China tells people they can read state-run
newspapers but not print and distribute Bibles, imprisoning
and torturing dissenters; or have one child but not two,
forcing women to have abortions; or watch state-run
television but not listen to Radio Free Asia, jamming
broadcast signals and threatening students--that is not
freedom.
But the absence of centralized state
control is not necessarily freedom, either. The people of
Beirut are not free. Neither are the people of Medellin and
Cartagena, the drug capitals of Colombia. Freedom is not
anarchy, chaos, and mayhem. The freedom to "let soulless
forces operate," as the great classical liberal
economist Ludwig von Mises termed it, is actually tyranny in
another guise.
So what is freedom? How can a widely
pluralistic society sustain freedom without degenerating into
chaos? What is the moral basis of a free society? Today the
citizens and leaders of every nation are looking to America
for answers to these questions. From Mexico City to Moscow,
from Johannesburg to Jerusalem, from Bombay to Beijing,
people have an eye on America as they struggle to make the
exciting but difficult transition to free markets, free
elections, free speech, and free worship.
No nation, after all, has ever enjoyed the
status that America does today. The greatest empires of
history were but regional affairs. Today, America is truly
the worlds only superpower. Yet our strength comes not
just from the might of our economy or the brilliant
capabilities of the men and women in our armed forces. It
comes also from the example we set for the rest of the world
of how a free people can adapt to and advance in changing
times and circumstances.
While others look to us, however, Americans
themselves are seeking answers to some painful and bitter
questions. Can a free society survive the collapse of the
two-parent family, where one-third of children are born into
homes without fathers? Can a free society long endure a
culture in which newborn babies have been thrown into trash
dumpsters and young people have doubled their rate of heroin
use in a single year?
As the 20th century comes to an end, the
world is learning from America that the economic and
political freedoms that come from capitalism and democracy
are the most powerful and productive way to organize society.
At the same time, we in America are discovering that
capitalism and democracy alone are not enough to sustain a
healthy, vibrant society. We are learning the hard way that a
self-governing nation must consist of self-governing
individuals. A breakdown in the moral fabric of society has
dire consequences. An explosion of violence, crime, drug
abuse, sexual promiscuity, and out-of-wedlock births
undermines the blessings of liberty and prosperity.
The stakes, therefore, are enormous. If
America makes the economic, political, and moral changes
necessary to move forward in the years ahead, then the rest
of the world has a chance of getting it right. But if America
drifts off course, then the rest of the world will be in
trouble as well.
A Free Society
Americans have always defined true freedom
as an environment in which one may resist evil and do what is
right, noble, and good without fear of reprisal. It is the
presence of justice tempered with mercy. It is a rule of law
based on fundamental moral truths that are easily understood
and fairly and effectively administered. It offers
individuals and families equal opportunity to better their
lives morally, spiritually, intellectually, and economically.
Freedom, in other words, is neither a
commodity for dictators to distribute and deny at will nor a
moral, spiritual, or political vacuum in which anything goes.
Freedom is a priceless treasure that the state is supposed to
safeguard. Why? Because human beings have an intrinsic right
to be free, a right that comes not from the state but from
God. To the Founding Fathers, this was a
"self-evident" truth. It is the essence of the
American experiment in self-government.
The Founders, even those most suspicious of
organized religion, believed that mans place in the
universe was no accident--that man himself and the world in
which he lived were created and sustained by a just and
loving God. "It is impossible to account for the
creation of the universe without the agency of a Supreme
Being," wrote George Washington, "and it is
impossible to govern the universe without the aid of a
Supreme Being." James Madison put it this way: "The
belief in a God All Powerful, wise and good, is so essential
to the moral order of the World and to the happiness of man,
that arguments which enforce it cannot be drawn from too many
sources."
To navigate the oceans without consulting
fixed stars, Americans knew, is to risk being turned around
by waves and wind, circling aimlessly with dwindling stores
of food and water. To believe in the randomness of mans
appearance on the earth, the Founders likewise intuitively
understood, would be to deny the existence of fixed moral
truths, established outside of mans own personal whims
and predilections. In such a world, no one could judge with
authority what is right or wrong because everyone would be
entitled to his own personal system of values. Hence there
could be no equality before the law, because the law would
consist of whatever people in power declared it to be. That
would elevate jungle law--what Darwin would later term
"survival of the fittest"--over the rule of natural
law. And that, in turn, would legitimize both the centralized
European regimes of the Founders day and the anarchic
Beiruts of our day, where the powerful rule over the weak,
use force to obtain wealth, and use wealth to reinforce their
power.
Instead, the Founding Fathers staked the
future of the country on the principle that human beings are
created by God, and therefore have certain intrinsic,
absolute, nonnegotiable rights. "[A]ll men are created
equal," reads the Declaration of Independence, and are
"endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights . . . among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness." Governments role in society, then, is
to "secure" these rights, not create or dispense
them. This is the moral basis of a free society.
