The One Thing Guaranteed to Work
By Don L. Tiggre
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
         I love talking to people about the freedom philosophy, but it has 
its challenges.  Those who are just discovering it are so excited, 
the whole world seems like a more wonderful place, brimming with 
possibilities!  In contrast, seasoned conservatives, who often 
understand the economic aspects of the freedom philosophy, have a 
depressingly grim outlook.  Seasoned (so-called) liberals, who often 
understand the personal aspects of the freedom philosophy, have a 
depressingly hysterical outlook.  Even libertarians, who often 
understand the freedom philosophy well, have a depressingly hopeless 
outlook.  It's like pulling teeth trying to convince many "seasoned" 
political observers that they are -- in fact -- free and that they 
can exercise their freedom.  Convincing them that a stable and free 
society is possible and perhaps even likely is harder than trying to 
talk a traffic cop out of a ticket.
         So, I've come up with one thing I can suggest to even the most 
cynical people that is guaranteed to make the world a better place.  
It is this: teach your children freedom.  More specifically: teach 
your children that they are free, and that no one has a right to hurt 
them, control them, or to take that which is theirs.  Help them to 
grow up to be healthy individuals, self-aware of their free nature.  
A free society is composed of free individuals; the former cannot 
come into being without the latter.  If you don't have children, this 
idea can be applied to nieces, nephews, students, and even employees;  
anyone to whom you become a mentor.
         Almost everything in the Liberty Round Table web-site and other 
sources of political thought pertains to adults, trying to teach the 
freedom philosophy to people, many of whom have already accepted 
their serfdom.  It is much easier to help children keep the sense of 
freedom and excitement they all seem born with, than to try to 
convince adults that the eternal slave-like existence so many have 
accepted is an illusion.
         Being a single parent of three rambunctious boys, I know how very 
difficult a thing it is that I am urging here.  Children who are 
aware that -- being human -- they have rights can be a total pain in 
the ass.  Completely inconvenient.  Impossible to get in the 
&^@%#@#!!! car when it's time to go.  Believe me, I know!!!
         However, compared to my sons' well-being, my convenience is a 
very small concern.  I am not saying that this is easy, just easier 
than trying to re-educate adults.
         It always amazes me that a parent who will stand in the rain for 
days collecting signatures for a ballot initiative (because, say, 
their freedom has been infringed by a government that claims to know 
what is best for them) will turn around and force their children to 
eat spinach because "it's good for them."
         Huh???
         Does anyone else see the contradiction here?
         I am totally unimpressed by claims about kids being different. Of 
course they are!  But, they are not that different.  To paraphrase 
Dr. Seuss, a person is still a person, no matter how small.  If human 
rights exist at all, then surely children must have them too!
         Therefore...  I do not use force as a parenting tool.  I don't 
force my children to do anything, not even to eat or go to school.  
I try very hard to reason with my sons, to give them reasons for 
cooperating with me, and because I have allowed their experience to 
show that I am usually right.  Perhaps this is why they choose to 
negotiate instead of fight and they choose to go to school while I go 
to work.
         When I say such things, many parents recoil in horror.  Their 
many protestations usually boil down to two errors: they think I let 
my boys run our house (which would lead to chaos!) and they think 
that children will not "do the right thing" in most cases (unless 
compelled to do so by a central authority).
         The uncanny resemblance these arguments bear to the excuses of 
statist apologists is horrifying.
         To the first I answer that my house is my property.  I bought 
it, and everyone who lives here knows it.  The significance of this 
may not be immediately apparent, but you have to understand that my 
boys understand the notion of private property.  Their entire lives 
have been spent in an environment wherein everyone's property was 
respected, including their own.  Yes, I even let them do things I 
consider "bad," like destroying a brand new toy, if such is their 
choice.  So, when I say that because I don't want food smashed into 
the living room carpet (and remind them about germs) and that they 
have not yet learned eat without getting food on the floor regularly, 
I will not allow dinner in the living room, they understand and 
accept.  They know that I have the right to make rules governing the 
use of my property, such as the living room carpet, and they 
understand that I've good reasons for my rules.
         Some people think my sons are very obedient, but that's not it;  
they are reasonable.  But to get to this point, I've had to be 
reasonable with them, giving them reasons, being patient with their 
questions, and respecting their authority to make rules governing the 
use of their own property.  I even ask them for permission before 
entering their rooms, which I have given them full ownership of, with 
the exceptions of not doing things that threaten the structural 
integrity of the rest of the house, or the safety of others within 
the house.
         To the second, I answer that children are not stupid, merely 
inexperienced.  The best way to encourage the growth of wisdom within 
them is to let them gain experience!  To try to shove my experience 
down their mental throats is not only inconsistent with my view of 
the proper way for people to treat each other, it also just plain 
doesn't work very well.
