I'm Tired
(With Apologies to Pearl Bailey and Madeleine Kahn)
As presented to the second annual Liberty Round Table 
Conclave near Estes Park, Colorado, July 2nd, 1998
By L. Neil Smith 
[email protected]
Exclusive to The Libertarian Enterprise
         You may remember the way that, at the start of Robert Heinlein's 
novel Methuselah's Children, a secret gathering of the exceptionally 
long-lived "Howard Families" began with the hero Lazarus Long assuming 
the chairmanship on the grounds that he was the oldest individual 
present.  
         Well ... I've been an active libertarian for 36 years last month, 
which, I suspect, makes me the senior libertarian at this gathering, 
presumably full of mature wisdom -- not to mention a great many other 
things I'm sure that several of you are practically bursting to bring 
up.  
         Mature wisdom.  Heinlein also asked us -- in "The Notebooks of 
Lazarus Long", as I recall -- if we'd ever noticed how often "mature 
wisdom" resembles "just being too tired".  Ayn Rand said something 
very like that, too.  And I certainly qualify on those grounds, as 
well.
         I'm tired.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government that, in the name of making 
the world "safer for democracy", took a young religious conscientious 
objector during World War I -- a kid who was willing to do everything 
the Army required of him but wear a uniform and kill the people they'd 
picked out for him to kill -- and hung him by his shackled wrists in 
the deepest dungeon at Leavenworth, standing in a foot of icy water in 
the dead of Kansas winter, let him die of pneumonia, and then buried 
him -- in a uniform -- before his mother could arrive to claim his 
body.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government which, at the end of a war 
widely advertised as having been fought to obliterate fascism forever, 
nevertheless agreed to round up two million Russian refugees in France 
and elsewhere in Europe at the end of that war, crowded them into 
boxcars exactly as Hitler had done to the Jews, and sent them back 
to Stalin, who had them all shot to death within a few hours of their 
arrival.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government that smashed its way into 
the Utah homes of Mormon polygamists in the 1950s, people harming no 
one by practicing their First Amendment right to freedom of religion, 
sorted out the women and children and made them pose for humiliating 
photographs with numbered cards around their necks, while imprisoning 
their menfolk until they signed statements making bastards of their 
children.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government that, sliming its way from 
one sleazy justification to another every day for 51 days, confined, 
terrorized, tortured, poison-gassed, machinegunned, and incinerated 80 
innocent individuals -- two dozen of them beautiful little children -- 
in broad daylight, on national television, and not only got away with 
it, but prosecuted the survivors, and -- when they were acquitted -- 
sent them to prison anyway, for what will likely be the rest of their 
lives.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of carrying around the knowledge that a crooked federal 
judge imprisoned that handful of innocent, acquitted victims of 
state terrorism to keep the government from being on trial in "his" 
courtroom.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of knowing that another crooked federal judge, in Idaho 
this time, deliberately set a killer loose to kill again for his vile 
masters, and that what he's expected to kill for his them -- fully as 
much as any innocent women or babies he happens to find in his high- 
powered rifle's crosshairs -- are the very things every American would 
most like to believe about himself, his country, and his children's 
future.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of waking up in the middle of the night, or not being 
able to get to sleep at all, worried about a gang of masked thugs in 
black body armor smashing into my house, brutalizing my family, 
crushing my pets under their jackbooted feet, laughing, and stealing 
anything they want -- with no legal obligation to give it back ever, 
even when it turns out that we're all innocent -- because they happen 
to disapprove of something I wrote ... or simply got the wrong 
address.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of having it back there all the time in the corner of my 
mind, whether I want it there or not, that I should really hide all of 
the possessions I treasure most -- possessions I like most to display 
in my home for everyone to see and enjoy -- and even worse, to find 
some hole to bury my family and myself in, in order to survive another 
year or two in what was once the freest country in history and in the 
world.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being considered some kind of criminal or dangerous 
throwback for no other reason than that I value, exercise, and defend 
my rights under the first ten Amendments to the United States 
Constitution.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being portrayed as a perverted monster for passing on 
to my daughter what my father passed on to me, the love of deeply 