The order of these rights--first life, then
freedom, and then the equal opportunity to pursue ones
own happiness--was written with great care and precision, not
haphazardly. The Founders understood the need to balance
mans right to be free with mans responsibility to
be honest, just, and fair. For example, if it makes you happy
to shoot and kill someone while you rob a bank--well, the law
says youre out of luck. A persons right to live
supersedes your "freedom" to steal and murder. This
may seem obvious, but it is profound. It is also the linchpin
of Western civilization. Switch the order of these
fundamental human rights--putting happiness before liberty,
or liberty before life--and you end up with moral chaos and
social anarchy. Deny the God-given nature of these rights and
you open the door to tyranny.
"Can the liberties of a nation be sure
when we remove their only firm basis, a conviction in the
minds of the people, that these liberties are the gift of
God?" asked Thomas Jefferson. Or, as John Adams put it,
"We have no government armed with power capable of
contending with human passions unbridled by morality and
religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge or gallantry would break
the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes
through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and
religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government
of any other."
The people of the former Soviet Union are
discovering this the hard way, in a tragic drama we have been
tracking with great interest and concern at Forbes
magazine. Communism destroyed not only material progress
there, but also the moral and spiritual foundations of the
country. Trust between strangers, the fundamental moral
component of a free-market economy, barely exists. Without
trust, how do you sign or enforce business contracts? How do
you operate a system of credit? How do you maintain a basic
sense of order? The people of the former Soviet Union are
discovering that a free, self-governing society is nearly
impossible without a moral foundation. Theft is rampant.
Their murder rate is several times higher than our own.
Mafias are moving into the vacuum left by the fall of
communism to seize control of vast sectors of economic
activity. A Hobbesian world has emerged, where life is
"nasty, brutish, and short."
Americas Moral Crisis
In America today, however, not everyone
regards these basic moral truths as "self-evident."
Modern liberalism, which rejects absolute moral standards,
has abandoned the proper ordering of mans fundamental
rights. As a result, modern liberalism has undermined a
long-held American principle: that the law should protect the
weakest among us, not just the strong, the healthy, and the
rich. Abortion and euthanasia violate this principle by
removing the protection of the law from societys most
vulnerable members.
There is no need here to catalog in detail
the lamentable results since the 1960s of liberalisms
passions. The effort to legitimate all moral claims, to give
personal freedom an utterly free hand--to "define
deviancy down"--has given us the following: horrific
increases in violent crime, out-of-wedlock births, family
breakups, and substance abuse; dramatic declines in
educational and cultural standards; a proliferation of
increasingly bizarre lawsuits; a blizzard of regulations that
defy common sense and assault our rights to property and due
process; a growing corruption of the tax code; and a
judiciary that often acts like an imperial aristocracy
hurtling decrees down upon the rest of us.
Modern liberalism has adopted a view of
liberty that is at the same time too broad and too narrow.
Liberalism wrongly insists, for example, on a parents
freedom to choose an abortion while simultaneously denying
parents freedom to choose the schools their children
may attend.
Ideas have consequences. Liberalisms
moral confusion over the sanctity of human life and the vital
importance of the traditional family has reshaped American
law and society. The statistics are grim enough. But the
anecdotal evidence hits home: An 18-year-old girl attending
her senior prom in New Jersey last spring allegedly delivered
her baby in a rest room, disposed of it in a plastic bag
where it suffocated to death, cleaned herself up, and went
back to the dance floor, where she asked the DJ to play a
favorite song. A teenage couple in Delaware has been charged
with giving birth to a baby boy in a motel room and then
tossing him into a trash dumpster, where he died a cold,
horrifying death. A 15-year-old boy in Detroit who
disappeared for six months had reportedly been sold by his
mother to a drug dealer to cover a $1,000 cocaine debt.
Meanwhile, "Doctor" Jack Kevorkian now claims to
have "assisted" in more than 100
"suicides."
Certainly crime is not new. But Americans
have rarely been so confused about right and wrong, about
what is acceptable and what is to be forcefully condemned.
So we must be clear: A free society cannot
survive the collapse of the two-parent family or the absence
of fathers, love, and discipline in the lives of so many
children. A free society cannot survive an unchecked
explosion in violent crime. Nor can a free society survive a
generation of crack babies and teenagers whose minds and
bodies have been destroyed by illegal drugs.
Like millions of people, my wife and I are
deeply concerned about the moral condition of our nation. We
are raising five daughters in a society whose wheels, it
often seems, are coming off. It is difficult enough in any
era to raise young girls to be wise and virtuous young women.
