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The Monument Society Versus the Free Society
Townhall.com ^ | October 11, 2012 | Ben Shapiro

Posted on 10/11/2012 8:31:16 AM PDT by Kaslin

Last week, after the first presidential debate, I spoke at an architecture school in downtown Los Angeles. One of the questions the moderator asked was about American exceptionalism. The foam flecked to his lips at the very phrase. What, pray tell, was American exceptionalism, he asked?

I answered by referencing the Founding Fathers and the freedoms they guaranteed us via the American Constitutional System of checks and balances. What makes us unique guardians of liberty, I said, is that our system is designed to counterbalance interest against interest -- we only act together with the full power of unity when we're actually unified. We prize the individual over the collective.

He scoffed at that suggestion. He derided the founders and the Constitution -- "a 200-year-old document written by dead white slave owners!" -- and suggested an alternative vision of American exceptionalism. American exceptionalism, he said, was characterized by "the things we do together." When he thought of an exceptional America, he thought of certain images: American footprints on the moon, the interstate highway system, Hoover Dam, nationalized health care.

The moderator's perspective was that of President Obama, too. He prizes reliance on the collective because no man can alone build roads or bridges or skyscrapers. As President Obama said, "You didn't build that." Government, says Obama, is the only thing we all belong to. We're "stronger together."

These are two fundamentally different ways of viewing the world. One is based on the value of freedom. The other is based on the value of monuments.

The monument society looks at the Chinese high-speed rail and says: "Let's build one of those." The freedom society looks at the Chinese high-speed rail and says: "At what cost to individual freedom?" Sometimes, collective projects do outweigh the needs of the individual -- see, for example, World War II, in which we mobilized collectively to preserve individual freedom. But the monument society always errs on the side of building the monument, of activating the collective; the freedom society always errs on the side of individual liberty.

We are now at the tipping point in America between these two visions. We must make a choice. Do we want to give our children monuments -- tremendous buildings, vast bureaucracies, bulwarks of human collectivism? Or do we want to give them freedom? Do we want to build pyramids? Or do we want to build families?

These two visions are in opposition now because we have moved too far in the direction of the monument society. And that diminishes human happiness.

It is remarkable how little the monument society left talks about human happiness and fulfillment. Instead, they prefer to talk about a "better tomorrow."

They talk about moving "forward." They imply that we must be miserable today to be happy tomorrow -- or, alternatively, that our children must be miserable tomorrow so that we can be happy today.

That's what the monument society is all about. Jewish Midrash teaches about the Biblical Tower of Babel, the monument society. The tower became so tall and so grand that it supposedly took a year to shuttle bricks from the bottom of the tower to the top. People wept when a brick fell, but did not care if a man died. There were always more workers. But bricks were invaluable.

The builders of that tower would have given their children a magnificent site. But those children would have been slaves to the monument. There would have been no happiness. Just a vast tower, crumbling to dust over generations.

The founders recognized that Americans, given freedom to pursue their own goals, made self-reliant, are happy. The power of the collective is magnificent, but only when the people agree on utilizing it. That is the balance the founders drew, and that is why they were so wise. Our liberties must be preserved from the collective, but in times of crisis, we must all come together. The collective must not be hijacked for particular interests, forcing men to labor for the selfish benefit of powerful interests. The collective must only be activated when absolutely necessary. Anything less destroys human freedom, and turns us into the monument society.

Only a society that prizes individual freedom over collective mobilization can hand that freedom to its children. It can make monuments -- living monuments. Children who grow up free. Who inhabit those great skyscrapers. Who visit Mount Rushmore, not as a relic of an ancient civilization, but as a tribute to the values of those whose faces are carved into it.

That is American exceptionalism. That's what we seek to give to the world. We are the monument. Our families are the monument: a monument to God and to liberty. Because, in the end, all towers crumble to dust. All that matters is the living. Monuments mean nothing if there are no free people to honor them.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 10/11/2012 8:31:19 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Good read. Thanks


2 posted on 10/11/2012 8:36:54 AM PDT by TEXOKIE (Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little. EdmondBurke)
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To: Kaslin
Things accomplished "together" include the Pyramids and the Great Wall. In fact bodies of thousands of individuals are said to be contained within that great example of statist exceptionalism.

Mao killed millions more accomplishing the "Great Leap Forward" one of the signal examples of things "done together".

I hope Shapiro responded to that brainstem with something along those lines.

3 posted on 10/11/2012 8:41:47 AM PDT by skeeter
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To: Kaslin

“That’s what the monument society is all about. Jewish Midrash teaches about the Biblical Tower of Babel, the monument society. The tower became so tall and so grand that it supposedly took a year to shuttle bricks from the bottom of the tower to the top. People wept when a brick fell, but did not care if a man died. There were always more workers. But bricks were invaluable.”

Elite America.


4 posted on 10/11/2012 9:16:47 AM PDT by donna (Pray for revival.)
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To: Kaslin
Excellent article.

One of the questions the moderator asked was about American exceptionalism. The foam flecked to his lips at the very phrase.

For all y'all in flyover country, if you come to California, you can actually see actual foam, actually flecking on actual lips by mentioning American exceptionalism to virtually anyone.

Hell, you can stand on the side of the freeway and cause car accidents by yelling "American exceptionalism" and watch the flecked foam explode against the inside of windshields and block the sight of the driver, and make the car careen off the road.

Liberal hate is redundant.

5 posted on 10/11/2012 10:08:42 AM PDT by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: Kaslin

American exceptionalism is a false religion. Sorry.


6 posted on 10/11/2012 10:12:32 AM PDT by Romulus
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To: Romulus
American exceptionalism is a false religion. Sorry.

American exceptionalism protects your right to say that. Idiot.

7 posted on 10/11/2012 10:18:24 AM PDT by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: Kaslin

American exceptionalism is right there on the moon. Those footprints will outlast the pyramids . Without American exceptionalism remaining intact it is doubtful anybody will ever see those footprints again.


8 posted on 10/11/2012 2:08:42 PM PDT by Nateman (If liberals are not screaming you are doing it wrong!)
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To: Kaslin
[Article] These are two fundamentally different ways of viewing the world. One is based on the value of freedom. The other is based on the value of monuments.

Well, not exactly. The "monument society" is the old one based on inequality and coercion and always has the stench of slavery about it, because its real agenda is always the pampering of its ruling class and the intimidation and oppression of everyone else.

9 posted on 10/12/2012 8:58:25 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: Kaslin
[Art.] Do we want to build pyramids? Or do we want to build families?

America in the 19th and 20th centuries did both, and the people were free, not slaves and rabble.

10 posted on 10/12/2012 9:05:21 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: Nateman
American exceptionalism is right there on the moon. Those footprints will outlast the pyramids.

Exactly, as I said in my last -- what America has done, has made the monuments of antiquity look like something you'd find in a Cracker Jack box.

And those things were accomplished by free people -- the despair of monument-loving tyrants.

Iraq was a political war, and it was no accident that the first thing Operation Iraqi Freedom went after was the big, monumental buildings of the regime -- liberal skeptics called it "blowing up empty buildings", but it was important that the world -- and the Iraqi people -- see Saddam's ego go up in billowing clouds of smoke and dust.

11 posted on 10/12/2012 9:12:07 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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