blued steel and richly polished walnut, the smell of Hoppe's #9, the 
proper way to align the sights, breathe correctly, squeeze-don't-jerk 
that trigger, and hold solid as the sear breaks, the weapon bellows, 
and the delicious aroma of smokeless powder wafts back to you on the 
breeze.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being treated as some kind of lunatic or villain, 
even by some members of my own family, even by some members of my own 
party and political movement, because I want -- all I want or ever 
wanted -- is to give people back control over their own lives and to 
live out my life in the land of liberty that I was promised as a 
child.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government that's supposed to be, above 
all, subject to ten laws that were supposed to make all of these 
travesties and atrocities unthinkable and impossible, ten laws that 
were supposed to shield me and my family from the kind of oppression 
my ancestors once fled from in Europe, ten laws that were supposed to 
let me know where I stand and what the rules are, ten laws that were 
supposed to let me and every other American think, say, do, and be 
whatever we wish without filling out a single form or asking anyone's 
permission.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of having to fight for my rights every day in a country 
where those rights were supposed to have been guaranteed, when what I 
want to be doing -- what I ought to be doing, after 36 mind-numbing 
years -- is enjoying my one true profession of storytelling, and my 
family.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living in a culture where the police are a greater 
danger to innocent civilians than they are to real criminals -- many 
of whom give the police their orders -- and where the military is a 
far greater threat to the people of America than it is to any enemy 
overseas.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living with a government that terrorizes, bullies, 
beats up, tortures, and kills more and more individuals every day, 
here and abroad, and does it in my name, and at my involuntary 
expense.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of living in a culture where you're considered lucky if 
you're allowed to register your name and Social Security number, 
surrender your fingerprints, provide your photograph and the serial 
number of your weapon, visit a psychiatrist, endure endless hours of 
expensive, useless "instruction" at the feet of some mercantilist 
parasite who lobbied for the legislation in the first place, and, 
finally, pay a whopping fee in order to exercise a right you were born 
with.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm even more tired of the dullwitted individuals and corrupt 
organizations who claim self-righteously to support and defend the 
Second Amendment, and at the same time give their wholehearted 
enthusiastic support to such a blatant abrogation of my inalienable 
rights.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of paying rent to the county on a home I bought and paid 
for; I'm tired of paying rent on my own life to the IRS and Social 
Security Administration; I'm tired of watching the government take a 
slice of everything I earn or possess, even though all they ever do is 
get in the way -- and make it more and more impossible to live every 
day.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being lied to by government, by the media, and by 
every corporation I have anything to do with.  I'm tired of always 
being on the losing side because I refuse to lie, cheat, or steal, 
myself.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of no one being considered a "real life hero" unless 
they're forcing some poor, helpless, broken creature eke out another 
miserable moment of existence -- while those who help to make life 
possible for productive individuals are reviled as exploiters and 
profiteers.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being considered property.  
         Make no mistake:  when the government can tell you what drugs you 
can take, what drugs you can't take, and what drugs you must take; 
when the government can define the circumstances under which you may 
or may not obtain, own, or carry weapons; when the government can 
force you to surrender your children -- the sweet hope of your heart 
-- to indoctrination centers where they'll be transformed into your 
bitter political enemies; when the government can tell you that you 
have to sign up for military slavery; when the government can tell you 
that you must have that baby -- those are assertions of a property 
right.  
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         And I'm tired of a world where being the property of the fascist 
dictatorship that America has become is the best that anyone can hope 
for.
         I'm tired of living in a police state.
         I'm tired of being tired.  
*********
         Are you tired of living in a police state?
         I am, but after 36 years of political activism, I know exactly 
what to do about it.  Now all I have to do is convince you to help 
me.  
         And this time, we're going to do it right.  