But it is particularly difficult today. Movies, television,
music, and the Internet bombard young people with cultural
messages of sexual revolution and self-absorbed materialism
that tempt them away from good moral character rather than
appealing to the better angels of their natures. Affluence
does not protect children from temptation; sometimes it makes
temptation more accessible.
The good news is that this is not the first
time we have faced such dark times and turned things around.
America has seen several periods of renewal and reform, most
notably the Second Great Awakening and the Progressive Era.
Both periods marked a return to Americas founding
ideals; both offer guidance as to how we might strengthen our
moral commitments while preserving freedom.
The Second Great Awakening
Following the Revolutionary War, America
experienced a period of moral decline. The chaos of battle,
the pain of death and separation, the anxiety of wartime
inflation, the excitement of subsequent political change, and
the all-consuming nature of building a new nation drained
peoples time and energy. Fewer and fewer people
attended church. Spiritual devotion waned and social problems
proliferated. From the late 1770s until the late 1820s,
per-capita consumption of alcohol in America rose
dramatically, to about four to five times per person what it
is today. Everybody took a swig from the jug--teachers,
preachers, children. They called it "hard cider,"
but it was nothing like the cider we buy at the grocery store
today. In those days, it seemed everyone was in a haze by
noontime. The social consequences were predictable.
"Illegitimate births were
rampant" during the early 1800s, wrote Tom Phillips in
his book Revival Signs. "Alcohol, the drug
of the day, was destroying families and wrecking futures.
Thomas Paine was proclaiming that Christianity was dead--and
certainly the body of faith appeared to be in a coma. Yet
even as church rolls were shrinking and greed, sensuality and
family breakdown were becoming more widespread, America was
about to experience a great spiritual revival."
Slowly at first, then building over the
next several decades, one wave of spiritual renewal and
religious rededication after another swept the country in
what historians now call Americas "Second Great
Awakening." In one community after another, people began
to wake up from their moral and spiritual slumber as though
saying, "If were going to have a self-governing
nation, it must be occupied by self-governing citizens."
The first public-health movement in America
was launched not by the government but by citizen-activists
such as Lyman Beecher, the founder of the American Bible
Society and a pastor who went on to form the American Society
for the Promotion of Temperance in 1826. This enterprise
became known as the Temperance Movement--and it worked.
Within one generation, alcoholic consumption in America fell
by two-thirds.
Soon pastors and community leaders were
opening elementary and secondary schools (this was before
"public" education), founding colleges and
universities, setting up orphanages and homes for abandoned
children, creating shelters for the poor, building hospitals,
and exhorting people to stop drinking and spend more time
with their families. The Reverend Thomas Gallaudet opened his
school for the deaf. William McGuffey wrote his famous
"Eclectic Readers," of which 120 million copies
were printed. The first Young Mens Christian
Association (YMCA) opened in Boston, followed shortly by the
first Young Womens Christian Association.
It was during this rebuilding of the moral
foundations of a free society that French historian Alexis de
Tocqueville came to America in 1831. "Upon my arrival in
the United States, the religious aspect of the country was
the first thing that struck my attention, and the longer I
stayed there, the more I perceived the great political
consequences resulting from this new state of things,"
he wrote. "In France I had almost always seen the spirit
of religion and the spirit of freedom marching in opposite
directions. But in America I found they were intimately
united and that they reigned in common over the same
country."
Eventually the religious and moral renewal
of the Second Great Awakening gave birth to the abolitionist
movement, one of the nations greatest struggles to
reassert a moral order based on mans fundamental
rights.
This gets to one of the great strengths of
the American democracy. It is not that we do not make
mistakes as a people and as a nation. We are, after all, only
human. But when we do stumble, we have a record of
rediscovering our first principles and resuming the journey
toward faith and moral renewal.
Roosevelt and the Progressive Era
In the early years of the 20th century,
Americans were filled with optimism. The nations rapid
industrialization and urbanization created enormous new
social, economic, and political problems, but these were
confronted by bold, imaginative national leaders and the
energetic efforts of people voluntarily working together to
promote shared objectives.
The period speaks to us today. The 1890s
had been a troubled time. The rise of large corporations and
massive industrial monopolies seemed to mock the idea of
individual entrepreneurship. The rise of big cities with
corrupt political machines supplanted the tradition of
democratic town meetings. People feared that massive
immigration, which was several times greater in proportion to
our population than what we are experiencing today, would
degrade the American character and culture. How, they asked,
could we assimilate so many people from so many different
races, nationalities, and religions? These years were also
plagued by drug addiction--primarily to opium.
