May 14, 2009

Live Free or Die

Si tiene un minuto, no se pierdan esta columna de Mark Steyn. No tiene una letra de desperdicio. Para imprimir y leer durante el viaje o quedar bien con muy poco dinero:

Conservatives often talk about "small government," which, in a sense, is framing the issue in leftist terms: they're for big government. But small government gives you big freedoms—and big government leaves you with very little freedom. The bailout and the stimulus and the budget and the trillion-dollar deficits are not merely massive transfers from the most dynamic and productive sector to the least dynamic and productive. When governments annex a huge chunk of the economy, they also annex a huge chunk of individual liberty. You fundamentally change the relationship between the citizen and the state into something closer to that of junkie and pusher—and you make it very difficult ever to change back. Americans face a choice: They can rediscover the animating principles of the American idea—of limited government, a self-reliant citizenry, and the opportunities to exploit your talents to the fullest—or they can join most of the rest of the Western world in terminal decline. To rekindle the spark of liberty once it dies is very difficult. The inertia, the ennui, the fatalism is more pathetic than the demographic decline and fiscal profligacy of the social democratic state, because it's subtler and less tangible. But once in a while it swims into very sharp focus. Here is the writer Oscar van den Boogaard from an interview with the Belgian paper De Standaard. Mr. van den Boogaard, a Dutch gay "humanist" (which is pretty much the trifecta of Eurocool), was reflecting on the accelerating Islamification of the Continent and concluding that the jig was up for the Europe he loved. "I am not a warrior, but who is?" he shrugged. "I have never learned to fight for my freedom. I was only good at enjoying it." In the famous Kubler-Ross five stages of grief, Mr. van den Boogard is past denial, anger, bargaining and depression, and has arrived at a kind of acceptance.

6 comments:

  1. "To rekindle the spark of liberty once it dies is very difficult." Algo sabemos nosotros al respecto. Muy buena frase: "I have never learned to fight for my freedom. I was only good at enjoying it."

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  2. Los Eloi y los Morlocks.
    H.G.Wells la tenía clara.

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  3. El problema aparece cuando el 99% de la población pretende vivir como Morlock.

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  4. Es al reves Louis. Los Morlocks eran los que laburaban, los Eloi eran los alegres mantenidos.

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  5. Los morlocks producen toda la comida y las comodidades de los Eloi, y los tratan como ganado, y se los comen. los Eloi renuncian a la libertad por el confort, negocian una vida de placer con el fatalismo de saber que van a terminar mal. Para mi el problema es que la mayoría de los europeos eligen vivir como los Eloi, sin grandes penurias ni responsabilidades, y cuando se les acerca la hora de pagar el pato se avivan que es pesimo negocio.

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