DEFENDING FREEDOMS YOU DON'T HAPPEN TO LIKE By Robert Brakeman Most wise people of most times and places, as well a great mob of secondary-literary hacks, curbstone philosphers, and intellectual knaves, have said at some point in their lives, "In order for liberty to have meaning at all, it has to have meaning for all our citizens", of "If we're serious about our love for freedom, we'll fight for it, even when it's being exercised by people we consider lunatics, or even worse." What's being said is that if a particular "right" is contingent upon what those in political power happen to think of the person exercising the right, it's no right at all - it's a mere privilege subject to revocation, like an 8th grader's hall pass or a politician's sworn oath. We must not differentiate among persons. There's something equally true which both leftists and rightists have generally failed to see. It is that in thinking of freedom, we also should differentiate among freedoms. Just as we should not say, "I believe liberty should be enjoyed by all persons", and then look to see who a particular liberty-enjoyer is to decide whether to include him out, so we should not say, "I believe that all persons should enjoy freedom to control their lives as long as they do not aggress against others, then look to see the way in which they're controlling their lives (peaceably) so we can decide whether to make exceptions to the rule. If you were to ask a thousand liberals and a thousand conservatives "Should a person have absolute control over his or her own life as long as no aggression is committed against others?" ninety nine percent of each would nod so hard they'd endanger their uppper vertebrae. So why do liberals spend so much time advocating the theft of money from people they don't like and the giving of it to those they like better (under such euphenisms as taxes and welfare)? Why do conservatives hardly finish breakfast before they're out trying to put people in cages for doing things with their own bodies that conservatives don't like? Both groups allow their visions of the "Good" Society to override their theoretical committment to liberty in the abstract. What is important is there is only one liberty - the liberty to control one's own life. What we tend to think of as various freedoms are just different expressions of that one liberty. A person seeking to keep that which he has earned, and one trying to use his body as he sees fit are both expressing the same (the only) claim to liberty - they are claiming the absolute right to their lives and products of those lives. Once we realize that there is only one liberty (with various ways of expressing it), it is logically easy to conclude it's as indefensible to differentiate among ways of expressing freedom as it is to distingish among people doing so. Over and over and over again (to paraphrase FDR), we need to stress that once we've established that liberty is the issue in a given case (no aggressive acts), the argument is over. The way the person in question is enjoying liberty (controlling his own life) is as irrelevant as who he is. We must dended freedom we don't like as much as individuals we don't like.