American churches and synagogues responded
to the challenge of the new industrial era by combining a
message of spiritual renewal with practical, personal care
for those in need. Dwight L. Moody, a former shoe salesman,
became the most influential American evangelist of the 19th
century. He launched a Sunday School movement in Chicago to
provide moral instruction for more than 1,500 poor, urban
street children. He opened a Bible college to challenge other
young people to follow his example of helping destitute and
demoralized people turn their lives around. And, in an age
without radio or television, he communicated his message of
spiritual and moral renewal to millions of people before his
death in 1899.
The spiritual and practical needs of
Americas burgeoning city populations were also
addressed by social reformers such as William and Catherine
Booth, who founded the Salvation Army in the United States in
1880. Women took a particular interest in the needs of those
who found themselves financially and morally bankrupt. By
1913, more than 500 urban rescue missions were operating in
the United States and Canada, many of them organized and run
by women of faith. Catholic nuns and Jewish and other
fraternal societies also labored to help the needy everywhere
from little mining towns to urban slums.
At the same time, President Theodore
Roosevelt was ushering in an era of political and economic
reform known as the Progressive Era. He declared in his
Inaugural Address, "Much has been given us, and much
will rightfully be expected from us. Our forefathers faced
certain perils which we have outgrown. We now face other
perils, the very existence of which it was impossible that
they should foresee. Modern life is both complex and intense,
and the tremendous changes wrought by the extraordinary
industrial development of the last half-century are felt in
every fiber of our social and political being."
From 1901 to 1909, Roosevelt sought to
expand individual opportunity and strengthen individual
control over personal, business, and political affairs, as
well as to increase Americas economic and military
influence in the world. He busted up incestuous and
anti-competitive trusts and corporate monopolies, attacked
government and political corruption in both major parties,
supported the right of workers to organize, expanded U.S.
trade with other nations, and built up our armed forces,
particularly the navy. He advocated the direct election of
U.S. senators, the right of women to vote, the creation of
open presidential primaries, and the introduction of citizen
initiatives, referenda, and recalls--all of which soon became
realities.
Roosevelt reinforced his battle for
political and economic reform by publicly, vigorously, and
consistently reasserting the notion that there must be a
moral foundation to a free society. It was he, after all, who
coined the term "bully pulpit." While governor of
New York, Roosevelt once declared, "It is absolutely
impossible for a Republic long to endure if it becomes either
corrupt or cowardly," and he never lost sight of that
essential truth. He rightly believed that private, local,
character-forming institutions must be left free to
strengthen the moral fiber of the nation. The role of
religious faith in society must be affirmed, not undermined.
He did not believe that government should establish a state
religion. But he did not shrink from the right or
responsibility of a public official to encourage individuals
to attend to their moral and spiritual character.
Eight years after leaving the White House,
Roosevelt was still offering Americans his "top 10"
list of reasons for going to church. "In this actual
world a churchless community where men have abandoned and
scoffed at or ignored their religious needs is a community on
the rapid downgrade," he wrote in 1917 in Ladies
Home Journal. "It is perfectly true that occasional
individuals or families may have nothing to do with church or
with religious practices and observances and yet maintain the
highest standard of spirituality and of ethical obligation.
But this does not affect the case in the world as it now is,
any more than that exceptional men and women under
exceptional conditions have disregarded the marriage tie
without moral harm to themselves interferes with the larger
fact that such disregard if at all common means the complete
moral disintegration of the body politic."
Not all of Roosevelts policies were
wise. (He argued vigorously for a graduated income tax, for
example.) Some of his policies, such as trust-busting, made
sense for his time but should be adapted in our day to such
causes as breaking up government education and entitlement
monopolies in favor of individual and parental choice and
control. Still, Roosevelt lived during the historic
transition from the Age of Agriculture to the Age of
Industry; his vigorous spirit of renewal and reform on behalf
of individuals and families should inspire us today as we
make the transition from the Age of Industry to the Age of
Information.
Renewal and the 21st Century
As we prepare to enter the 21st century,
the American experiment is again being severely tested. The
stakes are greater than they were in Teddy Roosevelts
time. It is not only our own future that is at stake, but
ultimately the worlds. Can we renew the moral and
spiritual foundations of our free society, and make the
economic and political changes necessary to enable all
Americans to have a chance to pursue their dreams and fulfill
our destiny as a positive, inspiring example to ourselves and
to other nations?
The answer is: yes. The reasons derive from
three great events that are already transforming our
society--the end of the Cold War, the dawn of the Information
Age, and encouraging signs of another moral and spiritual
awakening.
We take the end of the Cold War for
granted, but it has enormous implications for our system of
self-government and for others. To understand why, just
ask yourself: How did America--the most pro-individual,
anti-statist nation ever invented--come to permit its
government to assume the size and scope it has today? The
answer is war--the great shaper of this century. Throughout
history, warfare fostered government centralization. You
cannot face a major external threat unless you have a strong
government to marshal the resources necessary to meet that
threat. For most of the last 80 years, America has faced a
major external threat of one sort or another--first World War
I, then World War II, and finally the Cold War.