         My boys, ages 9, 7, and 5, bathe regularly and shampoo their 
hair.  They do their own laundry.  They choose to dress warmly when 
it is cold out.  They earn money washing dishes and doing other 
chores.  They can even catch a bus on time, on their own.  Even more 
important, to me, is that they can almost always determine the 
right and wrong of their actions.  They don't always act accordingly
-- who does -- but they can tell the difference and usually do the 
right thing.
         They are not, however, angels.  I probably pull my hair out as 
much as anyone else, but the problems I typically have with them are 
different from those of most parents I encounter.  For example, it is 
extremely rare for one of my sons to deliberately strike one of his 
brothers.  They also never knowingly take something that is not 
theirs, unless they think they've made arrangements to use it.  No, 
the problems I have are different.  They enter into verbal contracts 
(e.g. "I'll pick up the floor in the living room if you will vacuum 
it," or "I will give you this toy car for three of those Tootsie 
Rolls," or "I'll rent you my sleeping bag for two pieces of gum) with 
one-another without defining the terms carefully, or one alleges that 
he meant something else when he made or accepted an offer.  Another 
problem is that they accept promises from people who have no right or 
ability to keep them.  Also, they will use an absolutely incredible 
amount of pure genius to execute a plan that is nothing short of 
colossally stupid.  They are extremely impulsive.  But...  They are 
children.  They learn from every scraped shin, from every failed 
negotiation.  And, in spite of the problems, they are extremely warm 
and trusting.
         I try to help them.  When one of my boys approaches me with an 
emotional or physical hurt, I hug and kiss, and after they're feeling 
a bit better, I ask: "What do you learn from this?"  It would be a 
cruel thing, in my opinion, to fail to highlight opportunities for 
learning in every painful incident.  It would be a cruel thing to 
let them make the same mistakes over and over, when it is in their 
power to learn to avoid them.  Once the subtleties have been pointed 
out -- they usually don't need the obvious lessons pointed out -- 
they usually feel much better because they feel competent to deal 
with similar situations in the future.
         The point I am trying to make here is that each child's own 
experience carries much more weight with them than the experiences 
shared by others, even highly trusted others.  By trying to force 
children to do the right things, we commit the same errors and get 
largely the same results that the state gets when it tries to force 
people to be charitable, or to shield the foolish from the 
consequences of their actions.
         The art of successful parenting, then, must lie in using every 
resource available to create a series of environments where children 
can learn in safety.  Short of life threatening situations, I do not 
use force to overrule the will of my children, because nothing is 
more important to me than for them to grow up understanding their 
individual sovereignty.  If a situation arises wherein a child 
endangers his or her life and I use force to overrule their will as 
the only way to save them, then it is I who has failed.  Dying is 
worse than being coerced, of course, but I can't let that become an 
excuse; it's too short a step from there to begin justifying coercion 
in non-life threatening circumstances.  Instead, I define coercion as 
wrong, with no exceptions, try like hell not to let it happen, and 
admit my fault when I allow things to come to such a point.
         This rule I struggle to abide by is hard.  It has caused me to be 
late for work, to miss movies, to pay for things my sons have broken, 
and to endure situations in public places that would be embarrassing 
to most people.  But I do it anyway.  These are prices I decided to 
accept before -- with deliberate and with joyful cooperation -- I 
started the life process of my first son.
         Now, back to politics:  I challenge anyone to find a more potent 
way to end the ability of some people to rule over others than to 
bring into the world people who will not be ruled.  My nine 
year old has stood up to his school principal before and even a 
traffic cop!  He doesn't hesitate to argue with his teachers about 
biodiversity.  My seven year old took on his whole class when he was 
in kindergarten, over the Santa Claus Conspiracy (among adults).  My 
five year old has no fear of telling me that I am wrong.  Just try to 
imagine these boys growing up to say, "sure, take 90% of my paycheck 
in taxes, what right have I to keep what I earn?"
         Mind you, I try very hard not to let my ideas become a religion 
for my sons.  I encourage them to question me, to insist on evidence.  
I am not raising my children in this way in an effort to forge them 
into soldiers for the Glorious Freedom Revolution.  I do what I do 
because I love them and I treat them as I would have them treat me:  
with respect for their Life, Liberty, and pursuit of Property.
         This is nothing more nor less than how I think all people should 
treat each other.
         I will feel successful as a parent if my boys grow up to be 
healthy, happy, and free adults who know that they must respect these 
same things in others.  It is also true that if I succeed at this, I 
will have contributed concretely and significantly to the world we 
live in.
         This is a sure thing:  whatever else happens, the world will be a 
better place for having more such people in it!
Don L. Tiggre is a grant-writer and a would-be author of fiction.
He lives with his three sons, who teach him daily lessons in
effective ways to resist tyranny. Having just barely survived 16
years of 'education', Mr. Tiggre is doing his best to study the
human animal in it's natural habitats.