         The key to the future we all look forward to can be found in four 
words:
         "Bill of Rights enforcement".  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  Many years ago, I was a member of 
two Libertarian Party national platform committees -- 1977 and 1979 -- 
two Libertarian Party national platform committees that produced the 
most radical platforms that the party had ever seen and, tragically, 
would ever see -- the platforms that the Nerf libertarians presently 
running what's left of the party are most embarrassed by and have been 
chipping away at hysterically, in the fear that other people might 
mistakenly believe they really stand for something besides collecting 
campaign contributions and doling them out to themselves as consultant 
fees.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         I'm as radical as libertarians come.  I've proven it again and 
again over 36 years of activism.  But let me tell you now that if the 
first ten Amendments, commonly known as the Bill of Rights, were fully 
and stringently enforced like the highest law of the land they happen 
to be, any difference between the "New America" that that would give 
rise to, and the "New America" that would have been created by those 
radical Libertarian Party platforms, would only be a matter of fine 
tuning.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         And the advantage is that, unlike those platforms, the original 
radical libertarian document on which this nation was founded, the 
Bill of Rights, has all the respectablility, all the historical cache, 
all the time-honored tradition any suit-and-tie could possibly wish 
for.  Now throw in the fact I mentioned a paragraph or two ago, that 
it's already the highest law of the land, something to be enforced, 
something for which you -- meaning them -- can be thrown in jail or 
breaking.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         So what do we do about it?  Well for starters, from this moment 
forward, never let a day pass without writing those words, "Bill of 
Rights enforcement", at least once, preferably over the internet, or 
in paper correspondence with some sitting politician or political 
candidate.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         From this moment forward, never let a day pass without saying 
those words, "Bill of Rights enforcement", at least once, preferably 
on the telephone to a aluminum siding salesman or a radio talk show 
host.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         From this moment forward, never let a day pass without saying 
those words, "Bill of Rights enforcement", at least once, preferably 
to some door-to-door evangelist or, even better, to a political 
canvasser.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         Our future, our very survival, depends on making those four words, 
"Bill of Rights enforcement", the widest-spread catchphrase in 
history.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         No sitting politician or candidate should be able to make an 
appearance without being asked where he stands on Bill of Rights 
enforcement. 
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         No worldwide website anywhere should be without the Bill of Rights 
enforcement logo (which I'll have up on my "Webley Page" about the 
time you get home) on its opening screen, beside the free speech blue 
ribbon.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         No sidewalk should be without a t-shirt or two echoing the same 
idea.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         No car bumper or pickup truck window should be without that same 
logo.
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         No storefront should be without that symbol, displayed proudly in 
the window along with the words, "We are a Bill of Rights enforcement 
establishment".
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         There's no need for a national libertarian political party (a good 
thing, because we no longer have one) or for any other kind of group 
activity.  When enough of us, acting on our own, have saturated this 
culture with the idea, politicians of every stripe will be stumbling 
all over themselves to get aboard the Bill of Rights enforcement 
bandwagon.  
         Bill of Rights enforcement.  
         Which is a good thing because by then (and it could be no more 
than a year or two from now) the most important, perhaps the only 
criterion by which any politician -- including judges and prosecutors, 
and why not throw in television, radio, and newspaper commentators, as 
well? -- will be evaluated will be his position on Bill of Rights 
enforcement.
         Bill of Rights enforcement. 
         And we'll have taken an important, unprecedented -- and, with any 
luck at all, irreversible -- first step to reclaiming the nation we 
always wished America could be, for ourselves, and for our children's 
future.
         And then, perhaps, I won't be quite so tired.
         Thank you.
Novelist and political essayist L. Neil Smith is the only Libertarian 
ever to be called a "thug" within the pages of the Libertarian Party 
News. He has also been characterized by one disgruntled reader as 
having written the "single most repugnant ... piece of tripe ... ever 
seen in an American newspaper." In his spare time, he's the award- 
winning author of The Probability Broach, Pallas, Henry Martyn, 
and Bretta Martyn and 15 other novels, as well as publisher of The 
Libertarian Enterprise http://www.webleyweb.com/tle/index.html. 
Order his books from Amazon.com at his home site "The Webley Page" at 
http://www.lneilsmith.org//index.html, from Laissez Faire Books 
at http://www.laissezfaire.com or call toll-free at 1-800-326-0996.