These conflicts have been cited to justify
government expansion in every direction. How did we justify
federal aid to education? The initial rationale was national
security. Federal aid for research and development and the
space program? National security. Even the interstate highway
program begun in the 1950s was partially justified on
national security grounds. It seemed natural to some that if
government could mobilize resources to fight external
enemies, it could solve an array of domestic problems as
well. Hence the "War on Poverty."
It has taken us 30 years to learn, very
painfully, the limitations of Big Government. Now that the
Cold War is over, we no longer need such a massive,
centralized federal government. We now have the opportunity
to downsize Washington and shift money, power, and control
back to individuals, families, and local communities.
Just as Teddy Roosevelt started the new
century by attacking government corruption at its source and
busting up anti-competitive monopolies, it is time to start
the next century by shrinking Big Government. That means
junking the current federal tax code--the biggest source of
political pollution and corruption in this country--and
replacing it with a simple, honest, and fair flat tax that
also lowers everyones tax bill. That means creating a
new Social Security system for young people, expanding
medical savings accounts for all Medicare recipients, and
creating educational savings accounts and vouchers to give
parents more control over where their children go to school
and what values they are being taught. After all, it is the
moral right of the parents--not bureaucrats, politicians, or
union officials--to decide what is best for their children.
Financially, the taxpayer, not the government, has the right
to decide where and how his education dollars should be
spent.
The dawn of the Information Age means a
fundamental transformation in the way we live and the way we
work. This new era is symbolized by the microchip, which is
extending the reach of the human brain the way machines
extended the reach of human muscle in the 19th century.
Step back and think about it. At one time,
if you learned to drive a tractor, you could do more work in
a day than 100 Herculean plowmen. Today, if you learn to use
a personal computer, you can do more research, analysis,
writing, and communication from your basement or den than
entire companies could do 50 years ago with a whole division
of secretaries and staff assistants.
The Machine Age was all about bigness--big
factories, big companies, big unions, big cities, and big
government. The Microchip Age is almost Jeffersonian in its
dynamic--anti-hierarchical, anti-authoritarian,
anti-centralization. It gives us more control and more
choices in our lives. This puts further pressure on big
corporations who must constantly fight to stay nimble and
innovative in a highly competitive national and global
economy. It also puts tremendous pressure on Washington to
make the tax, regulatory, and legal reforms necessary to let
small business owners and entrepreneurs compete and win in
the Microchip Age.
Signs of Spiritual Revival
At the same time, there are encouraging
signs of moral and spiritual renewal in this country.
Consider, for example, the tone of the welfare debate last
year, which focused not on the fact that billions of dollars
are being spent but on the fact that welfare is destroying
the lives of the very people it was created to help. With
less federal interference, many governors and mayors have
been making dramatic reforms to help people move from welfare
to work. They are urging churches, civic groups, and local
businesses to help educate and employ welfare recipients-and
Americans are rising to the challenge. Welfare rolls
nationwide have fallen by 25 percent since 1996.
At the same time, millions of baby boomers
are returning to churches and synagogues for the first time
in years, some to meet their own spiritual needs and some to
build strong moral foundations within their children. Willow
Creek Community Church outside of Chicago, for example,
attracts more than 15,000 people every weekend. Millions of
high-school students are also meeting for prayer and Bible
study in small groups all over the country. James
Dobsons Focus on the Family radio ministry, heard on
more than 1,500 stations, is having remarkable success
teaching couples to build strong, successful marriages and
raise morally healthy children. William Bennetts Book
of Virtues, an 800-page compilation of old poems, songs,
and stories written to develop character, rocketed to the top
of the bestseller list not long ago. His wife, Elayne, runs a
successful sexual abstinence program for teenage girls in
Washington, D.C. Meanwhile, Wade Horns National
Fatherhood Initiative and Charles Ballards Institute
for Responsible Fatherhood and Family Revitalization
encourage young men to take parenthood seriously. And these
are just a few of many examples.
Consider, too, the Promise Keepers
movement, an impressive series of rallies held in
Americas stadiums aimed at helping men make and keep
seven promises ranging from racial reconciliation to being a
good husband and father. Launched in 1990 by former
University of Colorado football coach Bill McCartney, the
first gathering drew 72 men. By 1994, a series of regional
conferences were held drawing more than 280,000 men. By 1996,
Promise Keepers conferences had attracted more than 1 million
men from all over the country. In October 1997, hundreds of
thousands of men attended a single Promise Keepers event in
Washington, D.C.--not to call for political change, but to
pledge themselves to personal change.
