Freedom, The Future, and You
By Don L. Tiggre
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
From "Something for Nothing," By RUSH:
           What you own is your own kingdom,
       What you do is your own glory,
       What you love is your own power,
       What you live is your own story!!!
         Free will is a fact of human nature.  No matter how many people 
submit to the will of others, no matter how pervasive the 
institutions of coercion, no such evil is possible without the 
capitulation of the victims.  Such capitulation too is an act of 
will, no matter how fervently we might wish that it was someone 
else's responsibility.
         Even when the gun is pressed against your temple and the thug 
says, "lick my boot or I will kill you," it is we who mush choose to 
do the boot-licking.
         In saying this, I was once challenged on whether the people in 
the former Soviet Union were free.  I answered that they were, and 
had only to realize it in order to throw off their oppressors.  Well, 
they did and they did.
         Choosing to lick the boot, contrary to what the tyrant would have 
you believe, does not make you an accomplice or accessory to the 
crime; you are the victim, no more and no less.  Victimhood should 
certainly not be exalted in the way our culture attempts to do at 
times, but neither should it be a source of shame -- unless the 
victim chooses to lick the boot when there is a better choice 
available.
          This fact, the fact that people cannot be enslaved against their 
will -- the fact of freedom -- is a hard one that makes most people 
uncomfortable.  But it is a fact, and it certainly has a bright 
side, a beautiful, almost unbearably bright side.  It means that we 
can be free, if we would only choose to be that way.
         Of course, in making this choice you can well end up free and 
dead.  But is living in slavery so much better?  Better to shoot for 
living in freedom and fail than to resign yourself to living in 
slavery!
         I don't want to dwell on these stark options, but I do think that 
one must confront them in order to move on.  If you can come to grips 
with the fact that the worst that can happen is that you and those 
who walk with you can get killed, and decide that freedom would be 
worth it, you will have freed yourself.  You can then move ahead with 
applying your every ounce of energy and creativity toward making damn 
sure that what actually happens is much better than the worst case 
scenario.  By accepting the worst that can happen, then anything 
else that happens is bound to be better!
         This is a critical point;  I am not trying to convince anyone to 
join a Kamikaze legion!  But having accepted the worst, and bending 
all my will toward exercising my freedom in a way that benefits me 
more, I can feel very positive about the things I achieve.  I have 
seceded from these United States, and consider myself a foreigner in 
my own land.  I am creating a better future for myself and my sons.  
That I am occasionally stopped and robbed by the gang that claims to 
rule this land where I was born does not alter the fundamental fact 
that I am free to choose.
         And what a glory this act of will, this act of creation is!!!
         I stand on the road to the future, as though upon a rise to which 
my understanding has brought me.  I see before me an infinite fan of 
branching in the road and only one path behind me.  I see peaks along 
some of the branches, heights to which I've not yet grown.  I see 
valleys into which some paths disappear, valleys into which some 
choices might take me and out of which I cannot see which choice will 
lead to the best road.  I know that the more I grow as a person, the 
higher my vantage point and the more I can see of the paths and 
choices I've yet to take.
         And I do make those choices!  My present, the house I own, the 
place I live, the people I associate with;  they are all of my 
choosing!
         My definition of a good day is one in which I can see a path I 
can travel that will bring me to future circumstances I would want to 
be in.  Even when the shit hits the fan, as long as I can still see a 
way through my futurescape to a place I want to be, it's a good day.  
And I tell you, while the storm clouds of our aggregate present may 
cover vast swaths of our futurescapes with gloom, there are also 
sunlit highlands where freedom reigns, and we can all make our way 
thence.
         For me, this involves the creation of the Liberty Round Table, 
and trying to maximize the freedom of others in order to enhance my 
own.
         What will you dare to create, when you accept the full burden and 
wonder of your own freedom?  Freedom is dangerous.  In making 
choices, you accept risks.  But which is better;  to enslave yourself 
to coercive agencies in a vain attempt to eliminate risk, or to 
embrace the marvelous responsibility of a thinking being and give 
life your best shot?  If you fail, then you fail, and you get up, 
take matters in your hands again, and do better the next time.
         Let me share a metaphor with you:
         Life is a  roll of canvas, and we are all painters, leaving our 
marks as we move along for as long as we can.  I choose to use every 
power I have to reach into the futurescape of possibilities and paint 
myself into a continuous series of present moments of my own choosing.  
My feelings are my colors, my thoughts are my brushes, and the canvas 
behind me is my record.  
         Looking back, I can see some unbelievable messes where I really 
screwed up, spilling paint everywhere, fumbling for the right brush 
as the canvas continued to stream by...  And I can see some really 
beautiful stretches, where I had my pigments and tools well in hand 
and wrought with exuberance and joy.  It is also apparent to me that, 
as I take more responsibility for what happens to me, I get better 
and better at it.
         Looking at other Life-Paintings, I see some of such beauty that 
it hurts to think of the exquisite pain and pleasure that went into 
their making.  Others are less inspiring.  Perhaps fearing that their 
paintings will not be good enough, some people refuse to accept 
responsibility for their art, aimlessly applying whatever colors, 
with little thought to what lies ahead.  Some try to get others to do 
the painting for them, and don't understand why they don't like the 
results.  Others let the canvas roll by, largely untouched, waiting 
for "permission" to paint.  Yet others refuse to paint at all, 
rolling along in whatever colors the people in their lives happen to 
squirt upon them, making whatever marks their bodies happen to 
impress on the fabric as they tumble by.  In such canvases, one sees 
randomness; a buttock here, a nose there, and occasionally, a hand...  
A hand curled in the often unacknowledged agony that grips one whose 
life is out of control.
         Life goes on;  we all paint.  What kind of record will you leave, 
and can you bring greater beauty and joy to it by choosing to paint 
with deliberation?  If you do this, you will have grasped that most 
basic characteristic you have, that treasure that only you can take 
from yourself:  your freedom!
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.