The cliché is true: September 11, 2001, represents a defining
American moment. Generation X and Millennials suddenly had their own day of
infamy, just as their parents and grandparents had Pearl Harbor and the Kennedy
assassination. 9/11 marked the end of a relatively untroubled time in the US
following the 1980 and 90s, and the beginning of a dark turn that continues to
this day. Optimism, an enduring feature of the American psyche (rightly or
wrongly identified as buncombe by Mencken) suddenly was in short supply.
Lives were lost, along with
innocence. But the innocence lost that day had less to do with terrorism or
even the threat of terrorism than it did with what we all knew was coming: an
exponential rise in the size and scope of the American state. The specter of growing
state power frightened even those eager to endorse it, as most Americans were
in the days following.
For libertarians
9/11 was especially troubling precisely because of the intense public demand
for Congress and the Bush administration to do something. Whether that something was rational,
just, or even served American interests was almost beside the point. The people
wanted blood, and after the images of bodies jumping from the twin towers who
can blame the politicians in DC for obliging them? If there are no atheists in
foxholes, there are very few libertarians after terrorist attacks. Our uneasy
job was to counsel reason and restraint,
even if that meant shouting into a wind tunnel.
The entire US national security apparatus, a trillion-dollar
enterprise extending far beyond the Pentagon and alphabet soup intelligence
agencies like the CIA and NSA, had failed utterly in its ostensible mission.
All the airport security, nuclear missiles, air defense command centers,
bombers, fighter jets, aircraft carriers, destroyers, spooks, spies, analysts,
and supercomputers could not protect a single American from a small group of
middle-class Saudi kids with box-cutters and a few hours of Cessna training.
So what should have been a profoundly embarrassing and
soul-searching moment for the US national security state became an exercise in
chest thumping. War room sessions at the White House made for good TV
optics, but humility rather that hubris was in order. The question of what to
do could not be answered without understanding what went wrong and what
motivated the perpetrators. But not a single federal employee was fired because
of 9/11, at least not so far as Senator Rand Paul can tell.
Instead, both Congress
and the Bush 43 administration reacted predictably to 9/11 and poured it on: we
will spend whatever it takes, do whatever it takes, and go wherever it takes to
get the people who did this.
16 years later, the War on
Terror™ has yielded hundreds of thousands of dead and injured Americans,
Iraqis, and Afghans, ongoing and intractable wars disguised as nation building,
the Patriot Act, illegal executive actions, trillions in new federal debt,
vastly increased federal surveillance powers, rubber stamped FISA court
warrants, TSA at the airports, a useless Department of Homeland Security,
overflowing VA hospitals, and increasingly militarized police here at home.
More importantly, it has yielded a distressing complacency toward grotesque
federal power.
It has not yielded peace,
or liberty, or security. But liberty vs. security was never the choice.
* * *
An aside:
I vividly remember the morning of September 11th in Washington,
DC. It was sunny and beautiful, with no trace of August’s oppressive humidity.
Ron Paul’s staff arrived at his office in the Cannon building around 8:00,
ready for a typical Tuesday schedule of rote “suspension” bills (e.g., bills
naming post offices) and gearing up for the week ahead.
The office had a TV to monitor C-SPAN and activity on the House
floor. Although both the House and Senate were in session that day, as
customary debates and votes would not begin until sometime in the afternoon. So
we had CNN playing in the background when sometime after 9:00 they began to
show footage of smoke billowing from one tower in the World Trade Center. CNN’s
announcer wondered whether a small plane somehow had blundered into the
building.
When word filtered down that the cause was not a small plane,
things became more tense both on CNN and in our office: was this terrorism? We
began to flip channels to find more information, and that’s when we realized it
would be no ordinary Tuesday.
Around 9:45 the Capitol Police came through the building barking
at us to evacuate. It became clear there was no “plan,” just a bunch of people
shouting, running around, and pounding on doors. If anything, the underground
tunnels beneath the House office building were safer than the streets outside–
especially if gunmen or bombs were lurking.
Instead police herded us outside, to go nowhere. The lawns
surrounding the buildings were full of incredulous staffers milling about,
making calls on their flip phones. The streets around the Capitol were
impossibly jammed with cars attempting to get out. Some pedestrians headed to
the Metro stations, but the subway was overwhelmed too. Nobody would get
home easily or quickly. The corner liquor store, Subway, and nearby Taco Bell
wisely stayed open and did brisk business.
About this time rumors began to swirl about the Pentagon being
targeted, but of course we didn’t know what to believe. Urban legends grew and
just as quickly were debunked: a car bomb went off in front of the State
Department! Foggy Bottom is on fire! More planes are headed for the Capitol
Dome! One can only imagine how social media would react today.
Keep in mind the entire Capitol complex, consisting of the
Capitol building itself, the House and Senate office buildings, the Library of
Congress, and the Supreme Court is one or two square kilometers at most. Its
daytime population, mostly staff, is about 25,000 people. Note also that the
Supreme Court and Library of Congress have their own police.
A typical town of
25,000 might have a force of 20 or 30 law enforcement officers. The US Capitol Police force,
by contrast, has more than 2,000 officers. Its
budget is larger than the Atlanta police department! And while the DC Metro
police have plenty of real crime to deal with, the Capitol complex is quite
safe. Capitol police really serve as the personal security force for members of
Congress more than anything else. So, some animals really are more equal than
others…
Note: The views
expressed on Mises.org are
not necessarily those of the Mises Institute.
Jeff Deist [send him mail] is president of the Mises
Institute, a tax attorney, and a former staffer for Ron Paul.