Some Americans are uneasy with such public
demonstrations of religious faith. But this is not new to
American history, either. "The first time I heard in the
United States that a hundred thousand men had bound
themselves together publicly to abstain from spirituous
liquors," wrote Tocqueville, "it appeared to me
more like a joke than a serious engagement." He added,
"I did not at once perceive why these temperate citizens
could not content themselves with drinking water by their own
firesides." But Tocqueville was eager to learn. "I
at last understood that these hundred thousand Americans,
alarmed by the progress of drunkenness around them, had made
up their minds to patronize temperance. They acted just in
the same way as a man of high rank who should dress very
plainly, in order to inspire the humbler orders with a
contempt of luxury."
What Is Governments Role?
Samuel Johnson once wrote, "How small,
of all that human hearts endure/That part which laws or kings
can cause or cure!" How true. Personal moral and
spiritual renewal must happen in families, churches, and
synagogues, as is beginning to happen. But government leaders
do have a limited and specific role to play in
re-establishing the moral foundation of a free society.
Presidents, senators, and other government
officials are not archbishops. They do not have primary
responsibility for the life of the spirit. Yet our early
presidents and other leading Founders knew well how crucial
religion is to the cause of liberty. (To see this, you need
only consult Article I of the early constitutions of the
commonwealths of Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.)
The great historian of liberty, Lord Acton, wrote that the
history of liberty is in fact, "coincident" with
the history of Christianity, sprung from Judaism. In the
words of Jefferson, "God who gave us life gave us
liberty." To save liberty, our Founders never failed to
stress the role of faith.
At a particularly difficult impasse at the
constitutional convention in Philadelphia, Ben Franklin
proposed a pause for solemn prayer to Providence, just as in The
Federalist Papers, Madison, Hamilton, and Jay three times
noted the interventions of divine Providence in the cause of
establishing freedom on this continent. Presidents have
declared national days of Thanksgiving to Almighty God. The
inaugural speeches of Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln, to
take but three examples, are breathtaking for their moral and
religious reach.
In short, our national leaders have sensed
a duty to express this nations need of divine guidance
and its gratitude for the Creators manifold acts of
assistance. In this country, we do not have an established
church. But the foundations of our liberty are dug deep in
the voluntary and heartfelt faith of millions.
To root our liberties more firmly in a
moral soil, presidents and other officials can also show
leadership in word, in deed, and in law. Here are a few
examples:
Appoint judges and
Supreme Court justices who respect the moral outlook
that produced the Constitution they are interpreting.
Such judges will not imagine themselves
philosopher-kings who can dispense with centuries of
ethical tradition, or single-handedly determine
difficult social questions for an entire nation.
Reinforce the concept
that marriage is a legally binding contract. Most
Americans still marry in places of worship,
acknowledging the sacred nature of the vows they make
to one another. To them, of course, marriage is much
more than a legal contract, but it is certainly not
less than one.
Reform adoption laws
to make it easier for loving, married couples to care
for abandoned children. This would signal an
awareness that all children have a fundamental right
to loving parents, a right that supersedes the claims
of the state or of special-interest groups.
Reject racial
discrimination in all its guises, including quotas
and set-asides. Equality in the eyes of the law is
one of the most important ways we affirm the dignity
and worth of all people.
Protect people of all
faiths--or of no faith--from encroachments by the
state that violate their consciences and most deeply
held beliefs. The Founders never intended the
separation of church from state to become a
separation of religion from public and civic life.
There is no reason why a child should be denied the
right to hold a Bible study before or after school,
or write an essay about a biblical figure during
school.
Each of these functions is rooted in the
principle that governments role is to
"secure" individual rights, not create new rights
or dispense existing ones arbitrarily. Thus, the state must
"establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity,
provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare,
and secure the blessings of liberty." No individual,
family, or private institution can protect life, freedom, and
property by apprehending criminals, trying them before a
court of law, and incarcerating them. Nor can individuals and
institutions, by themselves, enforce contracts, or fight
terrorism, or negotiate and sign treaties with foreign
governments, and the like. These are responsibilities to
which only the state can attend. The Founders wrote the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights to define precisely
governments limited, specific role in securing
individual rights, and how government should carry out that
very important role.
Writing in defense of the Constitution,
James Madison noted in The Federalist no. 51 that
"if men were angels, no government would be
necessary." But men are not angels. They are prone to
attack, abuse, and impose upon the lives, liberties, and
property of others. Therefore, Madison went on to assert,
"justice is the end of government," its highest
purpose and mission.
Conservatives have been accused of denying
any significant role for government in promoting a just and
healthy civil society. The accusation is utterly misguided.
Government has a profoundly important role in recognizing and
defending Americans fundamental rights. Indeed, when
the issue is the right to life--that is, defining the
boundaries of the human community--government has no higher
calling. And this is not just a matter for the states: The
federal government has always had the responsibility, whether
it acknowledged it or not, to secure this highest, most
cherished of rights. That responsibility is again being
severely debated and tested today.
