Friday, February 14, 2014

Government Force - "A Loaded Gun" (Inaugural post)

Welcome to the Inaugural Post of "The Brisbane File."

Here, I hope to educate, as well as discuss, principles of liberty with any and all people who wish to interact and who are concerned about the current trajectory of this once-great nation. It almost goes without saying that these are perilous days for individual liberty, as well as for the United States Constitution, and as such, it is incumbent upon patriots (aka - liberty-lovers) everywhere to get involved, pay attention, and take action wherever necessary and possible. My hope is that this blog will assist in that effort somehow.


For this inaugural post, I would like to start out by telling a little bit of my own story; specifically about how I became a libertarian, but on an even more fundamental level, about how I learned that affirming and living by the principles of liberty goes beyond any particular party affiliation. In truth, it goes right to the heart of human dignity. If men are not free to pursue their own nonviolent interests free of the shackles of other men, then at that point, their quality and essence of life can only be diminished. On the other hand, if men are free to live, work, and create, there is hardly any limit to their potential.


With that being said, let me begin. I am an ordained and licensed Christian, Protestant, Southern Baptist minister. Some people find that surprising when they also learn of my political and philosophical beliefs. Indeed, I have not found many like-minded people in my immediate professional sphere of influence. And that is okay. My path is my own and I am happy to walk it with as many or as few people as are willing to join me. I cannot coerce anyone into thinking like I do or believing how I do, anymore than they can coerce me. And truthfully, I would have it no other way.


I suppose at this point I could go into detail about how my views on politics gradually shifted as Barack Obama was elected president back in 2008 and how I began to see just how political power given to a government can be used against ANYONE (including myself) once it's been granted. But I won't. Instead, I'll simply say that government power is probably best regarded as a loaded gun. What do I mean by that? Well, who wants to find themselves standing in diametrical opposition to the muzzle of an operational firearm? And yet, we cheer our government officials onward as they continually point the loaded gun of unconstitutional and arbitrary power at citizen after citizen, not realizing that that same gun can be (and often is) eventually pointed directly at each and every one of us.


For example, I can recall reading an excerpt from a DHS memo some time ago that suggested that gun-owners and veterans (two categories that fit me) might be subject to closer scrutiny by the government simply because there may be individuals within that demographic that would want to take hostile action against the State. This of course was years after the Patriot Act had been passed, and had given the President and other federal officials broad powers to warrantlessly spy on American citizens (mostly of Middle Eastern heritage) in an effort to prevent terrorist activity. THIS I had no problem with. Of course, they should be spied upon, I reasoned. They attacked us on 9/11. As long as that loaded gun is pointed elsewhere, why should it concern me?


Now it was being pointed at me, as a gun owner and as a military veteran.


Another example is gay marriage. As a Bible-believing minister, I will NEVER preside over the union of a homosexual couple. However, does that mean I have to support our DEEPLY flawed marriage-licensing system which results in higher taxes and fewer legal benefits for one group of people...just because I may disagree with their lifestyle? I don't think it does. Furthermore, and just to once again reiterate the "loaded gun principle," I believe that the history of marriage licensing should tell us all we need to know about the practice of marriage licensing itself.


During Reconstruction following the Civil War, marriage licensing was used as a means to DENY freed slaves and whites the right to intermarry with one another. Now, while there may be a few surviving people who still disagree with interracial marriage for one reason or another, I doubt many people would want to see a law put back on the books that mirrors what was done during the middle of the 1800s. And yet, such a thing is possible, isn't it? Why is it possible? It's possible simply because we have left the power to define marriage (or "protect" it, if you're a social conservative) in the hands of government, rather than leave that authority in the hands of individuals, communities, and places of worship, where it belongs. And with that being the case, is it entirely unreasonable that government might one day choose to train its "marriage cross-hairs," if you will, on the same heterosexuals who have so vehemently pushed for those cross-hairs being trained on other groups?


Issues like this are essentially what have sparked my transformation from a fairly staunch Republican to someone who simply wants the government's gun unloaded and put away until legitimate threats to life, liberty, and private property surface (which they often do, only to be ignored by this very same government of ours).


I could go on, but I'll stop here. There is plenty more to be said and plenty more to discuss. My hope is to have the opportunity to do both. For the time being, however, I'll summarize: goverment power, much like a loaded gun, can be used against anyone. The best way, therefore, to ensure that a society operates justly with the best interest of all at heart, is to allow men to live, work, and produce freely as long as their actions don't injure the well-being or property of another. Then, and only then, should government force be applied.


Thanks for reading.


Until next week, live free!


-Warren Brisbane

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