Part of the reason for this social and
political tension is that we as a nation seem so unclear
about the proper ordering of our fundamental rights--the
rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. As a
result, there are at least three issues that serve as flash
points for this debate: abortion, doctor-assisted suicide,
and the battle against illegal drugs. Each is a life issue;
each has become embroiled in arguments over the relationship
between life and liberty.
Abortion. Many Americans are
uncomfortable discussing abortion, and understandably so; it
is not a pleasant topic. Today, however, there is no
doubt--medically, genetically--that individual human life
begins at conception and ends with natural death. The
starting place for the discussion, then, is the recognition
that abortion involves the violent ending of life--the first
and foremost of our natural rights, the one that trumps all
others. That is why abortions are a moral wrong and a
national tragedy. As Lincoln said of slavery 140 years ago,
abortion is and must be on the road to extinction.
The real question is: How do we achieve
this goal of making abortions disappear? We must recognize
that we as a nation lack an overwhelming consensus about the
primacy of life over liberty or the pursuit of happiness. We
must recover such a consensus, but we cannot do so simply
with the stroke of a legislative pen or a Supreme Court vote.
In a democracy, we cannot impose; we must persuade. Thus, the
only way to eliminate abortions in this country is to bring
about a change of heart, a change of conscience, a change of
attitude. In order to change the law, we must change the
culture. To change the culture, we must change the law little
by little. I took a lot of heat for this view during the 1996
Republican presidential primaries, but as the political
passions of the moment have settled, I think more people are
recognizing that this approach makes eminent sense.
We must all acknowledge that there has been
a little legislative progress in restricting abortions since
1973, but only a little. Still, that is only part of the
story. What is exciting is that change outside of
Washington is truly visible. The number of abortions
performed has declined to its lowest point since 1976. The
number of doctors willing to perform abortions has fallen.
The number of schools willing to teach abortion is down
dramatically.
Why is this? Because since 1973, when the
practice of abortion was legalized in all states, the medical
knowledge about birth available to doctors and the public has
advanced by giant steps. We now have a knowledge of the
genetics of the first human cells, we have sonograms, and we
have many more lifesaving techniques for infants threatened
in the womb.
In this changing moral climate, now is the
time to advance the issue legislatively, step by step. We
should start by banning partial-birth abortions, a euphemism
for infanticide. Support for a ban is growing. We should also
ban abortions for the purpose of sex selection, ban fetal
tissue research, and end all federal funding for abortion. As
the father of five girls, I also support parental
notification and consent in the case of minors. We must also
work to end abortions in late pregnancy. Our hospitals today
are like a house divided. In one room, doctors work
heroically to save a premature baby born at 22 or 23 weeks.
Most of those babies now survive. Yet in another room,
physicians and nurses work to kill a baby at that same stage
of pregnancy. This house divided is untenable.
So where there is consensus on limiting
abortions, let us codify. From there, let us persuade. Great
social change has happened before in American history, and it
can happen again.
Doctor-Assisted Suicide. At the
other end of life, government must protect the elderly as
well. Our nation should not be misled. Assisted suicide will
lead us down the path to a dreary and dangerous society. At
the altar of liberty, the Jack Kevorkians of the world are
prepared to sacrifice the inherent value of all human life.
My mother died from lung cancer five years
ago. Near the end, the doctors asked her if she wanted a
living will. She thought they meant that they wanted to pull
the plug, and she was outraged. She said, "No
way--Im fighting this to the end." My brothers and
family and I were inspired by that. Just as we drew strength
from her in adversity, she drew strength because we rallied
around her in adversity. The medical profession must do more
to alleviate physical pain. But the pain, too, can be
spiritual and emotional. While science makes progress on the
physical side, we must work to provide real relief on the
emotional and spiritual side, supporting others when they are
in need.
Doctor-assisted suicide is the first step
toward euthanasia, which is turning doctors the world over
from healers into killers. Doctor-assisted suicide is not
about people being on a respirator where technicians can
barely find a brain wave. Nor is it about people who
voluntarily refuse heroic measures. Rather, this is about
what has happened in Holland, where they effectively
legalized euthanasia. Since then, thousands of patients have
been killed without their permission. With legalized assisted
suicide, families will become greedy for their inheritance.
The elderly will feel guilty for carrying on. People will
say, "Youre using up resources that others could
use." Someday people may say that to you and me. It is a
hideous, barbaric road for society to take. It encourages the
elderly to believe they are obstacles, not human beings
reflecting Gods image. We must fervently fight it every
inch of the way.
Drug Legalization. Finally, there is
the issue of illegal drugs, which are still destroying many
young people. This, too, is an issue where life supersedes
liberty. Illegal drugs imprison drug takers within sometimes
violent and murderous obsessions. They are designed to alter
our moral sensibilities, to dull our sense of duty and
integrity. Addictive drugs are wrong because they enslave and
eventually destroy the body. They take away free choice--the
hallmark of human dignity. When the world of adults winks at
rampant drug abuse, we abandon children to emotional and
moral chaos, thus threatening their very lives.
We must not be misled by state initiatives
that claim only to legalize drugs for medicinal purposes.
Relieving pain and legalization are separate and distinct
issues. America must not be made safe for Colombian-style
drug cartels. Americans overwhelmingly reject the notion that
someones "freedom" to grow, sell, and use
deadly drugs overrides societys right to protect lives.
If an illegal drug contains a property that helps people in
pain, that property can be extracted, or synthetically
manufactured, and given to patients under proper medical
supervision. The drug Marinol, for example, treats cancer and
AIDS patients with a synthetic form of an active ingredient
found in marijuana. But it is safe and available legally by
prescription, without exposing users to more than 400 other
toxic chemicals found in smokable "pot."
Parents must repeatedly emphasize to their
children how dangerous drugs can be. But society also has a
right to protect itself from mind-altering, life-threatening
drugs by the rule of law and its effective enforcement.
Government must not use the fight against drug distribution
and abuse as a license to deny individuals their
constitutional rights. That said, however, the vast majority
of Americans want a vigorous, effective fight against drugs.
Yet they are not getting it. In his first year, Bill Clinton
reduced the staff at the office of the "drug czar"
by 83 percent. He has never delivered an Oval Office address
on the drug issue. In the first two years of his
administration, he gave more than 3,300 presidential
statements, interviews, and addresses, yet illegal drugs were
only mentioned 24 times. He is now proposing to reduce prison
sentences for possession of crack cocaine.
At the Democratic National Convention in
1992, Governor Bill Clinton told the nation that George Bush
"hasnt fought a real war on crime and drugs. I
will." But as president, Bill Clinton is not keeping his
commitment on one of the greatest causes of crime and human
destruction.
The Unfinished Challenge
Americas moral and creative energies
have always come from the ground up. When Tocqueville visited
America 160 years ago, he noticed the enormous energy that
comes from people laboring together voluntarily--through
churches and synagogues, schools, hospitals, sports, cultural
activities, and professional activities--for a shared goal
and purpose. That is the great historic strength of America.
I believe we are now beginning a Fourth Great Awakening--and
none too soon.
From the beginning of our nations
history, Americans have understood that freedom has three
vital components: economic, political, and moral. In the 20th
century, the argument for economic freedom--that free markets
and entrepreneurship are vital to social and economic
progress--has largely been won. No one outside of entrenched
elites on some of our university faculties argues that
centralized control and ownership of a nations economy
will lead to freedom and prosperity. The battle now is to
expand economic freedom while shrinking government, both here
in America and around the world.
The same is true with the argument for
political freedom. In this century, we have witnessed and
participated in brutal battles over the right of
self-determination. People everywhere understand that they
have an intrinsic right to free speech and free and fair
elections. Here at home, people understand that government
has gotten too big, promised too much, and delivered too
little. More than that, where government has advanced,
personal freedom and responsibility have retreated. Our
challenge is to reform our political institutions here at
home while setting an example for others struggling to
determine their own destinies.
Yet the argument that there must be a moral
basis undergirding a free society is one of the great
unfinished challenges of our time. We have neglected the
vital task of teaching our children, reminding ourselves, and
communicating to others that mans rights to live free,
pursue happiness, and own property come from God and are to
be secured by the state. We have failed to assert at home and
overseas the fundamental importance of spiritual faith and
religious liberty in sustaining both freedom and democracy.
Indeed, too often we have averted our eyes from those
suffering persecution and even genocide.
As we end this bloody and brutal century,
however, we must acknowledge that neglecting the moral basis
of freedom has been terribly costly. We must also commit
ourselves to a different road as we head into the 21st
century.
America today has the potential for the
greatest economic boom and spiritual renewal in our history.
As we have done numerous times in our history, we can once
again brighten economic prospects for everyone, reform our
corrupt political institutions, and restore the severely
weakened moral foundations of our country. In so doing, we
can truly fulfill our national destiny as the leader of a
free world. The question is: Will we seize the glittering
opportunities that lie before us? Or will this become known
as an era of missed opportunities?
I am an optimist. I believe that when
historians look back on this era, they will have to conclude
that once again the American people confounded the critics,
the skeptics, the doubters, the negativists. They will have
to conclude once more that the American people rose to the
occasion, and that the American nation once again resumed her
place--her rightful place--as the leader and inspiration of
the world.
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